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Showing posts from July, 2014

Everywhere Connected Part 2

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I tested the DeLorme inReach Explorer in really extreme conditions: flying over Pacific. To my surprise the communicator maintained consistent connection with the Iridium network and kept on reporting the location at regular intervals. I was able to send / receive messages too. Pretty amazing stuff, considering I was just sitting at a window in a coach class. Looking at the chart, you may see it dropped the communication after we crossed the date line at 180 longitude. I simply fell asleep and the device dropped to the aircraft floor, where it lost the signal. If it just works in a jet plane flying at 650 knots, it should really work anywhere in more realistic conditions. Wow!

Wear Now

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Awaiting the Moto360 Android Wear, I bought two Wear watches (the Samsung and the LG) for our application development team. After spending few days with the LG, I have to say this is the first wearable device that is not a gadget, but proves to be well integrated and useful. It still does not address a simple scenario of charging both the phone and the watch via a single cable and charger (well... it seems like even the simplest industrial design ideas require geniuses like Yves BĂ©har ). But really the hardware is secondary in this experience. What constitutes a smart watch is the software. And Google delivers on the promise. Of course it has a strong foundation of Google Now, which has been developed and polished for years, and is the most important ingredient to the success of the Wear platform. It sounds simply stupid Samsung is playing a game here with Tizen . I had Pebble. I had the beautiful Gear Fit hardware. But the official Wear is a night-and-day difference. Yesterday w...

Everywhere Connected

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The world is flat. Finally. DeLorme inReach satellite communicator is a real breakthrough communication device. Not because it works anywhere on the Planet, talking directly to the Iridium satellite network. Not because it is an affordable, rugged, waterproof, GPS+satcom device with good battery life. But because it does not require a monthly fee (well, it does, but the fee is $3...). And because a decent monthly fee ($65) gives UNLIMITED two-way messages and tracking / location pings. It landed in my hands two days ago, so it is hard to fully judge it, but the first impressions are really, really good. The device itself is far from being an iPhone 6 or the next generation Samsung galaxy: it is thick, the screen is small, the GUI is awful, but it seems to be able to deliver in the three key areas: It is satellite based, so works where the cellular services do not. And it knows no borders / roaming. It works very well with a companion smartphone app via Bluetooth. The app most...

iWatch 2.0 is the Android Wear

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At the end of June Apple officially lost the smart watch race. Google is a year late (or my prediction was a year too early), but whatever Apple does later this year, they won't be able to turn back the clock. And anything else, including Pebble , Toq and Galaxy Gear is no longer relevant. Yes Apple will come up with an iWatch. But by the time they do, the Google Play Store will be full of applications supporting Android Wear. Google Now, which is most important, has supported the Wear since the day one, and other important updates are rolling out now. The Wear - enabled Google Maps was released last week. Yes Apple will make a beautiful iWatch hardware. And I know people will be wearing it just because is is so cool and beautiful. But by that time Android will have a decent selection of models that will be very practical (as the Android notification system is compared to the iOS'es) and not bad looking either (my personal favorite is the round Motorola Moto 360 ). I...