May 20th, 2012
BARRY PARK
In age of rapidly advancing technology, cars are slowly becoming less car-like.
At one time, it was a big jump from the radio cassette player to the six-stack CD player, once the realm of only the prestigious German luxury brands, but now as common as muck.
Surprisingly, Lexus – the luxury-car arm of Japanese car maker Toyota – still sells vehicles fitted with expensive Mark Levinson audio systems that include a cassette deck. Lexus says it is what the customers – mainly older buyers – want.
What has happened, then, to change the way we move, particularly during the past five years?
VIDEO SCREENS
Liquid-crystal screens in cars started as tiny, low-tech, monochromatic displays able to show only a small jumble of words and numbers – but some of the applications now are mind-boggling. Dull dashboards become a world of colourful, sometimes pointless, information and some of the smarter systems will even log on to the internet, download photo-realistic images from Google and project them to your satnav system. Some cars, such as Audi’s A8 limo, include Google Earth as its guidance system.
The biggest benefit has been in-car video. Gone is the steady chorus of “are we there yet?” – replaced by blissful silence until the movie ends or, in our case at least, someone breaks the player by trying to shove a DVD in on top of one already in the system.
You can even hook up a Nintendo Wii to some cars’ seven-inch screens, complete with four players. It was all fun until someone got hurt.
REMOTE-CONTROL CARS
Holden’s Volt turns the conventional hybrid formula on its head. Instead of a battery-powered electric motor helping a petrol engine, a petrol engine helps a battery-powered electric motor.
When it arrives later this year, expect to be able to control it remotely via your smartphone. Holden hopes to have a system that should allow Volt owners to do some fancy telephonic tricks, such as check the battery status, toot the horn, flash the lights, even run the air conditioning so the car is not too hot when you hop in.
DODGING TRAFFIC SNARLS
We hate it. Stuck in stop-start traffic, crawling along the road and clueless as to how long you are likely to be immersed in it. But that has all changed recently, with the introduction of a system named SUNA. Boffins in a laboratory collect as much information about the traffic flow in your city of choice, turn it into chunks of digital data and send it to your car’s satnav system, which crunches the numbers. It then comes up as visual and audible warnings and can even suggest alternative routes.
However, rather than giving drivers a magical solution to their traffic dilemmas, Melbourne-based Intellimatics, the company behind SUNA, says it allows drivers to make a choice based on the cause of the blockage. It is then up to individual drivers to decide if they would rather sit in the traffic jam or skirt it.
CAR KEYS
Once upon a time, a car key was an elongated, pointy piece of metal that, once in your pocket, would stab you painfully in the groin each time you sat down.
Now, they are more akin to a work of art.
Buy a powerful Porsche Panamera and you will get a key that looks more like an artist’s rendering of the four-door coupe’s silhouette.
Buy a BMW and instead of getting just one rectangular, box-shaped key, you get a his-and-hers pair. His key will push the seat back, wind out the mirrors and raise the steering wheel every time he pushes the unlock key, while hers will lift the seat up, wind in the mirrors and adjust the steering wheel to a lower level.
The modern key is also a handy part of your car’s maintenance cycle.
The more clever ones store information about what problems your car has had since it was last in the service bay, allowing technicians to see instantly what needs fixing – even before they have seen the car.
