Thursday, August 30, 2007

RFID Shoes, whats next condoms?!

RFID Shoes

Posted by samc on August 29th, 2007


Chief: There’s no telling where they’ll be able to infiltrate next. May be even the Pentagon.
Maxwell Smart: You’re right, Chief. But even if they do get a man into the Pentagon, that’s not saying he’ll be able to get out. I remember one of our own agents was lost in there for three days.
Chief: Three days? Max, no agent could be that confused.
Maxwell Smart: Well, let me see. I went in on a Friday…

New Balance is trialing its first RFID deployment, reports RFID Journal, to improve operations inside New Balance retail outlet stores. Their two-stage pilot will track athletic shoes sold at the retail outlet inside the company’s headquarters in Lawrence, Mass.

The first phase of the project, which began in July and will last until September, involves tagging each pair of the men’s version of the 992 model — the company’s most popular style shoe. The women’s version is not being tagged so that the team can use the women’s inventory and sales levels during the trial as a benchmark to compare the effectiveness of RFID technology and Vue software.

Workers tag each box of the 992 shoes before sending it to the retail outlet. Avery Dennison is providing the EPC UHF Gen 2 passive tag applied to each box.

RFID interrogators, provided by Motorola, mounted around the doors leading into the store’s stock room, read the tags as the shoes arrive at the stock room and are taken from the stock room to the sales floor. The interrogators send all the tag data they collect to software provided by Vue Technology, an RFID solution provider focused on item-level tagging applications in retail environments.

The software generates a running inventory, based on the tag read events, of the 992s both on the sales floor and in the stock room. As customers exit the store, Motorola interrogators mounted at the doors read the tag attached to each box of 992s they have purchased, and the Vue software adjusts the store inventory of 992s accordingly.

Meanwhile, Washington State’s Department of Licensing is trialing RFID enabled driver’s licenses. The pilot, which will run until mid 2009, will also use passive EPC Gen 2 UHF tags. The license features an RFID inlay, digital watermark and authenticators.

It will act as an alternative to US passports which are used at land border crossings between Canada and Washington. The cards have a unique identification number. The state of Washington would manage a database where data with names, residency, age and other data is stored and interrogated. It could also link to other data, such as criminal history of the card holder.

In selecting EPC Gen 2 technology, DHS said the tags’ 20 feet of read range could facilitate speedy verification of PASS card carriers at borders.

Opponents say that EPC tags’ lack of security could lead to the tags being read by unauthorized parties, who could then encode the card’s unique ID number onto a fraudulent ID.

In related news, Cross Match Technologies has received an order from the Department of State’s Bureau of Consular Affairs for 675 L SCAN Guardian fingerprint scanners and related software.

The deployments are part of the State Department’s Biometric Visa Program, designed to increase security in the visa issuance process by capturing fingerprints from applicants seeking visas to enter the United States and checking those fingerprints against government databases.

source : dailywireless.org

Google Phone will be Linux-Powerd, GPS-Loaded

Rumor: Google Phone Will Be Linux-Powered, GPS-Loaded and Cheap

By Michael Calore EmailAugust 27, 2007 | 5:24:47 PMCategories: Google, Linux, Mobile, maps

Googlephone If the murmurs are true, the GPhone cometh in September.

Mark "Rizzn" Hopkins has uncovered some details about the long-rumored (and apparently all but confirmed) Google Phone.

According to Rizzn's source at Google, the device runs a modified version of the Linux kernel and has GPS built in. The positioning system will be used to power a Google Maps application, and the phone will also have tight integration with other Google apps like Gmail, Calendar and Docs. The source for Rizzn's post notes that the company will announce the device in two weeks, and that a North American version will be available soon, possibly by the end of the year.

Rizzn also notes that Google's mobile device "is less about beating the iPhone and more about beating the $100 Laptop" made by the OLPC project. He speculates that Google will sell the phones for cheap and then reap ad revenue from targeted, text-based ads served to the phone. This isn't entirely new information, but it's interesting to hear the comparison with the OLPC -- at the least, we'll see an inexpensive, accessible device that uses open-source software.

Whether any of this is true is open to debate. The search and services behemoth has certainly made its intentions to go after the 700MHz wireless spectrum clear, and has even pushed the FCC to adopt some new regulations which ease the use and adoption of device-and-carrier-agnostic open standards and services. This would not only benefit Google, but also any other manufacturer building gear for the spectrum.

Rizzn will be outlining his chat with the Google mystery man on his podcast Monday night. Meanwhile, what's your take? Fact or sweet, sweet fiction?

source : wired.com

Google own your content?

Posted by Zonk on Wednesday August 29, @12:23PM
from the err-i-have-to-go-make-some-copies dept.
mjasay writes "ZDNet is reporting that Google has a potentially worrisome clause in its User Agreement for Google Apps. Namely, that any content put into the system and 'intended to be available to the members of the public' is free game for Google, reserving the right for Google 'to syndicate Content submitted, posted or displayed by you on or through Google services and use that Content in connection with any service offered by Google.' Google may not be evil, but giving it these (and other) rights to one's data should be ringing alarm bells in the Google Apps user base."

source : slashdot.org

DAMN lucky ass!

Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Wednesday August 29, @06:02PM
from the something-for-nothing dept.
PieGuy107 writes to mention that seventeen-year-old George Hotz of Glen Rock, NJ has made the trade of the summer. Hotz traded his hacked iPhone for a new set of wheels (Nissan 350Z to be exact) and 3 more 8GB iPhones. "[Terry] Daidone, who's the co-founder of Louisville, Kentucky-based CertiCell, has apparently also offered the young man a paid consulting job, but stresses the company doesn't have 'any plans on the table right now to commercialize Mr. Hotz' discovery'."

source : slashdot.org

Island resort ban gadgets? WTF?

