Category: Sony


Smile Detecting Camera

Now I’m not a big fan of posting the latest camera or phone or what have you unless it has something real unique about it. And well, this one does (even if it is a sham and doesn’t work and is a lie and is stupid). The new Sony Cybershot DSC-T200 has a smile detector. Don’t believe it? You’re not alone. But Sony insists.

Using Sony’s proprietary algorithm, this innovative intelligent auto shutter system responds actively to smiling faces. To start, just choose SmileShutter from Scene Selection, then press the shutter fully on the subject to be taken; the camera automatically detects the smiling face and closes the shutter. To detect the different degrees of smiles by your subject, you can set Smile Level sensitivity to “high” (to detect a faint smile), “medium” (for a normal smile), or “low” (for a hearty laugh).

 

While this sounds like a very interesting feature, I don’t smile. The batteries will die in the camera and the earth will turn to dust before I do. Smiling is for the weak. Showing that much emotion in a photo basically means your mom dresses you and you’re a monster sissy.


Sales of Sony’s PlayStation 3 (PS3) console in the US rose by 21% in June, analyst figures show, but the machine still trails the Wii and Xbox 360.

Tracking firm NPD Group reported that 98,500 PS3s were sold, compared to 198,400 Xbox 360s (up 28%) and 381,800 Wiis (up 13%).

 

Sony said that the $100 (£50) price cut to the 60GB PS3 led to a 135% sales rise over the last two weeks.

 

Independent figures for sales of the cheaper PS3 are not yet available.

 

“This jump in sales bodes very well for us heading into the fall as we launch an impressive arsenal of hardware and software,” Jack Tretton, head of Sony Computer Entertainment America, said in a statement.

 

Leading firms

 

Nintendo’s DS handheld sold 561,900 units , while Sony’s PSP, which has been boosted by an April price cut, sold 230,100 units, NPD reported.

 

Software sales in the US are 31% higher than the same time last year, the market research showed, buoyed by new consoles from all three firms.

 

Last month’s sales topped $1.1bn (£550m), the data revealed.

 

“The industry continues to realise substantial gains, month after month, and on all fronts it’s great growth,” NPD analyst Anita Frazier told Reuters news agency.

 

Nintendo said the sales showed that the firm was reaching a new gaming audience.

 

“We are delivering on our message of reaching out to new gamers,” said Nintendo spokeswoman Beth Llewellyn.

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