too cool

This is too cool…

this is a bit complicated, so hopefully i can explain this properly. if you read this site, you know i created a “portable geek gym” basically it’s a few mobile devices that i wear while i run. the next evolution of the features is something i’ve been working on for a bit location based play lists. what are they? well- imagine the songs on your music playing device changing based on where you are at, that’s what i made- for now i am using a pocket pc with gps to feed in the location data as i jog, based on that data my flash mx application will load in specific play lists and songs. as i run in areas that have steep hills i want hard rock, when i am running in the flat areas i tend to prefer hip hop. the screeshot to the right is ugly, but it’s just for testing. i’d like my car to play different songs based on the drive and roads i am taking too (working on that). [flashenabled | phillip m. torrone]

Vazu: Contacts OTA

Good link I just discovered through MobileWhack… I have not tried it and probably won’t… just passing it on. If you have a bluetooth phone and a Mac you can easily iSync your contact list or a group you create just for the phone. With Vazu, you can email or OTA them…

Christian Gloddy writes:

My friends and I [at Vazu] are trying to solve the long-standing problem of getting contacts on your phone without having to thumb them in or buy some cable or having a rediculously expensive phone.

You can either send them over the air through our website or even email contacts to your phone from your mail client. It’s free while we roll out the service, so give it a shot and let me know what you think. It’s a small group of developers working on this, so we’re looking for feedback and if you find that your Sony Ericsson or Nokia phone doesn’t work, just contact us and we’ll jump right on it.

In the US it currently works with Cingular, AT&T and T-Mobile with most Sony Ericsson and Nokia phones. We have just launched a beta in most of Europe and India and it works with almost all of the providers there. [MobileWhack]

TiVo-like devices to get booster shot

Tomorrow’s digital video recorders will be able to record two live shows and shuttle recorded content to several TVs at once, setting up a battle with PC makers. [CNET News.com – Personal Technology]

Engineers in the consumer electronics lab of hard-drive maker Maxtor, for example, are working on DVR-type devices that can record or broadcast at least six media streams at a time. That compares to three streams in current DVRs, which are hard-drive-based machines that can record video and temporarily pause live broadcasts. Three-stream machines can simultaneously record two live channels while playing a previously recorded program.

DVRs in development not only will be able to serve up video in multiple rooms at the same time, but also handle data from a home video security system, said Jasbir Sidhu, director of engineering for consumer electronics products at Maxtor. The coming DVRs may hit the market sometime in the next 18 months, he said.

Target is slowly joining Walmart on RFIDs

Target is slowly joining Walmart on RFIDs. This is great. Keep going. Unfortunately, misguided privacy activists want stores to destroy the tags as you leave the store. RFIDs could be a very powerful way for people to track the goods that they buy. For example: it would be great for insurance purposes (have you ever tried to catelogue your household items before a move?). In this case, the benefits far outweigh any negative privacy issues. [John Robb’s Weblog]

Qualcomm to build DRM into WCDMA chipset

I guess taking care of things well in advance of mobile P2P really being too much of a reality is a good way to assure that your products get picked up by device manufacturers.

Qualcomm Inc. will build digital rights management (DRM) technology into its forthcoming chipsets in hopes of enticing content providers to distribute their content wirelessly to smart phones, the company said Tuesday at 3GSM World Congress conference in Cannes, Frances. [InfoWorld: Top News]

The Home of the Future

In many cases, the mechanics for the gizmos already exist — mainly wireless sensors, cellphones, broadband access and home computers. What’s been missing, and what researchers now are trying to develop, are ways to harness the hardware to run your entire house with little effort or technological savvy — letting you turn up the heat remotely, anticipating when you want the lights on, or deciding automatically how long your food should cook. [WSJ via E M E R G I C . o r g]

Get this man some bluetooth!

With a bluetooth phone and enabled laptop this could be avoided…

The compulsion to quote and link is too strong…. Being stuck in an airport last night without connectivity, I found myself ripping the pages out of a print magazine so that I could refer to them later and quote from them. Soon I’ll resort to creating links with scotch tape and thread. [Anil Dash: Compulsion to Blog]

Though you could probably make some good use of the Palm moblog clientbeing worked on at Six Apart…

Palm Reading

I finished reading Cory Doctrow’s Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom via the PalmReader. I had not actually read any full books on screen until now and to my surprise, the experience was quite good. I was able to always have a book in hand, which gave me time on the subway or at line at the post office, where I finished reading this one.

I’ve checked out short stories and actually tried to read other longer pieces before on my Tungsten C or even my m515, but on the T3 the screen is just so much better. I like having the screen in landscape mode, which give you much more of a paperback novel feel — though a very short book.

I’m now loaded up with Cory’s latest book, Eastern Standard Tribe and looking forward to getting into it.

TiVo to promote the End of Advertising?

In what on-lookers are calling advertising’s most sadistic twist to date, TiVo has hired the independent San Francisco ad agency Grant, Scott, and Hurley to create the advertising that will, if successful, ultimately end advertising as we know it. [Adrants]

Interesting, but as I know I’ve said before the money (10-12 million) would be better spent on some reasonable education of the device. Commercial skipping is just a feature… sure a big one, but really just a detail.

The real magic (to me) is in watching what and when you want. If I was them… I would look to target new parents with some good old direct marketing. As a new parent I can tell you first hand that watching television when things are on, is almost impossible. There is always something baby related that forces any hope of watching an evening show to another time or day. Sure we skip the commercials when we time-shift, but that’s not why we have the box.

We actually own a Series 1 TiVO but have basically retired it based on our use of the Scientific Atlanta 8000 from Time Warner. It’s hard to beat integrated guide functionality, and no initial buy-in. You can look at the cost of ownership as simply the addition of a premium channel or two…

TiVO has their work cut out for them. Sure they (and Replay) defined the DVR market, but never made it into a mass market…. The installed boxes are going to keep coming from the Cable Cos…. unless there is a compelling reason to upgrade and pay much more to basically get the same thing. You can’t afford to waste money promoting something your competitors (and your customers cable company can offer. Go for the heart strings in the logical target groups… new parents are just the first hit.