Island resort bans gadgets from beach


Thinking about heading for the beach on your next vacation, catching a couple of rays, and maybe making a business call or two before the tide comes in? Well, if you were planning on a trip to the renowned resort of Palm Island -- located in the Caribbean -- you might want to start considering a serious change of plans. According to recent reports, the tropical destination just put the kibosh on the use of mobile phones, PDAs, or laptops within a half-mile of the island's Casarina Beach, effectively squashing your dreams of million-dollar deals and an "all over" tan. In the words of resort CEO Rob Barrett, "There is nothing worse than lying back in your double hammock, sipping on your strawberry daiquiri and hearing the Motorola jingle in the background," and then suggested that customers, "switch off their mobiles and enjoy the sound of the lapping waves." In the future, Palm Island says it will aggressively mandate book-burning, suppression of the media, and totalitarianism in all forms.

source : engadget.com

Sanyo worlds smallest 1080p

Sanyo's Xacti DMX-HD1000: the world's smallest 1080p camcorder


We like giving Sanyo heaps of grief over their boxy gear from time to time. But make no mistake, they've nailed it with their Xacti series of solid state camcorders. Meet the DMX-HD1000, their first to record full 1080p, 1,920 x 1,080 resolution video using the HD/MPEG-4 AVC codec. It features the ability to shoot 8 megapixel stills via its 1/2.5-inch CMOS sensor, a 10x optical zoom, 2.7-inch LCD, HDMI-out, and the ability to record direct to SD/SDHC cards for up to 2 hours at a charge. That's plenty of juice since an 8GB SDHC card will only hold about 1 hour and 25 minutes of Full HD recordings. All this in an itty-bitty pistol grip shooter which Sanyo claims is the world's smallest at this resolution. Available in Japan starting mid September for about ¥120,000 or about $1,000.

source : engadget.com

Californiaians get your FAKE ID!

California to bar teens from using mobiles, laptops whilst driving

California certainly won't go down as the first place to ban cellphones whilst driving, but if Governor Schwarzenegger signs a new bill into law, mobiles won't be the only thing teens can't operate while behind the wheel after July 1, 2008. The bill, which was overwhelmingly approved by the Assembly, prevents anyone "under the age of 18 from using their cellphone," even with handsfree devices; as if that wasn't enough, any "mobile service device" -- such as "walkie-talkies, pagers, two-way messaging devices, PDAs, and laptops" -- will also be illegal for teens under 18 to use while driving. If signed into law, violators will reportedly be fined "$20 for the first offense, and $50 for subsequent offenses with no violation points on the driver's record."

source : engadget.com

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Martial Law

Martial Law Threat is Real


Global Research, July 29, 2007
Commons Dreams


The looming collapse of the US military in Iraq, of which a number of generals and former generals, including former Chief of Staff Colin Powell, have warned, is happening none too soon, as it my be the best hope for preventing military rule here at home.

From the looks of things, the Bush/Cheney regime has been working assiduously to pave the way for a declaration of military rule, such that at this point it really lacks only the pretext to trigger a suspension of Constitutional government. They have done this with the active support of Democrats in Congress, though most of the heavy lifting was done by the last, Republican-led Congress.

The first step, or course, was the first Authorization for Use of Military Force, passed in September 2001, which the president has subsequently used to claim ‹improperly, but so what? ‹that the whole world, including the US, is a battlefield in a so-called ³War² on Terror, and that he has extra-Constitutional unitary executive powers to ignore laws passed by Congress. As constitutional scholar and former Reagan-era associate deputy attorney general Bruce Fein observes, that one claim, that the US is itself a battlefield, is enough to allow this or some future president to declare martial law, ³since you can always declare martial law on a battlefield. All he¹d need would be a pretext, like another terrorist attack inside the U.S.²

The 2001 AUMF was followed by the PATRIOT Act, passed in October 2001, which undermined much of the Bill of Rights. Around the same time, the president began a campaign of massive spying on Americans by the National Security Agency, conducted without any warrants or other judicial review. It was and remains a program that is clearly aimed at American dissidents and at the administration¹s political opponents, since the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court would never have raised no objections to spying on potential terrorists. (And it, and other government spying programs, have resulted in the government¹s having a list now of some 325,000 ³suspected terrorists²!)

The other thing we saw early on was the establishment of an underground government-within-a-government, though the activation, following 9-11, of the so-called ³Continuity of Government² protocol, which saw heads of federal agencies moved secretly to an underground bunker where, working under the direction of Vice President Dick Cheney, the ³government² functioned out of sight of Congress and the public for critical months.

It was also during the first year following 9-11 that the Bush/Cheney regime began its programs of arrest and detention without charge ‹mostly of resident aliens, but also of American citizens‹and of kidnapping and torture in a chain of gulag prisons overseas and at the Navy base at Guantanamo Bay.

The following year, Attorney General John Ashcroft began his program to develop a mass network of tens of millions of citizen spies‹Operation TIPS. That program, which had considerable support from key Democrats (notably Sen. Joe Lieberman), was curtailed by Congress when key conservatives got wind of the scale of the thing, but the concept survives without a name, and is reportedly being expanded today.

Meanwhile, last October Bush and Cheney, with the help of a compliant Congress, put in place some key elements needed for a military putsch. There was the overturning of the venerable Posse Comitatus Act of 1878, which barred the use of active duty military inside the United States for police-type functions, and the revision of the Insurrection Act, so as to empower the president to take control of National Guard units in the 50 states even over the objections of the governors of those states.

Put this together with the wholly secret construction now under way–courtesy of a $385-million grant by the US Army Corps of Engineers to Halliburton subsidiary KBR Inc–of detention camps reportedly capable of confining as many as 400,000 people, and a recent report that the Pentagon has a document, dated June 1, 2007, classified Top Secret, which declares there to be a developing ³insurgency² within the U.S, and which lays out a whole martial law counterinsurgency campaign against legal dissent, and you have all the ingredients for a military takeover of the United States.

As we go about our daily lives–our shopping, our escapist movie watching, and even our protesting and political organizing‹we need to be aware that there is a real risk that it could all blow up, and that we could find ourselves facing armed, uniformed troops at our doors.

Bruce Fein isn¹t an alarmist. He says he doesn¹t see martial law coming tomorrow. But he is also realistic. He says, ³This is all sitting around like a loaded gun waiting to go off. I think the risk of martial law is trivial right now, but the minute there is a terrorist attack, then it is real. And it stays with us after Bush and Cheney are gone, because terrorism stays with us forever.² (It may be significant that Hillary Clinton, the leading Democratic candidate for president, has called for the revocation of the 2002 Authorization for Use of Military Force against Iraq, but not of the earlier 2001 AUMF which Bush claims makes him commander in chief of a borderless, endless war on terror.)

Indeed, the revised Insurrection Act (10. USC 331-335) approved by Congress and signed into law by Bush last October, specifically says that the president can federalize the National Guard to ³suppress public disorder² in the event of ³national disorder, epidemic, other serious public health emergency, terrorist attack or incident.² That determination, the act states, is solely the president¹s to make. Congress is not involved.

Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-VT), chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee, has added an amendment to the upcoming Defense bill, restoring the Insurrection Act to its former version‹a move that has the endorsement of all 50 governors–but Fein argues that would not solve the problem, since Bush still claims that the U.S. is a battlefield. Besides, a Leahy aide concedes that Bush could sign the next Defense Appropriations bill and then use a signing statement to invalidate the Insurrection Act rider.

Fein argues that the only real defense against the looming disaster of a martial law declaration would be for Congress to vote for a resolution determining that there is no ³War² on terror. ³But they are such cowards they will never do that,² he says.

That leaves us with the military.

If ordered to turn their guns and bayonets on their fellow Americans, would our ³heroes² in uniform follow their consciences, and their oaths to ³uphold and defend² the Constitution of the United States? Or would they follow the orders of their Commander in Chief?

It has to be a plus that National Guard and Reserve units are on their third and sometimes fourth deployments to Iraq, and are fuming at the abuse. It has to be a plus that active duty troops are refusing to re-enlist in droves ‹especially mid-level officers.

If we are headed for martial law, better that it be with a broken military. Maybe if it¹s broken badly enough, the administration will be afraid to test the idea.


Dave Lindorff’s most recent book is “The Case for Impeachment” (St. Martin’s Press, 2006). His work is available at www.thiscantbehappening.net.

Google Sued for Automating Email

Posted by kdawson on Tuesday August 28, @09:08PM
from the promoting-the-progress-of-science-and-the-useful-arts dept.
Dotnaught sends us to InformationWeek for news of the latest lawsuit by Polaris IP, which holds a patent on the idea of responding automatically to emails. The company has no products. It brought suit in the Eastern District in Texas, as many patent trolls do — though the article informs us that that venue has been getting less friendly of late to IP interests, and has actually invalidated some patents. The six companies being sued are AOL, Amazon, Borders, Google, IAC, and Yahoo. All previous suits based on this patent have been settled.

source : slashdot.org

FBI Eavesdropping Network

Posted by Zonk on Wednesday August 29, @09:28AM
from the hiya-big-bro dept.
An anonymous reader writes "Building off the design mandates of CALEA, the FBI has constructed a 'point-and-click surveillance system' that creates instant wiretaps on almost any communications device. A thousand pages of restricted documents released under the Freedom of Information Act were required to determine the veracity of this clandestine project, Wired News reports. Called the Digital Collection System Network, it connects FBI wiretapping rooms to switches controlled by traditional land-line operators, internet-telephony providers and cellular companies. It is intricately woven into the nation's telecom infrastructure. From the article: 'FBI wiretapping rooms in field offices and undercover locations around the country are connected through a private, encrypted backbone that is separated from the internet. Sprint runs it on the government's behalf. The network allows an FBI agent in New York, for example, to remotely set up a wiretap on a cell phone based in Sacramento, California, and immediately learn the phone's location, then begin receiving conversations, text messages and voicemail pass codes in New York. With a few keystrokes, the agent can route the recordings to language specialists for translation.'"

source : slashdot.org

Chicago Cancels WiFi Plan?