– Sydney Morning Herald
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May 20th, 2012
By Diane Bartz WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Some Motorola Mobility smartphones infringe on a Microsoft patent and will be barred from importation to the United States, a U.S. trade panel said on Friday. The order by the U.S. International Trade Commission has been sent to President Barack Obama, who has 60 days to consider whether to overturn it for policy reasons. The legal fight at the ITC is one of dozens globally between various smartphone makers. Google’s Android system has become the top-selling smartphone operating system, ahead of mobile systems by Apple, Microsoft, Research in Motion and others. On Wednesday, some of HTC’s smartphone models were stopped at the U.S. border because it lost a patent dispute with Apple at the ITC in December. Shares in HTC tumbled more than 6 percent on news that shipments of the phones were being held up by U.S. customs. The ITC order did not say which models of Motorola Mobility smartphone were affected but Microsoft has asked for the following devices to be stopped at the U.S. border: the Atrix, Backflip, Bravo, Charm, Cliq, Cliq 2, Cliq XT, Defy, Devour, Droid 2, Droid 2 Global, Droid Pro, Droid X, Droid X2, Flipout, Flipside, Spice and the Xoom tablet. The patented technology at issue makes it possible for users to generate meeting requests and schedule gatherings using their mobile devices. One option for Motorola Mobility will be to remove the meeting-scheduling technology from its smartphones and tablets. The company could also license it from Microsoft. Motorola Mobility, which is in the process of being acquired by Google, said the company would not feel any near-term impact. “Although we are disappointed by the commission’s ruling that certain Motorola Mobility products violated one patent, we look forward to reading the full opinion to understand its reasoning,” the company said in an emailed statement. “We will explore all options including appeal.” Both sides can appeal to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. Microsoft said it was pleased with the decision. “We hope that now Motorola will be willing to join the vast majority of Android device makers selling phones in the US by taking a license to our patents,” a company spokeswoman said via email. In a complaint filed in October 2010 with the ITC, Microsoft accused Motorola Mobility of infringing nine patents for Windows Mobile and Windows Phone. Two patents were dropped during litigation. An ITC administrative law judge in December found that Motorola Mobility infringed on one Microsoft patent in making Android cellphones but did not infringe on six others. Google’s Android software has recently become the most popular cellphone operating system with 56 percent of the market in the first quarter of 2012, according to data from Gartner Inc. Motorola, which makes Android phones, is one of the smaller mobile phone makers with 8.4 million units sold globally in the last quarter, according to Gartner. The ITC is a popular venue for patent litigation since it has the power to forbid the importation of products that infringe on patents. The case at the ITC is No. 337-744. (Reporting By Diane Bartz; Editing by Tim Dobbyn, Gary Hill)
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May 18th, 2012
All is fair in love and war, and the spy shop has become America’s new relationship weapon.
Feuding couples are using spy technology, from phone tracking and GPS to hidden cameras and microphones, to secretly record their partner’s movements. Some try to use the evidence in divorce court proceedings to get custody of children.
Divorce attorneys say they’ve seen an increase in the role electronic data and social networking sites play in divorces, according to the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers.
Watch the full story on “Nightline” tonight at 11:35 p.m. ET/PT
Brian, a father in Texas who asked that his last name not be used, said he made a shocking discovery on a recent visitation with his young son. Brian claimed his ex-wife, Allison, stitched a tiny tape recorder into their son’s jeans and was using the boy to spy on him.
“My son told me, ‘Dad, Mom has all these recordings of us inside the house.’ I said, ‘what do you mean?’” Brian said. “‘She has all these recordings and she listens to them at night.’ And I pulled my son close to me and patted him down, and that’s when I found the recorder.”
Brian made a video recording of his own, showing what he said was documentation of the moment he found the recorder his wife had planted. His attorney has since filed a complaint in district court, alleging violation of wiretapping laws. In response, Brian’s ex-wife told ABC News, “The allegation of wiretapping is inaccurate and is in the process of being dismissed through an agreement between he and I.”
Her attorney added, “Brian is a three-time convicted felon. He is currently on parole… His federal lawsuit is nothing more than trying to gain the upper-hand in the family court.”
Brian told ABC News that the charges are old and don’t reflect on his parenting ability.
One of the primary reasons do-it-yourself snooping has become more widespread is because it is relatively cheap and easy. Surveillance equipment can cost less than $300, and spy gear that can’t be found in a store can be bought online. Some recording devices are small enough to be mounted on a keychain, a motel room peephole, eyeglasses, pens or even inside a child’s favorite toy.
“The one thing that’s exchanged between the warring parties is the child, So the child becomes, in effect, some sort of Trojan horse.” said John Kinney, a divorce attorney who has worked on a number of high-tech cases.
Duke Lewton has been on the other end of those devices in a vicious battle over his 7-year-old daughter, whose mother rigged her teddy bear with a microphone and told her to carry it at all times.
“[She] removed a few stitches, placed a recording device inside of the little bear’s head, and then you could access a USB port on the side of the head … and download all of our conversations that we had had through the weekend,” Lewton told ABC News.
Lewton’s wife was fined $10,000 for violating wiretapping laws and the tapes were thrown out of court.
