Skip to main content

Feel like you're flying in VR using these clever Samsung concept headphones

Entrim 4D
Samsung is taking three new experimental projects along to the SXSW 2016 festival, including a brand new way to look really silly while wearing a VR headset. It’s called Entrim 4D, and it fools the brain into thinking you’re really moving around in the VR world, despite being seating in the real one. As is shown in the demo video, this means you wobble around a lot, usually waving your hands about in the air at the same time.

The Entrim 4D experience is provided by a set of special headphones that send an electric signal to the brain, where it stimulates the nerves which control balance and identify body movement. When matched to a Gear VR experience, it gives the impression of actual movement. The team’s demonstrating Entrim 4D using a drone-shot video that apparently fools you into feeling like you’re flying.

Recommended Videos

Samsung says the Entrim 4D headset will replace the need for those crazy full-motion chairs, and a future version is being worked on with rotational motion detection. If it all sounds vomit-inducing, it’s supposed to do the opposite, by combining a physical sensation with the visual VR experience that bypasses the sensations which bring on motion sickness.

Hum On!

Entrim 4D isn’t about to go on sale though, it’s one of the cool side projects found inside Samsung’s C-Labs, and one of three that Samsung will exhibit at SXSW this year. The other two are apps. The first is called Hum On!, where you hum a tune that’s then converted over to musical notes, and played back in a variety of musical styles.

Waffle

The other app is Waffle, a social storytelling app where multiple people can share messages, images, and doodled pictures to a single channel. The wall — which looks like the surface of a waffle, hence the name — is gradually filled with content related to a single event, a shared experience, or just a fun time together. It’s the only one of Samsung’s C-Lab projects seen here you can try now, because a beta version is available through Google Play here.

Samsung has revealed some of its C-Lab projects before, which are worked on by employees of the company, with the possibility of becoming fully-fledged startups that operate independently should the idea prove successful.

Andy Boxall
Andy is a Senior Writer at Digital Trends, where he concentrates on mobile technology, a subject he has written about for…
Everything you need to know about the OnePlus 13
Official OnePlus 13 product renders showing rear panel colors.

OnePlus is an excellent brand that offers powerful flagship phones at a great value compared to some of its competitors. We followed every rumor about the OnePlus 13 for months, but now it's here — and it's everything we hoped for. It might not be available in the Western market yet, but it will be soon.

So, what makes the OnePlus 13 so special? Here's everything you need to know about OnePlus' latest flagship.
When is the OnePlus 13 being released?

Read more
Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite vs. MediaTek Dimensity 9400: the race is on
Comparison of Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite and MediaTek Dimensity 9400 processors.

The flagship mobile silicon race has entered its next phase, one that will dictate the trajectory of Android hardware heading into 2025. Merely weeks after MediaTek wowed us with the Dimensity 9400 system on a chip (SoC), Qualcomm also pulled a surprise with the reveal of the Snapdragon 8 Elite.

But this time around, the battle is not as straightforward. Where MediaTek is working closely with Arm and adopting its latest CPU and graphics innovations, Qualcomm has firmly put its faith in custom cores. These are no ordinary cores, but a next-gen iteration of the same fundamental tech stack that powers Windows on ARM laptops.

Read more
Discolored line on your new Kindle? You aren’t alone
Amazon Kindle Colorsoft Signature Edition on a table.

The new Kindle Colorsoft Signature Edition is the first full-color e-reader, and a lot of bookworms couldn't wait to get their hands on it. Sadly, many people are reporting the display has a discolored yellow area at the bottom of the screen. The problem is so widespread that the Kindle Colorsoft dropped to an average review rating of 2.6 out of 5, although it does remain the bestselling e-book reader at the moment.

The cause of the discoloration isn't clear. Some users report that it only happens when using the edge lighting feature on the Kindle, while others say it appeared after a software update. Either way, the yellowing is a problem, especially on a device that Amazon has marketed as being great for comics and graphic novel fans. It's hard to enjoy the colorwork in a comic when it's distorted.

Read more