Posted by Zonk on Wednesday August 29, @10:11AM
from the wave-goodbye-to-the-broadbands dept.
thatshortkid writes "The Chicago Tribune is reporting that a proposed plan for municipal wi-fi in Chicago has fallen apart. The story cites contract disputes and the falling price of residential broadband as reasons for the talks collapsing. 'Chicago officials had intended that the city would offer infrastructure, but no cash, to a carrier that would use its own funds to build the network here. EarthLink and AT&T Inc. submitted proposals to the city, but after months of negotiations the parties were unable to reach agreement. The companies sought a commitment from Chicago to be an "anchor tenant," agreeing to pay to use the Wi-Fi network to support city services, but the city declined ... Even if Chicago declines to back a municipal wireless network, city residents soon will gain more Internet connection options. Sprint Nextel Corp. is building a wireless WiMax network here that is due to offer service next spring.'"

source : slashdot.org

AT&T Stops 'TIME'

Posted by Zonk on Wednesday August 29, @10:53AM
from the at-the-tone-i'm-finished dept.
theoeag writes "Starting in September, you will no longer be able to pick up a landline, payphone, etc and find out what time it is at the beep. AT&T, which has had the service since the 20s, cited a lack of demand in the digital age as the reason for "time"'s extinction. Actually, the service had already stopped in most states, but Nevada and California — with their large rural and unmapped areas — were still holding out, should the lost motorist or weary hiker need to know the time of day. But no more! The "Time Machine", which consisted of two large drum-like devices that contained several audio-tracks and a quite advanced system for syncing up with the caller, will probably end up in a museum, anxiously awaiting the arrival of its cousin: The Pay-Phone."

source : slashdot.org

5GHz WiFi Connection spans 189 miles!?

World record 5GHz WiFi connection spans 189 miles

Alright kids, time to put away the Pringles can and get serious about that inter-continental LAN party of yours, 'cause the Italian Center for Radio Activities (CISAR) is making you all look bad with its new world record. Stretching from Sardinia Island to Central Italy, the 189 mile connection ran on Ubiquiti's XtremeRange5 miniPCI module at 5Mbps, and used 35dBi 5GHz parabolic dish antennas to achieve the range. It's not exactly the furthest WiFi connection ever achieved, but it is the first to use the 5GHz frequency for 5Mbps speeds, and was purportedly a snap to set up with the Ubiquiti tech. It all seems almost silly in a world where we lose a few home WiFi bars when we take the laptop into the bathroom -- maybe it's time to do something about all that lead paint.

source : engadget.com

Water Propeled jet-pack?

New jet-pack patent propels with water


Sure, we all love jet packs. Who doesn't enjoy strapping a gigantic tube of highly flammable fuel to their back and igniting it so it can propel you hundreds of feet into the air? Well, an inventor named Raymond Li has a different idea, one which he's just managed to patent: a water-propelled rocket pack. The new design would use a system of conduits which route pressure to independently pivoting thrust nozzles, while the actual engine, pump, and dangerous gases remain floating on water in a self-contained, buoyant package. It's somewhat unclear if you'll be able to rocket over land using this device (the fact that the engine is water-based would suggest no), though it is an interesting development for jet-pack enthusiasts.

source : engadget.com

Anti-GPS signs?

Welsh get incomprehensible anti-GPS signs

Apparently looking to avoid unfortunate incidents like this (or this, or this), the Welsh Assembly recently agreed to put up signs warning drivers not to use their GPS along narrow lanes. Problem is, the drivers may end up spending more time trying to figure out the meaning of the signs than they ever did staring at their GPS. According to Sky News, the signs are aimed specifically at lorry drivers, who seem to have been particularly prone to getting stuck along roadways around St. Hilary in the Vale of Glamorgan -- a problem one local resident described as a "nightmare." Despite those potential issues of comprehension, that region has now gotten four of the signs as part of a one-year trial period, although there doesn't appear have to been any word on their effectiveness (or lack thereof) just yet.

source : engadget.com

Google mobile OS

Google is working on a mobile OS, and it's due out shortly

Can it be true? Is the Googlephone nigh at hand? Not that we haven't been hearing this time after time (after time after time, etc.), but we've actually got some hot news from a number of very trustworthy sources about Google's plans for the mobile space. Namely, Google's mobile device platform is well on its way, and will be announced in the very near future.

We understand that the "Gphone OS" (our name for it, not theirs) began development after Google's very quiet 2005 acquisition of mobile software company Android, started by Danger cofounder and former-prez / CEO Andy Rubin. At Google, Andy's team has developed a Linux-based mobile device OS (no surprise) which they're currently shopping around to handset makers and carriers on the premise of providing a flexible, customizable system -- with really great Google integration, of course.

As for the timeframe on this thing, we keep hearing Google will announce its mobile plans some time post-Labor Day (September 3rd); from what we've heard Google isn't necessarily working on hardware of its own, but is definitely working with OEMs and ODMs to get them to put the Gphone OS on upcoming devices. Think of it more in terms of Windows Mobile or Palm OS (in the early days) -- Google wants to supply the platform, but we don't think they want to sell hardware. Still, don't entirely rule out the idea. Andy Rubin knows how to make a device and put it in peoples' hands, so nothing is impossible on the hardware side. Either way, we're totally stoked to peep the software, we've been waiting for the Googlephone for years on years.

Still, we can't help wondering what El Jobso thinks about all this. Apple has been so buddy-buddy with Google lately, especially on the iPhone -- and now Apple's mobile team is on the verge of outright competition with one of its closest partners. We know that's how the industry works, but it's got to sting a little, you know?

source : engadget.com

Olympus DSLR

Olympus launches the E-3 DSLR?


