Archive for December, 2011

‘Govt should enact policies to aid ICT growth’

December 29th, 2011

President of the Information Technology Association of Nigeria (ITAN), Mrs Florence Seriki, has urged the Federal Government and stakeholders in the Information and Communications Technology (ICT) industry to take advantage of convergence of ICT to move the nation forward.

Mrs Seriki said the newly-created Ministry of Communications Technology provides an opportunity for stakeholders to seal the union between Information Technology and communications.

She said this in her acceptance speech and swearing-in as president of ITAN in Abuja, adding that ITAN was prepared to work with the Federal Government and network operators to ensure Nigerians enjoy the benefit of convergence.

According to her, the computers and other hardware that members of ITAN sell are usually equipped with Wi-Fi facilities that are poorly utilised as a result of poor Internet facilities offered by the nation’s Internet Service Providers and network operators.

She said: “We plan to get the new ministry to marry IT with communications to get ICT. Communications services such as hotspots and Wi-Fi need to be established as Internet service, in the country is very poor compared to other parts of the world.

“Major ICT events and conferences can then favour ITAN members in hardware and this will enhance their businesses.”

The ITAN boss, who is also the Chief Executive Officer of Omatek Computers, regretted that the zero duty rate enjoyed by knocked-down ICT products during the tenure of former president Olusegun Obasanjo, has been removed.

She said government should put in place policies and environment conducive to growth of Small and Medium Enterprises, entrepreneurship and manufacturing, in order to ensure the survival of businesses and penetration of information technology in the country.

Mrs Seriki said: “Government must focus on developing manufacturing and SMEs industry as a major factor for creating employment and empowering youths. The Asians declared local policies to promote local patronage and enforced all citizens and government parastatals to buy locally-made products. Several incentives were created to promote their locally-produced products.

“Hence, we want to work with the Federal Government and the ICT ministry in the launch of a major local patronage campaign championed by Mr President and mandating government agencies to enforce this.

“Duty gaps between foreign and local personal computer and products are required to give incentive to locally-made products. For example, zero per cent for locally-made products and 10 per cent for imported products. This was in force, but now disregarded.”

The ITAN boss noted that promoting local SMEs and manufacturing in the ICT sector would create employment for many Nigerian youths, promote technology transfer, and enhance Research and Development prospects.

“It would also facilitate technology know-how, contribute to driving the economy, promote local content and empower youths,” she added.

Mrs Seriki assured that her tenure as ITAN chief would promote joint partnerships with foreign investors; work with financial institutions to find funding for viable IT ventures; increase membership drive and re-brand ITAN.

She added that the association would work closely with the Ministry of Communications Technology and the National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA) to ensure consumption of locally-produced ICT products in the country.

Source:http://www.thenationonlineng.net/2011/index.php/business/infotech/31395-%E2%80%98govt-should-enact-policies-to-aid-ict-growth%E2%80%99.html

Fake ID ticket to underage drinking

December 29th, 2011

City youngsters have managed to find a foolproof way of getting past strict checking at pubs to prevent underage drinking: making a fake ID. With easy to access and operate hardware and software which can be used to alter the writing on a document, party-hungry teenagers in the city declare that they have created the perfect age proof for themselves.

A printer and a computer are all that these juveniles need to come up with a realistic ID. Altered or fashioned with the help of photoshop software or paint, teens say the end product is shockingly similar to the real deal, making the task of getting past bouncers a piece of cake.

The practice seems popular among young party-goers although managers of watering holes in town claim that nobody could beat the checks with a fake ID. “It is impossible for someone to enter our club with a fake ID,” says Sanjeev Mehta, manager of Bottles and Chimney. “It is easy to tell a fake from the real ones since we look for the embossing and holograms on ID proofs.” Sanjeev added.

However, others like Naren Pal, manager of Liquids, say that despite all the checks, a few may have got away with fake IDs. “Although we take many steps like checking only for government approved IDs like PAN cards or driver’s licences, a couple of underage drinkers may be able to get through with fake IDs due to the heavy rush which lasts for around two to three hours on party days.

“We definitely lose a lot of business due to this since, usually, the whole group decides to leave even if there is one underage person in a big group whom we cannot permit,” Pal said. But pub owners say that they would rather lose business than risk getting busted by cops. Pub owners say that while the checking is always strict, if a person looked older than 21 and even produced a valid age proof it is impossible to tell whether he or she is lying.

Vinod Reddy, manager of 10 Downing Street says: “Checking is always strict. If a person looks young but still produces identification showing age as being above 21 then it is clear that the ID is fake. But if a person looks older and shows identification which looks real to our eyes then we cannot turn them away; we have to serve them whatever they order”.