But the law is murky. In 38 states, it is legal to secretly record in a public place. Federal wiretapping laws protect the privacy of your cell phone conversation and your computer, and most of the time, judges don’t allow it.
“The emotions get so heated that people will do almost anything to get an edge,” Kinney said. “If new technology provides avenues for collection [of] whatever evidence that a litigant might think is out there, they’ll stop at nothing to get the evidence that they think they want.”
And it’s not just sparring spouses that are using spy technology. There is pre-nuptial snooping too.
Machell Russell had been living with her boyfriend Marcus Elias for three years when she started to suspect he was being unfaithful.
“He was telling me he needed to work late a lot, you know, and kind of rushing me off the phone when I would call him while I’m away on business,” she said. “And I’m like, ‘That’s weird,’ you know?”
Russell turned to the television show “Cheaters,” which provides spy equipment to suspicious lovers.
“They gave me a clock cam and it looked like a regular alarm clock, and it was from the ‘Cheaters’ spy shop,” she said. “Basically, it has a camera already installed, so when they brought it to me, I just had to place it in my living room and, honey, when they called me to look at that footage, I was like, ‘Wow.’”
All caught on camera, it seemed Russell’s fears that her boyfriend was cheating on her were confirmed. The show indentified the other woman as an intern at the business where Elias worked. Russell later confronted him while she thought he was out with the woman.
Russell’s now ex-boyfriend Marcus Elias told ABC News, “I feel like my privacy and my character was violated by my ex-girlfriend and the show ‘Cheaters.’ People never had the opportunity to see that Michelle cheated on me before I was ambushed on national television, it was never proven that I actually did anything wrong. I wouldn’t wish that scenario on anyone.”
But Russell said she has no regrets about spying.
“I think that it’s a lesson for those who are thinking about cheating, that, hey, you never know. You never know that somebody could be watching, or just behave in your relationship as if there could be a camera around because you just never know,” Russell said.
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May 18th, 2012
Gadgets such as smartphones and tablets are becoming more and more embedded in kids’ lives. From middle schoolers with smartphones to babies who are comfortable with an iPad but can’t work a magazine, many children today grow up as true digital natives. And parents are catching on that gadgets can help control and distract their little rugrats.
According to one study, nearly a quarter of parents have given their kid a smartphone, iPod or iPad to keep them busy while they take care of business. Nearly 40% of kids aged eight and under have used tablets or smartphones in some capacity. And tablet usage by kids aged 12 and under rose nearly 10 percent from last summer to fall, according to another survey.
[More from Mashable: This Phone Lasts 15 Years on 1 AA Battery]
But can so much tech immersion ever replace human supervision and interaction for young humans? The online education portal Schools.com pulled statistics from a variety of news and research sources to compile an infographic showing just how much technology modern kids grow up around.
Many parents seem to think gadgets don’t just keep kids occupied — they can also help them grow and learn. 77% of parents think tablets are beneficial to kids, and 77% think they help develop creativity, according to Schools.com’s findings. More than a quarter of parents have downloaded apps for their kids. The top genres? Fun, at 46%; education, at 42%; and creative, at 28%.
[More from Mashable: Smart Collar Transmits Doggie Health Reports to the Cloud [VIDEO]]
Check out the infographic below for the fuller picture on just how much trust parents put in gadgets.
Do you think smartphones and tablets do more to help or hurt the development of kids today? Let us know in the comments.
This story originally published on Mashable here.
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May 16th, 2012
“Turn it off and on again” seems to be the usual advice given when on the phone to an IT helpdesk. But why did this fault happen in the first place?
Lara Lewington investigates why so many gadgets break without anything seeming to be wrong with them.
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May 16th, 2012
10 May 2012
Last updated at 07:55 ET
Record-breaking levels of rainfall in April have replenished Yorkshire Water’s underground stocks back to normal levels.
Checks by the company in February showed that borehole levels were 20% lower than usual.
It said that heavy rainfall in April and May’s wet start boosted stocks by 13bn litres and reservoirs were full.
A spokesman said water was a “precious resource” and urged customers to continue to use water sensibly.
Matt Thompson, from Yorkshire Water, said: “It would be stretching it to say that we’re in a record position for this time of year in terms of our water resources, but the recent rainfall has certainly helped to bring our stocks back to healthy levels, with reservoirs full and borehole levels back to where we’d expect them to be for this time of year.
