Archive for the ‘Technology Related Articles’ Category

In-ear headphones offer a serious listening experience

Saturday, May 1st, 2010

Gillian Shaw
Sun

1. JH|10X3 PRO in-ear audio monitors, JHAudio, $800 US

If you’re just looking for an inexpensive pair of earbuds to listen to your iPod on the bus, keep looking. Starting at $800, the JHAudio Pro series is for serious listening. The Pro series custom-fit audio monitors count pros among users — Aerosmith, Guns ‘N Roses, Lady Gaga and others. With noise isolation of up to -26 dB, they reduce background noise, making for better sound without having to crank up the volume to hearing-loss levels. With studies showing hearing can be damaged by intemperate use of headphones (if everyone on the bus can overhear your music, take note) it could be worth the $800 and more for the Pro Series. There are four models, ranging from $800 to $1,150, and they are custom fit for each user. Buyers go to an audiologist who takes an impression of their ear canal, with the mould sent to JH Audio, to create the custom fit. www.jhaudio.com/promusic

PowerDuo for iPad, Griffin


2. PowerDuo for iPad, Griffin, $40 USAvailable for pre-order now, the PowerDuo combines Griffin’s PowerBlock and Power Jolt for the iPad in a bundled package. With pre-orders for Apple’s new iPad starting May 10 for Canadians and other international buyers, the PowerDuo, expected to be available later this month should be here in time. The PowerBlock AC charger is available for the iPad in a new 2.1-amp capacity. The PowerJolt for on-the-go power is a 12V power adapter. It sells separately for $25; the PowerBlock for $30. www.griffintechnology.com

3. 5D Mark II Digital SLR Camera, Canon, $2,500 US

Not new to the market, but creating a buzz these days for its starring role in the upcoming season finale of House. The entire last episode was shot using Canon’s 5D Mark II,

5D Mark II Digital SLR Camera, Canon

System Mechanic, iolo technologies

so if you want to see this camera put through its paces, tune in to see it focus on Dr. House, voted the second sexiest TV doctor ever. With a 21.1-megapixel CMOS sensor, it supports Live View shopping and Live View HD videos. It got a resounding 140-character endorsement from Greg Yaitanes, producing director of the show, who tweeted: “i’ll answer any questions you have about the canon 5D that we shot the finale on. yes, a stills camera that shoots amazing HD. go!” www.canon.com

4. System Mechanic, iolo technologies, $40

My hard-worn computer hasn’t actually given up, but there is no doubt it’s getting sluggish. The answer? A little housecleaning with System Mechanic, a virtual tool box that does its job effectively without requiring much effort from the negligent computer owner. Easy to install, it walks you through a few screens assessing and fixing your computer. The verdict on mine wasn’t pretty — 6.6 gigabytes of system clutter, a few (okay more than a few) registry problems, 12 unnecessary startup items. The list went on. I clicked to clean it all up and went back to watching the Canucks beat Los Angeles. Before the game wrapped up, my computer was clean as a whistle. www.iolo.com.

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

Facebook, privacy advocates square off over what’s public and what’s protected

Saturday, May 1st, 2010

Has the social networking site gone too far? Outrage over its recent moves suggest that’s the case

Gillian Shaw
Sun

Imagine that a picture of you shows up in an online ad for “hot singles.”

And you find out about it when your husband signs into his Facebook page only to see your face pop up as a sexy single looking for a date.

That’s what happened to Linda Bell, who discovered the innocuous head shot from her Facebook profile had been lifted to appear in an ad trolling for men seeking hot dates.

“It was shocking,” said Bell. “These days God only knows how people are going to use things they find on the Internet.”

Bell isn’t alone. In the stampede to share details of our lives online we are often giving away more than we realize and social networking sites like Facebook are counting on that to capitalize on a lucrative and growing data bonanza. While Facebook has pointed out to users such ads by third parties violated its policy over the user of profile photos and were removed, many users don’t give much thought to other places where they photos may show up.

We post photos our of children, thinking Granny and Auntie Mary are going to be captivated by their cuteness, little expecting the most innocent of photos could end up in the favourite files of someone with more nefarious interests.

Alec Couros, a professor of educational technology and media at the University of Regina, is social media savvy, yet even he was surprised to find a viewer had dropped by his Flickr photo site and picked out a number of photos of his young daughter and friends playing. That a stranger took such an interest would be concern enough, but then Couros found one of the photos in a gallery of photos, alongside pictures of young women, clothed but bound in photos suggestive of bondage.

Sometimes it’s strangers seeking financial gain from collecting the postings of others — like the person in Pakistan who billed himself as a social media leader, offering to sell for $100 an entire online slide show presentation posted by Vancouver’s Kemp Edmonds through his work as a social media educator at the B.C. Institute of Technology.

Or your personal information ends up in other commercial venues, as St. Louis’s Danielle Smith, founder of extraordinarymommy.com,

discovered when a photo of her family that she had posted on her website and on the social networking site Ning appeared in a Czech grocery store ad.

Annemarie Tempelman-Kluit is the founder and editor of yoyomama.ca.

As the mother of two girls, aged four and six, she is careful to ensure her family photos are only viewable by friends.

“Lots of naked kids pictures are cute and not creepy in any way, but you want your mother-in-law to see them you don’t want someone creepy to see them,” she said.

But while data are plundered from a variety of online sources, Facebook is one of the larger repositories of information about our populace.

And so its policies and practices around security and privacy create headlines, as did its recent changes that leave Facebook users’ personal data open to companies like Yelp and Microsoft.

Has Facebook gone too far?

Outrage over its most recent moves suggest that may be the case.

Canada‘s Privacy Commissioner has criticized the move that comes even as that office tries to get Facebook to comply with recommendations from an earlier report released last summer.

And Elizabeth Denham, assistant privacy commissioner, said while they are still studying the changes, it’s clear her office doesn’t support them.

“We are not happy,” said Denham. “I think we will have an announcement to make in the next few weeks.”

In the United States, four senators have called on Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg to reverse the changes and give users more control over how their information is used.

There’s no shortage of data: Facebook has more than 400 million users worldwide, with one in three Canadians on Facebook.

If you are counting on the company to safeguard your privacy, your confidence may be misguided.

The most recent sentiments about privacy attributed to Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg came second-hand — in a tweet from New York Times tech writer Nick Bilton who wrote: “Off record chat w/ Facebook employee. Me: How does Zuck feel about privacy? Response: [laughter] He doesn’t believe in it.”

The comment comes as no surprise because as Ian Kerr, Canada research chair in ethics, law and technology at the University of Ottawa, pointed out in a panel Friday:

Concerned your social networking posts have fallen into the wrong hands? Here are 10 ways to track yourself online.

1. Set up Google alerts for your name at www.google.com/alerts.

2. Reverse image search at www.tineye.com.

3. Search for images through a number of different search engines, including: Google image search ( images.google.comor click ‘images’ on search options at www.google.com).

4. Use Bing ( www.bing.com/images)to search for images and click on similar images to find various sites an image may have appeared.

5. Yahoo image search (images. search. yahoo.comor click ‘images’ on search options at www.yahoo.com).

6. Imagery At Elzr.Com/Imagery.

7. Check Flickr images by searching at www.flickr.com.

8. Search your name on www.pipl.comfor a list of everything from your contact info to photos, to websites, news articles, blogs, videos and other online sources.

9. Find yourself on Twitter. Some Twitter search tools including www.twitterfall.com,monitter.comand search.twitter.com.

10. MonitorThis, at alp-uckan.net/free/monitorthis,lets you subscribe to 20 different search engine feeds.

“It has long been Facebook’s strategy to make users opt out of default settings that leave their profile pretty wide open,” said Kerr.

Facebook users are not necessarily leaving the information open by intent. Rick Howard, director of intelligence at VeriSign’s iDefense Labs, is a security expert, yet he says he finds Facebook’s privacy and security policies difficult to decipher. And he understands why users are quick to accept friend requests on Facebook, even from people they don’t know because people want to be seen as being popular. What teen wants to be known as the person in the school with the fewest Facebook friends?

Once online, our inhibitions about sharing information often seem to evaporate. You might not stand in a grocery store lineup and announce to everyone within hearing your birth date, your mother’s maiden name, the high school you graduated from, the name of your pet cat and details of your upcoming surgery — yet a cursory run through of information shared on Facebook shows all that and more.

Just this week I received a friend request on Facebook. I didn’t know the person, but by the time I had looked through her Facebook profile, I probably had enough information to get a credit card in her name.

Tim Callan, vice-president of producing marketing at Veri-Sign, can tell you the results of over sharing. It could be the information is just picked off by robots that mine the information on a vast scale; in other cases it could be a more focused hit — like the beautiful girl or the handsome stranger who befriends the lonely hearts, building an online romance that only ends after the stranger has managed to convince the hapless victim to send money so they can visit and consummate the union. The money disappears, along with the heartthrob.

“There is a lot of behaviour on social networking sites where people feel like they are talking with their friends,” said Callan. “It is worthwhile for people to ask themselves, is this something that I would be happy for any stranger in the world to know?

“If the answer is yes, then go ahead and publish it.”

Many website changes

Facebook was already under fire over its privacy policies. Even as Canada’s Privacy Commissioner was carrying out a year-long investigation that culminated with a report last summer with recommendations for the site, the company was making so many changes the commissioner’s office had a staff member dedicated full time to keeping up with them. While that full-time monitoring came to an end with the release of the report, the pace of change at Facebook hasn’t abated. While the Privacy Commissioner’s office has been following up on its recommendations and monitoring Facebook’s response, the social networking site has come up with new strategies that leave privacy experts shaking their heads.

“Since its incorporation just over five years ago, Facebook has undergone a remarkable transformation,” writes Kurt Opsahl, senior staff lawyer with the Electronic Frontier Foundation. “When it started, it was a private space for communication with a group of your choice. Soon, it transformed into a platform where much of your information is public by default.

