[gps-talkusers] Re: could our gadgetry get designed to charge by this new device

  • From: "Flor Lynch" <florlync@xxxxxx>
  • To: <gps-talkusers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Thu, 16 Oct 2008 14:00:49 +0100

I Think the braillenote's voltage and power requirements are proprietary 
enough.  not any fitting battery-charger will do there, as we  are reminded 
(now and then).  .

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Dogsc4me" <cheree@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <gps-talkusers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Thursday, October 16, 2008 12:56 AM
Subject: [gps-talkusers] Re: could our gadgetry get designed to charge by 
this new device


Cheree Heppe here:

In the interest of transitioning from theory to practice, why not write this 
company to see if they would dialogue with such specialized makers as 
Humanware, Baum, Germany or Sendero to design interfaces for their compact 
charging mat device?

I suspect the voltage and power requirements of our gadgetry are not as 
proprietary as some of their other parts.


Regards,
Cheree heppe


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Kevin Chao
  To: gps-talkusers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  Sent: Wednesday, October 15, 2008 3:56 PM
  Subject: [gps-talkusers] Re: could our gadgetry get designed to charge by 
this new device


   This sounds excellent in theory, but here are at least two issues I see 
by just reading the article:
  " Therefore, you have to retrofit each of your existing appliances with 
back-panel contact dots -- at a price of $35 apiece. "
  I doubt that they have these panels available for BrailleNotes, Braille 
Sense and GPS Receivers.
   " Today,     though, it's exclusively for BlackBerry and Razr owners."
  And, this validates my point above.

  Kevin

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

  From: gps-talkusers-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
[mailto:gps-talkusers-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Dogsc4me
  Sent: Wednesday, October 15, 2008 3:38 PM
  To: gps-talkusers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  Subject: [gps-talkusers] could our gadgetry get designed to charge by this 
new device


  Cheree Heppe here:

  This company might be worth contacting if one wanted a new, sleek, 
universal device designed to power the various electronics we use, instead 
of those bulky power bricks.  I'm sure they haven't even considered this 
outlet for their device and why not encourage all parties to consider an 
upgrade