“It’s important that stocks are healthy as we’re entering into the typically drier months of the year and customers can rest assured that we’ll continue to work hard to manage and balance stocks across the region.”
To help customers use water wisely, the company is visiting city and town centres across Yorkshire throughout May, June and July to offer free water saving gadgets.
The firm will also be at the Great Yorkshire Show in Harrogate on 10, 11 and 12 July.
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May 16th, 2012
Starting Wednesday, it will cost more to send iPads, Kindles, smartphones and other popular electronic devices to American troops overseas.
New United States Postal Service (USPS) rules restrict the international mailing of devices using lithium batteries, which power most personal electronics. Lithium batteries can explode in certain circumstances and have been implicated in at least two major incidents involving cargo planes — one in 2006 when a UPS jet was destroyed, and the other in 2010 when a UPS jet crashed at a military base, killing both pilots.
USPS based its decision on guidelines set the International Civil Aviation Organization and the Universal Postal Union. The groups issue guidelines for global trade.
Military families or companies wanting to mail electronic devices overseas will instead have to use private carriers such as UPS or FedEx, neither of which ship directly to APO, FPO or DPO boxes used by service members. Though FedEx does ship directly to service members overseas, it can cost more than three times USPS rates.
That is going to hurt troops, iPads for Soldiers founder Winnie Pritchett, who since 2009 has mailed more than 700 iPads to troops in Afghanistan, told msnbc.com.
Watch the Top Videos on msnbc.com
Pritchett started the nonprofit when her son, a helicopter pilot, was deployed in the war zone in Afghanistan. At first she started shipping Amazon Kindles to hospitalized soldiers on the front lines, then switched to the iPad because it was more versatile. Since then, deployed troops have used the devices to store military manuals, keep in touch with families and watch movies. And hospitalized soldiers with post-traumatic stress have even used apps for meditation to help their condition, she said.
Receiving the iPads is a morale boost, Pritchett told msnbc.com, noting the devices are easy to use by soldiers who have lost limbs from improvised-explosive device blasts.
“Better than sending them beef jerky or something like that, it’s a useful tool to help the morale,” Pritchett said. “And to let them know we truly appreciate them.”
Since finding out about the tightened USPS regulations last week, Pritchett and iPads for Soldiers volunteers in Key Biscayne, Fla., have been frantically shipping out the devices. Pritchett hopes to get the lithium-battery ban overturned.
The strict rules may be temporary. On Jan. 1, 2013, USPS says, “Customers will be able to mail specific quantities of lithium batteries internationally … when the batteries are properly installed in the personal electronic devices they are intended to operate.”
Meantime, Pritchett said she is exploring other shipping options as she receives some 2,000 requests a month for iPads.
USPS spokeswoman Darlene Casey told msnbc.com the Postal Service is “working with expert organizations to determine if any new exceptions can be developed” before January 2013.
More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:
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May 16th, 2012
All is fair in love and war, and the spy shop has become America’s new relationship weapon.
Feuding couples are using spy technology, from phone tracking and GPS to hidden cameras and microphones, to secretly record their partner’s movements. Some try to use the evidence in divorce court proceedings to get custody of children.
Divorce attorneys say they’ve seen an increase in the role electronic data and social networking sites play in divorces, according to the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers.
Watch the full story on “Nightline” tonight at 11:35 p.m. ET/PT
Brian, a father in Texas who asked that his last name not be used, said he made a shocking discovery on a recent visitation with his young son. Brian claimed his ex-wife, Allison, stitched a tiny tape recorder into their son’s jeans and was using the boy to spy on him.
“My son told me, ‘Dad, Mom has all these recordings of us inside the house.’ I said, ‘what do you mean?’” Brian said. “‘She has all these recordings and she listens to them at night.’ And I pulled my son close to me and patted him down, and that’s when I found the recorder.”
Brian made a video recording of his own, showing what he said was documentation of the moment he found the recorder his wife had planted. His attorney has since filed a complaint in district court, alleging violation of wiretapping laws. In response, Brian’s ex-wife told ABC News, “The allegation of wiretapping is inaccurate and is in the process of being dismissed through an agreement between he and I.”
Her attorney added, “Brian is a three-time convicted felon. He is currently on parole… His federal lawsuit is nothing more than trying to gain the upper-hand in the family court.”
