Category: News (Page 122 of 130)

Will the New iPhone Preview at WWDC This Year?

Steve Jobs with his baby.There has been a whole lot of back and forth today about regarding whether or not Apple will announce its latest iPhone at WWDC this year.

Most folks were saying no, citing Steve Jobs’ absence from the conference this year. Instead, the Keynote will be given by Phil Schiller, Apple’s Senior VP of Worldwide Product Marketing. Prominent Apple analyst Gene Munster thinks the address will primarily deal with software (at a developer conference? No way!), specifically Snow Leopard and the iPhone OS 3.0. Munster expects Apple to hold a special event in late June, early July, which will herald the return of Jobs and the release of a new line of iPhones.

So why wait? We already know the iPhone App Store to be the fastest growing developer community in the world. Wouldn’t Apple want to let that massive developer base know about the new hardware they’ll be working with at…the developer conference? And what makes the Senior VP of Worldwide Product Marketing a bad choice to do this?

Dan Frommer, an analyst at SAI, agrees, and cites quite a few compelling reasons for Apple to roll things out in June. For starters, the first round of iPhone contracts expire in late June. Also, the Palm Pre drops later this month. What better time to get people to start thinking about some new hardware?

Plaster Kills Cancer, Won’t Ruin Your ET Costume

This anti-cancer plaster could change cancer treatment forever.For all the nifty little gadgets in the world, it’s always the medical devices that make my jaw drop. Take this glowing piece of plaster. Not only does it track cancer, it kills cancerous cells in less than one tenth the time a typical radiation treatment might take.

The substance, which is currently being tested by Polymetronics in Oxfordshire, could even be used as an outpatient device. The device is simple, composed of OLEDs and powered by a small battery pack. A light-sensitive cream applied under the device reacts with the light emissions and attacks your cancer cells. Get your plaster applied, tuck the battery into your pocket, and you could be good to go, off to play some golf while curing yourself of those pesky cancer cells.

Source: Daily Mail

Big Brother is using GPS to follow you!

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Here’s a disturbing decision from Wisconsin regarding the use of GPS tracking devices by the police. The judge said the police don’t even need a warrant!

Wisconsin police can attach GPS to cars to secretly track anybody’s movements without obtaining search warrants, an appeals court ruled Thursday.

However, the District 4 Court of Appeals said it was “more than a little troubled” by that conclusion and asked Wisconsin lawmakers to regulate GPS use to protect against abuse by police and private individuals.

As the law currently stands, the court said police can mount GPS on cars to track people without violating their constitutional rights — even if the drivers aren’t suspects.

Officers do not need to get warrants beforehand because GPS tracking does not involve a search or a seizure, Judge Paul Lundsten wrote for the unanimous three-judge panel based in Madison.

That means “police are seemingly free to secretly track anyone’s public movements with a GPS device,” he wrote.

One privacy advocate said the decision opened the door for greater government surveillance of citizens. Meanwhile, law enforcement officials called the decision a victory for public safety because tracking devices are an increasingly important tool in investigating criminal behavior.

This decision is ridiculous on its face and I suspect will eventually be overturned by the U.S Supreme Court. With this decision the police can track anyone at any time for any reason!

It only highlights how things are dramatically changing in today’s world. Using technology, you can follow people, listen in on their conversations and do all sorts of spying! It sounds like fun in a way, until someone does it to you.

I suspect the courts with be busy with this topic for years to come.

Google Wants to Study Netbook Usability

Google's Android coming to netbooks?This past Thursday, Google posted an ad on Craig’s List asking for users willing to participate in a netbook usability study. Participants would be required to sign a non-disclosure agreement and be paid $75 in American Express gift checks.

The ad was released the same day as Google’s annual meeting, during which CEO Eric Schmidt declined to comment on the future of Android netbooks. From his short press conference, it sounds like Schmidt and the Google squad are looking to keep their web services viable on netbooks, and possibly roll out some new features for the netbook level consumer.

Sounds like business as usual for Google – telling us very little about what they’re actually doing. What kinds of applications are they looking to develop specific to netbook users? What kind of stability issues arise with netbooks/Google products. Why no word on Android?

Source: CNet

Is the Kindle DX Smart Enough for College?

The Amazon Kindle DX.With Amazon’s announcement of the Kindle DX, sites like Wired have been polling students to see just how successful the device might be. Turns out, not too many people are turned on.

For starters, the device comes in at a hefty $500, a price that makes schlepping twenty pounds of books to class seem reasonable. And once you’ve paid for the device, how much is each title going to cost? And what of reselling options? College students are crafty, thrifty buggers who would sooner share a textbook between five people than part with precious beer money.

If cost of ownership wasn’t a glaring enough problem, there’s still the functionality of the device. As one student said, everyone has a laptop now. Why carry two devices? And what if someone needs to borrow your textbook. Do you loan them your $500 DX? And isn’t old tech like a highlighter or a pen working faster for note taking than the DX’s sluggish input system? And, and, and, and, and?

All of these questions are simply answered by tech strategist Michael Gartenberg.

You can’t introduce technology like this, which has got a lot of breakthrough things associated with it, and expect it to be business as usual. The reason the iPod worked was not only did it introduce new technology, but it introduced a new business model for the technology as well.

For now, everyone is still comparing the Kindle to the old medium, books. It now falls to Amazon to make the $9.8 billion textbook industry rethink their methods of distribution and publication to make this device truly viable. If Amazon can keep themselves from getting too greedy, they just might pull this thing off.

Source: Wired

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