“Today, it has become a platform where you have no choice but to make certain information public, and this public information may be shared by Facebook with its partner websites and used to target ads.

Many Facebook users may not even know that the site automatically shares information from their Facebook profiles on search engine listings. That includes such details as your name, profile photo, gender, friends list and other items. You can’t edit the information that’s available to anyone searching the Web, it’s all or nothing — the only choice is to opt out completely so anyone looking for you on Facebook, either through the site or through an outside search engine, won’t find your Facebook profile.

While many users may not think sharing details like a photo and a list of friends (complete with their photos and public information) is not a big deal, it can be.

Couros, who teaches education students about technology and social media, said school districts have told him that finding a Facebook profile photo of a job candidate with a beer in his or her hand is enough to drop the candidate off the recruiting list.

“Even if you tighten up your Facebook profile as much as you can, you can’t hide your profile picture,” said Couros. “As a new teacher looking for a job you may have a beer in your hand.

“If you’ve got alcoholic beverages or you are doing something a bit sketchy, you are automatically out of the pool. It doesn’t matter what your resume looks like. I have heard that from four or five districts around Regina recently.”

You may or may not agree with such hiring judgments, but as a job candidate you’ll probably never know that your online persona played against you.

It’s the same for a wide variety of roles we may have in our lives — from employee, to parent, to customer, to insurance claimant (that picture of a supposedly injured accident victim posing at the top of a vigorous hike can wreak havoc with insurance settlements), to patient (with news recently that psychiatrists in the United States are looking up patients on Google for background information). Your online profile can also provide rich fodder for local burglars (who love such posts as, ‘heading to Europe for a three-week vacation’) as well as online identity thieves.

Most recently Facebook announced it was sending users’ profile information to companies like Yelp, Microsoft and Pandora (an Internet radio service not available in Canada). Unless you change the default settings on your Facebook profile or say no thanks at the website, every time you go to one of those sites while you’re logged into Facebook, you’ll be delivered a personalized version of the site.

Another issue is Facebook’s newly announced “Like” button, which can go on websites, blog posts or other online content from restaurant listings to your favourite musicians. If you click on the button, Facebook will publish that on your profile and in the news feeds that your friends get of your activity.

If you’ve managed to figure out that privacy minefield, Facebook will also now suggest you connected to “Pages” based on interests and affiliations contained in your profile data. The pop up box gives you two options: Agree to connect with all the pages recommended by Facebook or edit the choices. The default has all the suggestions checked; if you don’t agree you have to uncheck them.

Third-party developers who create Facebook applications cheered the changes, which put an end to a requirement that they delete users’ data after 24 hours.

Confused yet? You’re not alone. Facebook’s Open Graph protocol announced last week at a developer conference has prompted some Facebook members to opt out entirely from the service. But while privacy experts and those who are social media savvy may be well aware of the furore, it’s lost on a lot of ordinary Facebook users. I asked one Facebook user if he had changed his privacy settings after the recent changes.

“What changes?” was the response of this 20-something user, who would be considered a ‘digital native’ or one of author Don Tapscott’s Growing up Digital youth. If someone who has grown up digital doesn’t quite get it, chances are many baby boomers who are digital immigrants will find managing online privacy a daunting prospect.

Just Google your name

You don’t have to look to your friends to see what information is being shared: simply Google your own name, searching the Web, searching photos or one of the many categories Google offers. And Google and other major search engines aren’t the only source.

Canadians fare somewhat better than our American neighbours when it comes to privacy protection, with Canada’s private sector privacy laws adopting a comprehensive approach that covers all personal information collected in commercial activities, whether it’s online or off. Denham points out by comparison the U.S. has a more sectoral approach, with rules that cover different areas, such as financial or health.

“We’ve got comprehensive protection for Canadians and we’ve got broad principle-based law which is flexible; it can apply to social networking sites, it can apply to a small retailer,” Denham said.

The countries of the European Union have passed data protection laws that follow a standard EU directive and Denham said Canadian law is considered to be substantially similar to that.

The phrase ‘privacy by design’ is a concept Ontario Privacy Commissioner Ann Cavoukian came up with back in the ’90s and suggests that privacy assurance should be an organization’s default mode of operation.

That concept is at odds with Facebook’s apparent view of the issue, but it is one privacy advocates would like to see.

“We think there should be privacy-friendly default settings,” said Denham. Pointing to the letter last week sent by the Privacy Commissioner of Canada Jennifer Stoddart, along with the heads of data protection authorities in France, Germany, Israel, Italy, Ireland, Netherlands, New Zealand, Spain and the United Kingdom to Google, regarding Google Buzz, Denham said companies should not put out new products, expecting to deal with privacy concerns later. Google Buzz is a social networking application in which Google automatically assigns followers to Gmail users from their Gmail contact lists.

“You can’t beta test these on the open market,” Denham said of the social networking applications.

“When you test, you have to be compliant with the law.”