Brian told ABC News that the charges are old and don’t reflect on his parenting ability.
One of the primary reasons do-it-yourself snooping has become more widespread is because it is relatively cheap and easy. Surveillance equipment can cost less than $300, and spy gear that can’t be found in a store can be bought online. Some recording devices are small enough to be mounted on a keychain, a motel room peephole, eyeglasses, pens or even inside a child’s favorite toy.
“The one thing that’s exchanged between the warring parties is the child, So the child becomes, in effect, some sort of Trojan horse.” said John Kinney, a divorce attorney who has worked on a number of high-tech cases.
Duke Lewton has been on the other end of those devices in a vicious battle over his 7-year-old daughter, whose mother rigged her teddy bear with a microphone and told her to carry it at all times.
“[She] removed a few stitches, placed a recording device inside of the little bear’s head, and then you could access a USB port on the side of the head … and download all of our conversations that we had had through the weekend,” Lewton told ABC News.
Lewton’s wife was fined $10,000 for violating wiretapping laws and the tapes were thrown out of court.
But the law is murky. In 38 states, it is legal to secretly record in a public place. Federal wiretapping laws protect the privacy of your cell phone conversation and your computer, and most of the time, judges don’t allow it.
“The emotions get so heated that people will do almost anything to get an edge,” Kinney said. “If new technology provides avenues for collection [of] whatever evidence that a litigant might think is out there, they’ll stop at nothing to get the evidence that they think they want.”
And it’s not just sparring spouses that are using spy technology. There is pre-nuptial snooping too.
Machell Russell had been living with her boyfriend Marcus Elias for three years when she started to suspect he was being unfaithful.
“He was telling me he needed to work late a lot, you know, and kind of rushing me off the phone when I would call him while I’m away on business,” she said. “And I’m like, ‘That’s weird,’ you know?”
Russell turned to the television show “Cheaters,” which provides spy equipment to suspicious lovers.
“They gave me a clock cam and it looked like a regular alarm clock, and it was from the ‘Cheaters’ spy shop,” she said. “Basically, it has a camera already installed, so when they brought it to me, I just had to place it in my living room and, honey, when they called me to look at that footage, I was like, ‘Wow.’”
All caught on camera, it seemed Russell’s fears that her boyfriend was cheating on her were confirmed. The show indentified the other woman as an intern at the business where Elias worked. Russell later confronted him while she thought he was out with the woman.
Russell’s now ex-boyfriend Marcus Elias told ABC News, “I feel like my privacy and my character was violated by my ex-girlfriend and the show ‘Cheaters.’ People never had the opportunity to see that Michelle cheated on me before I was ambushed on national television, it was never proven that I actually did anything wrong. I wouldn’t wish that scenario on anyone.”
But Russell said she has no regrets about spying.
“I think that it’s a lesson for those who are thinking about cheating, that, hey, you never know. You never know that somebody could be watching, or just behave in your relationship as if there could be a camera around because you just never know,” Russell said.
Also Read
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May 13th, 2012
Aperion ARIS Wireless Speaker System
Just another wireless speaker system right? Almost, but not quite. Like most wireless speakers these days, the ARIS has Hi-Fi sound and wireless remote connectivity, but it stands apart from the pack with Windows compatibility. Using the ARIS App, select any device on your Wi-Fi network, be it your Windows phone, laptop, or desktop, then crank up the volume using your phone as a remote, and jam. $499 is a steep price to pay to be a Windows lover, but Aperion’s answer for AirPlay apostates ships on June 18. (Aperion)
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May 13th, 2012
Just another wireless speaker system right? Almost, but not quite. Like most wireless speakers these days, the ARIS has Hi-Fi sound and wireless remote connectivity, but it stands apart from the pack with Windows compatibility. Using the ARIS App, select any device on your Wi-Fi network, be it your Windows phone, laptop, or desktop, then crank up the volume using your phone as a remote, and jam. $499 is a steep price to pay to be a Windows lover, but Aperion’s answer for AirPlay apostates ships on June 18. (Aperion)
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The more there is the more there is to go wrong. 30 year old Ford Escort, 99% of what was factory installed still in working order. In 30 years do you reacon 99% of every contraption they put in a modern car will still be going ?