Tag Archives: Mixed Reality

Check Out This Inexpensive Basket of Japanese Growers

By Selena Maranjian, The Motley Fool

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Exchange-traded funds offer a convenient way to invest in sectors or niches that interest you. If you’d like to add some Japanese stocks to your portfolio, the iShares MSCI Japan Index ETF could save you a lot of trouble. Instead of trying to figure out which companies will perform best, you can use this ETF to invest in lots of them simultaneously.

The basics
ETFs often sport lower expense ratios than their mutual fund cousins. The iShares ETF‘s expense ratio — its annual fee — is a relatively low 0.53 %, and it yields nearly 2%.

This ETF has not performed well, as Japan‘s economy has long been struggling. It didn’t beat the MSCI EAFE index over the past three, five, and 10 years. Still, it’s the future that matters more than the past, and investors with conviction need to wait for their holdings to deliver.

With a low turnover rate of 3%, this fund isn’t frantically and frequently rejiggering its holdings, as many funds do.

Why Japan?
It’s good to diversify your portfolio geographically, and Japan‘s fortunes may be turning around, in part due to its new, aggressive prime minister. The Nikkei has been rising, and the yen has dropped recently.

More than a handful of Japan-based companies had strong performances over the past year. Mizuho Financial Group , for example, surged 31%, and recently yielded a solid 3.2%. Japan‘s second-largest lender’s latest earnings report featured earnings up more than tenfold, due to a surging stock market boosting the value of its equity holdings. Lending profits were up 6% over year-earlier levels.

Nomura Holdings , one of the largest banks in the world, gained 25%, despite losing its CEO and COO last year due to an insider-trading scandal. The company recently posted earnings that were a bit disappointing but still up 13%, and it has high expectations for its investment-banking business in 2013.

Other companies didn’t do as well last year, but could see their fortunes change in the coming years. Nippon Telegraph and Telephone gained just 1%, but it’s looking attractive to some, with a recent 4.3% dividend yield and its subsidiary NTT Docomo reducing its debt. But it faces strong competition, such as from Softbank, which recently invested in Sprint Nextel.

Canon , meanwhile, sank 21%, but offers a hefty dividend of 4.2%. The company has posted some disappointing numbers in recent quarters, but it compares favorably on a number of measures with many competitors. Boding well, though, is its patent strength. Canon has been one of America’s top five patent holders for 27 consecutive years. It recently released a new Mixed Reality 3-D headset, and has been taking market share from printer rivals such as Lexmark.

The big picture
A well-chosen ETFcan grant you instant diversification across any industry or group of companies — and make investing in and …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Canon's Mixed Reality headset delivers augmented reality for an eye-watering price tag

Thus far, Google is merely teasing us with previews of its Google Glass Android eyewear, but Canon just beat it to the augmented reality punch with the launch of its own computerized glasses. You’ll want to bring your checkbook, though—Canon’s PC-powered VR headset costs more than most college educations.

Canon’s Mixed Reality glasses goe on sale on March 1 for an eye-watering $125,000, or precisely 83 times more than Google Glass, which will cost $1,500 when it arrives some time by the end of 2014. There’s a reason for that sky-high price tag, however. Unlike Google Glass, which is aimed at consumers, Canon’s Mixed Reality is pitched as a high-end tool for product designers in the automotive, construction, manufacturing, or research fields.

Also called MREAL, the system works differently than Google Glass. MREAL‘s bulky-looking headset positions two cameras in front of your eyes, which display a combination of video from your surroundings and computer-generated graphics. What’s the point? Canon created MREAL to allow designers to interact with simple mockups of their products, which—thanks to the headset’s computer-powered augmented reality—will look like highly detailed objects through the glasses. Basically, it lets designers interact with intricate, computer-generated versions of their ideas in a 3D environment.

Canon
A simple prototype looks like a finished camera through Canon Mixed Reality.

MREAL also differs from Google Glass in that it needs to be tethered to a PC. The head-mounted display is linked to a controller, which is itself connected to a computer generating the video of your surroundings when using the glasses.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld