It will then guide itself back to the user’s wrist completing a, frankly, cool action like something only seen from a science fiction film. Targeting the extreme sports world, particularly rock climbers, the small quadcopter drone will launch from the user’s wrist and take a photo of their adventure from an angle that would otherwise be impossible. It’s usually high praise when Intel take interest in your start-up company, so when Nixie, a team developing a drone that can launch from your wrist received US$500,000 in funding from the company, others began to take notice. Its design allows it to be used by most phones, but sadly isn’t catered to phones that are getting increasingly larger as the slot only allows phones that are 3.2in wide or lower but at €39.99 (€32) it’s not too shabby for a projector. The company’s logic is that as phones become more sophisticated with more video editing tech crammed into it, there needs to be a more efficient way of showing friends in a local setting, ignoring the option to share online, of course. With a design similar to an old fashioned cinema projector, the DIY cardboard creation lets you put your smartphone into the box allowing you to project whatever is on the phone’s screen onto a wall with the help of an 8x magnified lens in the Smartphone Projector. DIY Smartphone ProjectorĬardboard appears to be the new hardware of choice for designers looking to make the most out of existing devices as, following on from creations including the Google Cardboard, Animi Causa have produced the Smartphone Projector which is, unsurprisingly, a smartphone projector. A look at gadget happenings, as a new DIY smartphone projector hits the market, a wrist-activated drone wins Intel’s approval, and HP launches its new designer smartwatch, the MB Chronowing.
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