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Wi-fi bunny a pet laureate

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  • Wi-fi bunny a pet laureate

    MX (Australia)
    August 11, 2006 Friday
    Melbourne Edition

    Wi-fi bunny a pet laureate


    SPEAK EASY

    In the Darwinian evolution of electronic companions, first came the
    speaking doll, then the Tamagotchi virtual pet, then Sony's
    short-lived AIBO robot dog.

    Now, it could be the dawn of the Wi-fi rabbit era.

    The plastic bunny with ears like TV antennae can read out emails and
    text messages, tell children to go to bed, announce a stock collapse
    and give traffic updates by receiving internet feeds through a
    wireless Wi-fi network.

    ''It gives a visual and vocal representation of what is on the
    internet,'' explained Paul Jackson, an analyst at US research house
    Forrester.

    The bunny, which stands 23cm tall and has a white cone-like body that
    lights up when it speaks, is called Nabaztag, which means rabbit in
    Armenian, its creator's mother tongue. It can also wiggle its ears
    and sing songs.

    French entrepreneur Rafi Haladjian, who came up with the idea, says
    the rabbit sometimes carries more sway over children than their
    parents and can help men win forgiveness from angry partners.

    ''It is sad, but true,'' he said.

    Nabaztag, made in Shenzhen, China, costs about $195.

    Since its market debut last year, 50,000 Nabaztags have been sold in
    France, Britain, Belgium and Switzerland.

    Wi-fi technology is the latest must-have in consumer goods, from
    mobile phones to personal digital assistants, laptops and TV set-top
    boxes.
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