Instead she said companies are putting out the changes, seeing if users have a problem with them and only then thinking of fixing it. That’s not good enough for the privacy authorities.

“You can’t make this stuff up as you go along,” said Denham.

SEVEN STEPS TO MANAGING YOUR FACEBOOK PRIVACY

1. Active, deactivate or delete?

If you are really worried about your privacy and don’t want to share any information, deactivate your Facebook account -although that doesn’t strictly clear the information Facebook has about you. For that you must permanently delete your account. Otherwise, your information disappears from Facebook but the company saves your profile information in case you want to reactivate your account sometime.

4. Are your friends over-sharing?

If you don’t want your information accessed through your friends, under the same applications and websites under privacy, go to “What your friends can share about you through applications and websites” and uncheck all the boxes. Click on save changes.

2. Do you want to be found?

If you don’t want your profile to show up in a Google search: Go to your Facebook profile, click on account on the upper right hand side and then click on privacy settings. Click on search, from the drop down menu, click on only friends. The default is everyone; with that setting anyone can see your profile information, including such info as your friends list.

5. ‘Everyone’ isn’t your friend

To ensure your personal information isn’t available to everyone, under profile information in privacy settings, check to see who you are sharing it with. Click on only friends if you don’t want the information available to a wider audience, making sure to include your photos and videos.

6. ID thieves aren’t looking to send you Happy Birthday wishes

Don’t include the year of your birth with your birthday. You can control that by going to Profile on your Facebook page, click on the info tab and then edit. Click on basic information on the left hand side. A drop down box by your birthdate will give you the option of not sharing that information on your Facebook pro-file, showing the full birthday or only showing the month and day.

3. Unhappy with Open Graph?

To disable Open Graph, click on privacy settings, click on applications and websites. At the item at the bottom of the list, instant personalization, click on edit settings. The is a box checked off that says “Allow select partners to instantly personalize their features with my public information when I first arrive on their websites.” Uncheck that box. Click confirm. You can also disable it on the participating websites by clicking no thanks when it asks at the top when you visit the site if you want Facebook to “personalize your experience.”

7. What pages are linked to your profile?

Editing your profile: Facebook will list pages that will be linked to your profile. Uncheck any pages you don’t want linked and click on save changes.

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

New tech, old tech revitalized

Friday, April 30th, 2010

Lowell Conn
Sun

Pioneer mechless effort:

The new MVH-P8200BT multimedia AV receiver is the first mechless receiver we’ve seen from Pioneer Electronics. For readers not yet acclimatized to the brave new world sans optical lenses, mechless receivers read neither CDs nor DVDs, opting instead to transmit music and video that is found on portable flash drives and other solid-state media. In this case, it has the requisite USB slot and a built-in SD Memory Card. This model features built-in Bluetooth capability, but those choosing to save about $75 can go for a model without the BT. It features a three-inch TFT display, which is more than adequate for watching video files stored on portable media, and it offers advanced control for iPods, including album art display, search by alphabet and iTunes tagging. And it arrives at a price so good, it gives the MVHP8200BT a spectacular leg up, as it is one of the top single-DIN stereo values of 2010, all features considered. $370;

visit pioneerelectronics.ca.

New use for old cassette players:

Hot on the heels of the recently released USB Cassette MP3 Player II comes another product that will bring that old car stereo into the new millennium. Monster’s iCarPlay 800 is a cassette adapter designed to help users play music from their modern MP3 player via the car cassette player. It arrives looking like a standard tape but features a cord that plugs into iPods, iPhones and other portable music devices. Just load the tape into the cassette player and all of your favourite MP3 digital files can be played through the old analog unit.

True to Monster form, the device features all sorts of build features that claim to translate into better sound, including dual-balanced conductors purporting to deliver more natural audio and 24-karat gold contacts for maximum signal transfer and corrosion resistance. The cord can also be conveniently stored within the unit. It’s also relatively well priced, which is an extremely rare thing for a Monstermanufactured product. $25; visit monstercable.com.

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

Watch and record TV on the computer

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

Gillian Shaw
Sun

1 EyeTV Hybrid, Elgato, $ 150 US More from the just-in-time TV department. A tiny TV tuner stick, this receives both digital and analog signals, including HDTV, to turn your PC or Mac computer into a digital video recorder. You can watch and record live TV, pausing just like on your PVR. It also takes video from set-top boxes, camcorders, DVD players and other sources. If you have an Apple Mac, you can edit recordings and export them to iTunes to watch on your iPhone, iPod or ( as soon as it arrives) your iPad. www.elgato.com

Helios Solar Weather Station, 2 Oregon Scientific, $ 55 US

A built-in solar panel keeps this weather station powered up by drawing on solar cells to extend battery life. The main power comes from three AA batteries that aren’t included. The weather station displays up to three locations indoors and out, monitoring temperature and humidity. And it will forecast weather for the upcoming 12 hours, including an ice alert if the temperatures drop close to freezing. www2.oregonscientific.com

