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Posts Tagged ‘Phones’

Pay Phones to Free Wi-Fi Hubs: NYC to Replace Outdated Booths

16 Jan

[ By Steph in Gadgets & Geekery & Technology. ]

pay phones NYC

If you’re old enough to remember making quarter calls on pay phones, you might also be old enough to recall an edgier, grittier, graffiti-covered New York City, when the streets were lined with mom and pop shops and punk legends vomited on the sidewalk outside CBGB. Whether you mourn those days or celebrate the city’s evolution, slick corporate facades and general gentrification have swept most of that away, but somehow, the fossil-like remains of half-functional phone booths still stand on many corners. Soon, that will change, too.

link nyc 1

In an age in which just about everybody has a cell phone and people under 25 barely even know what a landline is, the need for these booths has vastly diminished, and they tend to just take up valuable sidewalk space. Soon, most of them will be replaced with something the city could actually use: a system of free, super-fast wi-fi hubs via a project called LinkNYC. These hubs transmit ‘gigabit wi-fi,’ which is up to 100 times faster than average public wi-fi and mobile LTE networks.

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In addition to offering wi-fi to anyone nearby equipped with their own device, the kiosks will feature built-in tablets that enable web browsing, maps, directions and access to city services like transit. Lest you worry that marginalized people who can’t afford gadgets won’t be able to make calls, the kiosks also offer free phone calls to anywhere in the U.S. using either the Vonage app on the tablet or the tactile keypad and microphone. You can plug in your own headphones for privacy, and there’s a dedicated red 911 button for emergencies. Oh, yeah: you can charge your gadgets here, too.

link nyc 3

The streamlined design of the hubs takes up less public space, and illuminated ads on the sides fund the whole shebang. The city is in the process of replacing over 7,500 pay phones across five boroughs with the kiosks. LinkNYC is currently in beta phase, with trial kiosks going up around the city and at least 500 more set to be installed by summer 2016.

top image via: runs with scissors/Flickr Creative Commons

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[ By Steph in Gadgets & Geekery & Technology. ]

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The Glif: A Stand and Tripod Mount For All Phones

21 Jan

Extra photos for bloggers: 1, 2, 3

We found it! The photo gizmo with the highest usefulness to square-inch ratio. The Glif is a tiny little thing, with a trillion useful uses.

It’s a pocketable phone stand and tripod mount that’ll prop up absolutely any phone, cased or uncased, at any angle.

Prop your phone vertically or horizontally or mount it to a tripod.

Record shake-free videos. Combine it with a self-timer app for flawless selfies and big group photos. Or, just keep your phone at the perfect angle to watch a movie.

This handy gadget adjusts to hold your iPhone in an Otterbox case, your friend’s phone nekked, your mom’s Android … Glif’s usefulness knows no bounds.

Learn More About the Glif
$ 30 at the Photojojo Shop


© laurel for Photojojo, 2014. |
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Snapzoom aims to bring camera phones closer to the action

26 Apr

connect.png

Snapzoom is the brainchild of Daniel Fujikake and Mac Nguyen, two surfers (and brothers-in-law) from Hawaii looking for a better way to capture and share video of their themselves riding the waves. They’ve created a universal adapter that attaches most smartphones to most binoculars, spotting scopes, telescopes and microscopes, bringing camera phones closer to the action without relying on the devices’ digital zoom. Learn more at connect.dpreview.com.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Get Glitchy with Your Phone’s Panorama Function

08 Apr

Glitching is the digital equivalent of throwing a roll of film into water and seeing what happens.

While you might not want to dip your phone in H2O, you can get experimental with your phone photos other ways.

And by other ways, we mean panorama glitching.

All you need is a sweep of the arm to get your panorama to stitch a scene in really strange and awesome ways.

(We used iOS 6′s built-in panorama, but you can try this with pretty much any auto-stitching pano app.)

1) Stitch totally different parts of a scene

  • Sweep your phone to capture one part
  • Stop, then quickly move your phone to another part of the scene
  • And sweep again

The result ends up looking like a diptic with sweet transitions that vary from wavy edges to smooth stitching or black edges.

2) Make a jagged composition of a single subject by jerking your hand as you shoot the pano. This makes for a choppy, mosaic-like image.

Try other experiments like twisting your phone as you shoot. More examples at the link below!

BONUS: Another trick to try is getting your model to show up multiple times.

Make Panorama Phoneography Experiments

p.s. Show us your panoramas! Post it to our Facebook wall, and tomorrow (4/9) we’ll pick 4 favorites to feature on our Facebook page.

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© lisbeth for Photojojo, 2013. |
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Interactive Urban Light Art Installation Operated by Smart Phones

06 Nov

[ By Steph in Art & Installation & Sound. ]

A five-story ‘veil’ of light situated along the river Main in Frankfurt, Germany billows and contracts according to users’ finger movements on their smart phones. ‘Photophore’ was installed at the Seven Swans restaurant, bar and hotel for the annual Luminale festival of light, inviting passersby to literally change the fabric of their urban environment.

A collaboration between Kollision, Martin Professional and light designers Katja Winklemann and Jochen Schröder, Photophore is an interactive media facade consisting of five illuminated panels mounted on the exterior of the building. It’s named for the light-emitting organ found within certain deep-water marine animals.

Onlookers scan a QR code on the side of the building, which accesses a website enabling them to control the installation. Swiping across the screen causes the ‘fabric’ to be pinched, pulled, pushed, poked and twisted.

See a video of Photophore in action at Vimeo.


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[ By Steph in Art & Installation & Sound. ]

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