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Showing posts with label tech. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tech. Show all posts
Monday, September 19, 2016
Thursday, August 11, 2016
The New Samsung Galaxy Note 7 takes giant-screen Android phones to the next level.
The New Samsung Galaxy Note 7 takes giant-screen Android phones to the next level. Curved screen, 12-megapixel camera, expandable storage, water-resistant coating, Gorilla Glass 5 screen, more accurate S Pen stylus, larger battery and the new Coral Blue color is just great.
Coming soon. Exp release September 2,
Monday, July 18, 2016
Sony Xperia X Performance Unlocked is finally here.
Sony Xperia X Performance Unlocked is finally here. Order yours now at www.reaganwireless.com/sony/shop/ and Save up to $50 - no sales tax if shipped outside the state of Florida. Get free 2 day shipping, free 128GB sandisk ultra plus memory card, premium leather pouch and sol republic relays headset for every consumer order.
Available in Graphite Black, White, Lime Gold, and Rose Gold.
Tuesday, June 7, 2016
Parrot AR Drone quadricopter 2.0 elite edition
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On Sale Parrot AR Drone quadricopter 2.0 elite edition 720p High Definition Camera. It's easily controlled by Wi-Fi using a smartphone or tablet. It features a camouflage housing can be for indoor and outdoor, plus a pair of black propellers and another pair of custom propellers. Call us for more info!! 😁
Tuesday, October 27, 2015
Droid Turbo 2 announced with shatterproof display, 48-hour battery
The Droid Turbo 2 is here, and by far the most impressive thing about it is the phone's "shatterproof" display. We've dropped it plenty of times, and the Turbo 2 has come out unscathed every time. So it seems Motorola's ShatterShield is tougher than your average flagship.
From a design standpoint this is one of the better-looking Droids we've seen yet and remains super comfortable to hold. Droid emblem aside, it looks like a Moto X from every angle, but a more powerful one. The Droid Turbo 2 has a Snapdragon 810 processor (versus the Moto X Pure Edition's Snapdragon 808 chipset) and a far larger battery that Motorola claims will last 48 hours We've heard that number before only to be let down, so we're not ready to crown the Turbo 2 as any kind of battery champion just yet.
Software support is also a big unknown. Verizon took a long time to get Lollipop on the first Droid Turbo, so there's no telling when the Turbo 2 will receive Android 6.0 Marshmallow. But if durability, longevity, and deep customization options are what you're after — and you're a Verizon customer — the Droid Turbo 2's looking pretty good in that regard. It's launching just two days from now on October 29th for $26 per month (32GB) or $30 per month (64GB) on 24-month installment plans.
Daniel Kaufman, Pres. & CEO, Reagan Wireless Corp.
Friday, October 2, 2015
Google Patents Holograms For Glass, Which Could Involve Magic Leap.
Today Google published a patent application for using holograms in a head mounted display like Google Glass. It would effectively let Google create augmented reality experiences that superimpose computer-generated imagery (CGI) atop the real world. Filed in March 2014, the patent shows Google’s research into how it could merge its head mounted display technology with AR.
But what’s perhaps more fascinating is how the patent contextualizes Google Inc leading the $542 million funding round for augmented reality startup Magic Leap. One possibility is that Google’s smart eyewear could be the hardware platform for Magic Leap‘s AR content.
When asked about the patent and its significance, I got this boilerplate no-comment response from Google: “We hold patents on a variety of ideas – some of those ideas later mature into real products or services, some don’t. Prospective product announcements should not necessarily be inferred from our patents.” But let’s dive a little deeper, though the patent might never be exercised and there’s no official word on how it could relate to Magic Leap.
While Google’s original Glass initiative faltered due to the hardware’s clunkiness and lack of real-world utility, it’s still in the smart eyewear game. It’s selling versions of Glass for enterprise, according to 9To5Google’s Stephen hall. Meanwhile, Business Insider’s Jillian D’Onfro recently reported that Google is trying to revive the Glass initiative through what it’s calling Project Aura.
One way to make smart eyewear more useful would be to allow projected content to interact and react to the real-world behind it, rather than just being pasted on top. The new patent “Lightguide With Multiple In-Coupling Holograms For Head Wearable Display” details how Google could potentially do this with augmented reality via holograms. It describes how “with augmented reality the viewer’s image of the world is augmented with an overlaying CGI, also referred to as a heads-up display”.
But who would make the holograms projected in Google’s smart eyewear? Magic Leap is one possibility.
Over the past few years, Magic Leap has filed a bunch of trademarks for forthcoming augmented reality content. These include characters, titles, and games like Super Bionic Bitforce, Roadkill Warriors, Monsta Battle, Moonstone Monsters, Moonsters, and my personal favorite, Flutterboard, which refers to “flying sentient skateboards”.
This patent and trademark research came from legal technology firm SmartUp Legal. The company’s founder Mikhail Avady tells me “I believe Google wants Magic Leap to be the content provider for Google Glass. If we look at their trademark applications, it shows very story and content based trademarks. Magic Leap wants to turn the world into a movie theater and Google wants it to be through Glass.”
That could be a logical factor in why Google Inc, not Google Capital or Google Ventures, but the core technology company itself, led the half-billion dollar round in Magic Leap. For Glass to become a popular augmented reality platform, it will need great content — something Google’s never been great at it. But with tons of gaming talent, Magic Leap could perhaps one day make must-see AR experiences that run on Google’s hardware.
Daniel Kaufman, Pres. & CEO, Reagan Wireless Corp.
www.reaganwireless.com
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