3 Contour USB blood glucose meter, Bayer, $ 100

This is a gadget we’re hoping you won’t need, but with diabetes affecting an increasing number of people, Bayer’s new blood glucose meter — the first to have a built-in USB connection so you can store and monitor blood sugar results — is a useful step up from the traditional log book method of tracking glucose levels. It has a colour screen that flags high, low and average blood sugar readings, and stores up to 2,000 test results. Its rechargeable battery is powered up via the USB port on your computer or with a USB wall charger that’s an optional extra. Not available yet, but Bayer is taking pre-registration online. www.bayercontourusb.ca

4 Surge, Novothink, from $ 70 US

This is a carrying case that comes with a built-in solar panel, giving you a charger that extends the life of your iPhone or iPod Touch. A handy double-duty carrier that will get you out of a jam if your iPhone or iPod runs out juice while you’re out and about. Two hours of direct sunlight ( a B. C. winter could prove challenging) will charge your iPhone with 30 minutes of talk time for a 3G network or 60 minutes for 2G. It has four LED lights to signal whether or not you have enough sunlight for a charge, plus to show how much charge is left in the battery. The iPod Touch version is $ 70 US, for the iPhone it’s $ 80. www.novothink.com

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

The iPhone’s assault on the English language

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

Janice Kennedy
Sun

Language demons, again. My iPhone is out to get me. True, I’m crazy about the compact little devil, the newest gizmo in my life — but I believe it wants to destroy my reputation. It wants me to commit a sin. It’s trying to get me to perform an act of gross indecency against the language I love.

I discovered this recently as I composed an e-mail message with the word “its.” The little text tyrant that lives inside my iPhone kept correcting it to “it’s” — the contraction, rather than the possessive I wanted. Each attempt to override the text tyrant and its slyly inserted error was rebuffed until finally, after repeated determined assaults on the default “it’s,” I emerged victorious. An unadulterated “its” took its place proudly on the screen.

Still, it irked me that the contraction was the default, as I assume it is in all predictive texting. (And why? Surely, the possessive isn’t that rare.) It irked me that people thumbing away speedily on their devices must routinely appear to err, even when they do know better. And it irked me that, once again, our poor old English language is taking another mass usage hit, and no one seems to care.

According to today’s groupthink, if a message goes out saying “proper punctuation has outlived it’s usefulness,” so what? Everyone knows what you mean, right? Drives me nuts — both the error and the cavalier indifference to the error’s existence. I think it’s part of The Conspiracy.

Yes, that conspiracy. The conspiracy to abuse language, publicly and collectively. The conspiracy against which I can’t seem to stop railing, Cassandralike (though, really, everyone needs a hobby horse). I know I’m not alone in this. Partly from e-mail I’ve received, I know that there are all kinds of English-lovers who feel strongly that the public abuse of the world’s richest, liveliest language is something that should be addressed.

Such people must have been cringing along with me, throughout the otherwise magnificent games, every time the CTV Olympics theme played (as it did at least 9,724 times, conservatively estimated) — the one where singer Nikki Yanofsky extols the virtues of believing “in the power of you and I.” “Of you and I?” If it were singular, would she have sung “the power of I?” It is to weep. The song’s creators, Alan Frew and Stephan Moccio, are guilty of this assault on the language, but they’re hardly unique. Songwriters are notorious.

Does anyone remember that linguistic lulu in the execrable 1972 song, Play Me? It was the creation of Neil Diamond, composer extraordinaire of a massive oeuvre that also includes such numbers as the excruciatingly awful I Am, I Said. I mention this latter only as evidence of Diamond’s leaden touch, a song in which the singer tries to proclaim his very existence, although “no one heard at all, not even the chair.” (Chair? Chairs are supposed to hear?) But the linguistic mangling that has become a Diamond classic is this beaut from Play Me, an exercise in fingernail-on-blackboard painfulness: “Song she sang to me, song she brang to me.” Anything for a rhyme. Frew, Moccio and Diamond are just part of a continuing songwriting tradition that thinks nothing of manhandling language for the sake of musical convenience. If you can bear it, listen to hip-hop some time. Get beyond the tedious adolescence of the “poetry,” and you’ll discover that tortured rhyme is king, even when it massacres meaning.

Not to go all Cole Porter-y, or George and Ira Gershwin-y, or anything, but wouldn’t it be nice if songwriters — whose work finds its way on to every-one’s lips — tried, like Porter and the Gershwins, to make language their friend, using it cleverly and with the kind of respect that would repay them in artistic merit?

Of course, popular songs are only part of the widespread abuse. If you want to know how badly language has been degraded, you need only listen to radio and television (and to those announcers and hosts who should know better — or should be instructed to know better). And you need only read mainstream newspapers, which, while no longer role models for language usage, should also know better.

It pains me to produce this cringe-worthy tidbit as an example, since it comes from my paper, the Ottawa Citizen, but it does provide evidence of the decline of English. The recent news story was about a woman left hanging by the bankruptcy declaration of a travel agency. As the reporter wrote (and as an editor presumably read, without blinking an eye), the woman had “booked tickets for she and her husband.”

