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Samsung brings dual view feature to OLED TV

The OLED TV competition is heating up.Samsung has joined LG Electronics in offering the long-awaited organic light-emitting diode TVs. Samsung's new 55-inch curved display, priced at $9,000 (actually $8.999.99), is shipping to retailers and is also available to order on Samsung.com.The TV and electronics maker, which like LG is based in South Korea, had originally priced to arrive in the U.S. at $15,000 – the same price as that of LG's curved OLED display that began arriving in stores last month[1]. Samsung says it improved its manufacturing process enough to yield displays more efficiently and decided to drop the price, undercutting LG in the process.And Samsung's set has a unique Multi View feature that lets two people watch different programming simultaneously on the display while wearing 3-D glasses. "Some of us at Samsung call it 'the marriage saver' because my wife and I can be sitting on the couch watching two different programs on the same OLED TV," says David Das, vice president of home entertainment for Samsung Electronics America.Each person has personal ear bud headphones built into the 3-D glasses (two pairs come with the set) that deliver individual audio streams to the viewer.The display, like the new LG OLED TV, has a concave shape. "It actually mimics that of an arena or amphitheater," Das says.Consumers have coveted OLED TVs since the first were shown more than five years ago, because the super-thin displays reproduce super-saturated colors, ultra-distinct blacks and whites and virtually no motion blur. But they have been hard to manufacture.Analyst Ken Park of DisplaySearch projects that as few as 20,000 OLED displays will be shipped globally this year, with about 800,000 expected in 2014, before approaching 4.5 million in 2015. "Consumers may find it difficult to pay for hugely expensive OLED TVs, so volume will be…
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Talking Tech: The art of the selfie — some tips

ANAHEIM, Calif. — You've seen folks doing it all summer long: taking those silly pictures of themselves directly into the smartphone.They're called "selfies," which Evan Spiegel, the co-founder of photo messaging app Snapchat describes thusly: "a picture taken with the front-facing camera of your cellphone of your face."Snapchat generates 200 million photos daily, many of them "selfies."The practice of taking one's photo and sharing it with the world is also huge on Instagram, the world's most popular photo app. A simple Instagram search on Friday for "selfies" produced 150 million mentions.But it's not easy framing yourself into the camera, especially when others join the shot. What are the best techniques for selfie-dom? We asked consumers at the recent VidCon convention here, a gathering of YouTube fans and stars."Take your phone, tilt it and lean," says Emily Faulkner, who lives in the United Kingdom.In other words, get the phone at a good angle to fit both yourself and your friends. You don't have to always shoot straight on.Tom Milsom, a British musician who makes videos that run on YouTube, likes the control of selfie shots. "I prefer to hold the camera myself and be able to position it appropriately, so I'm looking at a screen with a real-time view of what the photo will look like," he says, "so I get the best photo possible."Katt Wade, a friend of Faulkner's from the U.K., says she enjoys watching folks making Snapchat selfies on the streets. "You can see those people in public, when they'll be doing something on the phone," make a funny face and then "carry on."Adds Faulkner: "In university, I'm like sitting in class, and you know who's not doing anything. They're on Snapchat" making funny faces into their phone quickly and then returning to pay attention.Katerina Guillermo, from Miami,…
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Reviewed.com: Back-to-school tech and dorm essentials

It's almost time for college students to start heading back to campus. We've rounded up some of the essential gadgets and small appliances to make any dorm room or apartment feel like a proper place of residence. Mini Fridge: Cold Drinks and Leftovers A mini fridge is more than just a cold box for beer. It's a badge of pseudo-adulthood, a signal that this 8 by 10-foot cement-walled room is a home, and a grown-up person with a grown-up appliance lives here. That's adorable, but as tens of thousands of freshmen will learn before orientation ends, these ain't real fridges. Uncooked meat and fresh produce won't keep for more than a few days, and pizza boxes won't fit. But compact fridges are super-convenient for chilling drinks and short-term food storage. This Kenmore mini fridge holds a ton of drinks and costs less than other budget models. Our favorite budget mini fridge[1] is the Kenmore 93382, a 3.3 cubic-foot model available at Kmart for about $100[2]. It can hold down a pretty serious party, packing in 72 cans of whatever it is you're drinking, and can cool a six pack to drinking temperature in under 30 minutes. It holds cool, consistent temps in the fridge and freezer compartments. Best of all, it costs less than other new compact refrigerators we found. Laptop: Comfort Is King College is expensive enough already, so you probably won’t want to spend more than you have to on necessities like a laptop. The Sony VAIO Fit 15E[3] (MSRP $899) is our recommendation for an affordable, comfortable machine. It runs Windows 8 by default, has a mighty 8GB of RAM so you can run a handful of programs at the same time, and its full-size keyboard should help when it's time to write term papers. Bonus: The…
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Reviewed.com: Why your TV's color settings matter