Source:http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/hyderabad/Fake-ID-ticket-to-underage-drinking/articleshow/11286455.cms

Rugged gun-style mobile computer with Windows CE or Windows Mobile 6

December 29th, 2011

Janam is a New York-based rugged mobile computing vendor with worldwide distribution. The company was established in January of 2006 as a provider of purpose-built rugged handheld computing devices for mobile workers.

Janam first launched the CE-version of the XG100 in January of 2009 and then introduced a Windows Mobile version in October of that year. Like the XM Series, the XG Series brings a number of unique and innovative features to market. For example, according to Janam it is the only rugged gun shaped mobile computer with the battery in the handle. This lowers the product’s center of gravity which makes the device feel light and balanced in hand.

From a technical perspective, the Janam XG100 is built on traditional vertical market mobile computing hardware and software. For processing power, the XG100 relies on the 624MHz version of the competent and powerful Marvell PXA320 chip. On the software side, it’s either the user-friendly Windows Mobile 6.1 or the more developer-oriented Windows CE 6.0. Neither is the latest version of Microsoft’s mobile mini-OS, but both continue to have wide-ranging support.

The 3.7-inch portrait-oriented analog touchscreen display measures 3.7 inches diagonally — about average for this class of device — and uses the classic 240 x 320 pixel QVGA resolution that is low by today’s smartphone standards, but goes well with Windows Mobile/CE. Operation is primarily via passive stylus, and there are also function keys and a navigation diamond.

In terms of size, the XG100 measures 3.5 x 9.1 inches, with the gun-style handle making the device about 7.15 inches tall. The whole thing weighs about a pound and a half. As can be seen on the picture, the XG100 has an elaborate keypad with either 42 or 52 keys in a total of five variations, including some that have dedicated VT or 3270 terminal emulation keys (yes, those are ancient, but still very much in use out there).

As a data capture device, the XG100 includes an integrated Adaptus 752 x 480 pixel CMOS imager for reading a large variety of 1D and 2D codes and symbologies. There is a user-accessible micro-SDHC card slot for extra storage. For wireless communication there is Bluetooth 2.0 and either 802.11b or 802.11a/b/g WiFi, both Cisco CCX certified.

In the ruggedness and durability department, the XG100 can handle multiple six-foot drops onto concrete, carries IP64 sealing, and has a wide operating temperature range from 14 to 122 degrees Fahrenheit. The Li-Ion battery packs 18.5 watt-hours life, which should be good enough for full-shift operation.

Janam optimized the XG100 for the needs of mobile workers in warehouses, distribution centers, loading docks and other operating venues where rugged gun-shaped mobile computers are deployed. The device is clearly designed as a workhorse based on tried-andtrue, mature technology and capable of handling abuse on the job. Pricing is in the US$1,000-1,400 range, depending on configuration.

Source:http://ruggedpcreview.com/3_handhelds_janam_xg100.html

Apple may hurt shareholders with patent war

December 29th, 2011

Company should take a leaf from Google’s book and license its patents broadly, say experts.

Steve Jobs, the co-founder of Apple, told his biographer that he’d rather wage “thermonuclear war” with Google than make deals to share its technology with the maker of the Android operating system.

That was no empty threat. In the 18 months before Jobs died on October 5, Apple sued HTC, Samsung Electronics and Motorola Mobility, the three largest Android users. It alleged that the phone makers stole Apple’s technology and asked courts to make them stop.

Now, as rulings start coming in, it might be time for a détente that helps Apple maximise the value of its patents, said Kevin Rivette, a managing partner at 3LP Advisors, a firm that advises on intellectual property. When courts side with Apple and impose bans on infringing products, competitors can often devise workarounds; in cases where Apple doesn’t win import restrictions, it would be better off striking settlements that ensure access to a competitor’s innovation, he said.

“A scorched-earth strategy is bad news because it doesn’t optimise the value of their patents – because people will get around them,” said Rivette, whose clients include Android licensees. “It’s like a dam. Using their patents to keep rivals out of the market is like putting rocks in a stream. The stream is going to find a way around. Wouldn’t it be better to direct where the water goes?”

Steve Dowling, a spokesman for Cupertino, California-based Apple, declined to comment for this story.
Early victories

For a time, Apple’s strategy looked sound. In October, an Australian court banned the sale of Samsung’s Galaxy 10.1 tablet in that country, and the US International Trade Commission agreed to consider an import ban on sales of certain HTC devices.

Then the tide began to turn. Apple suffered a setback November 30 when a higher Australian court overturned the ruling against Samsung. On December 22, a German judge said he was unlikely to uphold an import ban on a version of the Galaxy, which Samsung had modified in response to a ban on the original design.

The ITC gave Apple only a partial victory on December 19 by ruling that HTC had violated only one of four patents Apple said it infringed. The patent covered so-called data detection, a feature that helps users make a call, send an e-mail or find an address on a map with a single keystroke.
Can’t last?

HTC decided to drop the feature. That’s a significant loss for HTC, since the capability has come to be an expected part of using a smartphone. Still, the ruling reinforced predictions that Apple won’t succeed forever in preventing Android rivals from selling gadgets with the now-familiar hallmarks of Apple’s pioneering devices. These include touch screens and app stores.

Legal history isn’t on Apple’s side, said Marshall Phelps, former head of intellectual property at IBM and Microsoft.
“Nobody has ever kept competitors out of any market with patents,” in part because software can usually be slightly changed to find a non-infringing alternative, he said.

Exceptions, he said, include an IBM patent that characterised the basic architecture of a computer and Texas Instruments’s original patent for the integrated circuit, or computer chip. IBM was ordered by the US Department of Justice to license its patent, while Texas Instruments decided to do the same, which has resulted in billions of dollars in royalties, Phelps said.

Many of Apple’s patents, by contrast, relate to the look and feel of devices or particular ways of using a machine, rather than a basic technology breakthrough.
Shift ahead

The question on the minds of many patent lawyers isn’t whether Apple should adapt its legal stance, but when. For now, the company’s approach is costing rivals millions of dollars in fees, distracting management and preventing them from emulating Apple’s products more boldly, said Ron Epstein, a former attorney at Intel who now runs patent licensing firm Epicenter IP Group.

Apple’s patent portfolio remains strong compared with those of rivals, thanks both to the innovations that went into groundbreaking products such as the iPhone and iPad, and to the effectiveness of Apple’s legal department in obtaining patents for those innovations, said Christopher Marlett, chairman and co-founder of MDB Capital Group, an investment bank that advises companies on buying and selling patents.

“Apple has the patents, the money and the expertise to go to war,” Marlett said. “I just don’t see why Apple would seek détente, since they’re the clear leader. Until they’re hit with an injunction by Google or Samsung, they don’t need to get serious about licensing.”

Still, as more companies pour resources into the booming mobile-devices market, Apple should eventually cut deals to ensure access to rivals’ innovations as well, Epstein said.

“How long can you beat everyone else over the head before they can do the same to me?” he said.
Tim Cook, who took over in August when Jobs announced he would be unable to come back as CEO, has many other ways to take advantage of the company’s patent portfolio. The company could probably collect as much as US$10 in royalties for every device sold, more than the amount analysts speculate Microsoft receives from Samsung and HTC, which use its mobile technology, said Rivette at 3LP.
Other arrangements

With US$81 billion in cash and investments, Apple has little need for more. Instead, the company could pursue out-of-court settlements that would help it take on Android in other ways, Rivette said. The company could offer to drop its more than two dozen patent claims against Samsung in exchange for an agreement to hold off using Apple technology for six months or a year, he said. Cook could also try to get price breaks or guarantees that would give it greater access to Samsung parts, Rivette said.

Apple and Samsung also could agree to focus on different parts of the market. For example, Apple might make iPad-sised devices while agreeing to stay out of the market for smaller devices with 7-inch displays that could compete with Amazon.com’s new Android-based Fire tablet, Rivette said.

If Apple agreed to let Samsung include Apple’s proprietary iTunes software in such a device – an unprecedented and unlikely step, he said – Samsung’s sales would probably increase. That would help slow gains by Amazon, whose push into hardware makes it a threat to Apple. The move also would make Samsung more reliant on Apple, lessening its dependence on Google.
‘Divided loyalties’

“If I’m Apple, I want divided loyalties” from Android licensees, Rivette said. “At this point, it would make more sense for Apple to build an ecosystem that everyone can live in. If you’re going to license, why not go for the big deal where you lock down supply chains, get your technologies broadly adopted and slow down competitors? That is the game.”

Apple should pursue such settlements soon, before it winds up in need of other companies’ technology, Rivette said. The ITC is expected to rule in September on an import ban on Apple and Research In Motion’s mobile devices, for improper use of a photo preview feature patented by Eastman Kodak.

If the Commission decides there was infringement of the Kodak patent, Apple would need to settle the dispute by licensing the technology or buying some or all of Kodak’s patent portfolio to continue selling its products in the US Because Kodak has been actively trying to sell its portfolio of 1100 patents in recent months, Apple runs the risk that they may be purchased by Google, Samsung or another competitor.

