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SMART Unveils Multitouch Table for School Kids


Determined to make us jealous that our kids' childhood experiences are more marvelous than ours, SMART Technologies will tomorrow unveil the SMART Table, a primary education "interactive learning center" (we'd rather call it Surface Jr.). It'll be available Spring of next year, and will work out of the box with learning applications that can be operated by any number of kids and all their fingers. Other classroom multitouch devices are on the horizon, but most of them are a little further from market than this Canadian contraption, which includes custom lesson plans, gesture support and a (touted but unspecified) wide viewing angle.

At $8,000 we're not sure it's an option for public schools whose budgets only have room for essentials, but if you work at a school that's totally loaded with cash and think the kiddos would dig this, feel free to look at SMART's short promotional vid after the break.

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Smart Drink Coasters Tell Bartenders When to Refill



Sentilla is a company that specializes in pervasive computing, which means it would like to find a way to make anything and everything smarter by attaching a computer to it... Apparently, even coasters are no exception. The folks at Sentilla boast that they have invented the world's first Smart Drink Coasters, which know when a drink has been placed or removed from them and provide "visual feedback" (i.e., flashing lights) to notify the barkeep that your drink is dangerously close to empty. The coasters can even communicate wirelessly to work the lights in tandem and bring back old school favorites like Simon – as a drinking game, of course.

These three-inch squared gems are made using glass "picture frame" coasters from arts and crafts barn Michael's. Add some switches, rechargeable batteries and a tiny Sentilla computer, and you've got one of your own. Follow the directions from the Sentilla Web site and you will have coasters that will entertain everyone from the 'Girls Gone Wild' cast to the grandparents who'll have a hot toddy.

From Sentilla (via Engadget)

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Video Games

Nintendo Wants You Thinner, Smarter

Wii Fit
Nintendo, it seems, thinks we're all fat and lunkheaded. The Japanese giant has made it clear at this year's E3 video game conference that it is out to fix us. To target both novice and core gamers with its Wii console and DS handheld, the company has promised a suite of new games similar to the simple-yet-genius crossover titles like 'Wii Sports' and 'Brain Age,' with which it found so much success.

'Brain Age 2' is the first fix-em-up on the way. The game is already out in Japan where it quickly eclipsed sales of the original. If you haven't played the original puzzle/brain tease/brain builder, do so immediately. Your IQ will thank you.

Also in the works is a game called 'Flash Focus,' a so-called "vision training game" that aims to improve your vision and coordination with such exercises as baseball batting practice and basketball passing practice. Ditch your eyeglasses this October 15.

Ubi Soft, the developer of such console hits as 'Splinter Cell' and 'Rainbow Six,' is working on a couple of self-improvement games for Nintendo. One is called 'My Word Coach' and aims to beef up your vocabulary. The other, 'My Life Coach,' we were given no details about, but one assumes it will be a cheap alternative to psychotherapy.

Finally, the big news is the new Wii game developed by game legend Shigeru Miyamoto, the brains behind the Mario and Zelda franchises. 'Wii Fit' comes with a new peripheral called the Wii Balance Board, which you stand on in front of your TV. It measures your balance while you do aerobics, push-ups, dance moves and even yoga poses. Besides measuring balance, it measures your Body Mass Index to help you track weight loss while doing these exercises.

Nintendo: building a slimmer, smarter, better-sighted you.

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