Originally introduced in 1953, color television was not an immediate success. Nowadays, though, most of us couldn't imagine watching our favorite TV shows or movies without it. The means of digital color production have changed over the years, but the basic makeup of what is called "additive color" has remained the same. As professional TV reviewers, we make it our business to know how televisions create color on-screen, and to know how that color relates to what we see in real life, as well. By the end of this article, expect to have a pretty good idea of how digital color works, and why there are standards for it. What is Digital Color? The color produced by TVs, monitors, tablets, and smart phones is called digital or "additive" color, made distinctive from real or print color by the way it is produced. In the real world, our eyes use tiny, photosensitive receptors called cones to perceive color. Oddly enough, we only have cones for three colors: Red, green, and blue. This is because human vision, like the other four senses, is tuned to promote our common environments, our repetitive habits, and—ultimately—our survival. Real color is a phenomenon of the Universe that only exists for the observer.Real color is a phenomenon of the Universe that, like a tree falling in the forest, only exists for the observer. Color falls along a spectrum of longer/shorter wavelengths of light; our eyes are tuned to some wavelengths better than others, and there are some we can't see at all. An apple, for instance, absorbs all of light's wavelengths—except for red. That is why, to human beings, apples appear red. Photo: Johnathan Ratcliff, Flickr [CC-BY-3.0] Digital color is called "additive" color because the colors are added together, rather than subtracted from one another, to make…
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Educate Yourself for Free

As an entrepreneur, you may find that you need to have a deeper understanding of your craft or of marketing yourself, or even economics or sociological behaviors. Also, as an entrepreneur, you may not have the extra money or time to attend college classes.   There are many obstacles to pursuing education while also building a business. Thankfully, several Universities from around the world are offering free online course materials for public use. Some offer simple reading lists, either providing them for download or recommending books. Some present audio or video classes for viewing. While none will provide college course credit, they will provide knowledge.   An unlikely but very useful place to start is iTunes. Known predominantly for their music, apps, and media, iTunes also offers iTunes U. The last category on the top menu bar, iTunes U provides information sorted by college or subject. Anyone with a compatible device can now download the iTunes U app to access courses from a huge catalog of digital content. The app is free and the educational content and courses are free as well. The app has recently been updated to check for course updates automatically. If you have an iPad, or any Apple device, this is a fantastic resource. Sample courses: Yale Astronomy; Ohio State General Chemistry; Stanford Programming Methodology.   Open Culture offers a list of 750 free online courses. Most are available via YouTube, web video, or iTunes. The course list is broken down into categories of study, such as Business, Computer Science, Psychology, Sociology, and more. If you are looking for written content, this is not the best resource for you.   Einztein beta calls itself “the social learning network for higher education and lifelong learners”. Members may join Learning Groups, such as Business & Management Strategy. Within…
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What's the best way for small business to grow?

Jack Dorsey, co-founder of Twitter and founder of Square, talks about how simple technology can level the playing field for small businesses. Jack Dorsey, co-founder of social-media giant Twitter and digital payments system Square, at a Small Business Administration conference in Washington, D.C.(Photo: H. Darr Beiser, USA TODAY)Story HighlightsFrom mobile payments to build-it-yourself sites, digital tools deliverOne consignment store saw revenue go up 250% with a websiteSquare lets food trucks take cards on the flySHARECONNECTEMAILMOREDigital technology, websites and social media now are key tools for growing small businesses and competing with larger ones."Even if you're making coffee or ice pops or lobster rolls, you can also expand your business using technology," says Small Business Administration chief Karen Mills. "It levels the playing field."Examples:• Swing's Coffees, near the White House, has customers tweeting about its lattes and employees tweeting at strategic times of the day about specials. Meanwhile, its baristas at one location place orders on iPads that let customers pay by swiping their credit cards. And those with the Square Wallet app can pay with their phones.• After doing brisk business at seven farmers markets and with a food truck using mobile devices, the owner of the Washington, D.C., frozen fruit pops company Pleasant Pops turned to Kickstarter.com — a site that lets people post projects and solicit investment — to raise money to open a store. Bryan Sykora raised $13,000 in his first day and has attracted 400 supporters.• Marilyn Caskey, owner of the San Antonio designer consignment store The Garment Exchange, used to spend much of her day answering the phone just to tell people her hours and location. After she spent an afternoon setting up a website with that information, her phone largely stopped ringing — and revenue increased 250% in the week after the site went…
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