This week at CES imaging company Spectricity is presenting color-matching technology that integrates a multispectral camera in a smartphone “enabling ‘true colors’ on smartphone photos,” it said Monday. The technology will let buyers make accurate assessments of the color of online purchases and enable true skin tone, Spectricity said: “The camera can assess colors more accurately than the naked eye, giving a true color representation of everything from paint to skin tone. This spectral camera ends all guesswork: colors on smartphone photos will now be true to reality.”
Sixty-six percent of U.S. internet households own a smart TV, with Samsung's Tizen operating system commanding 35% of the smart TV marketplace, Parks Associates said Monday. It said LG's Web OS, Vizio's SmartCast and the Roku TV OS combined account for the same share as Samsung but are likely to be more competitive in coming years, as are other operating systems, it said.
Comments are due Feb. 2 on a petition asking the FTC to protect consumers’ right to repair products, the agency announced Wednesday. U.S. Public Interest Research Group and iFixit filed a petition for rulemaking in November asking the agency to implement rules making independent repair “easier” and “more widely available.” In addition, they asked the FTC to require makers of parts that routinely wear out ensure there are replacements readily available during a product’s lifespan. An example is batteries. Moreover, consumers should be able to choose repair providers or fix a product themselves, the petition said. Components from “identical devices should be interchangeable without needing manufacturer intervention,” and independent repair shops shouldn’t be forced to share a customer’s personal information with the original manufacturer, they said.