While Apple is working on its own location-tracking technology, many iPhone and iPad users now rely on Google mapping tools to get directions or find the nearest coffee shop, by way of a partnership between Apple and Google that predates the rise of Android. Nokia, Microsoft and Skyhook also hold valuable patents for tools that keep tabs on a device’s whereabouts. Apple has made little headway in social networking and may need deals with companies such as Facebook to add features that help users connect with one another.

“If Apple wanted to get into social networking, they’d have a big problem,” said Ron Laurie, managing director of Inflexion Point Strategy, a Palo Alto, California-based intellectual property consulting firm.

Working toward settlements sooner would help Apple and its rivals maintain the fast pace of innovation that has fueled the mobile-device market, he said.
“At some point, there has to be some kind of settlement, some kind of peace,” Laurie said.

Source:http://www.smh.com.au/it-pro/business-it/apple-may-hurt-shareholders-with-patent-war-20111229-1pdhc.html

WIMM One Android Watch Tested: Groundbreaking Wrist Computer Delivers

December 29th, 2011

The world has been waiting for a Dick Tracy-like computer watch for decades, but up until now, nothing has even come close to providing a full-fledged computing experience in a wrist-friendly design. Enter the WIMM One, the world’s first Android watch. Available as a $299 preview device for developers, the WIMM One is capable of running a host of custom apps, syncing with your phone, and pulling in the latest news headlines from the web using its Wi-Fi connection. We’ve been wearing this gadget as our everyday timepiece for three weeks now, and we’re blown away by its potential.

Design
The developer kit comes with the module itself, a simple black wristband, and a charging kit. The 1.4 x 1.3 x .5-inch WIMM One module, which comes detached from the wristband, is no larger or heavier than many of today’s plain digital watches. The front of the module has a 1.4-inch touchscreen, surrounded by a shiny black bezel, the bottom of which contains the WIMM logo, though we suspect the branding would change as this is licensed to partners.

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The right side of the module houses its only button, a tiny power button that you should never need to use, except for the first time you turn it on or if there’s a need to emergency reset the device, something we never needed to do in three weeks of constant use. The back of the module has 14 metal teeth that connect to corresponding pins on the charging dock.

The device snaps into the tiny dock and stays in place through the use of magnets. When docked, the module can plug into either the wall or a PC’s USB port for charging. When attached to a PC, you can mount the device to copy files back and forth from the non-removable 2GB microSD card.

The module pops into the wrsistband securely by pushing it up through the bottom of the band’s mount. Once seated in the band, the module remains securely in place, even if you wave the watch around. Perhaps to underscore that you never need the power button after the first setup, the band’s mount covers it.

Though it won’t win a fashion contest, the WIMM One looks pretty good on the wrist, reminding us of a typical digital watch from the likes of Casio or Armitron. However, we look forward to seeing the types of bands that come with the device when it’s released commercially.

The WIMM Vision
With a universe full of powerful mobile devices with established uses, the WIMM One isn’t trying to compete with your notebook, tablet, or smartphone. WIMM Labs, the company behind the watch, sees wearable devices like watches enabling a whole new world of what it calls microexperiences.

Vice president of product marketing Tim Twerdahl told us that the company sees an inverse relationship between the size of a device and the length of usage sessions, with users spending hours in a row on larger-screened devices such as notebooks and tablets, but only picking them up a few times a day versus dozens of times a day for minutes at a time on smaller devices like your smartphone. The WIMM One, its creators posit, is best when used scores of times a day for a very short period of time. These microexperiences could be as short as glancing at the watch face to check the temperature or tapping through to a home automation app to turn the lights off in your house.

While we see the merit in designing for short bursts of interactivity, we can also see the potential for longer sessions that don’t necessarily fall into the microexperiences category. Imagine playing a game, reading the news, or scrolling through an inbox for several minutes at a time.

WIMM Labs has no plans to market its product directly to the public. Instead, the company intends to build a strong hardware and software platform it can license to other companies who will then package and sell the device under their own brands.

Though WIMM hasn’t announced any partnerships yet, Twerdahl told us to expect a number of different partners to sell the WIMM One in 2012. Depending on what accessories and apps it comes with, the device could be sold as a sports watch that helps you keep track of workouts, as a pendant or belt accessory that that gives you quick information at a glance, or as a social-media key fob that attaches to your luggage and helps you check in wherever you go.

We prefer the most obvious use of the WIMM One, as a supercharged wrist companion that’s capable of doing lots of things well. Through its partnership with leading Chinese manufacturer Foxconn, WIMM says its capable of ramping up production to meet virtually any partner’s demands.

Twerdahl told us that, no matter how the WIMM One is sold, the first generation of units will likely carry the same specs and design from partner to partner, with the size of the internal microSD card ranging from 2 to 32GB. He said the company is capable of tweaking things like the screen, casing, or internal components for a partner, but that most partners they’ve spoken to are happy with the reference design and want to create a custom experience with pre-loaded apps and accessories like the band.

We don’t know how WIMM’s partners will price their versions of the WIMM One, but Twerdahl told us not to expect them to be significantly less expensive than the $299 developer kit model. Considering all the small components involved, he said that mass production will not significantly cut costs. Though we’ve recently seen Android tablets like the Kindle Fire and Lenovo IdeaPad A1 priced at under $200, these devices don’t require the same level of miniaturization as a watch.

Specs
The WIMM One looks pretty good on the inside, with a 667-MHz ATM 11 processor, Wi-Fi radio, Bluetooth, an accelerometer, 256MB of mDDR memory, 128MB of DRAM, and 512MB of internal flash. A second controller manages the watch face and accelerometer when everything else is asleep. The device has a 2GB, non-removable microSD card built in for storing data, though partners who offer the watch can include a larger card that’s up to 32GB capacity. The module also has a GPS radio inside, though it is currently disabled by software.

Unfortunately, the WIMM One doesn’t have the ability to play sounds other than a straightforward beep for the alarm. A haptic feedback unit allows the watch to vibrate during alerts as well. The WIMM One also lacks a microphone or camera so forget about using it to video chat a la Dick Tracey.

There’s no headphone jack for enabling audio out, though WIMM told us that it is working on a Bluetooth profile that will allow the watch to pair with Bluetooth-enabled headphones for playback. Nobody has made a video playback app yet, but we’re pretty certain the device could handle low-resolution video.

Screen
The 1.4-inch, 160 x 160 resolution dual-mode screen is the WIMM One’s most intriguing feature. When you’re not interacting with the device, the screen goes into grayscale mode, putting itself into a low-power state and showing only the watch face, which looks like a typical grayscale digital watch. However, the moment you touch the face, the watch goes into Android mode, allowing you to see up to 65,000 colors on its vibrant capacitive touch screen.

Set Up
When you first take the device out of the box and power it on, the software requires that you connect it to a Wi-Fi hotspot. Since the WIMM One doesn’t have a virtual keyboard of any kind, it offers a scrolling list of letters and characters and you must scroll through to select one at time in order to enter the correct password for your router.

Once, you’ve connected the Internet for the first time, the watch syncs to WIMM’s servers and provides you with an activation code. You must register for a free developer account at WIMM.com and enter the activation code from the watch there so the account is connected to your phone. With the account synced, you can then control a number of settings from WIMM’s web-based interface, including the date and time format, home location, weather and world clock cities, and calendar accounts to sync.

Considering that WIMM’s business model is based on licensing its watch to third parties, we expect the online set up portal to look a bit different when partners sell the watch under their own brands. The WIMM logo and branding won’t be there and the options and registration process may be a bit different as well.

User Interface
Though the WIMM One’s operating system is a form of Android, the custom UI is designed for a tiny 160 x 160 screen and therefore looks nothing like any version of Android we’ve ever seen. There’s no status bar, no back/home/ menu buttons, and no apps menu filled with lots of tiny shortcut icons. Every button and icon is large and finger-friendly.

When the user isn’t actively interacting with the device, it simply shows the current watch face, which displays information like the time, date, and possibly the weather. Tapping on the watch face wakes the watch up and turns the watch face to full color. At that point, you can long press to see a list of available watch faces, swipe down to view the amount of battery remaining, or swipe upward to return to either whatever app you were using before or the app menu (if you didn’t have a specific app open before the device last went into watch mode).

The app menu is a 3D carousel that shows large icons for each of your open apps, with only one icon and a side view of two others visible at any one time. Tapping on a shortcut icon launches its associated app. When you’re in an app or the apps menu, swiping down from the top takes you back a screen, which could bring you to a higher-level menu in the app, back to the apps menu, or all the way back to the watch face.

Unfortunately, the WIMM One has a 15-second timeout no matter what you are doing. That means that whether you are trying to look at the weather or read news stories in the newsfeed app, you better touch the screen frequently or risk having the screen turn grayscale and return to its watch face, the equivalent of an Android phone timing out and returning to its lock screen. Whatever app you’re in will turn grayscale two seconds before returning to the face. We hope WIMM will allow users to change the timeout time in a future update, but for now, it remains way too short.

Within apps, swiping up scrolls down the screen and swiping left or right often takes you back and forth to other screens on the same level. Many apps, such as the settings menu, also have menu buttons that take you into sub-menu pages. A number of settings, both in apps and the main settings menu, have on/off toggle switches.

Don’t expect to be doing a lot of data input on any app, as the WIMM One does not have a virtual keyboard. The few apps that require any kind of text entry (e.g., Wi-Fi passwords) launch a scrolling list of letters and characters. To enter each character, you must scroll through the entire list to tap and then scroll around again to find the next character.

Settings and Sync
Using the built-in settings menu, you can toggle the Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and location services while also selecting from a list of available wireless networks. You can also control the beep volume, whether or not the watch vibrates on alert, set the brightness level, or toggle USB debugging from the settings menu.

WIMM’s web-based interface lets you control some of the same settings via your browser and also allows a few additional options not available on the watch itself. Using the web interface, you can decide which watch faces to show on the watch face menu, what cities appear on the world clock app, and which of the built-in apps to show in the apps menu. More importantly, you can add/remove Google or Exchange calendar accounts to sync with the watch’s calendar.

The WIMM One syncs to WIMM’s servers on a regular basis, and the settings allow you to configure a frequency between 1 and 24 hours per sync. At each sync, the watch downloads any changes to your calendar events, any settings you may have changed via the web interface, and any content third-party apps like the newsreader require to stay fresh. If you can’t wait until the next scheduled sync, you can tap a button in the settings menu to sync manually.

Twerdahl explained to us that the WIMM One puts its Wi-Fi connection to sleep between syncs in order to preserve juice. However, he said that the company is considering changing the options so users can schedule more frequent syncs, perhaps as often as every 10 or 15 minutes.

Watch Faces
To switch faces, simply long-press the middle of the current face and wait for a set of thumbnails to appear. You can scroll right or left to choose the face you want. Watch faces appear colorful for a few seconds after you tap them, but change into grayscale mode to save juice. You can also control which faces are available from the menu by using the web-based control panel on wimm.com to select or deselect them.

Users can choose between a number of watch faces with different looks, ranging from an analog clock to a simple digital time display. You can also install third-party watch faces from developers; WIMM expects its Micro App Store to be filled with different faces once it launches.

Our favorite face so far is The Fahrenheit, which combines a simple digital readout of the time and date with the current high and low temperature in your area. We can’t overestimate the number of times we decided whether or not to wear a coat based on a quick glance at our wrist.

Faces like the Valencia, the Zurich, and the Shadow simulate the look of an analog watch. The Globetrotter shows a few world times, while the Mod and the Swinger both show garish displays of just the time. The Closer shows the time against a Windows XP-like green grass background and the Gambler makes the time look like a slot machine. We’re hoping someone will come out with a watch face that displays email messages or news articles in the future.

Calendar
If you use the web interface to set up the calendar function, it will update the current list of appointments on the watch at every sync. In the watch’s calendar app, you can scroll through a list of appointments on each day, tapping on each appointment to see details like the location and notes that have been pulled down from Exchange or Google Calendar. You can also move between days by swiping left (back a day) or right (forward a day). A little calendar icon in the upper-right corner lets you see a layout of the entire month, but it is rather useless because you cannot tap on individual days to view them.

On each day’s view, you’ll see appointments not only from all of your calendars, but also from any calendars that others have shared with your accounts. Unfortunately, this means that our 10 a.m. meeting was right next to the 10 a.m. meetings of two coworkers, which was a little confusing. We wish there was a way to set the calendar not to show others’ appointments.

When you have an appointment of your own scheduled, the watch will alert you 15 minutes beforehand by showing the details on the main screen instead of your watch face (or whatever else you are doing at the moment) and vibrating. During our testing, we found ourselves relying heavily on these alerts.

Micro App Store
In addition to building the hardware and developing the watch’s custom version of Android, WIMM will maintain the Micro App Store, which will house a bevvy of custom watch-friendly apps built by third-party developers. WIMM’s partners will be able to customize the app store for their products so only the types of apps they want to show customers will appear in their versions of the store. For example, a sports watch maker might not want games or social-media apps appearing in its version of the Micro App Store.

The Micro App store isn’t live yet, but if you hang out in WIMM’s developer forums, you’ll see a number of programmers posting beta or alpha versions of their micro apps. Sideloading these apps is as simple as downloading their APK files from the forum and then dragging them into the root folder of the watch’s internal memory. Once an APK file is there, the watch automatically installs it and adds it to the app menu.

Micro Apps
The WIMM One developer kit comes with six built-in micro apps, though we expect the selection of preloaded apps will grow significantly when partners release the watch under their own brands. The built-in micro apps include the calendar, a world clock that shows the time in different cities you set, an alarm app, a stopwatch, and a timer. The most useful of these apps are the calendar and the weather app, which lets you see a 7-day forecast for your home location and any additional cities you designate.

