Samsung pushes Galaxy S III-specific app for drivers

If you’ve got a Samsung Galaxy S III, you’re right at the heart of the manufacturer’s new push for total vertical integration – with today’s step being “Drive Link”, an app for driving in your automobile. This application makes use of some of the abilities your device already has – like in-car navigation – and puts it all into an easy-to-manage interface intended for use while you’re driving. Of course Samsung doesn’t want you to be going 70 miles per hour down the speedway while you’re tapping about, but the giant buttons here are certainly going to make it a lot easier.

This software is made for hands-free action as well, made available to owners of the Galaxy S III in 21 countries straight through their Samsung Apps portal on the phone. Drive Link makes simple the three most popular smartphone-based in-car activities: listening to music, talking hands-free, and driving to a destination with GPS-based mapping. This whole app conforms to a collection of safety certification standards, one of which is the standard set of the Japanese Automotive Manufacturers Association – Samsung assures us that this is one of the “world’s strictest driver’s safety regulation standards.”

As Dr. Won-Pyo Hong, Executive Vice President of Mobile Communications Business at Samsung Electronics notes:

“Samsung is dedicated to providing our customers with the optimal Smartphone user experience in any environment. For many, driving is an integral part of their lives and Drive Link allows us to provide a considered solution for those wishing to use their Smartphone in car. With this application we ensure users can retain the core functionality of their smartphone while making sure their experience is as safe as possible.” – Hong

The first screen you’ll see is a welcome with time and weather information based on your current location. Included in the app is a set of appointments based on your entries with S Calendar. Address and contact information contained therein links you to associated apps when you need them. With the app’s connection to your other GPS navigation mapping apps you’re able to select from a collection of recent or favorite destinations or find a brand new location to navigate too.

If you get a text while the app is open, one tap will have your Galaxy S III reading the text aloud to you. This app is able to work with your car’s In-Vehicle Infotainment system in a collection of cars using MirrorLink. The Car Connectivity Consortium is currently holding MirrorLink as their standard for connectivity between head units and smartphones in next-generation cars. According to Samsung: “Current working head units include JVC’s KW-NSX11), Alpine’s ICS-X8, and Sony’s XAV-701BT, XAV-741 and XAV-601BT.2). Additional compatible head units will be announced in the near future.”

This app works with music files stored on your device physically and works with TuneIn version 6.2 or higher – that’s internet radio for those of you that’ve never tried it out before. Samsung also lets us know that further compatible internet-reliant apps will be made available to this interface very soon. This app also works with Text-To-Speech in English(U.S./U.K) French, Italian, German, and Spanish. With TTS you’ll be able to have not just your texts read aloud to you, but all messages, emails, and updates from social media websites as well.

This app also connects to your personal contacts saved in your phone so you can call directly with just the keypad in-app. The Drive Link interface is available via your Samsung Apps app on your Galaxy S III right now in the following countries: Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, France, Germany, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Russia, Spain, Switzerland, Sweden, Ukraine, and United Kingdom. The app will also be reaching other countries and smartphones running Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich in the near future – grab it when you can!


Samsung pushes Galaxy S III-specific app for drivers is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Samsung announces Drive Link, a car-friendly app with MirrorLink integration

Samsung announces Drive Link, a car-friendly app with MirrorLink integration

Until self-driving cars become mainstream, it’s best to keep eyes on roads and hands off phones. With this in mind, Samsung’s debuting Drive Link, an app that balances in-car essentials with driver safety, complete with approval from the no-nonsense Japanese Automotive Manufacturers Association. It’s all about the bare essentials — navigation, hands-free calling and audiotainment from your phone-based files or TuneIn. Destinations can be pulled from S Calendar appointments or texts without trouble, and the text-to-speech feature means you won’t miss a message, email or social media update. The best bit is that via MirrorLink, all these goodies can be fed through compatible dash screens and speaker systems. Drive Link is available now through Sammy’s app store for Europeans sporting an international Galaxy S III, and will be coming to other ICS handsets “in the near future.”

