Ceatec 2007
Meet Umihiko Namekawa, TechCrunch Translator
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by John Biggs on October 3, 2007

Had a great evening with Umihiko Namekawa (front and center), a translator who writes TechCrunch Japan and Serkan (sitting to my right), a grad student living in Japan who is working on a Web 2.0 project and reads and seems to enjoy CrunchGear and TC. We went to Jetee, a place in Tokyo’s former red light district. The place was about as big as a modern American bathroom but it’s definitely recommended for its odd amalgam of French music and weird decor. Good times. I’m still here in Tokyo until Saturday, so drop me a line at john@crunchgear.com if you want to rock and roll all night and party every day.

The Infobar 2: Like the Infobar 1, only infobarrier plus BONUS RANT!
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by John Biggs on October 3, 2007

I’m going to take this opportunity to say something that has been bothering me all week here at CEATEC: Japan is no longer the home of innovation. Sure, they kicked our asses for years in terms of wireless media, cellphone design, and PC/laptop manufacturing but at this late date I think the iPhone can kick any DoCoMo clamshell and I haven’t seen a single thing here — NOTHING, mind you — that I haven’t seen or heard of in the U.S. already and that would even mildly twiddle my neophilia sensors.
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Hands on with Horizon fuel cells
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by John Biggs on October 3, 2007


Ready to power your iPod with clean, delicious hydrogen? I got a chance to see Horizon fuel cell technologies up close yesterday and I’m pleased to report that soon we all will be using our pent up atoms to power iPods, toy cars, and unmanned assault vehicles. Most of the cells are fairly bulky but they showed a small cell using a hydrogen canister the size of a AA battery that they designed for cellphones as well as a powerful 40W cell that can power an emergency light. They talked about a few potential products coming out down the road — nothing concrete — but they did mention emergency gear and construction tools that used fuel cells. They’re starting slow — no fuel cell cars, just yet — but they’re slowly ramping up and getting ready for some serious applications.
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Hands on with Fujitsu’s vein-scanning mouse
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by John Biggs on October 3, 2007

This is totally gross. I was walking by the Fujitsu booth when I saw the vein-scanning PalmSecure mouse that uses the veins in your hand to log you into a PC. I figured it wouldn’t look that bad — like a fingerprint at worst — so I asked the guy to run the demo for me. He placed his hand over the mouse for a few seconds and then his vein scan popped up…

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MuRata Boy!
by John Biggs on October 3, 2007

Sorry this video is a little long, but you get the drift. This little bastard can ride a rail all by himself and is designed to avoid cars and eventually marry your sister. Don’t ask me why, where, or how this came about, but it’s apparently a showcase for components maker MuRata.

CEATEC Booth Babe Bonanzarama
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by John Biggs on October 3, 2007


A strange amalgam of Uhuru and Sulu

Ever since the U.S. basically outlawed Booth Babes, I think our trade shows have become more serious, intelligent, and valuable. In unenlightened regions like Europa and Japanasia, however, their very presence is an insult to the strides women have made in the realms of commerce, education, medicine, and science and paint this proud people with the brush of misogyny and benighted attitudes about representations of women or, dare I say it, womyn. That said, here are some of the hot and bodacious booth babes of CEATEC 2007 showing their gams to a bunch of gimlet-eyed sararimen who wouldn’t know women’s suffrage if it bit them on the keister.
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Fujitsu MediaTop: The cube’s the thing
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by John Biggs on October 2, 2007

Fujitsu’s MediaTop is kind of like Microsoft Surface but with blocks. You use a Bluetooth-enabled cube that lets you control on-screen action in three dimensions. When you place the cube near the screen you can turn it to control the UI or use it like a 3D mouse. They even have a plan to give kids huge blocks so they can use them to interact with on-screen characters.

The Daily WTF
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by John Biggs on October 2, 2007

Can you guys see this? I ate four pieces of potentially bad sushi last night and now this thing has been following me around all morning asking for quarters.

Sony’s OLED TV: Awful small
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by John Biggs on October 2, 2007

Sony’s XEL-1 is pretty impressive. It’s only 27 inches wide and costs $1,500, so it’s not that impressive but if you want to be an early adopter and feel like your TV can get blown off the table with a strong gust of wind, this is your device.