  Article follows

                             The Perfect Charger (Almost)
      By [5]DAVID POGUE
      Would you still want the power to fly, if you were required to put on 
a
      117-piece set of chain mail before each flight? Would you still value
      instant teleportation, if you had to fill out a 72-page form before
      each jaunt? Would you still want control over the universe, if you had
      to power it by pedaling an exercise bike 14 hours a day?
      In other words, how much inconvenience would you tolerate in exchange
      for a little magic? Thanks to a new product called the WildCharge mat,
      that question is no longer hypothetical.
      The concept is irresistible: For $60, you get a thin pad that's about
      the size of a typical mouse pad (8 x 6 inches). Its surface is covered
      by 12 shiny chrome stripes. Each day when you come home, you just set
      your cellphone, [6]iPod and BlackBerry directly on the mat. They
      connect to it solidly with a subtle magnetic click -- and you marvel 
as
      they begin charging automatically.
      In other words, this single, sleek pad replaces the hideous mass of
      heavy, ugly, black power bricks that are currently required to 
recharge
      your mobile gadgets. (There's a special circle of hell reserved for
      every electronics-company designer who's ever shipped a product with
      yet another proprietary, mutually incompatible AC adapter brick.)
      And since it can charge five doodads at once, the mat also reclaims
      four power outlets on your wall, freeing them up for more important
      jobs; the mat's own power cord uses only a single wall socket. If
      you're a business traveler, you'll find the apparatus simpler and
      lighter to carry than a mess of black wall warts.
      The first time you plop your BlackBerry or Razr onto the WildCharge 
and
      see it light up with the "battery charging" message, without your
      having had to fiddle with a single cord, plug or connector, you can't
      help smiling. This, you think, is how things should work.
      Now, WildCharge is not the only company pursuing the dream of
      cordless-recharging surfaces on desks, counters and bureaus. A number
      of companies are working on it -- or have gone out of business trying.
      WildCharge, however, is the first company to bring such a product to
      market. The difference, it says, is in the technology it uses. Its
      rivals are trying to incorporate something called wireless inductive
      power, where rapidly changing magnetic fields transfer the power.
      That's how cordless electric toothbrushes get recharged. The advantage
      is that you don't need visible metal contacts to conduct the power; 
the
      disadvantages are low efficiency, susceptibility to interference --
      and, evidently, difficulty bringing a product to market.
      The WildCharge uses conductive power, meaning that the little metal
      charging terminals on your phone, iPod, or whatever come in direct
      contact with the charging mat's metal strips. There's no radiation.
      There are no magnetic fields, either, so there's no danger to credit
      cards, hard drives or videotapes. And there are no electric shocks; if
      flesh, liquid or some metal object touches the metallic strips on the
      pad, the power cuts off instantly (yes, I tried it, and felt nothing
      but relief). The charging resumes once the offending object, puddle or
      limb is removed.
      All right, so the charging mat works like a charm, it solves all kinds
      of problems and it's wicked cool. So what about the trade-off -- the
      WildCharge's equivalent of the chain mail, the exercise bike and the
      72-page form?
      The problem is that the electricity somehow has to find a pathway from
      the charging pad to the gadget. Any WildCharge-compatible gadget has
      four tiny raised nubbins on its back panel, metal pinhead contacts
      strategically arranged so that they'll get the necessary power no
      matter how sloppily you toss the device onto the pad. Unfortunately, 
no
      gadgets are made that way today.
      Therefore, you have to retrofit each of your existing appliances with
      back-panel contact dots -- at a price of $35 apiece. For the 
BlackBerry
      Curve and BlackBerry Pearl, you get a rubbery silicone "skin" that
      slips over the phone like a galosh. Not only does this skin have the
      requisite contact points on the back, but it doubles as a handy
      protective case for the BlackBerry itself.
      (As a bonus, the BlackBerry skin leaves the phone's traditional
      charging jack -- the little USB jack on the side -- unobstructed. The
      BlackBerry happens to have a second set of charging contacts, intended
      for charging docks, on the back panel. They connect to the WildCharge
      skin.)
      For the [7]Motorola Razr phone, the retrofit is much sleeker: you get 
a
      replacement back panel (battery cover) for the phone. This approach
      adds no bulk to the phone in your pocket, although there's a two-inch
      rubber arm that snakes down to the phone's charging jack. You have to
      yank it out when you want to plug anything else in there. (Be sure you
      order the correct panel for your phone. There are more than a dozen
      Razr models, but WildCharge panels are available only for the V3, V3c,
      V3e and V3m.)
      And that, at the moment, is it. Those are the only three
      WildCharge-compatible gadgets: BlackBerry Pearl, BlackBerry Curve and
      Motorola Razr.
      The company says that it will offer iPod and [8]iPhone adapters later
      this year; photos and descriptions indicate that these, too, will take
      the form of silicone skins. Their bottom edges plug into the 
recharging
      jack at the bottom of the iPod or iPhone. WildCharge is also working 
on
      a universal cellphone adapter, where you'll simply attach the correct
      charging-jack tip for your phone model.
      WildCharge hopes to license and spread its technology. For example,
      Griffin International is working on WildCharge-compatible replacement
      back panels for Wii and Xbox remotes. Just store your remotes on the
      mat when you're not playing, and they'll always be charged and ready.
      Unfortunately, neither adapter solution is ideal. The silicone skin
      approach does provide protection, but it also adds bulk. It also hides
      your gizmo's good looks -- the iPhone's shiny curves, for example --
      inside what amounts to an ugly rubber wetsuit.
      There's a downside to the back-panel approach, too. It sacrifices some
      sleekness for the glory of wireless charging. The back panel now 
bulges
      slightly to accommodate the electronics, and its smooth, comfortable
      surface is now interrupted by the stubble of those contacts.
      You should note, too, that the mat takes longer to recharge your 
gadget
      than the original power cord. The company won't say exactly how much
      slower, noting only that it's equivalent to trickle-charging from a
      computer's USB jack rather than a power cord. In theory, you won't
      care, since you'll get into the habit of topping off the charge every
      time you sit down -- and if you typically recharge overnight, you 
won't
      notice any difference.
      So yes, the WildCharge is magical technology. But if you had any
      additional wishes, you might wish for one that didn't require so much
      modification of your electronics. You might wish for compatibility 
with
      more gadgets -- like laptops, which WildCharge says it's working on.
      You might wish, as the company's executives do, for a day when
      WildCharge mats are built into desks, countertops, coffee shop tables
      and hotel room bureaus. (There's no size limitation to the mat size.
      The company says that it could be as small as a deck of cards, or it
      could cover an entire tabletop.)
      Maybe the WildCharge mat will indeed catch on like wildfire. Today,
      though, it's exclusively for BlackBerry and Razr owners. It brings
      supreme recharging convenience -- at a price.
      E-mail:
  pogue@xxxxxxxxxxx




------------------------------------------------------------------------------



  No virus found in this incoming message.
  Checked by AVG - http://www.avg.com
  Version: 8.0.173 / Virus Database: 270.8.1/1727 - Release Date: 10/15/2008 
8:02 PM


Other related posts: