Gadgets Have Travelers Opting for Buses over Flights

laptop-on-amtrak

Like to check e-mail or surf the internet while traveling? You may want to take the Megabus rather than JetBlue, says a study.

The availability of free Wi-Fi and power outlets in inter-city buses and trains, coupled with increased security around air travel, is spurring more people to take the longer road home.

“Technology is changing how people approach travel,” says Joe Schwieterman, a professor at DePaul University who worked on the study. “For many travelers, the ability to seamlessly use portable technology offsets the disadvantages of longer travel times.”

Schwieterman and his colleagues collected information from 7,000 passengers on intercity bus, train and airline trips in 14 states. They found that at randomly selected points during trips, nearly 40 percent of passengers on buses were using some form of portable technology such as a laptop or a phone. It is two percentage points more than on conventional Amtrak trains and more than twice that on commercial flights and Greyhound.

That’s translated into growth for bus and some train services. Intercity bus networks grew 5.1 percent in 2009, a rate of growth higher than all other major modes for the third straight year, says the study.

It also marks the end of Americans’ love affair with the car, says Schweiterman.

“Earlier people would get into the car, drive have their cellphones with them and listen to their music systems,” he says. “But now you can’t text while driving, can’t surf the net so for young people, driving is no longer an attractive idea.”

Buses have been quick to give in to the consumer desire to stay connected most of the time. The DC2NY Bus, a service that runs between Washington, D.C., and New York started offering free on-board Wi-Fi in 2007.  Other services such as BoltBus and Megabus did the same. Even the “Chinatown buses”–lines that link the Chinatown districts of major cities–spent an estimated $5,000 per vehicle to equip their buses with Wi-Fi, says the report.

Airlines are trying to fight back. Wi-fi is now being offered on a number of most major long-distance flights in the U.S.

Still with ever-changing security restrictions including the recent temporary restrictions on the use of electronics in flight means the Accela looks like a better option than ever.

“The hassles of flying and limits on technology use has made people move away from flights for short distance trips like New York to Washington D.C. or Chicago to Detroit.

Photo: (Salon de Maria/Flickr)


Appeals court sides with Apple in iPod hearing loss dispute

Well, it looks like that iPod hearing loss lawsuit that’s been nagging Apple for the past couple of years may finally be going away (in its current form, at least), as the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco has now affirmed a 2008 district court ruling and rejected a class-action lawsuit that sought to hold Apple responsible for hearing loss allegedly caused by iPods. While that may be a possibility, the court said that the “plaintiffs do not allege the iPods failed to do anything they were designed to do nor do they allege that they, or any others, have suffered or are substantially certain to suffer inevitable hearing loss or other injury from iPod use” — further adding that, “at most, the plaintiffs plead a potential risk of hearing loss not to themselves, but to other unidentified iPod users,” which doesn’t quite make the grade for a class-action suit. Not surprisingly, neither Apple nor the plaintiffs are making any comments on the verdict, and we’re pretty sure that Apple would like to keep it that way.

Appeals court sides with Apple in iPod hearing loss dispute originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 31 Dec 2009 12:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceYahoo News  | Email this | Comments

SmartQ V5 MID available now to a world that’s just stopped caring

When we first laid eyes on the SmartQ V5, we were pretty underwhelmed… yet another resistive touchscreen MID? We’re beginning to long for those halcyon days of late 2009 when an Android handheld was a thing of awe and wonder. Just a refresher: this guy features a 4.3-inch display, 600MHz ARM11 processor (which the brave among us can overclock to 800MHz), 256MB RAM, HDMI out, and more. Of some interest to the jaded gadget-head, this guy ships with Android, Ubuntu, and Windows CE 6.0 pre-installed — not a bad feature, if that’s your thing. If you poke around the Internets you should be able to find this bad boy for near $180.

SmartQ V5 MID available now to a world that’s just stopped caring originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 31 Dec 2009 12:24:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Pocketables  |  sourceiMP3  | Email this | Comments

Boxee Beta Is a Web Video Streamer’s Dream

Boxee beta

Boxee’s media player software app promises to free us all from stinky, trashy preprogrammed television by bringing web video’s hassle-free, on-demand, click-to-watch experience onto our HDTVs.

The somewhat clunky alpha release of Boxee’s software has been around since the beginning of the year, but the company took a big step forward with its public debut of the amped-up beta version in early December.

The Boxee beta, which is currently invitation-only but will be made available to all as a free download during the Consumer Electronics Show the first week of January, improves the stability and the usability of the alpha significantly.

The company will be offering a dedicated set-top box next spring, but the software — which runs on almost any computer — is almost fully cooked. I’ve been testing the new Boxee beta on an Intel Mac Mini hooked up to my HDTV for a little over a week. Windows and Linux versions are also available.

While I’m not ready to tell the cable guy to stuff it (as much as I’d love to), my evenings have been filled with hours of streaming video pulled down from literally scores of online sources. The quality ranges from watchable to spectacular.

Loads of HD options

Most importantly, the software has opened up a treasure chest of possibilities for my HDTV: cooking shows, travel shows, underwater documentaries, Ze Frank, Cool Hunting, Star Trek and all sorts of classic movies. Normally, I’d have to sit at my desk or prop open a laptop to take in this stuff. But Boxee lets me enjoy it on the big screen while sitting on my couch.

Yes, there are many methods for putting web video on your TV, but Boxee is the most elegant solution I’ve seen. For the beta release, the whole user experience has undergone a slick redesign.

The new Boxee homepage delivers a global menu where you’ll find big icons for all the important stuff — Movies, TV Shows, Apps, Music, Photos and a local file-system browser (called simply “Files”). There are also direct links to your queue, Boxee’s settings and a “Now Playing” button that immediately takes you back to your full-screen video.

Boxee menu

Click on one of the content libraries for TV or movies in the global menu and you’ll see a huge improvement in the way Boxee organizes your available content.

The TV show library, for example, now aggregates all available shows from the web and from your local machine. Since each show is listed in the library regardless of its source, you no longer have to go into various independent apps — Comedy Central, CBS, Hulu feeds, etc. — to find the shows you want. You just get a huge list. Sort it or filter it how you’d like. I found it useful to filter out shows that require a paid subscription (like those from Netflix) so I would only see the free streams.

Boxee TV Library

Movies are handled the same way. Picks from Hulu are mixed in with documentaries from other sources and the local files on your hard drive.

Boxee’s homepage hub

The libraries are deep, but all roads lead back to the Boxee homepage. It’s your hub, and there’s always something fresh waiting for you there.

The global menu takes up the whole top of the homepage. Below it, a new three-column layout shows your personal queue, a feed of content recommended by your friends (”Feed”) and a stack of programming chosen by the Boxee staff (”Recommended”).

To get the most out of the Feed column, you have to follow some other users. As with Twitter, following is a one-way proposition. Boxee makes it easy to import your contacts from other services. I quickly added a bunch of friends, but since the Boxee user base is tiny, I didn’t get the flood of awesome suggestions I was expecting. The Boxee staff seeds the Feed daily with some cool viral videos, however, so even if you don’t “do” social networking (or if your friends are stooges), the Feed is still useful. Boxee says it will soon let you add suggestions from Twitter and Facebook friends to your Feed.

The Feed column contains mostly shorter clips from YouTube, but the picks in the Recommended column tend to be longer, feature-length videos or HD eye candy like slide shows from NASA and the Big Picture blog. By clicking around both columns, you can get a taste of what all the cool kids on the web are currently into.

The queue is the best part of the beta’s redesign. As you cruise around the various libraries within Boxee, you can add to your queue any bit of content that catches your eye. Then just fire it up and let the streams flow. After each video, you’re given the option to share it with your Boxee friends or move along to the next item in the queue. Click, click, click.

There isn’t much to say about the revamped Apps area other than that it’s been redesigned to make it easier to browse the available episodes within each channel. I actually spent less time browsing the content inside the Apps now that the TV library does such a good job aggregating videos from across the whole system.

Improved video playback

Video playback also has been improved. The expanded controls are easier to use, and the software is more responsive. You can use a regular handheld remote like the Apple remote to control playback, but it’s clunky. If you have an iPhone or an Android phone, get one of the free official or third-party Boxee remote apps, which are much more responsive.

The Windows version of Boxee has moved from OpenGL to DirectX, with full hardware graphics acceleration on Nvidia Ion chips. This makes it possible to play full 1080p HD videos on relatively inexpensive PC hardware. I did my tests by hooking my Intel Mac Mini (2007 model) to an Olevia 747i with a DVI-to-HDMI cable. So even if you have an older, slower machine and a big HDTV, you can run Boxee and get an excellent picture. It may not be true HD in all cases, but it still looks great.

Some of the full-HD streams (like Heroes and House) hiccupped while they played, but when I dialed down my resolution a step to 1280×768, the stuttering stopped. Getting surround sound from the Mini involved a painless hack.

Minor problems

One of the big problems I had with Boxee’s alpha release was stability: The menus would choke often, and the app would freeze a few times a day, requiring a reboot. The beta is much more stable. It still crashes, but far less frequently (and usually without requiring a reboot).

My installation of the Boxee beta had a hard time playing discs. I went through a stack of DVD-Rs filled with .avi files, and Boxee wouldn’t load any of them. Likewise with .avi and MP4 content streamed across my wireless network. I found it easier to drag the files onto the local hard drive, where they played flawlessly. Actual DVDs played OK most of the time, but the subtitles would sometimes switch on, and Boxee wouldn’t let me turn them off. In those cases, I would have to watch the DVD in Apple’s Front Row.

But Boxee’s goal isn’t to replace your DVD player — it’s to bring a wealth of streaming web video content to your couch. And in that role, it truly excels.

Sign up to download the free beta at Boxee.tv, and expect to see it released in early 2010.


The Ten Most Distracting New Car Technologies

New car technology is great right up to the point you’re tagging songs and checking out graphs and then it’s “Ahhhhh! WATCH OUT FOR THE NUNS!” Here are ten in-car technologies we find seriously distracting.

None of these are dangerous on their own as long as the drivers and passengers use common sense if, you know, you believe in common sense.

Technology: Cameras
Example: Range Rover Sport
Why it’s getting dangerous: It started with a backup camera piped into the navigation screen, then cars started getting wide angle cameras on the nose to help peek around corners, but the Range Rover Sport boasts five cameras littered around the perimeter of the vehicle to supposedly help in off-roading. The likelihood of any Range Rover Sport so much as dirtying a tire is next to nil, so drivers will probably just use them to perv it up and check out sexy pedestrians on the sly.


Technology: Customizable/animated gauge clusters
Example: Ford Fusion Hybrid
Why it’s getting dangerous: Anyone who’s driven a Ford Fusion Hybrid will tell you the first 20 minutes in the car are rather dangerous because you can’t help but fixate on the cool LCD gauges. They grow leaves when you’re driving economically, give you all kinds of information about the way the car’s operating and generally completely distract you from the task of driving.


Technology: In-car wireless
Example: Chrysler UConnect system
Why it’s getting dangerous: There are few things as distracting as the internet and putting it into a car is just begging for trouble. Let’s assume drivers aren’t dumb enough to go surfing while they’re driving, that doesn’t mean passengers aren’t constantly showing off the latest disgustingly brilliant creation on thisiswhyyourefat.com.


Technology: Massaging/Active Seats
Example: Mercedes-Benz SL550
Why it’s getting dangerous: The idea of massaging seats aren’t particularly new, but combined with the now normalized seat heater it’s a recipe for nap time, napping of course being the most passive version of distraction.


Technology: OnStar Route Guidance
Example: Anything from GM
Why it’s getting dangerous: On the face of it, OnStar route guidance seems like the antithesis of distraction, but after you’ve called OnStar and had them beam directions into your car’s computer a disconcertingly sexy voice dictates the turn-by-turn directions. Men have been distracted by much less.


Technology: Mercedes Splitview
Example: Mercedes S-Class
Why it’s getting dangerous: Here’s an idea, arrange two video sources on the navigation screen so the driver can see only car stuff and the passenger can watch TV or a DVD. All’s fine and dandy until the passenger starts watching porn. You know it’ll happen.


Technology: Sync iTunes tagging
Example: 2010 Ford products
Why it’s getting dangerous: Zipping along listening to music is a time-honored part of motoring, but in 2010 Ford’s going to let you tag the songs you like to remind you to buy them on iTunes later. It’s probably innocuous if it’s just the driver, but when the brood in the back launches into the front seat to insure the latest teeny-bopper manufactured garbage tune is tagged it’ll get a little distracting.


Technology: iPhone Turn-by-Turn Nav
Example: Any car
Why it’s getting dangerous: The iPhone turn-by-turn app actually works fairly well for providing directions, what it doesn’t do is prevent drivers from fiddling with their fancy widget while it’s stuck to the windshield, or taking phone calls, or fiddling with other applications, or texting…


Technology: Refrigerators
Example: Ford Flex
Why it’s getting dangerous: The fridge in the Flex is situated between two captains chairs in the middle row and the door flips forward, things specifically designed to keep drivers from using it. Drivers will use it, and because it’s in the back they’ll have to do some pretty severe acrobatics to get into it, and we’re not even going to get into what might go in there.


Technology: Histograms
Example: Lexus RX450h
Why it’s getting dangerous: That hybrids put drivers to sleep through crushing boringness should be enough, but they all pretty much include some form of fuel economy graphing system. Hybrid drivers are naturally inclined to want to eke out the most fuel economy possible and fixating on bar graphs detailing fuel consumption is a great way to get higher readings, it’s also hugely distracting.

Picture of Motorola ‘Shadow’ leaked, inverted on Taiwanese forum

While everyone’s gearing up to celebrate New Year’s Eve, it seems that Motorola‘s busy squeezing out the last bit of rumor juice of 2009. We’re looking at what’s purported to be Motorola’s ‘Shadow’ (not ‘Mirage’ as Google Translate unhelpfully suggests) — a phone with 9mm thickness, 4.3-inch 850×484 screen (larger than the devices on the leaked roadmap), HDMI port and 8-megapixel camera capable of 1080p video recording. Not much else came out of the “tight-lipped” tipster who might’ve inverted the picture’s colors — see above for our fix — but an educated guess should point to that friendly green robot (though that battery icon certainly isn’t part of Android’s game). Any brave souls dare to guess otherwise?

Picture of Motorola ‘Shadow’ leaked, inverted on Taiwanese forum originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 31 Dec 2009 11:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Electronista  |  sourceMobile01  | Email this | Comments

Photographers bless improved Canon autofocus

Early reviews of Canon’s 1D Mark IV SLR by professional photographers indicate Canon could be on its way to shaking a reputation for sub-par autofocus. pOriginally posted at a href=”http://news.cnet.com/8301-30685_3-10423029-264.html” class=”origPostedBlog”Deep Tech/a/p

Hardware accelerated ‘Doom’ comes to the Pre

Pre homebrew has certainly come a long way in its short but happy life — and now it’s just gotten another little notch in its belt. Apparently, with the release of webOS 1.3.5, Palm has included a software library called SDL (or Simple Directmedia Layer) which allows developers low-level hardware access — like the kind needed to tap into accelerated 3D graphics. With a little bit of elbow grease, webOS hacker extraordinaire zsoc was able to put together a port of Doom which can be run within a card in the OS, and completely functions (including keyboard controls). You’ve got to get your hands a little dirty with the Terminal app to make things happen right now if you want to try it for yourself, though the experimenters promise an easier solution in the coming days. Exciting stuff for webOS users hungry for a little more horsepower… now let’s see if Palm puts this into play come CES.

Update: PreCentral has a video of the app in action — check it out after the break!

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Continue reading Hardware accelerated ‘Doom’ comes to the Pre

Hardware accelerated ‘Doom’ comes to the Pre originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 31 Dec 2009 11:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourcePalm Infocenter  | Email this | Comments

The Times Square New Year’s Eve Ball Timeline

The 102-year history of the Times Square New Year’s Even Ball is one filled with technology, death and, of course, pretty shiny lights. See it all unfold in our historical timeline.

(Click the image for a large popout version.)

Of course, for those who don’t appreciate the festivity of the ball drop, despite all of the hard work behind the scenes, feel free to ignore the ball’s 32,256 glimmering Philips LEDs and turn your attention to your iPhone…because, yes, Waterford has made an app for that.

Happy New Year everyone!

Orange plans to bring ‘HD Voice’ calls to UK next year

We’ve had some indication that Orange planned to expand its “HD Voice” technology beyond the hot testbed of Moldova sometime in the coming year, and it looks like the carrier is now starting to get a bit more specific about when the UK will finally have an alternative to standard definition calls. Apparently, Orange will begin trials of the new and improved, 3G-facilitated service early in the new year, and fully roll it out along with a “range of handsets” before the end of the year. Just what can you expect from HD voice? Why, it will make it “sound as if callers are actually in the same room,” according to Orange UK chief executive Tom Alexander, who further added that “HD voice really does inject a level of innovation into mobile phone calls,” and that “once people have tried it, they won’t want to go back.”

Update: Orange has now pushed out a press release further confirming that trials will begin in the UK early in the new year, with a nationwide rollout due “later in 2010.” In related news, DigiTimes is reporting that Foxconn has landed large orders for Android-powered handsets from Orange, although Foxconn itself has issued something of a denial on the matter.

Orange plans to bring ‘HD Voice’ calls to UK next year originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 31 Dec 2009 10:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceTelegraph.co.uk, The Guardian  | Email this | Comments