As an editor with a major electronics magazine,
I’m invited to industry events all the time.
Come July, though, I start receiving invitations
from public relations folks for events that are
really outside the magazine’s coverage—events that show the
hottest consumer electronics items for the coming holiday
season. I can’t resist the temptation. Could you?
SAMSUNG HOLIDAY IN JULY
Samsung Electronics recently held its Holiday in July at a
venue in New York City that I had never been to before, 723
Washington Studio in the West
Village. As much as I tried to pass
it up due to its odd location and
consumer focus, I was lured by
the fact that Samsung Semiconductor,
a company we regularly
cover, would be there. As it turns
out, the venue is a multi-level
11,000-square-foot townhouse,
and Samsung filled most of the
rooms with great electronics.
I got a chance to speak with
Steve Weinger, marketing manager
for NAND flash for Samsung
Semiconductor. He showed me
two 128-Gbyte solid-state drives
based on multi-level cell (MLC)
flash. One drive had a 1.8-in. form
factor that looked like a PCMCIA PC card, and the other had
a 2.5-in.form factor that looked very much like a standard hard
drive. The new drives have data write speeds of 70 Mbytes/s
and read speeds of 100 Mbytes/s.
These drives aren’t new, as they were introduced at the International
Consumer Electronics Show in January. But until the
256-Gbyte versions show up, they’re still at the forefront of
solid-state disk technology. Steve went to great pains to tell me
about their speed, reliability, and longevity.
They’re still an expensive proposition, about four times the
cost of rotating media. Yet Steve thinks Samsung can make an
economic case for the drives over the long term, especially to
companies who care about the downtime caused by failures in
rotating media. If successful, we may see these drives make it
into the mainstream one day.
TAKING NOTES WITH A SMART PEN
Continuing with NAND flash innovation, Steve showed me
some neat flash-based products that are just coming to market.
One was particularly intriguing, a smart writing pen called the
Pulse from a company called Livescribe.
The Pulse comes with a built-in computer that records
everything you hear during a presentation, seminar, or class and
automatically links it to the notes you have written. The notes
and accompanying recordings can be easily transferred to a
desktop or notebook for a quick search on words within notes.
The pen comes in two versions. A $149 model contains 1
Gbyte of Samsung NAND flash memory, which can store more
than 100 hours of audio recordings. A $199 premium device
comes with 2 Gbytes of NAND and can store more than 200
hours of audio. The Pulse also
includes a rechargeable lithium
battery and a tiny organic LED
(OLED) display screen. Steve
said the pen records videos too,
but he didn’t show any to me.
Powered by a Samsung ARM
9 processor, the Pulse connects
to a PC through a USB port via a
charging cradle that comes with
the pen. The Pulse Smartpen is
currently available through the
company’s Web site at
www.livescribe.com, and it will be available
exclusively nationwide at
Target stores. Steve also showed
me special notepaper you can
buy for the Pulse that will play
the corresponding recording when you touch the pen to the
notes you took. It’s quite amazing.
NEXT-GENERATION PRESS KITS
To punctuate the fact that NAND is showing up everywhere
and is relatively inexpensive nowadays, Samsung gave me an
unusual press kit as I left the event. Typically, the electronic
versions of press kits come on USB drives, but this one came on
a Samsung S2 digital audio player (see the figure).
This 1-Gbyte MP3 player looks like a stone and connects to
the computer via a jack that has a USB plug on one side and an
audio jack on the other—no wire in between. When plugged
into a USB port, the device works just like a USB drive, so I was
able to download the press release and photo.
Naturally, the S2 can play music, too. On the back of the
device are five buttons to control the music. I don’t know if this
player will give the Apple iPod Shuffle a run for its money, but
it sure is a conversation piece. Let’s hope no one picks it up at a
picnic and tries to skim it across a lake.