Egregious as that is, it is also an error symptomatic of a curious recent phenomenon in the continuing abuse of English — the shunning of that fine and useful case, the objective.

April is National Poetry Month, which implicitly makes it National Language-Loving month. So how about showing English a little respect? It’s time to halt the abuse.

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

The iPad could become ultimate in-car entertainment system

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

Aftermarket industry pioneers are already finding ways to make the iPad a vehicle’s primary info-tainment source

Melissa Guillergan
Sun

 
 
The Apple iPad, today’s newest must-have gadget, has inevitably found its way from user’s hands and desks, and into cars.

Apple iPad is the new source of music, videos, applications and more -and one owners will want in their vehicles. Photograph by: Robert Galbraith, Reuters, Special to the Sun

 

Although this revolutionary tablet computer has been
class=”SpellE”>avalable for less than two weeks in the United States, it has already established a strong position in the car accessory market. The iPad — due here next month — could become the ultimate mobile in-car entertainment system. It may even replace in-car stereos and multimedia head-units.

 

One of the aftermarket industry’s pioneers in the iPad’s integration in vehicles comes south of the border in Santa Clarita, Calif., from SoundMan Car Audio. This auto shop has already tested the iPad as the primary source for a vehicle’s entertainment system. When the team at SoundMan Car Audio received an iPad, they immediately started working on installing it into a Toyota Tacoma pickup’s stereo system.

“We chose to use the iPad as the only source for (the Toyota Tacoma’s) entertainment system,” said a Sound-Man Car Audio staff member of iPad installation plan. “The dock connector will plug in to a cable that runs to an Onkyo ND-S1, which will send the digital signal from the iPad directly into an Audison Bit One. The Bit One will then act as the D/A converter, and will also process the audio signal. The Bit One also has a great controller for adjusting the volume and audio settings. The amplifier we chose is the McIntosh MCC406M.”

Manufacturers are also taking note of how important the iPad is to drivers and car enthusiasts. Cadillac and design-loving website Cool Hunting announced that its new iPad application, available in Apple’s App Store since April 3, will feature exclusive content designed for the iPad inspired by the all-new 2011 Cadillac CTS Coupe.

“The Cadillac CTS Coupe serves as

Cadillac enabled new opportunities for our readers to engage with our content while pushing the innovative ways we work with brands.”

Expect many auto-inspired iPad applications coming from other manufacturers, as the iPad is defining itself as a great medium to promote

new models and products in the auto industry.

There’s no denying that iPod connectivity

ity is a must-have feature in head-units and car stereos in today’s market, and very soon we can expect iPad connectivity to become the next in-car entertainment necessity. Voice-activated and hands-free application functions for the iPad must be installed in cars order to drive safely and to obey driving laws.

It is safe to assume this advanced technological function is just around the corner, as voice-activated functions are continually being integrated into communication devices, from iPhones to BlackBerrys, for use while driving.

The great thing about new, highly anticipated electronic products such as the iPad is that many auto shops like SoundMan Car Audio are eager to integrate it into cars. There’s no doubt you’ll soon see the next new electronic gadget introduced to tech-savvy and entertainment-hungry consumers installed in head-unit and factory-installed GPS systems spaces in vehicle dashboards.

Melissa Guillergan works for the Laura Ballance Media Group and loves looking for those Missing Parts that manufacturers fail to install in your ride.

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

B. C. developers rush to join iPad revolution

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

Apple’s latest device is driving lucrative demand for applications that take advantage of its larger screen

GILLIAN SHAW
Sun

A gold mine or a lottery? That’s the question as British Columbia developers join the rush to deliver applications for Apple’s newly released iPad.

Some applications can make the shift from iPhone to iPad seamlessly but the larger device is also driving lucrative demand for applications tailor-made to take advantage of its larger screen and other features.

Vancouver’s Atimi Software was among the first out of the gate with several apps in Apple’s iTunes app store for the iPad in time for its launch last Saturday.

“ We have three more that are under production right now,” said Atimi vice-president Scott Michaels. “ We are doing the i Pad version for HBO, an app that is not available in Canada .

“ We did an iPhone version for them this year that did really well so we’re doing an iPad one. We’re also doing another for a major TV broadcaster and another in the health space.” The launch of the iPhone and Apple’s app store has proven lucrative for Atimi.

“ It went from being zero per cent of our business to 60 per cent of our revenue in just two years and it caused us to grow as a company,” said Michaels. “ We have a staff of 65 now, when the app store first launched we had 40 to 45 people.”

Michaels said the real gold rush was when the app store first launched and had only a few thousand apps.

“ I think the gold rush time was actually at the beginning of the app store,” he said. “ You could be a small store and actually get noticed.

“ I think of it like a lottery win at this point, it takes good solid effort now and the price to win a category [ be the most popular app] has only gone up.”

While iPhone apps can be put on the iPad and there are more than 150,000 apps in the store, there are only several thousand apps — estimates put it around 3,000 — that have been specifically created for the iPad.

