Helo TC Helicopter

App-driven toy helicopter puts flying at your fingertips
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The latest in iPhone- and iPad-specific gadgets, Griffin Techonology’s Helo TC Touch RC Helicopter recently launched to the cheers of tech-savy kids “ages 14 and up” around the world. As a leap forward in app-powered innovations, the “Flight Deck” module attaches to your iOS device and works in conjunction with the Helo TC app to control and direct the helicopter in flight.

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Although the agile little vehicle is impressive enough, the software is the real winner of the bunch. The iOS-specific controller works with multiple generations of iPhone, iPad and iPod touch. For a familiar remote-control feeling use the joystick controls on your iOS device or switch controls and tilt your device to fly the mini-chopper. When you’ve found a path you like to fly over and over, use the app’s Flight Plan to record up to three routes to fly on demand anytime.

Keeping the twin-rotored helicopter flying high, the craft is constructed of a lightweight metal frame encased in a polycarbonate body; it charges (and recharges) by any USB power source. At just $50, the Helo TC has been in and out of stock since its release, so keep an eye on Griffin Technology online to claim one for yourself, then head to iTunes for the free app download.


Dominus Plus iPhone Clock

Dominus Plus è una Sci-fi Clock per il vostro iPhone/iPad. Disegnata da Albert Salamon, si scarica dall’ App store.

Dominus Plus iPhone Clock

Dominus Plus iPhone Clock

BookBook for iPhone

Custodia camuffata da vecchio libro per contenere iPhone, carte di credito e qualche soldo in carta. In vendita da twelve south.

Jawbone UP

Yves Behar on the stylishly subtle accessory that just might add a few years to your life
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Today at TED Global 2011 Jawbone introduced the UP, an electronic bracelet clearly born of the company’s design DNA. About the size of a Livestrong band, the UP serves users 24/7, using sophisticated sensors to track movement and sleeping patterns. This data will then be relayed to an app, accessible on phones, tablets and computers, in which users can type in the nutritional data of their diet. Serving as a diary of your daily activity, the app becomes a life coach of sorts, providing helpful suggestions tailored to your diet, exercise and sleeping patterns.

Labeled as functional jewelry, the UP’s pioneering achievement is its subtlety. Jawbone’s VP of Product Management, Travis Bogard tells CH, “There are other devices but they are bulky and unattractive and people aren’t comfortable wearing them. So we made one that you don’t really notice. We’ve gotten used to people wearing things that blend in. It’s one of the biggest breakthroughs. It’s much smaller than most of the existing devices and truly the intersection between wearability and design and solves a technical problem.”

As a company, Jawbone first tackled the wireless audio market with a unique design philosophy: how to best reach people on multiple levels with their products. They revolutionized the bluetooth headset market with the original Jawbone product, first using style, simplicity, and comfort to establish the standard of excellence and incorporating innovative features like environmental noise cancellation. The strength of their super successful Jambox portable speaker hinged not only on its ease-of-use and sleek design but on its powerful bass and the charming voice used when setting it. They also made it very easy to change and update those voices whenever the mood hits.

With 68% of Americans either overweight or obese, and the growing rate of lifestyle disease surpassing that of communicable disease, tracking one’s health has become more important than ever. While devices like the Fitbit seek to address this issue, the UP is the first to combine practicality with style. It is this understanding of how best to connect these devices to people that has propelled Jawbone’s success.”It’s about the next frontier of computing, about wearable products and we’re one of the few companies geared up to do that,” Bogard says.

We asked Jawbone’s designer Yves Behar about the role of design at the company.

How does UP fit into Jawbone’s design vocabulary?

“My role for the last few years now has been to envision unique and authentic creative that spans a product, it’s packaging, it’s UI and UX, it’s communication and much more.  I call it “inescapable engagement”, every part of the encounter between a person and the Jawbone brand/product follows a story that fulfils un-met desires: simplicity of form, tactile delight in materials and textures, expressive differentiation.

 

Solving the macro and the micro, removing the friction that technology often adds to human experiences, communicating genuinely, surprising at every step…all are part of the challenges we tackle at the design level, but also at the management level with the CEO Hosain Rahman.”

What was the a-ha moment when you knew you had the design nailed?

“I am never quite sure we have nailed it! So, we keep working at it, trying more detail variations, playing with 0.1mm subtleties on the design till we are right, and till we are wrong.  It’s only then that we “know” for sure.

When prototypes arrive in the studio, and that’s often a daily occurrence, we can start wearing the products, feeling the subtle tactile changes…and so, when I saw the wave texture reflecting the light just right, and the bracelet felt at home on my wrist, and the metal detail was brushed right, and one of the designers said “when can I get one of those to wear? It’s ok if the battery is not charged I just want to wear it”, then the a-ha moment came!”

The Jawbone UP is due to be released later this year.


iPhone SLR Mount

Photojojo’s SLR Lens Adapter turns your iPhone 4 into the ultimate mobile photo machine
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It’s always intriguing to see what camera enhancing products the creative minds at Photojojo will come up with. Their latest, the iPhone SLR Mount, might seem a bit over the top but it strikes a cord with the camera geek inside. The adapter, which encompasses a case, extension tubes and some custom machined parts to link it all together, lets you attach any Nikon or Canon EOS lenses to the back of your iPhone 4 — giving the 5 megapixel sensor a whole new world of prime glass to interpret.

