Friday, August 01, 2008

The Leaf AFi 10 Camera Delivers 56 Megapixels [Digital Cameras]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/351842517/the-leaf-afi-10-camera-delivers-56-megapixels

This has been a big month for big-time cameras. First we we first saw the Hasselblad H3DII-50 and its whopping 50-megapixel sensor, which was topped the following week by the Phase One's P65+. The Leaf AFi 10 medium format camera falls in the middle of the war over sensor-size with a 56x36mm TWF sensor that cranks out a 56 megapixel resolution across the entire width of the 6x6 sensor area.

Unlike the other cameras, it also features proprietary "Verto" technology that rotates the sensor internally, so you don't have to turn the camera when you want to take a portrait shot. Other than that, the AFi 10 captures images at about 1 second per frame and it can shoot up to ISO800. Oh, and it's even more expensive than the Phase One P65+ at $43,700. [Leaf via Photography Blog via DVICE]


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Judge Rules Early Termination Fees Are Illegal and Violate California Law [ETF Fees]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/351932712/judge-rules-early-termination-fees-are-illegal-and-violate-california-law

A California County Superior Court judge has just ruled that early termination fees from cellphone companies violates California state law and are illegal. What's this mean to you? Sprint Nextel has been ordered to pay $18.2 million in reimbursements to customers who already paid their ETF, and to stop trying to collect $54.7 million from customers who canceled and refused to pay. But if ETF fees are illegal, does that mean 2-year contracts—which in turn give you subsidized price on your cellphones—will be a thing of the past? Tough to say, but we're headed towards some change. [Mercury News via Yahoo]


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iPhone Apps We Love: NetShare - Share Your 3G/EDGE Connection With Your Computer [IPhone Apps]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/352096056/iphone-apps-we-love-netshare-+-share-your-3gedge-connection-with-your-computer

NetShare is one app we never thought would make it onto the official iPhone App Store. All it does is set up a SOCKS5 proxy for you to get your laptop/computer online through use of the 3G/EDGE connection. Does it work? Yes. Yes it does, much to our surprise. EDGE works just fine, although Mahoney says it's slow as balls. 3G impressions in a sec. Be careful of how much bandwidth you're using, since your provider probably makes a frowny face at you using their network to power your laptop, however "unlimited" your plan may be. [NetShare - Thanks Matthew and Ryan!]

Update: Having problems setting it up on my iPhone 3G. I follow the instructions and the phone seems to "connect", but that's about it. No connections shown in the NetShare app, and nothing goes through.

Update 2: Now we're getting the message that it's not available in the US store. Sucks.


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Mint V10: World's Smallest Pocket Projector [Projectors]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/352446142/mint-v10-worlds-smallest-pocket-projector

Australian company Mint Wireless is claiming their Mint V10 is the smallest commercial pocket projector in the world. At 125 x 55 x 23 mm, this bulge in our pants means we are happy to see that, even while it means we will have to go to Sidney to get one. The aluminum and plastic sandwich has a 20,000-hour LED lamp which, according to them, doesn't need warming up. The company also says the $600 projector battery offers "hours" worth of viewing time at 640 x 480 pixels, either from your computer or using its SD card slot or 1GB of internal memory. [Mint Wireless via Gizmodo Australia]


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Honeycomb Skyscraper Has No Internal Structure, Attracts Giant Killer Wasps [Architecture]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/352481434/honeycomb-skyscraper-has-no-internal-structure-attracts-giant-killer-wasps

Design goodness hunters Dezeen got this pictures of the 1,174-feet-high Sinosteel International Plaza in Tinajin, China, designed by architects MAD—or just mad architects. The external white honeycomb structure, with huge hexagonal windows that vary sightly in size, is not just for the pretty looks: it will sustain the whole building without the need for any internal structure. And make it look like a huge wasp nest to me. From the inside, however, each room looks like a space station.

The variable size of the windows is not just to make the building more interesting. According to the architects, the pattern was created to adapt to the wind and sun:

By mapping the different air flows and solar direction across the site, we were able to position different sized windows accordingly, minimizing heat loss in the winter and heat gain in the summer.

The building—located in a port city one hour east of Beijing—will be finished in 2012, including the big office tower and the smaller one, which will be dedicated to a hotel. [Dezeen]


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