Remember the unnamed Olympus DSLR of with multiple monickers? We've seen it as the E-P1 and P-1, but now, after what seems like countless months brand-free glass-encased trade show appearances it looks like Olympus has officially titled launched it's E-1 DSLR successor, the E-3. We don't yet know much about it, but we understand it will have a live view LCD, work on the 3/4ths mount standard, and be available at least somewhere in November. (That in addition to the other stuff we heard, like it having a 10 megapixel sensor, 11 point autofocus, etc.) We'll update with information as it continues to trickle out.

source : engadget.com

iPhone unlock

iPhoneSIMfree announces availability of iPhone unlock within 3 days

You've seen the hack, now see the FAQ. In it the iPhoneSIMfree free guys answer many of the questions we already got to (Is it restore-resistant? Yes. Which features don't work? Just Visual Voicemail. Does it work with 1.0.2? Yes. Etc.), and a few we've all been eagerly awaiting the answers to:
  • Can I unlock it before the AT&T registration process?
    Yes.
  • What is the process the end user will go through?
    Currently our initial release will require that the end user activate and "jail break" in order to place our app on the phone. (We are working toward a fully automated PC / Mac application to be released shortly after launch).
  • Do you offer 100% money back guarantee if the software does not work?
    The unlock WILL work. We cannot offer any guarantee should Apple, Inc. choose to re-lock the phone after a future update.
And the 64k question:
  • When can I get it?
    We are hoping to release in the next 48-72 hours.
We'll let you know when we hear more.

source : engadget.com

Monday, August 27, 2007

Google Phone?

GooglePhone: Two Weeks?

Posted by samc on August 24th, 2007

Engadget says they have witnessed a full SIM unlock of the iPhone with a small piece of software.

The iPhoneSIMfree.com team said they cracked Apple’s iPhone SIM. That, apparently, allows the iPhone to be used on the other GSM network in the United States — T-Mobile.

Congratulations, guys. Now it’s on to the Google Phone (right). Oh, no wait…it’s already open, isn’t it?

Rediff is reporting that the rumored Google Phone will be launched in 2 weeks. The GPhone is said to simultaneously launch in both Europe and the United States, with the only thing standing in Google’s way being US regulatory approval.

According to TechCrunch;


Om Malik reporting in December that a Google phone was being developed for release in 2008. Engadget posted alleged pictures of the GPhone in January 07 (see pic) with notes claiming that the device was a button-less touchscreen phone that came with GPS built-in for pinpoint navigation around Google Maps. ZDNet wrote that the phone was said to be 3G with built in Wifi and was designed by Samsung. The Register again reported in early August that the GPhone would include 3G, Wifi and GPS, and that UK mobile operator Orange was in talks with Google to carry the device.

Google has continued to deny rumors of the phones existence.

source : dailywireless.org

Google Transit Maps

Google Transit Maps

Posted by samc on August 24th, 2007

Google, which provides online transit guides for more than a dozen U.S. cities, is now taking on the biggestNew York’s Metropolitan Transportation Authority.

Google is working with the agency to give users one place to go for maps, schedules and trip planners. The New York and New Jersey transit agencies serve the five New York City boroughs and suburbs in New Jersey, Connecticut, Westchester County and Long Island.

Google introduced its online guides in 2005. They boost Google’s revenue from ad revenue. Google probably got about $500 million in sales last year from local ads, or about 8 percent of its U.S. revenue of $6 billion, said Greg Sterling, an analyst at Sterling Market Intelligence in San Francisco.

U.S. companies spent about $922 million last year to place ads alongside local searches and maps, according to Kelsey Group Inc., a market research firm in Princeton, New Jersey. That will almost triple to $2.61 billion by 2011, the researcher says. They forecast global local search and online classified advertising revenues will grow from $15.7 billion in 2005 to $31.1 billion in 2010. The local search segment will grow from $3.4 billion in 2005 to $13 billion in 2010, with online classifieds growing from $12.3 billion to $18.1 billion during the same period.

The metropolitan New York market would be the biggest and most complicated Google has tried to crack with its online guide. The New York MTA had 8.27 million daily riders as of Dec. 31 and runs the city’s subway and buses and the Long Island and Metro- North railroads. The system has 468 subway stations, 35 fewer than in all other U.S. cities combined.

New Jersey Transit, the largest statewide transit system in the U.S., carries about 857,000 passengers daily on buses, commuter trains and light-rail lines.

While some agencies, including New York’s MTA and New Jersey Transit, have trip planners on their own Web sites, travelers may be more inclined to get directions from Google because they already use its other mapping services, rather than trying to navigate local transit Web sites.

The Nokia N95, E90 and 6110 Navigator as well as some Windows Mobile phones have built-in GPS, with features similar to standalone GPS units. Nokia Maps and Google Maps for Mobile as well as Yahoo Mobile Maps and Microsoft Live Mobile Maps will soon include GPS support for points of interest.

How long until every block gets a 42″ touch screen displaying Google Earth, Google Sky, Google Transit, Google News and i Google — also on your G-Phone? Maybe sooner than we think.

source : dailywireless.org

iPhone unlock

UniquePhones's iPhone unlock release 'slowed' by AT&T lawyers


Hope you weren't waiting in tense anticipation to get your hands on UniquePhones's iPhone unlock software, because things certainly aren't going as planned. Reportedly, the gurus behind the software unlock were contacted by "a Silicon Valley law firm" who is "slowing down the release of the software." Of course, they still claim to have the app "ready to go," but until this legal hubbub gets cleared up, it seems like their method of freeing your iPhone will remain a well kept secret. We'll keep you posted.

source : engadget.com

Red ONE HD - kick ass!

RED ONE HD camcorder finally gets a street date


So we know a lot of you have been on the edge of your seat concerning the RED ONE modular, high-end, HD HD-clobbering camcorder system. The camera -- announced at NAB way back in the wild, sun-soaked days of 2006 -- rocks 11.4-megapixel, 60fps video, and is designed as a multi-part system, featuring a base unit that can be modded with a variety of add-ons -- allowing for all kinds of crazy configurations (just what the low-budget auteur is after). Now, according to the Reduser forums (and more specifically, Jim Jannard, Oakley founder and Red Digital Cinema company head), the RED ONE shipments will begin on August 31st, with a second batch to follow on September 7th. Sure, the $17,500 base system price-tag may seem prohibitive to some, but as we all know, fear is the mind-killer, and if you're really serious about that film you're making, you're going to need something like this. Time to break open the piggy-bank.

source : engadget.com

Automated Restaurant - the rebellion is comming

Fully automated restaurant opens in Germany


Hate interacting with humans? Well then we've got the restaurant for you, located in Nuremberg, Germany. The restaurant, called Bagger's, eschews waiters and waitresses for gravity operated ramps that sends food directly to tables. Customers order on touch screens, swipe their cards on built in readers, and wait for their food with a read-out that shows when the food is expected to be delivered. So, get ready to yell at your ordinateur when your fries are late. "Garcon!" ain't gonna cut it in this restaurant.

source : engadget.com

Acer to acquire Gateway

Acer to acquire Gateway: so long cow spots?


Acer -- the third largest PC company globally -- just announced a definitive agreement to acquire Gateway. The acquisition has been approved unanimously by both boards and is expected to close by December 2007. You know, following the usual international, anti-trust approvals. Sure seems like a win-win what with Gateway steadily losing market share (but still tied for third largest PC maker in the US) while finally giving Taiwan's Acer a dominant position in the Americas to match their aggressive growth in Europe and Asia. From the looks of the press release, it would appear that the Gateway (and eMachines) brands will continue under Acer's new "multi-branded company." Fine, but could we now get rid of the cow spots, please? It's not 1985 anymore.

source : engadget.com

virtual XP or Vista - damn cool

Pano Logic's Pano: virtual XP or Vista in a box


Check it CIOs, Pano Logic just announced their new Pano virtualization device which brings XP and Vista to your users without the need of a PC. According to the fiesty startup, their new virtualization solution can cut your Total Cost of Ownership by 70% for a promised savings of $3,200 per desktop over three years. While you can ace the desktop PC, you'll still have to make the initial investment of $20 per month per device (one per user) with perpetual licenses available. The Pano device has no CPU, memory, operating system or drivers -- at least not in the way those items are typically perceived by your IT staff. A "Pano Logic chip" manages the virtualization. In other words: no client-side malware or hiccups for fewer deskside visits -- everything is managed centrally from your VMWare Server installation. The device does pack the required jacks for a VGA display (up to 1600 x 1200 pixels supported), USB keyboard and Mouse (3x total USB), 10/100Mbps Ethernet, and a pair of mini-jacks for audio in/out. Of course, the system is entirely dependent upon lickity quick, uncongested pipes so if you're sporting a latency above 5-ms, you can forget about Pano's virtualization. Check out the business minded, ass-end of the Pano after the break.

source : engadget.com

Great Mic for PodCasting

CEntrance's MicPort Pro makes your podcasting dreams come true


You know, sometimes you want a preamp, but not too much preamp. Well, CEntrance has got you all-kinds of covered on that tip with its new, self-contained, microphone-attaching, USB-based MicPort Pro. The premise of the device is simple: it turns any single microphone or instrument into a self-powered, single channel, 24-bit / 96KHz audio interface -- all you have to do is hook it up to your computer with the supplied USB cable. The MicPort also features a headphone out, if you want to create the wackiest closed-loop situation ever, though it looks like the company is intending this for podcasters and the like, given that it allows any and all XLR-based mics to be plugged directly into your USB port. Shipping now (or so the company says) for $149.95.

source : engadget.com

Friday, August 24, 2007

Google mobile phone

Google's mobile phone in two weeks? Not likely


According to reports out of India, Google is currently in talks with country's first and third largest telecos, Bharti Airtel and Vodafone Essar, concerning everyone's favorite mobile rumor: the Google Phone. Based on information coming from Rediff's India Abroad, an exclusive launch -- happening in a highly questionable two weeks -- is being discussed between the companies, and would tie into a simultaneous debut of the Gphone in both the US and Europe, coupled with announcements in India and other parts of the world. The only hurdle, they say, is approval from regulatory agencies (such as the FCC, we would assume). The report goes on to suggest that Google has plans to invest $7-8 billion in its telephony plot, though there has been practically zero confirmation from the company. When asked about the possibility of the Google mobile phone making an appearance soon, a spokesperson for the search-portal-giant said, "We don't comment on market rumour or speculation. However, Google is committed to providing users with access to the world's information, and mobile becomes more important to those efforts every day." So, while you can never, truly rule out a sudden showing of the Gphone, definitely don't go banking on it either.

source : engadget.com

figerprint scanner in car

ATRD M10 offers fingerprint scanning for your car

It looks like those not satisfied with the current security measures on their vehicle will soon have another option at their disposal for some added peace of mind, with ATRD's new M10 device set to offer some fingerprint scanning as a means of last resort. The system can apparently be retrofitted into just about any vehicle, with a variety of different modules available to integrate it with various alarm and immobilization systems. With the device installed, you'll have to first put the key in your vehicle to start the electronics, and then place your finger on the scanner in order to start the ignition. For those sharing a vehicle, you'll be able store up to ten different prints, and there's also a "valet mode" that'll let others drive the vehicle. No word on a price or release date, but we're sure some of you can whip up your own solution with some off-the-shelf gear -- if you haven't already.

source : engadget.com

Flex crystal display

Flexible displays created by stretching crystals

As researchers continue to forge ahead in their quest to create commercially viable flexible displays, a new team from Canada has apparently unearthed a breakthrough of sorts. Reportedly, the crew has been able to conjure up a full-color display which boasts pixels made from photonic crystals, and by "bonding them to an electroactive polymer that expands when a voltage is applied to it," the colors of the pixels change. According to André Arsenault of the University of Toronto, the newfangled devices "can be viewed just as well in bright sunlight as in indoor light," and if all goes as planned, we could be seeing a whole lot more of these promising units "in as little as two years" when the startup Opalux looks to fit these bendable creations into billboards, handheld gadgetry, and anything else it deems fit.