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This accessory is designed for those who have pined to dominate mobile phone photography with glowing bokeh and the super soft backgrounds. Granted throwing a 300mm lens onto the back of an iPhone probably looks absurd enough to have people snapping shots of you, but it’s definitely a fun way to expand your mobile’s photography capabilities. Grab it from the Photojojo store for $190 and start bragging about your app free iPhone photo skills.


Zombie Snow White Macbook Decal

The quintessential Disney princess gets a morbid makeover

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While looking for a way to jazz up my plain white Macbook, I came across this zombified Snow White sticker. And what is she holding? The infamous Apple logo, of course! Being an undead enthusiast, I ordered on on the spot.

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The sticker is made of die-cut pressure-sensitive adhesive vinyl and eco-solvent inks. It is easily applied and removed and can be ordered in any size to fit your laptop, iPad, iPod or iPhone perfectly. For those who don’t like their Disney princesses undead, but still want a twist on the original, Snow White is available in “goth” guise as well. The decals are priced from $7-$20 depending on the device, and can be purchased on Etsy.


Shift digits calculator for iPad + iPhone

Solo per un periodo limitato, approfittate per scaricarvi una delle calcolatrici + comode per iPad/iPhone. Programmata da Shift, la trovate sull’app store.

Shift digits calculator for iPad + iPhone

Mike Matas

How one software maverick is pioneering the future of digital publishing

by Meghan Killeen

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Digital design prodigy Mike Matas combines the ease of navigating the physical world to create lifelike interfaces that feel so unobtrusive you hardly notice you’re using complex technology. Motivated by the desire to do things on a computer more like in reality, Matas set out to create virtual interfaces driven by touch. “If you want to do something [on a computer] you should just be able to reach out your hand and do it, no buttons, and no user interface required,” concludes Matas.

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Near the end of high school, Matas along with genius coder Wil Shipley founded the proprietary software company Delicious Monster, creators of Delicious Library, a media cataloging application for Mac OS X. The system enables users to visually categorize their multimedia library by placing photo-realistic icons of the products on a simulated bookshelf. Extending the library theme, Delicious Library also offers barcode scanning capabilities via the Mac webcam software, iSight, and allows interloan connections with friends.

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The ingenuity and authenticity of Delicious Library earned it the coveted Apple Design Awards “Best Mac OS X User Experience” (2005) and “Best OS X Leopard Application” (2007), catapulting Matas’ design talents into the spotlight. He reflects, “It was a pretty radical departure from what most software looked like at that time and people reacted very positively to it.”

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At the mere age of 19, Matas captured the attention of Apple and was invited to join the company’s Human Interface team. Anticipating the design of Apple’s desktop computer operating system, Matas quickly discovered that he would instead be working on an innovative, covert project—the iPhone. “Working on the original iPhone was a lot of fun because it was a completely new product where nothing was off limits,” states Matas. Capitalizing on its multi-touch conventions, Matas went on to design interfaces for the iPhone’s interactive maps and camera applications, including the iPhone’s phosphorescent green battery screen.

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After just four years with Apple, Matas left in 2009 to partner with friend and fellow Apple alum, Kimon Tsinteris. They launched Push Pop Press, a publishing company offering dynamic digital solutions without the fuss of labor intensive and pricey programming. Approached by publishing firm Melcher Media, Matas began to develop the first full-length interactive book for iPad, “Our Choice,” the sequel to Al Gore’s cautionary environmental tale “An Inconvenient Truth.”

Matas demoed the digitized book at the recent TED conference, highlighting its specialized pinch-and-place navigation, culminating in a mind-blowing demonstration of Matas powering an animated windmill on the screen with his breath. “You can navigate the entire book this way, without any extra computer interface to stumble over and distraction from the content. The technology disappears and you can get lost in the content,” explains Matas.

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Push Pop’s watershed title release is as revolutionary as it is rudimentary, bringing a human touch to touch-screen technology. Matas’ eye for design and interaction is also revealed through his stunning photography. Armed with a backpack full of lenses, Matas captures lush images of nature and documents his globetrotting travels through beautifully rendered time-lapse videos. His photo talent also graces the food blog he runs with his girlfriend, called My Cooking Diary.

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Balancing functionality and emotion are key elements for pioneering the future of digital publishing, however, Matas also predicts its potential. “I think digital publishing is going to look less and less like a scanned printed book under glass and more like its own thing that was born to be digital.”

The Audi Icons series, inspired by the all-new Audi A7, showcases 16 leading figures united by their dedication to innovation and design.


Red Pop

Take better iPhone snaps with a handy button add-on
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Instagram addicts will love what the innovators at U.K. startup Beep Industries recently came up with to follow their clever MoviePeg stand. Their new product Red Pop, another iPhone add-on, eliminates awkward poking at the touchscreen button by replacing it with an actual big red button. Simply attach the accessory to the bottom of your phone and presto—it transforms into a camera!

Not only is the device extremely convenient to use, it has the familiarity of classic cameras and adds a modern twist. The free downloadable app allows for rapid-fire photography, ensuring that you never miss that perfect moment. Once you have the shot, the app also allows you to easily share the image via Twitter, Facebook and other social media platforms. Beep Industries also hopes to integrate their Red Pop app with other popular camera apps.

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Red Pop comes with a wrist strap and protective pouch for easy transport, and designs for other accessories (such as cases and tripod stands) are in the works. Look for this handy product online in early September.


TypeClock

App per typography lover. La trovate qui.
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