Enter the Grid With These 9 Tron Objects

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<em>Tron: Legacy</em>

Robot babes, lasers, ludicrously speedy motorcycles Tron: Legacy is the movie that sweaty nerds like us live for. It may even be the virtual reality we wish we lived in.

With the help of some pricey paraphernalia, we sort of can.

Zipping into theaters Friday, Disney’s Tron: Legacy was drummed up with one of the hugest gadget-driven marketing promotions ever. And fans have started creating their own unlicensed tributes, too, some of which are for sale. Here’s some Tron gear you can buy to hook into Disney’s cyberworld.

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Brian is a Wired.com technology reporter focusing on Apple and Microsoft. He’s also writing a book about the always-connected mobile future called Always On (publishing April 2011 by Da Capo).
Follow @bxchen and @gadgetlab on Twitter.

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Source:wired.com

Posted under Gadget Reviews

Droid Eris Phone is Reborn as a Disney Tour Guide

HTC’s Droid Eris phone is getting a second lease on life as a tour guide in a Disney amusement park. Disney has taken the smartphone, added a frame around it to turn it into a device running an app that shows wait times for rides, offers discounts and indicates show times at the park.

The repurposed Eris also gives out tips and tricks and coupons for use in the park.

HTC launched the Droid Eris in November as a $100 smartphone (with a two-year contract) on Verizon Wireless. The Droid Eris had a 3.2-inch display, a 5-megapixel camera, Wi-Fi and GPS capability. It also used HTCs Sense custom skin for Android. In June, Verizon said it has retired the Droid Eris.

Meanwhile, last year Disney also launched its Mobile Magic app for mostly feature phones and non-Android smartphones. The app gives users detailed information about the different Disney theme parks in the U.S. Now with the Android version of the app running on the Eris, Disney hopes to connect with those users who are already at the park.

Check out the video to see the Mobile Magic app on the Droid Eris

Ultimately, the Eris phone running the app may be offered as a free or “low cost add-on” for visitors on the trip, says the MickeyUpdates site.

Photo: Mickeyupdates.com

[via Engadget]

Source:wired.com

Posted under Gadget Reviews

Holographic Displays, Robot Eyes Hint at Your Interactive Future

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Animatronic_Eyes_Large1

The eyes may be the window to the soul. But what do you see when you look into robotic eyes so real that its almost impossible to tell they are just empty, mechanical vessels?

At Siggraph, the annual conference for graphics geeks that ended last week, Disney researchers created an animatronic eye that moves in a lifelike way, makes eye contact and tracks those who pass by.

We wanted two things from the eye, says Lanny Smoot, senior research scientist at Disney Research. It should be able to see or have vision, and it should move as smoothly and fluidly as the human eye.

The animatronic eye was one of the 23 exhibits in the emerging-tech section of the conference.

Each year theres always been some consistent themes, says Preston Smith, emerging-tech chair at Siggraph 2010. But this year there hasnt been one thing that has leapt out in front of others.

Instead a variety of technologies jostled for attention: new 3-D display technologies,augmented reality and robotics. Siggraph 2010 showed research not just from universities but also from corporate labs, including Disney’s and Sony’s.

Above:

A Seeing Eye

Disney Researchs animatronic eye is relatively simple in its design. The eye has a transparent-plastic inner sphere with a set of magnets around it, painted to look just like a human eye. It is suspended in fluid and has a transparent outer shell. Using electromagnets from the outside, the eye is moved sideways or up and down, giving it a smooth and easy motion.

It is as fast as the human eye and as good as the human eye, says Smoot.

The pupil and the back of the eye are clear. A camera placed at the rear of the eye helps the eye see. Smoot hopes the mechanism can be used to create prosthetic eyes.

The prosthetic eye based on this wont restore sight, but it can restore cosmetic appearance to those who have lost an eye, says Smoot. The animatronic eye won the best in show prize at Siggraph this year.

Photo: Daniel Reetz/Disney Research

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Source:wired.com

Posted under Gadget Reviews