“ The price for productivity applications is substantially higher for the iPad than for ones on the iPhone,” said Michaels. Productivity applications for the iPhone — ones that let you write, edit and create presentations — can cost between $ 5 and $ 12, he said.

“ On the iPad that same application will be between $ 20 and $ 40 but it will also have substantially more features.”

Andrei Iancu does see the arrival of the iPad as a potential gold mine for application developers. He teaches iPhone app development at the British Columbia Institute of Technology and his upcoming spring course will add iPad development to the agenda.

“ Everybody wants to be on board with what Apple is bringing in,” said Iancu, whose company Dynamic Leap Technology helps companies create their own iPhone and iPad apps. “ It is like the dot-com boom when everybody became a web developer but not everybody was a good developer.

“ This is a gold rush. What I’m doing here is selling boots and shovels instead of trying to look for gold. That’s why I’m teaching.”

John McIntosh stayed up all night racing to meet Apple’s deadline to get his iPad application ready for the app store in time for the launch of the new device.

He made it and was rewarded by seeing his iPad application in the iTunes store on the April 3 launch day of the iPad.

His first submission is Scratch, an iPad version of an app he already created for the iPhone. Scratch is a programming language that lets children create their own interactive stories, animations and other projects.

“ When Apple announced the iPad we took a look at that and thought there was a really interesting opportunity to build some stuff for that,” said McIntosh, a developer who works from his North Saanich home on Vancouver Island.

McIntosh also has a second app in the iTunes store, his Wiki Server Pro, a fully fledged wiki for the iPad. He said Apple has made it easy for developers to get their applications to the market, a factor that is helping fuel the rapid growth of applications.

“ As a programmer and developer Apple has made it extremely easy for us to sit down and build an application, get it out and sell it,” he said. “ My friend in L. A. who was involved in selling education software for desktop machines, they got pennies on the dollar — once the people did the packaging, the boxes, the distributor in the middle, the store and they also had to front all the money to pay for all that.

“ Apple’s model is completely different — you basically come up with an app, submit it to Apple and once it goes into the store Apple takes 30 per cent but they give you the other 70 per cent.

“ It makes it extremely easy for you to get iPhone or iPad apps out to millions of people around the world.”

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

RIM unveils new BlackBerrys, operating system

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

Reuters
Sun

BlackBerry Pearl 3G 9100

BlackBerry Pearl 3G 9105

Research in Motion gave analysts a sneak peek at a revamped operating system for its BlackBerry smartphone on Monday and said it would launch it next quarter.

Describing the long-awaited operating system as one of the biggest Black-Berry overhauls in years, RIM co-chief executive Mike Lazaridis showed a short video of the system, called OS 6.0, to analysts gathered in Florida.

“Shock and awe” was the response in the room to the clip, said Mackie Research Capital analyst Nick Agostino in an e-mail from the investor conference, which took place on the eve of RIM’s annual Wireless Enterprise Symposium. That event runs through Thursday.

The more touch-friendly operating system and display may help dispel concerns that rival smartphones like Apple’s iPhone and Motorola’s Droid are being favoured by consumers, who want easy-to-use, intuitive devices.

The snippet on OS 6.0 created a “big buzz,” said Canaccord Adams analyst Peter Misek in an e-mail from Orlando.

Lazaridis said RIM aimed to make all its devices run the new operating system, although integration “takes time.” Asked if existing BlackBerry smartphones could be upgraded, he said: “We are going to try and do our best to allow people to upgrade to 6.0.”

A new, more user-friendly browser, another key development investors want to see from RIM, will be included in the new operating system.

Earlier in the day, RIM said it is launching variations of two existing BlackBerry smartphones.

A CDMA version of the high-end BlackBerry Bold will ship in May. The BlackBerry Bold is already available to carriers that operate GSM networks.

GSM and CDMA are the two main types of mobile technology used by wireless carriers around the world. CDMA lost the battle for global dominance, but it still has a strong position in some markets.

RIM is also taking the wraps off a new 3G version of the Pearl, the smallest smartphone in the BlackBerry product range. The new GSM device will allow faster data downloads on newer 3G networks.

Analysts hope the software improvements will allow RIM to compete more effectively against the iPhone, Droid and other smartphones that have been nibbling away at RIM’s market share.

Consumer-friendly enhancements, such as more powerful in-phone cameras and an easier-to-navigate display, are also in the offing, co-CEO Jim Balsillie said Monday.

RIM’s apps store, which analysts say falls far short of Apple’s offerings, is growing rapidly, with downloads doubling in last four months to about one million a day.

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

3D Vancouver Floor Plans

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010

Software designer offers 3D tour of rental housing

Jeremy Shepherd
Van. Courier

It worked for filmmaker James Cameron, and now one Vancouver software designer is hoping to turn 3D technology into big money with a little help from Vancouver’s realtors.

See: http://laidlersoftwaregroup.com/

“I wanted to build software you could build once and sell over and over again,” James Laidler said.

