Archive for the ‘Technology Related Articles’ Category

Welcome to Generation App – Apple iPhone Applications that has forever changed the way we live

Saturday, June 13th, 2009

Our ever-evolving technology is a runaway train that has forever changed the way we live

Shelley Fralic
Sun

Apple’s new iPhone 3GS with its many applications that we can use to organize our entire lives is a sign of how technology keeps taking over more of what we do. Photograph by: Robert Galbraith, Reuters, Vancouver Sun

As Apple introduced yet another faster, sexier version of its wildly popular iPhone this week, one is reminded that there was a time when the automatic washing machine was the hottest gadget on the planet.

But that was then, and this, this is the time of the smartphone.

With a single handheld device, without burning a calorie, without getting out of your chair, in fact, without any effort at all, 21st-century technology and the brave new world of applications allow you to do pretty much anything.

Anything.

Like start a band, play Scrabble, read a restaurant review, compose music, book a trip, converse with the boss, do the banking, hire a nanny, get directions, shop for shoes, watch The Bachelorette, upload a grad photo, find a phone number, shoot a video, order a pizza, screen a movie, look up an address, buy Olympics tickets, calculate your 2009 taxes and, of course, text and Twitter and Google and MySpace and blog and instant message with not only strangers halfway around the world, but with friends and family you never see much any more because you talk to them via a magic satellite every five minutes.

Some would say you can even have sex with a PDA (which used to mean public display of affection before it meant personal digital assistant), though we wouldn’t know anything about that.

What we do know is that technology is a runaway train that has forever changed the way we live.

Apple reported recently that it had reached one billion application downloads, with 35,000 tech tools available to users in 77 countries, and even more applications will debut this summer.

The truth is, that little smartphone — and all the other PDAs like it, the iPod Touch, Blackberry Curve, Palm Pre, G1, HTC Touch and Sidekick — have become a fingertip secretary, serving an entire generation that no longer needs to learn fundamental life skills because a microchip does it all for them.

Welcome to Generation App.

That would be the generation that has never not had a computer in the house, the generation raised on the 30-second sound bites of Sesame Street in the 1970s, the generation for whom a touch screen has eliminated the need, and ability, to get information the old-fashioned way, through a phone book or library or any of those other increasingly quaint hard copy sources.

And while Generation App knows more stuff than any generation before it, it is knowledge that comes without learning, without effort.

High-schoolers, for instance, were once required to perform a trig function with nothing but a pencil and a brain, until the calculator made mathematics from scratch all but obsolete.

Try getting your average 16-year-old to work out a percentage without a calculator, or finding a sales clerk who can give you change without a cash register.

To say that we don’t need to understand pi to balance our chequebook (what’s a chequebook?), is to not understand that math isn’t about finding the solution. It’s about learning to solve the problem.

Think, too, for a millisecond, just how technology has transformed our social interactions.

Why talk face-to-face when you can Facebook? Why write in longhand when there’s LOL and GR8, the new literary hieroglyphic that requires its own elementary school syllabus?

And who needs an attention span when 140 characters, give or take Ashton Kutcher, says it all?

Does any of this too-much-information-without-knowing-anything matter?

Is it any different than the wave of post-war technology — the microwave oven, the television, the supersonic jet, the credit card — that changed life for the better for baby boomers?

Maybe not. But as comic Louis C.K. declares, we live in an increasingly amazing world and yet everyone’s grumpy.

We freak out when the cellphone takes a second longer to connect than we think it should. We get angry when the ATM isn’t working, forgetting that not too long ago you had to go into the bank to get your money.

We complain when the Internet connection on the airplane fails, forgetting the marvel that is “flying through the air incredibly, like a bird . . . sitting in a chair in the sky.”

We demand to have an app to make our life easier, right now, even though we managed without it an hour ago.

One of the many Web definitions for application software is this analogy of a lightbulb and a power plant:

“The power plant merely generates electricity, not itself of any real use until harnessed to an application like the electric light that performs a service that benefits the user.”

Except that even good ol‘ light bulbs are becoming passe.

Here’s hoping the PDA will light the way.