Though the micro app store isn’t up yet, we were able to download some beta and alpha level apps from the WIMM developer forums and sideload them to the device. Our favorite of these third-party apps is the micro newsreader, which downloads stories from RSS feeds, either by using your Google Reader account or by using a list of popular news feeds that are built into the program. At each sync, the newsreader downloads fresh content from all of your RSS feeds then displays a list of the latest headlines from each site.

In the newsreader, you move from site to site—for example, from Engadget headlines to BGR headlines—by swiping right or left. On each site’s screen is a list of headlines you can scroll through, opening the stories that interest you by tapping on their headlines. When viewing a story, there’s a full color photo underneath the headline and the article text is below. Unfortunately, during our testing, the reader did not support formatting. As a result, all paragraphs of a story were jammed together into one text block, and there were no inline images, links, or videos. The 15-second timeout is a bigger hindrance than the lack of formatting support, because the watch would return to the home screen while we were trying to read a story.

Balance Ball, a game that lets you roll a ball around a board using the watch’s accelerometer, is an interesting proof of concept. Micro Maps lets you pan around the globe, but isn’t all that useful at this point. The Simple Calculator allows you to do simple math. SportyPal lets you count how many calories you might burn at the gym. Unified Remote is supposed to allow you to control your PC from the watch by installing some software on your Windows PC, but it didn’t work for us. Astrid Tasks syncs to an online to-do list, but that also didn’t work for us.

At present, there are a few glaring omissions from both the built-in and beta app selection. There’s no email software, no contacts app, no social-networking software, no way to view instant messages, no photo gallery, no web browser, and no media player. Considering the lack of a persistent Internet connection, we’re not sure if there will be a full web browser or real-time IMs, but we’d like to have the ability to access more content both on and offline.

Performance
The current build of the operating system suffers from some sluggishness, which WIMM is working to fix. In our testing, we often had to tap or swipe a second or third time to have our inputs register. Scrolling down a screen or swiping between screens was often jerky. However, the operating system and apps were rock solid; we never once experienced a crash or lockup. WIMM told us it is already testing a software update that will significantly improve performance.

Phone Syncing
By installing a simple app on your Android or BlackBerry phone, you can tether the watch to your handset in order to see incoming calls or SMS messages from your phone in real-time. We installed the Android WIMM companion on a Samsung Stratosphere 4G phone, and were able to easily pair our handset with the watch.

When the companion software was running and Bluetooth was enabled on both devices, we were able to see caller IDs from incoming calls, even while the phone was in our pocket. A button on the phone screen allowed us to send these calls directly to voicemail if we wished to avoid pulling the phone out of our pocket. SMS messages also appeared on-screen as soon as we received them, though there’s no way to respond to them.

When you consider how long it can take to fumble through a jacket or purse to pull out a ringing phone, knowing who is calling or texting you can be a big time saver. If the caller or message doesn’t require your immediate attention, you don’t need to whip out your phone. At one point we were in a dentist’s chair, but were able to read a text message on the watch face and then determine that it was important enough to merit taking out our phone for an immediate response.

Unfortunately, once you’ve swiped away from a message on the WIMM One, that message does not remain archived anywhere on the watch. You’ll have to pick up your phone to see a list of your old SMS messages and missed calls. You also can’t get other information from your phone just yet. We’d love to see Google Talk or other instant messenger messages displayed on the watch and we’d also like to get our phone’s contacts onto the watch in some way. WIMM tells us it is opening this Bluetooth connection up to third-party developers.

Battery Life
With Wi-Fi on, brightness set to low, and the module set to sync once per hour, the WIMM One typically lasted 10 to 11 hours on charge, with the occasional watch tap throughout the day to read news from the newsreader or check the weather. With Bluetooth on and the watch paired with our Samsung Stratosphere phone, both the phone and the watch lasted only 7 to 8 hours of light use. WIMM told us that battery life in Bluetooth mode depends a lot on the phone’s individual Bluetooth radio, so your results may vary.

Though it doesn’t last as long as we’d like on a charge, the WIMM One juices up in a hurry. Our module was usually fully charged after less than an hour on the charger. It also charges quite effectively when plugged into a USB port.

Future Improvements
The WIMM One is still in developer preview mode, so we can expect a number of improvements in the weeks and months to come, particularly after partners begin selling their own branded versions of the device. Among the improvements we expect to see are:

Improved Performance: An upcoming software update should make the device more responsive.
Micro App Store: WIMM will soon have a store up with a wide array of vetted apps.
Email: Whether from WIMM Labs or a third-party developer, we expect to see an app that will allow users to see their incoming messages.
Enhanced Bluetooth Support: Right now, the WIMM One can only pair with an Android or BlackBerry smartphone and only send SMS and caller ID info to the watch. WIMM is updating its Bluetooth support so it can pair with headphones or Bluetooth peripherals such as an external keyboard.
Improved Phone Functionality: Developers will be able to write apps either on the phone side or the WIMM side that exchange more data than just SMS and incoming calls between the handset and the watch. Imagine incoming Google Talk, Skype, or BBM messages appearing on the watch as soon as the phone receives them.
Social Media Integration: There will be some way to view FaceBook, Twitter, and other social network updates on the watch.
More Frequent Syncs: You will likely be able to increase the sync time to once every 10 or 15 minutes.
GPS Support: The onboard GPS radio will be enabled and empower developers to build all kinds of location-based apps.
Early Verdict
The WIMM One is truly the first of its kind, a real Android computer for your wrist. In the past we’ve seen watches like the Sony LiveView, which are nothing more than dumb terminals that tether to your phone, and we’ve seen high-tech sports watches like the MotoaACTV, but we’ve never seen a wearable device that promises an entire ecosystem of apps filled with endless possibilities. In its present state, the device is still a bit rough around the edges, but useful enough to wear every day. We can’t wait to see what developers and partners due with this promising platform.

Source:http://blog.laptopmag.com/wimm-one-android-watch-tested-groundbreaking-wrist-computer-delivers

BungBungame offers business-use tablet PC

December 29th, 2011

BungBungame Technology, a Taiwan-based developer of smartphone-based and customized application software, has unveiled Photon 100, an internally developed own-brand tablet PC model for business purposes, including medical care, restaurants, hotels and insurance, according to the company.

Photon 100 features AMD Z01 APU, Windows 7 Home Premium, a 10.1-inch multi-touch screen, 4GB DDR3 memory, 64GB SSD and a weight of 820 grams, BungBungame indicated. The tablet PC is produced by Taiwan-based Askey Computer on an OEM basis.

The motivation of BungBungame’s developing Photon 100 is that many of its clients have found that the application software they need does not fit in well with hardware specifications of exiting tablet PCs, BungBungame said. The competitiveness of Photon 100 is BungBungame’s capability to offer customized application software for business users, the company indicated.

Having obtained orders for 7,000-8,000 Photon 100’s, BungBungame will launch the tablet PC in the Taiwan market at less than NT$20,000 (US$662) in February 2012, the company indicated. To compete for orders from international clients, BungBungame will showcase Photon 100 at the 2012 Consumer Electronics Show to take place in Las Vegas during January 10-13.

Source:http://www.digitimes.com/news/a20111228PD202.html

Boxee Burns Loyal Users, Discontinues Support for PC Software

December 29th, 2011

Yesterday Boxee announced that version 1.5 of it’s Boxee Box is currently being tested by a select group of users and will roll out to everyone in January. The update also went out to Boxee users who access the service through their PC. But in the same post Andrew Kippen, Boxee’s VP of marketing, also announced that this would be the last time Boxee would offer updates or support for their PC users. In a section entitled “Growing Past the PC” he wrote:

We believe the future of TV will be driven by devices such as the Boxee Box, Connected TVs / Blu-Rays and 2nd screen devices such as tablets and phones. While there are still many users who have computers connected to their TVs, we believe this use case is likely to decline as users find better alternatives. People will continue to watch a lot of video on their computer, but it is more likely to be a laptop than a home-theater PC and probably through a browser rather than downloaded software.

To our computer users… to those who have come out to our NYC and SF meetups, talked with us at Engadget, GDGT, and Giz Gallery events, or enjoyed Austin BBQ with us during SxSW, or simply messaged with us on Facebook, Twitter, and our forums… thank you for all your support – we would not be where we are today without you. But we can’t stay here.

Hundreds of users replied in the comments. “Yeah, Merry Christmas from Boxee… Leaving all your PC users out in the cold,” wrote Matthew Hall. “Seriously, you should just charge for a premium PC app, I would gladly pay for this. Definitely want be getting a Boxee box. Very disappointed.”

For some long time users, the end of the PC was a slap in the face. “So to sum up the article: If you helped spread awareness of Boxee and tested it and provided feedback years before there was a Boxee Box product and helped make the service and software a success, you’re being shown the door. In exchange for our time working through a products bugs and helping to get it ready for prime-time (which it still isn’t) you get nothing,” wrote R. Reed.

It might make sense for Boxee to focus on its hardware product, where it generates real revenue. It also allows them to stay closer to the integrated experience of Apple, and avoid the fragmentation plaguing Google’s Android operating system. But it has clearly cost them a lot of passionate users who contributed to improving the product.

Source:http://www.betabeat.com/2011/12/27/boxee-burns-loyal-users-discontinues-support-for-pc-software/

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