OLEDs use less power and are more eco-friendly than plasma or LCD screens. Does this mean you’ll have an OLED in your home next year? Probably not. While it’s an amazing technology, they’ve been harping on this stuff for almost a decade and I can’t see them pumping these out any time soon. It’s nice to see Sony is experimenting and leading the OLED charge, but let’s not hold our collective breath.

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The Robots of Chiba
by John Biggs on October 2, 2007

One thing CEATEC has a surfeit of is robots. They come in all sizes, from a twee bike-riding robot whose visage I cannot now find in my photo library to a set of guard robots that won’t do much guarding when you kick them over before they can alert the authorities. Then there was yesterday’s Sony Rolly, an embarrassment for all involved.

I grabbed photos of all the robots I could find and even interacted with a tentative little guide robot that eventually came back to my room with me and showed me the true meaning of “retractable claw.” It will be a summer wedding. My family will be there and Guardrobo will wear white, although I do believe I installed a third party app into her last night, if you get my drift.
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Sharp cavalcade of LCDs
by John Biggs on October 2, 2007

Here’s a quick look at some of the huge Sharp screens. There was a really nice 102-inch model — you know, for oligarchs — the super-thin models, and some weird model that rises out like the Great Pumpkin. Not exciting, but cool enough. Check out the “52-inch” screen inside the 102-inch model.

You know you’re jet-lagged when…
by John Biggs on October 2, 2007

Check out Darth’s Platform Sith Boots

…you start seeing Sith Lords and their entourage wandering the halls of a Japanese tech trade conference. BONUS – Click through to see me in 3D glasses praying for death.

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Hitachi Rollerball Interface Concept
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by John Biggs on October 2, 2007

Another concept device using a very cool system of see-through rollerballs and a back button to do just about anything. They had a few mock-ups and it really makes sense once you see how smoothly everything works with just a ball. Maybe the next iPod can get a scroll-ball?

Sony Rolly: MP3-playing robot or glistening, ambulatory Aibo turd?
by John Biggs on October 2, 2007

This video of the Sony Rolly MP3 player sums up everything that is wrong with the former electronics giant — a lack of vision, the inability to produce products people want, and ham-handed attempts at fun that are quickly quashed by higher ups.

Thats, said, just look at that little bastard roll!

Amazing 3D gesture-based Pioneer GPS system
by John Biggs on October 2, 2007

I was wandering around the show floor when I came upon this little gem. It’s a gesture-based 3D system that lets you control your dashboard GPS/radio with a wave of your finger. It’s over at the Carrozzeria booth, which is an offshoot of Pioneer. The icons that pop up float in 3D and you wave and bat at them like someone with delirium tremens to move them out of the way. It can’t be very safe for drivers.

Crazy, uber-skinny Sharp HDTVs
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by John Biggs on October 2, 2007

I got a chance to circle the new ultra-slim sharp LCDs. They look amazing and they’re so damn thin it’s incredible. There’s one shot in there of an LCD sliding up out of some cabinet and it looks like a piece of paper popping up. These are truly flat screens.

Toshiba Booth Tour
by John Biggs on October 2, 2007

I love the Qosmio line of Toshiba laptops and this collection of Gigabeats, phones, and cameras made me pee a little. Essentially the entire laptop line is very slick with unique touches like HDDVD playback and odd applications for music and photo viewing.
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Panasonic’s DIGA Blu-Ray/DVD Recorders: 18 hours on one BR disk
by John Biggs on October 1, 2007

Our first stop was a huge announcement by Panasonic about their line of DIGA Blu-Ray/DVD recorders. The recorders — BW700/800/900 on the Blu-Ray side and XW200V/100/300 on the DVD side — include monstrous hard drives and we’ll probably never see them over here.

The Blu-Ray series starts at 250GB and tops out at 1TB of internal storage. It records to DVD and Blu-Ray and includes i.Link/Firewire for attaching cameras and other devices. It supports full HDMI out at 1080p.
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CEATEC 2007: The sky over the Chiba Bridge was the color of a TV set tuned to no channel
by John Biggs on October 1, 2007


Hello, true-believers. I just landed in Narita last night and I’m getting ready to wander the halls at CEATEC, one of the biggest CE and component shows in Asia. Not sure what I’ll see here but I’m sure it will be fabulous. Stay tuned and follow my travels here. If you emailed me about meeting up, I’ll get back to you this afternoon. If you’re in Japan and want to kidnap the Shogun’s daughter, drop me a line a john at crunchgear.com.

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