source : engadget.com

Netgear WiFi Skype

Netgear intros SPH200W WiFi phone with Skype


If you can reach back into the archives of your brain, you may be able to recall an elusive Netgear WiFi Skype phone that was previewed in May. Unless our eyes are seriously deceiving us, that very handset has now been launched, and it's been titled the SPH200W. Sporting 802.11b/g compatibility, around four hours of talk time (or 48 hours in standby), WEP / WPA / WPA2 support, and most importantly, the ability to take and make Skype calls wherever there's an open WiFi signal, this device also allows you to manage up to 500 contacts and touts a built-in speakerphone. Unfortunately, there's no word on how much this unit will cost you just yet, but feel free to indulge in a few extra photos waiting after the jump.

source : engadget.com

HotSpot @ Home

HotSpot @ home

Thursday, August 23, 2007

China - Baidu, Google, Alibaba

Last Month in China - Baidu, Google and Alibaba

August 21st, 2007 by Gemme | 2 Comments

It has been some time since my last overview of the latest “What happened in China”. I just blame it on buying an apartment in Shanghai:).

There has happened a lot and I will highlight the most significant. Baidu is yet again offering more services, Google revives Answers, Yahoo resumes real name service and Alibaba starts an ad exchange. First something else.

Halfway July, the China Internet Network Information Centre (CNNIC is a government agency) released the lowdown on the number of Internet users in China. The report showed a sharp increase over the last half year, from 137 million to 162 million users.

It surprised me but I couldn’t figure out right away what the cause was.

The CWRblog did have an explanation for it, by citing from the report that the CNNIC has changed their definition of an Internet user. In all previous reports Internet users were defined as “Chinese citizens aged 6 and above who averagely use the Internet at least one hour per week”.

In the latest version the CNNIC has broadened the scope of Internet Users by changing the definition to, “Chinese citizens aged 6 and above who used the Internet in the last half year”. A rather significant difference which helps the stats go up. The difference in definition also applies to Mobile Internet Users. No wonder the number of mobile internet users increased with 157% to 44 million. It seems they can’t wait to overtake the US fast enough.

Baidu’s call-a-search and IM rumors

Baidu has launched a voice-based search service. You call and a real person will help you out.

Danwei tried it out:

You can call (010) 1161 6690 and ask the operator to search for information.
Your correspondent called and asked for a Middle Eastern restaurant in Beijing. The operator took about one minute to provide the phone number and address of 1001 Nights, which is in fact the capital’s most popular Arab restaurant.
I then asked the operator to find Hu Jintao’s (note: the Chinese President) email address. She was amused but had no luck finding it.

There are rumors that Baidu will launch their own instant messenger. The current leader is Tencent with QQ, followed by MSN Messenger. Although a rumor I wouldn’t be surprised if Baidu would launch this. All the big players in China venture out from their core business to corner more of the Internet market. As said, QQ rules the instant messaging market so it won’t be an easy venture in case the rumor becomes reality.

Google offers Chinese Answers and plans investments

Google has started a cooperation with Tianya.cn, a huge community website, to offer a free version of Answers and cooperate as well on Laiba, a social networking website. Last year they closed down their paid English version of Answers but recently they started a free Russian version and now it’s China’s turn.

Baidu already has their own version called Zhidao and China Tech Stories tells us:

Baidu Answers(zhidao.baidu.com) has been very successful in China. Robin Li, CEO of Baidu claimed recently that Baidu Answers has become the largest interactive community service in the world.

The same blog also mentions the rumor, there we have it again, that Google has taken a majority stake in said Tianya. On the time of writing the draft for this article, it was still a rumor. It has stopped being a rumor as Google announced they made an investment in Tianya. The amount of the investment is still in the open. The rumor, I love these, is that they bought 60% but Google denies.

This investment is in line with Kai-Fu Lee’s, president of Google China, recent statements that they intend to invest in four to five companies and buy one or two companies. Tianya is the first one that has been made public.

Another show of Google’s intent to get as local as possible is that they introduced two other versions of its Guge News. A Text-only and an Image-version.

Alibaba gets a wife

Alibaba has added a new part to its already formidable empire. Next to Alibaba, the biggest B2B platform in China, next to Taobao, the biggest online auction platform and next to Alipay, the biggest online payment provider in China, they have now started Alimama which is a nice addition to the Alibaba family.

From the CWRblog

As a typical ad exchange, in Alimama, publishers can specify the format of ads on their websites, the types of ads they would like to serve, the price for the ads, and the profile of the website to let advertisers to choose. Advertisers can set the readers they want to targeted, their budgets and the type of ads. Then if there is websites match the criteria of advertisers, the ads will show automatically on those websites.

Alibaba’s B2B service already has many users of small and medium enterprises, who would be main advertisers of an ad exchanges, so Alibaba can cross market this new service to those SMEs.

The big players in China are investing and broadening their scope in the online world fast these days. The coming months it will become clear what other websites Google will invest in and I expect Baidu to keep on rolling out new services as well.

source : searchenginejournal.com

Facebook Ad Deal

Facebook Draws Advertising Strategy

August 23rd, 2007 by Arnold Zafra | No Comments

Despite establishing itself as a contender into the social networking arena, Facebook up to know is still uncertain on how to put in more revenues into its bank accounts. Facebook has been struggling on the financial side especially since owner, Mark Zuckerberg has consistently turned down buyout proposal from several giant companies. But things seems to be on the positive note now with Facebook as The Wall Street Journal reports that the second most popular social networking site is drawing up a plan to set up an advertising system that aims to accomplish what Google did with its advertising program, Adwords. That is, allowing anyone to purchase relevant “keywords” online.