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Samsung announces Drive Link, a car-friendly app with MirrorLink integration originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 28 Aug 2012 05:35:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Telenav Scout for Apps comes to Android and Windows Phone, Scout Drive Button released for website-based nav

Telenav Scout for Apps comes to Android and Windows Phone, Scout Drive Button widget released for websitebased nav

iOS app devs got Telenav turn-by-turn navigation access in March of this year, and now the same can be said for folks programming for Android and Windows Phone. In case you forgot, the Scout for Apps platform allows developers to incorporate Scout’s personalized navigation directly into their applications. Not only that, but Telenav’s making it easier for website owners to do the same for their websites with the release of the Scout Drive Button. The button puts the power of browser-based GPS mapping in an easy-to-implement widget, for free, with no coding expertise required. It also allows users to click the Drive button in their desktop browser to send a link to their phones that’ll launch navigation directly, as opposed to inputting the address into a nav app manually. Interested? More info awaits after the break, and devs can get down and dirty with both Scout for Apps and the Drive widget at the sources below.

Continue reading Telenav Scout for Apps comes to Android and Windows Phone, Scout Drive Button released for website-based nav

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Telenav Scout for Apps comes to Android and Windows Phone, Scout Drive Button released for website-based nav originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 23 Aug 2012 18:17:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Garmin dezl 760LMT GPS Navigator For Trucks

Garmin dezl 760LMT GPS Navigator For Trucks

Garmin has announced the availability of the new Garmin dezl 760LMT GPS navigator. Designed for professional truck drivers, the gadget provides a 7-inch high-resolution touchscreen display that allows you to see tons of information in great detail. The Garmin dezl 760LMT also features a special set of points of interest (POI) that is specifically targeted at professional truck drivers, Bluetooth smartphone pairing for hands-free calling, a microphone and a speaker. The Garmin dezl 760LMT is priced at $399.99. [Press Release]

Telenav extends HTML5 Navigation to Android and Windows Phone

With the new HTML5 wave covering the whole internet-loving universe, the news this morning of Telenav’s HTML5 Nav on Android and Windows Phone devices is a sign of a fabulous new era. This push comes in the form of Scout for Apps, a service that was launched earlier this year for iOS exclusively. With Scout for Apps, developers will be able to integrate into their creations the first HTML5, browser-based, voice-guided, turn by turn, GPS navigation service for mobile phones!

This service allows developers to push free, voice-guided, turn by turn, GPS navigation directly from their app or their website, making full use of the Telenav database with ease. Just as easy as it is to embed a video into your website, you’ll be working with Telenav’s Scout mapping without sacrificing your own brand – the app or website can keep their own brand name on everything throughout the whole navigation session.

This Scout for Apps environment and service is available for developers on iOS, Android, and Windows Phone starting immediately, and Telenav has also brought on a companion for the web as well. Telenav is bringing on a website widget for Scout called the Scout Drive Button, made for small businesses that want to make it super easy for people anywhere in a web browser to find their physical location. Your mobile browser will be able to initiate turn-by-turn directions now with a single tap!

Developers will be able to access the Scout Drive Button for websites as well as the Scout for Apps environment immediately, for all three major mobile platforms! Have a peek below at our other recent encounters with Telenav and Scout, and get to navigating!


Telenav extends HTML5 Navigation to Android and Windows Phone is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


TomTom refreshes Navigation app for iOS, adds social features

TomTom refreshes Navigation app for iOS, adds social features

TomTom has refreshed its Navigation App for iPhone and iPad with a new user interface, Foursquare integration and constantly updated maps. It’ll also automatically check into your favorite hangouts to avoid forgetting to oust your frenemies at your local coffee house. The revised application will also help you avoid French speed traps that don’t fall foul of new laws on traffic alerts, with the whole thing playing very nice with the recently announced car kit. The app retails for $50 (€70) in the App Store — although we’re not sure how popular it’s going to be if those same features will be bundled in iOS 6.

Continue reading TomTom refreshes Navigation app for iOS, adds social features

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TomTom refreshes Navigation app for iOS, adds social features originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 21 Aug 2012 11:36:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nokia patents haptic system to simulate linear motion, assist with navigational route guidance

Nokia patents haptic system to simulate linear motion and assist with navigational route guidance

The crew in Espoo have just added a new patent to the arsenal that promises to add a refined level of haptic feedback to the user experience. Fundamental to Nokia’s plan is a matrix of independent haptic devices that remain stationary, but combine to simulate the sensation of linear and circular movement. Not only could the enhanced feedback bring a new level of interaction to the software interface, but Nokia also hypothesizes that the system will be useful for providing navigational route guidance — say, without the need for visual or auditory feedback. Given the company’s other research in the field of haptic systems, it seems Nokia’s future may be full of good vibrations, indeed.

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Nokia patents haptic system to simulate linear motion, assist with navigational route guidance originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 16 Aug 2012 21:43:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Telenav Scout gets offline navigation

Telenav has just announced that it has added offline navigation to its Scout personal navigation application on iOS. Before going on the road, users can download regional maps that contains huge areas of the country so that they won’t have to worry about having a working data connection.

It is clear that although data connectivity has become extremely common in urban areas, there are many places where it is too slow, unreliable or simply non-existent. While it’s not dramatic when you want to update a social network status, it can be really annoying when you are trying to find your way in a new area.

Google has recently added offline navigation to Android (a free service), but Apple users don’t have an “out of the box” solution, that’s why Telenav came up with this new option for Scout. This update is called “Always There Navigation” and should be available right now, at least in the USA. Offline navigation is not a free feature, and costs $9.99/yr or $2.99 for customers who subscribe to Scout’s premium features (voice guidance, auto re-route, speed trap+camera info, advanced traffic). Official teaser video in the full post. (more…)

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: TeleNav launches world’s first HTML5 voice guided, turn-by-turn GPS navigation service, TomTom announces iPad optimized version,

Telenav’s Scout gives iOS users offline navigation in exchange for ten bucks

Telenav's Scout gives iOS users offline navigation in exchange for ten bucks

We know that iOS 6 will bless iPhone users with some in-house-made mapping, but that hasn’t stopped Telenav from bettering its own Scout navigation offering for Apple’s favorite handsets. Scout now does offline navigation by letting users download maps of the west, central or eastern United States over WiFi only. Plus, Scout now takes voice commands, so on your next road trip you can tell it to find the nearest Whataburger whether you have cell signal or not. Interested parties can head on over to the App Store to get their download on, but you’ll pay for the privilege — offline navigation costs $9.99 a year or $2.99 a month, though the free, data-dependant version of Scout for iPhone still includes speech recognition. Still not sold? Perhaps the video after the break will persuade you.

Continue reading Telenav’s Scout gives iOS users offline navigation in exchange for ten bucks

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Telenav’s Scout gives iOS users offline navigation in exchange for ten bucks originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 14 Aug 2012 08:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Disney’s REVEL could turn the whole world into a tactile touchscreen (video)

Disneys Revel could turn the whole world into a touchscreen video

Disney Research think it can go one better on Tactile and Haptic touch displays by using electrical fields to add sensation to nearly anything you can touch. Using Reverse Electrovibration, REVEL works by strapping an electrostatic signal generator to your body, so when you come into contact with an object on the same electrical plane, that low-level field can be altered to create friction. It’s hoped that the technology could revolutionize touchscreens, add a whole new level of feeling to augmented reality and help blind people feel their way around. There’s a video after the break, but be warned, it’s light on the sort of cartoony hijinks you’d normally expect from the House of Mouse.

Continue reading Disney’s REVEL could turn the whole world into a tactile touchscreen (video)

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Disney’s REVEL could turn the whole world into a tactile touchscreen (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 10 Aug 2012 05:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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