Posts Tagged ‘digital’

Wirelless Spy Camera Kit

Monday, April 28th, 2008


This clever set comprises a wireless spy camera AND a excellent 2.4GHz handheld receiver with built in 2.5″ LCD screen WITH digital recording facilty, it means you can spy, watch and record easily and simply!

With 4 channels receiver, you can control up to FOUR 2.4GHz wireless spy cameras - both video and audio. The monitor has a built-in rechargeable Li-battery for completely wireless functionality, however you can run the receiver/monitor directly from the 5V mains power adaptor supplied.

The recorder has a built in 64MB internal recording space to capture your wireless camera images. The unit is fitted with an SD memory card slot so the memory can be increased to over 2GB allowing for the capture of up to 12 hours of video footage (additional SD card not included).

The unit has a built in speaker for audio monitoring and a “Video OUT” port so that footage can also be recorded using a standard VCR, DVR, camcorder (camcorder must have phono video input) if required.

Smallest Camcoder by Sony

Thursday, April 3rd, 2008


Today electronic producer Sony corp. announced what it claims to be the smallest high-definition camcorder, the 10-ounce HDR-TG1 Handycam. Into this small package (1.3×4.8×2.5 inches), Sony sueezes most of the features that go into bigger models: including 1920×1080i resolution, a 10X optical zoom lens and face-recognition. It’s packed in a titanium shell with a scratch resistant coating that Sony calls “quite fashionable.”

What did Sony toss out to make it so nice? Not much. It doesn’t have optical image stabilization like some camcorders from Panasonic and Canon, and it doesn’t have a jack for an external microphone—but few cameras do have these features. But it has features that really do matter, like a largish (2.7-inch) LCD screen, and an HDMI port for plugging right into a high-def television. And the battery, which can’t be huge, still powers the camera for up to an hour and 35 minutes.

So can such a small camera take good video? Sony starts selling them in May, bundled with a four-gigabyte memory card for “about $900.”

Olympus E-3 Digital Camera

Saturday, March 29th, 2008


The E-3’s photos look great. Especially, the colors are gorgeous: saturated, yet some of the most precise we’ve tested in this class (at low ISO sensitivities, at least), with impressive automatic white balance. The camera has a slight tendency to underexpose, but you can easily compensate for that.

The camera disappointingly maxes out at ISO 3,200, but its noise profile looks pretty good; I printed some 11×15 shots taken at ISO 2,000 inside Grand Central Station and found the noise pretty subtle. Nor do Olympus’ noise suppression algorithms overblur.

With the exception of its somewhat awkward design and interface, the Olympus E-3 stands up quite well to competitors such as the Sony Alpha DSLR-A700 and Nikon D300. But if you’re buying into a system, think carefully: Olympus currently offers only 13 pro-quality lenses, and the gap since the last pro dSLR release was about four years. Will that translate into problems for you down the road? Consider it before committing.

Make Phone With M600i GSM Watch

Monday, March 24th, 2008


This gadged GSM Watch Phone M600i, works like a normal watch and a normal phone both at the same time, blue tooth + MP3/MP4 full screen play, forward and pause, internal 60MB memory, SMS group sending, Voice recorder, WAP, Handwritten input, Bluetooth, GPRS download, MMS, E-book, IP dialing, calendar, health manager, caculator, unit converter, rate exchange, memo, world clock, note.

This DigitalRiseTM M600i Mobile phone watch brings a shock to us with its cool appearance, smooth handwritten messaging, touchscreen dialing, and stereo Bluetooth music! This M600imobile watch overcomes many shortcoming of previous models such as its support for TF card up to 2GB memory, its camera and video recording, and WAP internet access! All these amazing functions are integrated into the smallest mobile phone watch!

DigitalRise M600i designers are most considerate for customers’ concerns. It also comes with much demanded features such as calls vibration, voice recognition for (voice control, such as dial, music playing)! The flaws of previous mobile phone watches have become bright spots.

Simply TIX Led Clock

Saturday, March 22nd, 2008


Patterns can be found everywhere in life. In our DNA, in cloud formations, during a chess game, in your code, in your deviant behaviors, and even in your bottle of Bawls. Patterns give us clues. Clues give us information. Information makes the world a happier place (not necessarily a safer happier place though). In the case of the Tix clock, the patterns can give you the time.

Millions of patterns are possible with the futuristic-looking Tix clock, yet the clock is extremely simple to read once you grasp the basic concept. The four seperate fields act like the four digits of a digital clock. The value of each digit is simply the number of illuminated squares in each field. So any given time of the day may have thousands of different ways of displaying the time. The clocks in the image are displaying the time 12:34. It’s that easy! Of course your friends are just going to take a look at your Tix clock and think it’s just modern LED art. Dullards.