gadgetPhreak Gadget News Blog. Futuristic Gadgets and Portable Electronics

June 4, 2006

AircordAV promises wireless, lossless HD streaming

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Certainly not the the first solution for streaming HD programming around your house, a new product called the AircordAV promises to dumb down the whole process into what would appear to be a 5-minute-install, and supports that sweet 1,080p resolution to boot. Instead of asking your existing router to do all the hard work, AircordAV comes with a base unit that hooks up to any of your home theater gear using HDMI, DVI, component, S-video, composite, or SCART connections, and creates its own 802.11g network with up to eight clients feeding any or all of your video displays. Aircord claims the product is capable of lossless streaming, and uses a proprietary technology to encode and decode your video signals, although the company's lack of a website or actual product shots makes us a bit wary of the whole thing. We'll find out in December if this clever idea can be turned into a working device -- that's when the AircordAV will supposedly be released -- and if it can, expect to cough up at least $500 to start cutting those cords.
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April 19, 2006

Philips sues Kodak over patent infringement

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href="http://www.marketwatch.com/News/Story/Story.aspx?dist=newsfinder&siteid=google&guid=%7BF38B6A1D-363A-4642-9610-5EB71DEA4B6F%7D&keyword="> vspace="16" hspace="4" border="0" align="right" alt="" src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/patent.jpg" />It’s
been a mixed day over at Philips: on the one hand, they had the pleasure of announcing a new offspring, href="http://www.engadget.com/2006/04/19/philips-spins-off-liquavista-to-develop-thin-electrowetting-disp/">Liquavista,
but now they’ve been forced to air some dirty laundry concerning fellow consumer electronics manufacturer Kodak, taking
the NY-based company to court for allegedly infringing upon a sixteen-year-old patent. Philips claims that while
several digital camera manufacturers license the JPEG compression technology protected by patent number href="http://tinyurl.com/q6bk3">4,901,075 (refer to the schematic above for all of the technical details), Kodak
refuses to do so, even though many of their products supposedly take advantage of the "Huffman codeword"
magic outlined within. Financial details of the suit have not been made public, but Kodak doesn’t sound like it’s going
to budge, saying that it will defend itself "vigorously."

[Via href="http://today.reuters.com/business/newsarticle.aspx?type=consumerProducts&storyID=nN19246085&imageid=&cap=">Reuters]

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April 11, 2006

Kensington laptop dock first to feature startup’s multiple-monitors-over-USB tech

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Although we're pretty sure that many of you wouldn't agree with Newnham Research CEO Michael Ledzion's assertion that "connecting a graphics card to a PC is hard, and expensive," you might still be interested in his company's technology for connecting multiple displays to a PC through a standard USB connection, which will debut in a Kensington laptop dock in June. The Cambridge, England-based startup is able to achieve this rather amazing feat through a hardware rendering engine call NIVO, which can either be built directly into a monitor or incorporated into other peripherals, and which uses proprietary compression algorithms to deliver video up to 1280 x 1024 at 75Hz. As you could probably guess, this technology isn't designed for gaming -- the company suggests using it to display "largely static images" -- although it's supposedly capable of HD playback, which is something we'd definitely like to see firsthand.

[Via Extreme Tech]
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