Laidler, 42, has spent two years creating software that gives homebuyers an interactive view of Vancouver’s real estate market. For a fee of $50 a month, realtors can take their clients on a comprehensive search of buildings available for rent in Vancouver including a 3D view of the building’s floor plans, courtesy of Laidler.

“It could generate millions of dollars, ultimately,” Laidler said.

The idea is to give prospective buyers the most comprehensive search available, letting them see everything from the common areas in the building to the view from their prospective apartment.

Laidler said he taught himself to program computers at 13, and by 16 he was studying computer science at the University of B.C.

But in the mid-1980s, Laidler said computer science primarily consisted of spreadsheets. Bored, he dropped out at 18 and went to work in mud. For 10 years, before the arrival of the Internet, Laidler refined and sterilized mud used for high-end cosmetics in a factory. “The Internet democratized software,” Laidler said.

Laidler said he’s been a software developer for the last 12 years, and employs five full-time software developers at his own company, Laidler Software Group.

Laidler said building developers regularly put floor plans online when selling a property. From those two-dimensional plans, Laidler created the 3D floor plans he believes are more interactive than interactive photo tours.

Laidler said a key difference is the user can move around in his virtual environment, while most virtual tours consist of a series of photos taken from the same spot.

Hootie Johnston, a realtor who has worked in Vancouver for 17 years, was one of the first to sign up for Laidler’s service.

“It’s much easier to see and relate to the product,” Johnston said.

Except for a few adjustments, such as including townhouses in the search, Johnston said Laidler had his website up and running within a few days.

Johnston said Laidler’s system is perfect for an area like Coal Harbour due to the multiple high-rise towers. However, he said the 3-D technology wouldn’t work in an area without vertical density like Kitsilano.

Fred Leitz, an employee of Laidler’s, met him when the two worked together at a Vancouver software company.

Leitz has been working for Laidler for the past month to develop an iPhone application to augment the 3D search.

Leitz said the application uses geo-location, meaning users can access real estate listings in the region they’re located in. Leitz said the application could be useful for buyers looking for a condo near work or skiers searching for a place near a favourite mountain. He also discussed an “augment reality” feature in the works that would allow a user to point their phone at a building and bring up the building’s floor plans as well as relevant information about the building and the listing.

With two million realtors in North America, Leitz said he is optimistic about the potential of the project. “I think it’s more like a billion dollar idea,” he said.

© Vancouver Courier 2010

Track the kids with tiny and functional GPS unit

Saturday, April 17th, 2010

Sun

Silver Alert GPS monitoring system, Amber Alert GPS Canada

Babylonian Twins

ESP Office 6150 All-in-One Printer, Kodak

A-Frame tabletop stand, Griffin Technology

1. Silver Alert GPS monitoring system, Amber Alert GPS Canada, $300 with one-year monitoring plan

Keep track of kids and elderly relatives with this tiny GPS unit that can be tossed in a knapsack, the trunk of your teen’s car, or even sewn into clothing. To keep tabs on its whereabouts, you call it from your cellphone — it doesn’t ring, but sends a text message back with its location that you can then pull up online on your smartphone or computer. You can set perimeters for safe zones and trigger a destination alert; it also has an emergency SOS button so whoever is carrying it can instantly alert you to a problem. It has voice monitoring to let you tune in on conversations without the people at the other end knowing. A high-tech Jack Bauerlike babysitter. Can’t see teens being happy to have their parents virtually riding along, but parents no doubt will like it, and it is useful for caregivers worried about elderly relatives. Monitoring is $12 a month, with the device available in combination with one-, two-and three-year plans. www.amberalertgps.ca

2. Babylonian Twins, $2.99 for iPhone, $3.99 iPad version

This game was first conceived by Rabah Shihab, an Iraqi-born software engineer who created it while he was living in Baghdad back in the days of the Commodore Amiga computer. Economic sanctions put a halt to his plans to have it published, but years later, the release on YouTube of video from the retro game was met by an enthusiastic response in the gaming community. That, plus the imminent arrival of the iPad prompted Shihab, who now lives in North Vancouver, to get back to the game and get it ready for release on the iPhone and the iPad. The game follows the story of twin princes of Babylon, Nasir and Blasir, who are protecting the city from an evil sorcerer. In its first day in the app store it rocketed to the Top 20 for the puzzle games category. babyloniantwins.com

3. ESP Office 6150 All-in-One Printer, Kodak, $230

Print from a Wi-Fi-enabled smartphone or your computer. This four-in-one prints, copies, scans and faxes, and Kodak promises its ink cartridges will save you on average $137 a year compared to other consumer ink-jet printers. www.kodak.ca

4. A-Frame tabletop stand, Griffin Technology, $50 US

With the iPad now out in the United States and to follow in late April in Canada, there has been a rush of iPad accessories to the market, including this stand that props your iPad up for viewing. It works in both the upright position and for landscape mode. Folded flat, it acts as a stand that puts your iPad into a tilted position for writing or playing games. www.griffintechnology.com

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun