Holawin Smart Watch MT6577 $210 (sample price)

Posted by – October 14, 2013

MediaTek MT6577 Powered Android Smartwatch with a 500mAh battery, 1.54″ 240×240 LCD screen, 512MB RAM, 4GB Flash, built-in camera, WiFi, Bluetooth, MicroSD card slot, full sized SIM card slot, etc.

Holawin Smartwatch Holawin SmartwatchHolawin Smartwatch Holawin Smartwatch Holawin Smartwatch specs

Contact Holawin (please only for serious buyers/distributors):
Nina Chen, Sales manager
Tel: +86 755 23948062
Mobile: +86 15814725816
sales2@holawin.com
Skype: sales05.holawin
QQ: 2269755795

Filmed at Filmed at the HKTDC Hong Kong Electronics Fair (Autumn Edition) 2013

Lucky WiFi Fish Finder for Android and iPhone/iPad

Posted by – October 14, 2013

Throw the WiFi fish finder in the water, it looks for fish and tells your smartphone or tablet app over Wi-Fi where the fish are in the water, how big the fish are, then you can just fish them out. Yea.

Contact Wendy of Zhejang Lucky Manufacturer:
Wendy Zhang
General Manager
Mobile: +86 13758980916
Skype: luckywendy916
sales@goodluckycn.com
Tel: +86 82081596

Filmed at Filmed at the HKTDC Hong Kong Electronics Fair (Autumn Edition) 2013

Allwinner A80 Octa ARM Cortex-A15/A7 big.LITTLE, A70 quad A15/A7, A90 ARMv8 64bit, A23 Dual A7


Allwinner announced their upcoming Allwinner A80 Octa-core with four ARM Cortex-A15 cores and four ARM Cortex-A7 cores configured in a big.LITTLE configuration, the release to happen around Q1 2014. As well as the Allwinner A70 Quad-core (2x Cortex-A15 and 2x Cortex-A7), and for later, Allwinner already announces that they will release a 64bit ARMv8 ARM Cortex-A57 and ARM Cortex-A53 big.LITTLE processor, perhaps for later in 2014 or for early 2015. For the first time, Allwinner shows the Chrome logo, Windows 8 (probably meaning Windows RT), this means the Allwinner A80 may be good to use in mass market affordable Chromebooks, cheap Windows RT laptops and desktops and more. This video also features the Allwinner A23 PCB, implemented in affordable 7.85″ tablets and more, manufactured now by Pegatron and Foxconn, Ramos, Onda, Winn and many more. Allwinner is the leading Quad-core and Single-core chip provider for tablets worldwide.

ZGPAX Smart Watch MT6577

Posted by – October 14, 2013

ZGPAX shows Smart Watch using MediaTek MT6577 dual-core 1Ghz ARM Cortex-A9, 512MB RAM, 4GB ROM, 6hr talk time, Bluetooth support, 1 and a half day battery life in normal use, 1.54″ 240×240 LCD screen, features built-in front-facing camera to do video-chats when you look at your wrist watch. Boot time is pretty fast (just a few seconds), supports Android 4.04, Google Play Store (probably a bunch of Smart Watch optimized apps are going to be added to Play Store soon), this is the first time they show this smart watch. ZGPAX also shows a GPS watch that could maybe have saved my father’s life, he died 5 months ago alone in his house, maybe of a heart pain. Please industry, build smart watches to monitor heart beat, make system to alert neighbors and ambulance in case of reliably detected heart attack.

Contact Andy of ZGPAX (please only for serious buyers/distributors):
Shenzhen PGD Digital Technology Co Ltd
Anlong International Group (HK) Co Ltd
Andy Loi, Sales Director
Mobile: +86 15013588272
Tel: +86 755 33126046
http://andalong.com
http://zgpax.com
http://china-msd.com
sales@andalong.com
root@andalong.com
Skype: pgd818

Archos Gamepad 2

Posted by – October 13, 2013

Archos releases the Archos Gamepad 2 ($199/179€ MSRP) on Rockchip RK3188 Quad-core ARM Cortex-A9 28nm HKMG 1.6Ghz, with 2GB RAM, 8GB or 16GB Flash storage (perhaps more storage options to be available for people who want to store many Android games on built-in Flash storage and not on MicroSD?), 1280×800 super high quality IPS display, new improved Gamepad buttons, new improved design compared to Archos Gamepad from last year (2, 3, 4), 5000mAh battery for long enough battery life, Mini-HDMI output, USB host/slave, Bluetooth (nice for controllers too when connected to HDTV). Basically this is better than a portable open Ouya. The future of Android gaming is nice. If I do get the chance to test the device for a bit, let me know what I should test on it. Should I test certain emulator performance such as N64? Dreamcast? Which games?

Read more: http://www.archos.com/products/themed/gamepad2/index.html?country=gb&lang=en&p=2

Filmed at Filmed at the HKTDC Hong Kong Electronics Fair (Autumn Edition) 2013

Roppongi Hills Mori Tower in Tokyo

Posted by – October 13, 2013

Walking down the Roppongi street towards the Roppongi Tower.

Planned Obsolescence and IEEE’s new P1874 standard presented by William Lumpkins of IEEE

Posted by – October 13, 2013

IEEE launches the P1784 Standard for Documentation Schema for Repair and Assembly of Electronic Devices for users and the industry working together to make all devices easily repairable by people themselves by just looking up how to fix everything online. Standard for documentation for showing how to take devices apart and fix it one self, without needing to send devices back for repair, but also enabling more repair centers to be opened up everywhere.

End of CEATEC 2013 Tokyo Japan, people exit the exhibition center

Posted by – October 13, 2013

Slow walking out of the CEATEC Japan consumer electronics conference, filming the thousands of people walking out of the fair ground. Next stop, Hong Kong Fair (check back for Hong Kong fair videos to be posted starting on October 13th at http://ARMdevices.net)

Fujitsu Lettuce produced in semiconductor factory clean-room

Posted by – October 12, 2013

Fujitsu shows their smart city concept Akisai, mass producing vegetables in factories, producing Lettuce with a very low level of potassium, bringing salad to people with Hyperkalemia which is a kidney disease.

Toyota Ha:mo electric vehicle prototype presentation (dubbed in English)

Posted by – October 12, 2013

Toyota shows their latest compact electric car, and smart home appliances at CEATEC 2013 in Tokyo.

Takeshita Dori street in Tokyo Japan, Part 2

Posted by – October 12, 2013

Here’s my second video walking down the Takeshita Dori market street in Tokyo interrupted by some pancake that I had to buy.

Asakusa Sensō-ji Buddhist temple with markets in Tokyo

Posted by – October 12, 2013

Walking down to the Asakusa Senso-ji Buddhist Temple in Tokyo.

Mac/Windows on 32″ 4K IGZO with touchscreen

Posted by – October 12, 2013

Sharp presents their 32″ 4K IGZO touchscreen running both Windows and Mac. The screen could be used for photography, displaying text, or point of sale. An Xbox One game is also shown running on a 32″ 4K IGZO display.

Sony HMZ-T3W Personal 3D Viewer, out of focus head-mounted display

Posted by – October 12, 2013

Anyone want to use one of these for more than 3 minutes? I’m not impressed with the experience. Sorry.

Fujitsu Wadant Dog Health Management System

Posted by – October 11, 2013

Here’s a Dog Pedometer, also senses if your dog is shaking. It puts the data on the computer, let’s you see online if your dog is doing enough exercise and if your dog is scared.

eJigen Virtual Humanoid

Posted by – October 11, 2013

The virtual humanoid works through using a pare of glasses and imitates a human being. No date was specified for release other than as soon as possible. The system requires a Windows based computer.

Kiddy Land Tour, Toy Store, Omotesando Tokyo

Posted by – October 11, 2013

Filmed at the huge Kiddy Land toy store in Tokyo on the Omotesando street.

Rohm Booth Tour at CEATEC 2013

Posted by – October 11, 2013

Here’s a tour of the Rohm booth at CEATEC 2013.

William Lumpkins, IEEE Senior Member, talks about Artificial Intelligence in the Home

Posted by – October 10, 2013

William Lumpkins is an IEEE Senior Member, IEEE 1874 Working Group Chair, IEEE Consumer Electronics Society Standards Chair, IEEE Consumer Electronics Society Magazine Associate Editor, here he talks about Artificial Intelligence in the home, Japanese Tech culture/marketing, Tech politics and more.

Fujitsu Exascale Super Computer

Posted by – October 10, 2013

Fujitsu is the number four maker of super computers and formerly number one. Fujitsu’s new Exascale super computer uses a Spark architecture processor and a total of 88,000 CPUS. The Exascale super computer will be built for government use rather than commercial. Supercomputers are used for applications that require large amounts of computing power like predicting disasters.