NerdBeach

Wii Digital Print Channel Offers Online Photo Print Ordering

Nintendo has teamed up with Fujifilm to offer a photo service straight from the Wii console.  The Wii Digital Print Channel allows users to upload their photos from an SD card, and from there order customized prints, photo books, business cards and more.  The physical order would then be shipped back after processing.

Currently the service is offered only in Japan, but it is expected to roll out to other countries soon.

With the Xbox 360 offering Netflix movies, and now with the Wii allowing photo processing, we can see how the battle for the living room is starting to take place.  And interesting to note that a home multimedia PC, despite being more than capable, is not even in the running. It is all about convenience and ease of use, apparently.

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A Robot That Can Go Shopping For You

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Robots are changing our lives, and one aspect of robotics that is interesting is in telepresence, where you are virtually there thanks to a physical robot that does the action for you remotely.  Already we have surgeons that are virtually in the operating room, and it is the opinion of this author that telepresence robotics will have a very significant impact on our daily lives in the future. 

Along those lines,  we have a robot from Japan that is a virtual presence shopper. Basically it is a robot that can go shopping for you while you control it via cellphone.  The robot fights the crowds, digs through the merchandise, pays for it, and brings it home while you stay comfortable at home (or wherever else you happen to be).  

The robot is a modified TMSUK-4 humanoid robot that is tied to cellular communications.  The concept of telepresence with a communication device is here referred to as 3D communication, and it is an equally apt label to use.  You could also refer to the device as a telerobotic shopper.

In the demonstration, an aged lady sent the TMSUK-4 robot and her young granddaughter to  a department store in Kitakyushu, Japan. The lady used her NTT DoCoMo video capable cellphone to control the robot and shop through the merchandise. Navigating to the hat section, the robot picked the hats and the granddaughter acted as the hat model.  The lady was then able to select a new hat from the physical store without leaving home.

One aspect of telerobotics that could really drive its acceptance is in its ability to allow the user to manage their time very effectively.  The virtual presence in a lot of the cases requires no travel time, allowing the user to instantly be at the location.  This allows the user to potentially visit many places in a short time (such as a skilled surgeon doing several operations via telerobotics). 

Obviously in the case of individual telerobotic ownership, such as the case illustrated above, this would not always be the case, but even then you could do other things while your robotic Doppelganger was en route.

Of course, having a telerobotic device to go the gym for you would not be a good use of the technology, despite the acknowledged short term lack of pain for the user.

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Asus Leather Laptop Releasing in Japan

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Asus is launching a premium notebook complete with leather upholstering to the Japanese market on July 12th.  The "U2E" features a LED backlight display running at 1366,768 resolution.  Other features include a 32GB SSD, built in camera and fingerprint reader.

The default OS is Windows Vista Home Premium, and the processor is a Intel Core 2 Duo U7600 1.20GHz.  The laptop measures 277 x 194 x 24.9 mm (10.9 x 7.6 x 1 inches).  The Asus Premium Leather laptop will sell for 298,000 JPY ( about $2,782)

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Bandai Introduces the 5 Second Game

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Japan has certainly shown us many new game crazes (and personally I am rather fond of Ninja Warrior), but now we have a new game that is poised to be the next craze.  The concept is simple enough – you push a button, and press it again exactly five seconds later.  The winner is the one that gets closest to 5.00 seconds.

Simple enough to describe, but the buildup is looking sweet. Check out the Promo video, which is interesting all to itself.  There is also an online version of the 5 second game, in case you want to see what the game concept is.

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Bandai is going to be releasing the game in Japan on July 26, 2008.  That means you might see it popping up elsewhere this fall.  Now, go practice – 1 Mississippi, 2 Mississippi (does anyone really count seconds this way any more?)

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