Facebook will utilize the information that its member put into their public profiles to identify relevant ads that will be integrated into the news feeds of activities that are visible to members’ networks of friends.

Using its technology, Facebook will pinpoint to advertisers, members’ networks which would be most interested to their particular product. To safeguard members’ personal information from advertisers, Facebook would not divulge the members’ information but instead will just direct advertisers to relevant networks where they could target to serve their advertisements to.

With this new plan on advertising scheme, Facebook is hoping to get in more revenues into its accounts which are very vital to Facebook’s survival. Being the only privately owned company among the social networking industry, Facebook is facing a tough challenge on its income generation program.

A big part of Facebook’s fate hangs in the balance. And advertising revenues would play a big role in determining that fate. Should Facebook succeed in generating more revenues from this advertising program, then it can give its closest rival, MySpace, a good battle in the social networking market.

source : searchenginejournal.com

YouTube Ads

YouTube to Serve Overlay Ads on Selected Videos

August 21st, 2007 by Arnold Zafra | 1 Comment

Google will begin serving advertisements on selected YouTube videos through an “overlay” method that appears on the bottom of videos during the first 20 seconds of play before disappearing 10 seconds after.

YouTube users will have the option to close the ad overlay before it finishes playing or click on the ads to launch it. If the user decides to click on the ads, the current video will pause for awhile, while the user views the ads and resumes it as soon as the ad stops from rolling.

Serving ads on YouTube videos could be both beneficial to YouTube users and advertisers as well. Giving users more control of the ads being serve to them reduces the annoyance towards online ads and even entices them to click on the ads. Hence, the challenge lies on advertisers to come up with engaging and lively advertisement that would lure customers into their fold.

Currently on the testing stage, the new ad serving scheme pays YouTube content partners around 70%-80% revenue payment. As for advertiser charges, YouTube charges $20 per one thousand video viewings.

With the current popularity of user generated and uploaded videos, it is high time that Google utilizes YouTube videos for income generating purposes, to recover the cost it pays for it.

source : searchenginejournal.com

Google Mobile

More People Using Mobile Google Services


Posted by Eric Zeman, Aug 23, 2007 11:07 AM
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Bucking typical summer technology trends, the number of savvy mobile users logging onto Google's services has jumped since May. The most popular mobile apps? Gmail, Google Maps, and good old Google search.

As May and June unfold, there is generally a slow down in the amount of Internet traffic seen by Google (20% to 40%). According to Reuters, so many people logged onto Google services via their mobile phones over the last few months, that use leaped by 35%. So far use of mobile services has remained high all summer, even though regular PC-based traffic has dropped off as people log off and go on vacation.

The application that saw the biggest jump in mobile usage was Google Maps (40% to 50%). This was buoyed in part by Google Maps' inclusion on the iPhone, which launched June 29th. Google noted that there are "tens of millions" of mobile searches performed every day. It did not indicate what sort of usage its mobile Gmail application was actually seeing, nor anything about its mobile calendar app.

This reflects an important marker in mobile services: They are truly beginning to catch on. People are finally beginning to realize what their phones--especially smartphones with more advanced browsers--are capable of. And they're putting them to use.

Google has worked hard over the last 18 months to make mobile services easier to use and more appealing. In fact, usability is a core aspect of Google's mobile strategy. Its work appears to be paying off. I use Google's mobile services every day. Do you?

source : informationweek.com

Google Sky

Google Sky

Posted by samc on August 22nd, 2007

Sky in Google Earth lets you explore the heavens. Like Google Earth, Sky will let users fly around and zoom in, exposing increasingly detailed imagery of some 100 million stars and 200 million galaxies, explains the NY Times.

“You will be able to browse into the sky like never before,” said Carol Christian, an astronomer with the Space Telescope Science Institute, a nonprofit academic consortium that supports the Hubble Space Telescope. “These are really the images of the sky. Everything is real.”

The Sky imagery was stitched together from more than one million photographs from scientific and academic sources, including the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, the Palomar Observatory at the California Institute of Technology and the NASA-financed Hubble.

Microsoft has a research project called the World Wide Telescope that offers similar capabilities to Sky. The project was once headed by Jim Gray, the veteran Microsoft researcher who disappeared this year after a sailing trip off San Francisco Bay.

source : dailywireless.org

802.11 n

Will “N” Rescue MuniFi?

Posted by samc on August 22nd, 2007

There are now some 71 products that offer some 802.11n compatibility. This January, the 802.11n working group okayed Draft 2.0 with the full IEEE approving it some months later. The next step is Draft 3.0, which should see only minor modifications from 2.0, followed by the official 802.11n specification late next year.

Draft 2.0 hardware is guaranteed to work with the final 802.11n specification. That means any upgrade can probably be made with a firmware download.

A new 802.11n home router may be worth the price premium just for the improved range around the house. If an “N” client with MIMO can link to an ordinary WiFi access point at nearly twice the range, as one might hope (with MIMO antennas built into laptops), perhaps municipal WiFi might actually prove useful.

The issue of 40 MHz channels in the 2.4 MHz band remains a concern, says Wireless Design Line, with the protocol for interference avoidance still unsettled in the 802.11n draft. All 801.11n draft 2.0 certified products are listed at Wi-Fi.org.

source : dailywireless.org


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