by Joshua Klein
posted Aug 25th 2004 at 1:04AM
Necessity is the mother of invention, or so we're told. Schneider National Inc. needed to know what the hell was
going on with their trailers so they devised a tracking system with Qualcomm to figure it out. The new trailers include
sensors to tell if they're empty or full, as well as sensors to detect if they're connected to a truck or riding on a
railroad car. All this data is paired with a tracking system that transmit this data over cellular networks. Makes
Smoky and the Bandit seem kind of primitive, doesn't it?
by Joshua Klein
posted Aug 9th 2004 at 12:34PM
Seems that Belkin is going to start using Airgo's MIMO (Multiple Input, Multiple Output) technology in their
wireless gear that lets you quadruple the speed of 802.11g from its current maximum of 54Mbps to over 200Mbps. The
catch is the same one you'll find with all that Netgear and Linksys gear which doubles the speed of 802.11g to 108Mbps:
none of the equipment is interoperable, so to get the full benefits of the boost you have to use the right kind of
Belkin wireless access points with the right kind of Belkin wireless cards. The good news is that Airgo's MIMO format
could very well end up as the basis for the new 802.11n protocol that is being hammered out by the IEEE, which means we
might possibly see it in other devices in the not-too-distant future. The wireless access points should go for around
$189 and the cards for $130 when they arrive sometime in mid-October.
by Joshua Klein
posted Aug 9th 2004 at 12:16PM
Keeping people locked in cages has never been so complicated, but the Pinellas County Sheriff's Office in Florida is
taking things to the next level with their new WiFi network. Besides using the system for wireless handhelds, they're
also using the WiFi to monitor inmate location, keep track of inmates records and photos, and for making VoIP phone
calls between deputies. It isn't as Orwellian as it could be—there are no wirelessly-enabled cameras in the showers and
the guards can't use WiFi to remotely activate your shock collar, but at least if we find ourselves spending a night in
the Pinellas County jail we'll be able to while away the time looking at Internet porn. (At this point taking away our
laptop would surely count as cruel and unusual punishment, wouldn't it?)
by Joshua Klein
posted Aug 6th 2004 at 12:17PM
We wouldn't bet our first-born on it, but PhoneMag swears up and down that a "trusted source" has confirmed for them
that Motorola will be brightening our lives with their new MPx220 Smartphone on September 27th. The MPx Pocket PC Phone
is supposed to appear a couple of months later, on November 30th, but we've heard rumors that it's been delayed until
early next year.
[Via Smartphone Thoughts]
by Joshua Klein
posted Aug 6th 2004 at 11:55AM
Today's fast-paced world demands ever more of our children and the Magic Messenger is here to help. It's a neat
little device with a full QWERTY keyboard that connects to a landline and lets you send text messages to both
cellphones and regular phones (converting your child's
message to speech if the recipient's phone isn't text message-capable). Only available in the UK right now, the
Magic Messenger costs £20 (which includes an initial three month subscription) and £4.50 every three months after that,
with texts costing 10p each. It also has group sending, so your kids can blast messages out to many people at once,
letting them learn the ways of the cellphone spammer at a young age.
[via Textually.org]
by Joshua Klein
posted Aug 6th 2004 at 10:19AM
Get that little lead bag for your cellphone ready; long distance Bluesnarfing (aka using Bluetooth to hijack a
cellphone or PDA) is here. An Austrian Bluetooth researcher in Santa Monica Bay recently used an antenna and a modified
dongle (don't do this at home, kids) to steal the entire address book as well as send an SMS from a target phone 1.08
miles away. (Looks like they could have also used the
BlueSniper we reported on yesterday.) Along the way they
saw dozens of Bluetooth devices that were similarly vulnerable, although they say they focused only on that one
phone. Bluetooth-enabled cellphone makers (we're looking in your general direction, Nokia) are denying that
Bluesnarfing is a serious risk because it has to be done in such close proximity to the victim, but it looks like that
theory's out the window…
[UPDATE: We've just been contacted by the Flexilis team who
conducted the experiment in conjunction with Martin Herfurt, the Austrian researcher. They organized the event with
Martin. Thanks, John!]
by Joshua Klein
posted Aug 6th 2004 at 3:37AM
Sometimes a handheld comes out of left field and sort of blindsides you - the Tiqit is one of those. It's been so
long since we'd heard anything about it that we'd figured they'd just quietly faded away, something which isn't totally
unheard of for a startup. But not so! The Tiqit is alive and well, sort of. Like the OQO, it's a handheld computer that
runs on Windows XP (though it'll also run Linux and Unix), but has a pathetically slow CPU (just 300MHz, or slower than
most regular PDAs these days). Yeah, it has a full 56-key keyboard and a mouse stick with left/right buttons, but it's
awfully thick and heavy, weighing in at a hefty 1.25 pounds. If we're lucky the next version will be slimmer, trimmer,
and sport some built-in WiFi; assuming that the Tiqit survives long enough to see a second edition.
by Joshua Klein
posted Aug 5th 2004 at 12:10PM
British company Forbidden Technologies thinks they've stumbled on yet another form of viral marketing:
"viewtoothing", which mainly involves people using Bluetooth to beam each other video clips using their cellphones. And
of course they have a new application called FORmobile that let's people do just that (as if it were somehow impossible
to share video clips over Bluetooth already), which is handy because they want to sell it to marketers as way to expose
consumers to clips of movie trailers, advertisements, etc. who will then share them with their friends (that's the
viral part). Too bad they're going to discover the limitations of viral marketing when they see how badly the term
"viewtoothing" fails to catch on.
[Via Textually.org]
by Joshua Klein
posted Aug 5th 2004 at 12:01PM
You thought you were an audiophile? Well chew on this: the Nordic Concept turntable has two different cabinets, one
for the platter, and one for the motor and phono preamp. The idea is that the very thin belt minimizes any transfer of
vibrations from the motor, and the huge platter further minimizes vibration and assures a perfectly flat surface for
your records. They've got ceramic bearings, vibration damped cabinets, and an extra heavy puck for level adjustment -
and did we mention the "unconventional Nordic design"? Of course this all comes at a price - $9,800 for the turntable
without preamp, $15,500 with. Quality doesn't cheap, you know.
by Joshua Klein
posted Aug 5th 2004 at 11:47AM
Looks like Orange wants to be one of the cool kids now (we reported on T-Mobile UK's
3G/GPRS launch last last month), and is providing
its own 3G/GPRS card for PC owners. This enables users to access the web at top speeds near a respectable 384Kbps -
that's "near broadband" for the marketers among us. Given that Orange claims to have a wider 3G network than its rival,
Vodafone, (covering 60% of the UK population as opposed to a measly 42%) this is good news. The downside may lie in
usability; rumor has it the interface on the Orange cards aren't as good, and only time will tell how reliable its
network connectivity is and what kinds of download speeds subscribers can realistically expect.
by Joshua Klein
posted Aug 5th 2004 at 11:05AM
The FCC have ruled that marketers must have explicit permission from anyone with a wireless device before they send
them spam, a ruling eerily similar in scope to the
CAN-SPAM act for email which
has been largely ignored by spammers. The devil's in the details on this one - this ruling only applies to email sent
to your phone from the carrier. Most carriers have a special email address they use for your phone (i.e.,
2061923343@carrier.com); checking email from your normal account isn't affected. Most importantly, SMS text messages
aren't affected at all, which is pretty much what people think of when you say "mobile spam." The long and short of it
is that the ruling is basically a loophole closure for the CAN-SPAM act, and doesn't really do much to protect us from
all the text message spam on our phones. Hey, at least
the FCC is trying…
by Joshua Klein
posted Aug 5th 2004 at 4:13AM
Not that you can put too much stock in these sorts of things, but there's a rumor that AT&T Wireless is backing
away from plans to carry Sierra Wireless' new Voq Professional Phone, which runs on Microsoft's Smartphone OS., saying
that it'll be supported on their network, but not sold by them. We're guessing that Sierra Wireless and AT&T's
first date didn't quite pan out—did Sierra not pay for dinner or open the door for them on the way out? The big
question now is what AT&T means by "support"; we're assuming it means they're just talking the kind of suppoer
where you can slap your SIM in and you'll be able to make calls (which you can do with any unlocked GSM phone, really),
but no one knows.
by Joshua Klein
posted Aug 4th 2004 at 1:47PM
There's nothing more delightful than squealing grubby rugrats racing around the shopping aisles when you're trying
to get your Alka-Seltzer morning relief after a big night out. Fortunately British supermarket chain Tesco may have a
cure. They recently funded a study that found that three-fourths of parents found shopping with children stressful
(which is only surprising that there is a one-fourth that doesn't) and want to develop something called the "Tantrum
Tamer", a shopping trolley (that's British-ese for Shopping Cart) twith an electronic screen attached to the handle of
the cart for playing DVDs, CDs, and educational games. The real fun, of course, will be in seeing how ruggedized Tesco
has to make the things to survive the brutal affections of the 3-9 year-old set that will be torturing these things
and how they stop hacker-types from swiping them for home use and cracking them open to feast on the gooey
electro-goodness inside.
by Joshua Klein
posted Aug 4th 2004 at 11:36AM
SlimDevices just prettied up their Squeezebox networked digital audio player a little bit. The two-line,
forty-character display on both their wireless and wired models has been replaced with a 280 by 16 pixel graphic
display (the display is also available as an upgrade for older models). There are also two new software releases that
are available, one featuring an enhanced user interface based on the new display, and the other a visualizer feature
for developers to play with.
by Joshua Klein
posted Aug 4th 2004 at 11:24AM
The new Kodak EasyShare Printer Dock Plus isn't really that exceptional; it makes 4x6 inch prints (or multiple
pictures on 4x6 inch sheets) directly from both digital cameras and memory cards, something plenty of other
manufacturers offer. But what is worth mentioning is that Kodak is getting even deeper behind wireless printing (which
they already offer through their Picture Maker G3 kiosks) and in October they're coming out with a Bluetooth USB
adapter for this thing that'll make it possible to print pics directly from cameraphones (yes, we know there are other
Bluetooth printer adapters and even
printers out there, but hey, this is Kodak). It
looks like Kodak may actually be paying attention rather than just continuing their steady slide into irrelevance.
by Joshua Klein
posted Aug 4th 2004 at 11:12AM
We've pretty much given up on trying to get take decent pics with a cameraphone, especially since hardly any of them
sport a flash, and when they do, it's some anemic LED that can barely cast a shadow. Hopefully helping our plight,
Linear Technology has developed a photoflash capacitor system that can recharge a small xenon flash in under a second,
which is good because xenon bulbs are hundreds of times brighter than those little LED lights your phone has currently.
They're also much closer to natural light, meaning your pics will turn out better. Linear hopes to see its system in
cameraphones within 3 to 12 months, until then, continue on with outdoor, sunny-day cameraphone photography only.
by Joshua Klein
posted Aug 4th 2004 at 10:34AM
The National Transportation Safety Board recommended yesterday that all US cars be required to have black boxes like
those used in airplanes. Privacy advocates are freaking out because it's not clear who would own the resulting data,
but you don't need to be John Gilmore to realize that these things will make it a little harder to argue your way out
of a speeding ticket. In any case it's sort of a moot point; the NTSB recommendation came two months after the National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration (which has the actual authority here) said it didn't see a need to require them
because automakers were adding them to more models on their own. It looks like black boxes are already coming, required
or not, and somebody out there is going to make a mint doing after-market "de-installations" of these things.
by Joshua Klein
posted Aug 3rd 2004 at 12:45PM
We're definitely not hitting up Samsung next time we need advice about the fairer sex. Yeah, their new SGH-E600C
(which continues the long tradition of terrible, clunky and forgettable product names)is a "petite" GSM/GPRS
tri-band cameraphone with a silvery casing, with a camera that has a multi-shot feature, which can snap 6, 9, or 15
pictures at one shot, and also supports video recording. But aside from the fact that it's just small and pretty, how
exactly does it distinguish itself from any of the other tiny cellphones we lust after?
[Via PicturePhoning.com]
by Joshua Klein
posted Jul 31st 2004 at 12:32PM
And some say there's nothing new in fashion these days… Studio 5050's Love Jackets are made in pairs with matching
LEDs that blink and chirp when they come within ten feet of each other. They use infrared and a PIC chip to find each
other and make their noise, but what's really impressive is that all the hardware is surface mounted, meaning that the
tech is as invisible as possible. The components are connected via fabric "conduits" instead of wires, making them even
more comfortable and less obtrusive. The same designer has made "HugJackets," which make a different noise along with a
light show when the jackets' wearers hug. Now isn't that sickly sweet? There are also sneakers that click like
high-heel shoes and a set of bags that make more noise and light the more of them are brought together, proving that
tech and fashion are truly not dead — but are indeed strange bedfellows.
[Via near near future]
by Joshua Klein
posted Jul 29th 2004 at 12:22PM
Looks like a clever hacker took the Mac-based Bluetooth application Salling Clicker (well known to any Bluetooth
aware Mac user) and scripted a way to control his hugenormous telescope with it. This means he can whip out his phone
and watch his 'scope whiz and whir away to resolve on whatever he likes - no hands, man. Goes to show that megacorps
aren't having all the fun; it's still the little guy who comes up with that one cool app from time to
time.