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Future iPhones/Pods charged with your heartbeat – experts say

By | Apple, Droid, iPhone, news | No Comments

Apple's colorful iPod Nanos.

“Nanogenerators” powered by your heartbeat could replace conventional batteries in about five years, according to chemists.

In a world dominated by 4G smartphones, touchscreen tablets and portable laptops, finding ways to keep everything charged can be a nightmare and a losing proposition. What if we could power them from anywhere while doing almost nothing at all?

Dr. Zhong Lin Wang and his team of researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology have developed tiny nanogenerators that use small movements to generate enough power.

At the National Meeting & Exposition of the American Chemical Society, Wang’s team demonstrated the ability of their milestone device, using it to power LCD screens and even transmit a radio signal.

For Wang, his nanogenerators are the solution to our outlet-tethered mobile existence — an idea he made clear at the chemistry conference. “This development represents a milestone toward producing portable electronics that can be powered by body movements without the use of batteries or electrical outlets.”

Wang’s new device is thousands of times more powerful than previous generations. “If we can sustain the rate of improvement, the nanogenerator may find a broad range of other applications that require more power,” he said.

“Our nanogenerators are poised to change lives in the future,” Wang said. “Their potential is only limited by one’s imagination.”

Nanogenerators work using zinc oxide (ZnO) nanowires — “piezoelectric” gizmos that can generate an electric current when strained or flexed. This means that almost any kind of movement – walking, a heartbeat, wind, even rolling tires — can generate electricity.

The next step is to boost the potential power output, Wang said. “Additional nanowires and more nanogenerators, stacked together, could produce enough energy for powering larger electronics, such as an iPod or charging a cell phone.”

“While a few volts may not seem like much, it has grown by leaps and bounds over previous versions.” Wang expects his nanogenerators to be in stores within 5 years.

ThunderBolt pre-sales break record

By | Droid, news, Verizon | No Comments

Best Buy lowers its price for ThunderBolt to $249.99 for three days only

Computerworld – Online retailer Wirefly said Wednesday its first day of pre-sales of the HTC ThunderBolt smartphone were 400% higher than any other cell phone pre-sale in the company’s eight-year history.

Wirefly didn’t provide the number of pre-orders of the Android-based smartphone, the first to run on the Verizon Wireless LTE network, but said the smartphone accounted for 25% of all of its sales on Tuesday. The pre-orders started at 3 a.m. ET on Tuesday and Wirefly shipments begin Thursday, when Verizon will also start selling it.

Wirefly calls itself the number one online retailer of cell phones, smartphones and cell phone plans. However, it does not sell phones that run on AT&T, nor does it sell the best-selling iPhone.

The pre-sale record for ThunderBolt shows there is pent-up demand for the first device to launch on Verizon’s faster LTE network, said Andy Zeinfeld, CEO of Simplexity, the parent company of Wirefly. “Our sales volume far surpassed our expectations,” he said in a statement.

A Wirefly spokesman added: “If there was any lingering doubt that the ThunderBolt by HTC was going to be lightning hot, Wirefly’s pre-orders smashed that doubt to smithereens.”

Wirefly didn’t credit its $50-lower price for the device as a reason for the increased sales. It offers the ThunderBolt for $199.99 with a two-year service agreement from Verizon, while Verizon will offer it for $249.99.

Various Web sites, including Amazon.com, have historically offered smartphones at lower prices than the carriers, using the discounts as a way to attract attention to their sites, analysts said.

Retailer Best Buy advertised the ThunderBolt in Sunday’s newspaper circulars for $299.99 for several weeks, helping build interest in the smartphone, but suddenly lowered the initial price to $249.99 on Tuesday, the same day of the Wirefly pre-sale for $199.99.

But Best Buy said in a press release that it was dropping the price to $249.99 only through March 19, including online pre-orders, then kicking the price back up to $299.99 on March 20.

Best Buy’s move indicates customer interest in the first LTE device from Verizon, along with the pre-sales by Wirefly. “The HTC ThunderBolt has generated a lot of excitement for us since it was announced,” said Scott Anderson, head of merchanding for Best Buy Mobile, in a statement. “Customers have already spoken loud and clear — people want this phone and we’re excited to deliver it on March 17.”