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

 

Scott Forstall, senior vice-president of iPhone software at Apple Inc., speaks during Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference in San Francisco, California Monday.

Thursday, June 11th, 2009

But cost of the telephone without the contract has not been released

Gillian Shaw
Sun

Scott Forstall, senior vice-president of iPhone software at Apple Inc., speaks during Apple Inc.’s Worldwide Developers Conference in San Francisco on Monday. Photograph by: Robert Galbraith, Reuters

Rogers Wireless turned to social media this week to build buzz around the arrival of Apple’s new iPhone 3G S on June 19.

Instead of the usual press release, the company’s social media guru Keith McArthur told followers on his Twitter network that Rogers and Fido will be selling the new 16-GB iPhone for $199, with the 32-GB model at $299, both with a three-year voice and data plan.

Rogers hasn’t yet announced a price for the phone without the contract subsidy.

Rogers is also bringing back the six-GB for $30 a month data pricing that it offered as a promotion when the iPhone 3G first arrived in Canada last year. That pricing is also available with the new Google Android-powered phones introduced in Canada by Rogers last week, but only until July 1.

McArthur said the latest promotional $30 for six-GB data plan linked to iPhones is effective starting immediately both with Rogers and Fido. No end date was announced for the pricing.

The 8-GB iPhone 3G will drop in price on June 19 to $99.

There is some bad news for Rogers customers who bought the iPhone 3G when it came out last year: The company’s hardware upgrade subsidy is usually only available two years into a contract, according to McArthur.

Rogers also announced a limited-time offer for customers who upgrade to iPhone OS 3.0. For customers who subscribe to a data plan that includes at least one GB of data, the wireless data used through tethering the phone to a computer to use it as a modem will be included in the plan’s volume of data at no extra charge at least until the end of this year.

THE LATEST BRIGHT, SHINY THING

Apple’s new iPhone 3G S has a number of advantages over its predecessor, including:

– Three megapixel auto focus camera with a camcorder for video recording that can be edited on the iPhone.

– Longer battery life.

– Voice control that offers handsfree operation for the iPhone and iPod functions.

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

 

Apple unveils zippier iPhone 3G S

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

Jefferson Graham
USA Today

Apple has a cool new iPhone, the 3G S, coming out next week, with faster speed, longer battery life and a video camera for $199 but if you bought an iPhone recently, exclusive U.S. carrier AT&T says you won’t get the phone at that price.

The new phone will sell for $199 with a two-year contract. AT&T says it will be available at that price only to those with a “few” months left on their contract and to new customers. Otherwise, the phone is $399 for the new 16-gigabyte version, or $499 for a 32GB model.

MORE: Liveblog of the announcement.FIRST LOOK: Apple iPhone 3G looks promising

The price of the current 8GB model falls to $99.

Beyond the hardware, upgraded iPhone operating system software will be available worldwide June 17, free for iPhone users, and $9.95 for iPod Touch users. Highlights include cut-and-paste controls and MMS visual text messages so you can add pictures and audio clips to text messages.

Another feature, tethering, allows an iPhone to share its Internet connection with a PC.

But tethering is not yet supported by AT&T. “AT&T is behind the ball,” says tech analyst Tim Bajarin at researcher Creative Strategies. “Pressure is on them. I expect tethering … before the fall.”

Apple (AAPL) unveiled the offerings at a conference here for software developers, who also showed off new possibilities for the iPhone:

A medical application from AirStrip Technologies monitors patients’ heartbeats remotely. It is currently awaiting FDA approval.

GPS veteran TomTom brings audible turn-by-turn directions to the iPhone. The GPS app, available this summer, will also be sold with an optional accessory that displays it on your windshield. No pricing was announced. The iPhone has GPS now, but it doesn’t offer audible directions.

Beyond the iPhone, Apple introduced revised versions of its MacBook Pro laptops, with lower prices, improved battery life and greater storage capacities. Apple said its operating system upgrade, Snow Leopard, will be available in September. For current users of Leopard, an upgrade will sell for $29.

Rival Microsoft will have its new version of Windows, Windows 7, out in October.

Apple CEO Steve Jobs, currently on a medical leave until the end of the month, wasn’t mentioned in the presentation. Apple stock was up 25 cents in after-hours

Apple kicks off conference with new iPhone model

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

Faster device comes with video camera and price gets slashed

Sun

Scott Forstall, senior vice-president of iPhone software at Apple Inc., speaks during Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference in San Francisco, California Monday.

Apple unveiled changes to its iPhone offerings at a trade show for the Mac-using world that kicked off Monday in San Francisco, premiering a speedier new model complete with a video camera and slashing the price of its predecessor to $99 US.

With some applications launching on the new iPhone at twice the speed they would launch on its predecessors, Apple says the new device will be its fastest-running smartphone. It’s called the “iPhone 3G S” — the “S” stands for “speed.”

Speaking from the stage at the company’s Worldwide Developer Conference, Apple vice-president of worldwide marketing Phil Schiller said that the new device will let users capture video on the device. The new iPhone’s more sophisticated camera will let users select what the lens should focus on, with the touch of a finger. With a new set of voice controls, users will be able to upload an iPhone video to YouTube with a spoken command.

The new device, priced at $199 and $299, will be available in a little over a week, the company said. The more expensive version comes with 32 gigabytes of storage space, a new capacity for the device.

Chief executive Steve Jobs, who is out on medical leave and expected back at the company later this month, was a no-show at the conference.

Apple had already introduced the third major version of the iPhone’s operating system in March. The new version of the device’s software offers 300 new features, the company said.

That includes some long-overlooked basic features that iPhone owners have been waiting for since the device first went on sale, such as “cut and paste,” allowing users to copy blocks of text from one application to another.

Apple also introduced a handy new feature called “ Find My iPhone,” designed to help iPhone owners who have misplaced their device. Lose the device under the sofa, and users will now be able to send the phone a message ordering it to make a sound.

If the device has been stolen, it will now be possible to send an iPhone a command to erase its memory, so that sensitive information is not compromised.

Apple said that more than 40 million devices have been sold that can access the company’s App Store — that figure includes the iPhone and the iPod Touch.

The company also unveiled new versions of its “MacBook Pro” laptops, which will feature longer lasting batteries.

Apple convention rife with new product rumours

Monday, June 8th, 2009

Speculation includes new iPhones, a Mac OS, iPods with cameras

MURRAY HILL
Sun

TGRBLOG.com’s iPhone rumour chart.

Steve Jobs has traditionally delivered the keynote address at the Macworld conference. But Apple has since switched its efforts to the WWDC event. BLOOMBERG NEWS FILES

SAN FRANCISCO his year’s World Wide Developer’s Conference has taken on a new meaning since Apple decided that the Macworld Convention would no longer feature the Apple keynote address. Deciding that focused events such as the WWDC, which is an Apple-run event, provide a better platform for its announcements, Apple has effectively made this event No. 1 for all the world’s MacHeads.

As with any event involving Apple, the WWDC that begins today is rife with rumours about what will be announced.

Apple is a master at keeping information private until it announces it, which has always made the keynote address at Macworld an event worth doing almost anything to get into.

This year’s WWDC keynote is no exception, with rumours floating around about new iPhones, the impending release of a new Mac OS (called Snow Leopard), and even talk of new iPods with cameras and some sort of announcement about a netbook.

These stories are the real fun part of a conference like this — for the mortals. Real Mac developers, the people who write all the software and design the hardware that works with the Mac OS and Apple’s hardware, use the WWDC to network and learn. They’re what the conference is really all about; the keynote is designed to tell them what’s coming up and to make new announcements — and to whip the rumour mongers into a frenzy.

It works. The Internet has been full of speculation for weeks now.

The best site I’ve found online to describe potential upgrades/changes to the iPhone is at TGRBLOG.com, which has a terrific iPhone rumour roundup diagram created by Remy. He’s even attributed every rumour, with a link at the bottom of his blog.

Snow Leopard promises to be a huge step forward in the Mac OS. With the release of Windows 7, Microsoft has writ-

Tten the most Mac-like operating system to date, and according to many analysts, it has closed the gap somewhat in the debate over which operating system is superior. The release of Snow Leopard will start that debate all over again as the myriad new features and enhancements are expected to vault Apple back to the top.

The debate on an Apple netbook-type computer has been raging for several months, with Apple flat-out stating that it is not interested in competing in a space that contains inferior products.

One rumour is the possible release of a smaller version of the MacBook Air, with ramped-up multi-touch capabilities.

One thing is for sure, if Apple decides to come out with a small computer to “compete” against the low-cost netbooks now being offered, it will do it in a fashion that will immediately vault it to the front of the pack and will wow consumers.

Chief executive officer Steve Jobs, who is on medical leave, has been actively involved in preparations for the event.

The main address at the developer conference, which has featured Jobs each year since 1998, will be given by marketing chief Philip Schiller, Apple said last month.

If Apple doesn’t release a new iPhone, the company may hold another event to introduce new models and mark Jobs’s return.

Today’s WWDC keynote address will certainly lay to rest this latest round of rumours, fuel a new round, and provide us with a glimpse of the direction Apple intends to take for the next year or two.

Cisco’s Flip Ultra and Ultra HD a snap to power up

Saturday, June 6th, 2009

Gillian Shaw
Sun

Flip UltraHD

Flip MiniHD

FLIP ULTRA

Pure Digital Technologies (now part of Cisco Consumer Business Group) from $180 for SD, $250 for Flip UltraHD

Cisco has locked onto a winner with its recent acquisition of Pure Digital Technologies, the San Francisco company that rewrote the screenplay for the camcorder business. From the launch of its first pocket-size, simple-to-use and low-cost camcorder less than two years ago, the company has gone from zero to two million units sold. It recently launched its next-generation lineup in the United States, and Canadian consumers have been waiting for the new devices — some versions boasting high-definition — to make it across the border. The second-generation Flip Ultra and the Ultra HD have a recording time of two hours, a two-inch transreflective screen, and an AA rechargeable battery pack that can be recharged from your computer through the Ultra’s built-in USB connector. No power? No problem. You can also use regular AA batteries, a handy feature that means you don’t have to miss those memorable moments because you can’t plug in for a recharge. They are just arriving on store shelves. Walmart has some of the new lineup already, Amazon.ca is carrying them, and they are expected soon at Future Shop and Best Buy. http://ca.theflip.com.

FLIP MINO

$220 for SD version, $280 for Flip MiniHD

A camcorder is of no use if it’s always at home or back in the hotel room when you want to shoot video. But with this tiny Mino, there are no excuses for not slipping it into a pocket. And once you’ve shot the video, a Flip makes it a no-brainer to edit and post them online and create your own movies. I once shot a Flip video on a chairlift, went inside at the bottom of the mountain, plugged it into my netbook and after 10 minutes had a completed video ready to post with a story. Maybe not ready for Hollywood, but for what it does, it does it well. The application installs directly from the camera when you plug it into a Mac or PC, and the cameras come with a TV connection to view your video on the big screen. The Minos sacrifice an hour of recording time with their size, getting one hour compared to the Ultra’s two. Unlike the Ultra, this has a rechargeable lithium-ion battery. The Flip models come in a range of colours and you can also customize them with their own design. http://ca.theflip.com.

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

Web identities all about brand image

Saturday, June 6th, 2009

Companies need to develop online behaviour policies that are ‘future-proof’

Derek Sankey
Sun

Rod Miller, regional vice-president of Robert Half Canada Inc., says social networking sites are proliferating rapidly. Photograph by: Ted Jacob, Canwest News Service

Twitter is just the latest social networking site to rise in popularity at viral speed, yet despite the plethora of the sites — Facebook, MySpace, LinkedIn and others — people still appear to be struggling to manage their online identities, or personal brands, according to technology insiders.

“There is this proliferation of social networking sites,” says Rod Miller, regional vice-president for Robert Half Technology in Calgary. “The challenge that we face comes back to your personal brand image.”

Miller’s research shows there are between 100 and 120 popular social networking sites being used worldwide and they continue to grow fast in popularity.

Facebook boasts 200 million users, LinkedIn has 40 million, Twitter has 25 million “and that’s growing really fast,” he says.

The problem is recruiters are among those users scouring the Internet to help determine if job candidates have a suitable character and values to be the “right fit” for the company.

“There are still people who believe my work image is very different than my public image, but unfortunately . . . that’s all beginning to get blurred,” says Miller. “Who you are is who you are 24/7.”

In one recent example, an employee who thought she was having a “private” conversation on MySpace made negative comments about her boss, who later saw the exchange and fired her.

A Utah attorney-general accidentally revealed his senate bid through an inadvertent Twitter exchange he thought was private, yet could be viewed by anyone with a Twitter account.

“People are seeing the need and value of getting their heads around [managing their online brand],” says Phil Gomes, senior vice-president of digital integration for Edelman Digital in Chicago.

“Companies now are seeing the need to integrate these policies into whatever company handbook they distribute,” says Gomes.

Rather than advocating an online behaviour policy that presumes to “run your life on and off the clock,” Gomes says employees and employers need to have a common understanding about what’s expected of them in the online realm.

Even use of language is up for debate. “It would reflect badly on me and my employer, just the same as if I was at a bar screaming obscenities and my boss happened to be there,” says Gomes.

Miller says employees must actively manage their online brand image by being diligent about not sharing too much personal information. Activate and use the privacy settings available on most social networking sites. Only add friends you really know, make certain photos are private and ask friends to ‘un-tag’ you from photos you don’t want the boss to see.

“Google has a long memory,” says Gomes, noting that images and information posted to the Internet accumulate infinitely.

Companies, meanwhile, need to develop online behaviour policies that are “future-proof” to a reasonable degree and “platform-neutral,” meaning they recognize the changing nature and platforms being used and developed.

“The best policies . . . look at the threads of commonality that make up for good online citizenship across different platforms and web destinations,” says Gomes, who authored Edelman Digital’s policy.

It’s not always easy to be safe by creating separate accounts or using different applications for different groups of people — work life, personal life, family life.

Yet it can be one strategy to help avoid embarrassing or destructive situations. Gomes, for example, is less selective of who he adds to his Facebook account, but he’s very picky on LinkedIn, a professional and business networking site.

“These things are necessarily a work in progress, but I think that thoughtful people online are rethinking how they comport themselves,” says Gomes.

“Over time, I think it’s an instinct that people are going to develop.”

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

Google launches smartphones in Canada

Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009

Gillian Shaw
Sun

Rogers Wireless has dramatically dropped data pricing for the new Google Android-powered smartphones released Tuesday, bringing back the promotional six gigabytes of data for $30 a month it offered with its launch last year of Apple’s iPhone.

That compares to Rogers‘ regular wireless data rates that start at $25 for 500 megabytes for the iPhone and other data-rich devices in its product lineup.

The first phones to be released in Canada with Google’s Android platform are the HTC Dream and the HTC Magic, available through Rogers for $149.99 with a three year voice and data plan that amounts to a minimum monthly service fee of $45.

The $30 for six gig data plan for the Android phones is only available until July 1, 2009. The promotional pricing for wireless data is only available to customers purchasing the HTC Dream or the HTC Magic.

In an interview when he was in Vancouver this week talking to Rogers employees, the company’s new CEO Nadir Mohamed suggested such promotions would be offered to address the needs of early adopters who may be particularly heavy data users. He said it is also a way to meet the concern of consumers afraid to try wireless data devices like the smartphones for fear of unexpected costs.

The Android operating system has built-in integration with Google’s mobile services including Google search, maps and Gmail and in a move similar to Apple’s app store for the iPhone, the Android Market offers 3,200 applications for download on Android phones like HTC’s Dream and Magic. More applications are added daily.

British Columbians have proven to be among early adopters of mobile Internet services, with 45 per cent of cell phone users accessing the web from their mobile devices more than five times a day, according to a poll conducted by Ipsos-Reid for Rogers Wireless. Among British Columbia‘s smartphone users, 47 per cent are downloading applications.

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

Dell netbook for students of all ages

Saturday, May 30th, 2009

Gillian Shaw
Sun

Latitude 2100, Dell

Aspire One AO751h netbook, Acer

iFrogz EarPollution earphones, iFrogz

Photo Shower Curtain, PhotoShowerCurtain.com

Latitude 2100, Dell, from $495

A netbook on every school desk. Already, university and college classrooms are a sea of laptop screens and now Dell has come up with a 10.1-inch netbook geared to the kindergarten to Grade 12 crowd. Clearly a company that has peaked into the backpacks of the average 11-year-old, Dell has given the Latitude 2100 a ruggedized design with a rubber casing for easy gripping. Wireless connectivity is a given, of course, and this netbook has an optional web cam. A network activity light on the lid is a giveaway for students who may not want the teacher to catch them web surfing. Weighing in at 1.32 kilograms, and available with a three- or six-cell battery, the Latitude 2100 has a three-in-one media card reader, optional external DVD+/-RW that plugs into the USB, and an optional touchscreen. Comes in five colours. www.dell.ca/latitude

Aspire One AO751h netbook, Acer, from $430

When this netbook craze started, the whole point was their tiny size — eight inches and smaller opened this new category. The tiny screens and keyboards have been giving way to larger ones, and Acer is pushing the netbook envelope with an 11.6-inch version, but promises it is thinner and lighter than earlier netbooks. However, it is larger overall and has a larger screen and full-sized keyboard to match. It’s blurring the lines between conventional notebook computers and their junior cousins, but Acer is the top netbook seller in Canada with a 72-per-cent market share and 80,380 units shipped, so it must be doing something right. From $430 with the extended six-cell battery version starting at $470. www.acer.com.

iFrogz EarPollution earphones, iFrogz, starting at $8 US for children’s to $20 and up for adults

Customize your headphones with a lineup that lets you mix and match components from the headband, base, side piece, speaker pieces, cushions and hinge piece to create your own look. The EarPollution lineup also offers earbuds in three styles with three earfit pieces to make fitting easier. Find them at ifrogz.com/earpollution.

Photo Shower Curtain, PhotoShowerCurtain.com, from $150 US

It’s the time of year for that perennial dilemma — what to get Dad for Father’s Day that he doesn’t already have. I’m betting the average dad doesn’t have a life-sized reprint of his favourite photo staring back at him in the shower. These curtains use a process that fuses the image into the fabric to create a permanent and durable image, according to PhotoShowerCurtain.com that takes customers’ photos and transforms them into the curtains. www.photoshowercurtain.com.

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

Microsoft lifts lid on search engine

Friday, May 29th, 2009

Glenn Chapman
Province

Microsoft yesterday unveiled a new search engine, Bing, designed to intuitively understand what people are searching for on the Internet and challenge online king Google.

The U.S. software colossus refers to Bing as a “Decision Engine” and said it will have it deployed worldwide at bing.com by Wednesday.

“Today, search engines do a decent job of helping people navigate the web and find information, but they don’t do a very good job of enabling people to use the information they find,” said Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer.

Bing search employs semantic technology intended to help it recognize not just key words but what is intended by phrases typed in as online queries, according to Microsoft.

Internet search engines have traditionally relied on matching key words to words found at websites. Bing is built to “go beyond today’s search experience” by recognizing content and adapting to query types, according to the Redmond, Wash.-based company.

Bing takes aim at Microsoft arch-rival Google, which dominates the online search market.

Bing will replace MSN Live search, which has languished in a distant third place behind Google and Yahoo!

“Microsoft’s Bing will change the face of search,” Forrester analyst Shar VanBoskirk proclaimed in a blog post at the technology-tracking firm’s website.

“Bing focuses on delivering answers, not web pages.”

Bing gives Microsoft “a leg up” on competitors but is more likely to lure users from Yahoo! than Google because “Google is too much of a habit for everyone,” according to VanBoskirk.

The search engine is aimed at online shoppers and will initially focus on helping people make buying decisions, plan trips, research health matters, or find local businesses.

Microsoft cited study results indicating that an estimated 30 per cent of online searches are abandoned out of frustration and that searchers often fail to get what they seek on a first try.

© Copyright (c) The Province