Author: Serkadis

  • Why so few paid Android apps? Blame Google Checkout

    android-market-16-smThe new monthly report on location-based apps from Dutch app store analytics firm Distimo and American location-detection technology maker Skyhook Wireless opens with a striking stat: Only 21 percent of the location-based Android mobile apps in Google’s Android Market app store have a price tag. Most are free.

    Why is that? After all, Apple’s app store has over 100,000 apps, of which 57 percent have a price tag. And BlackBerry’s store is 49 percent paid apps. Doesn’t anyone want to make money off the hot new phone platform?

    Distimo co-founder and CEO Vincent Hoogsteder says it’s combination of two factors. “First, Android Market has significantly more free applications because of Google’s less strict approval process,” he emailed me. Apple’s mystery-box methodology can take weeks to approve — or reject — an app. The system has delayed product launches and prompted some developers to abandon the iPhone.

    Getting an app into Android Market is much less of a dice roll. Also, Android’s open-source operating system attracts software developers who enjoy giving away their works, rather than trying to make a sideline business out of them. These factors raise the ratio of free apps in the Android store compared to iPhone or BlackBerry.

    Second, Hoogsteder says that from his experience working with app developers, Google’s requirement that payments be made through Google Checkout has put off many of them.

    distimo“The majority of iPhone users have a credit card attached to their iTunes account and are therefore able to buy applications in the Apple App Store with just one click,” Hoogsteder said. “Users with an Android phone use their regular Google Account, which does not require them to sign up for Google Checkout. The first moment the user is asked to provide his credit card details is after he actually decides to buy a first app in the Android Market.”

    Having to haul out a credit card and type it into a phone, or go to a computer to do it, is enough of a hurdle that Hoogsteder believes many Android phone owners choose to stick with the free apps instead. App developers, seeing that the paying Android customer base are much smaller and less spendy than their iPhone counterparts, don’t rush to build an Android version of their app.

    15392v5-max-250x250So what’s it going to take to change that? Hoogsteder thinks carrier billing, where Android app purchases show up on your phone bill instead of your credit card, will get people to start buying. T-Mobile began offering carrier billing for some phones earlier this month.

    He also thinks the pending arrival of hugely popular paid iPhone apps, such as the $50-and-up turn-by-turn navigation apps from TomTom and Navigon, will get Android users to punch in their credit cards and become regular paying customers of Android Market, and will socialize the idea that yes, it’s OK to give your Droid your MasterCard number.

    Me, I think carrier billing won’t catch on in America the way it has in Hoogsteder’s Netherlands. Americans have balked for years and years at having purchases billed to our phone service contracts. We don’t trust the phone companies not to run up the tab with service charges and taxes, or to make expensive billing errors.

    I also think pundits underestimate the power of the Google brand beneath which Android sits. We’re used to getting mind-bendingly powerful, delightfully innovative tools from Google for free. Never mind that Android apps are built by third parties, not Google. To most people, Android equals Google. Since when have we paid Google for anything?

    [Screenshot: Engadget]


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  • Homebrew, the perfect gift for command line lovers

    Filed under: , , ,

    If you’re an OS X user who spends as much time on the command line as you do in the GUI, you’re probably familiar with the MacPorts and Fink package management projects, making open source software easier to compile and run on Mac OS X. You may also be well-aware of the shortcomings of these projects when it comes to future-proof package management. A new, open source project called Homebrew may be exactly what you’ve been looking for. If you’re not a lover of all things CLI, send a link to Homebrew as a great (free) last-minute gift for the Terminal-lover in your life.

    My favorite thing about Homebrew is its ability to function perfectly well with /usr/local as its base directory, installing packages in their own folders but linking them to /usr/local/command. This makes them manageable with existing command line tools. Homebrew can work out of any directory you like, if /usr/local isn’t your cup of tea. Installed packages are optimized and stripped based on your architecture, and makes great use of libraries you already have installed or that came with the system, reducing duplication and speeding up download, compile and install times significantly. Add in the zero-config installation, an already-extensive list of “formulas” (packages), a greatly-reduced need to sudo anything, and a Ruby-based framework for creating your own formulae and you’ve got a killer package for extending your command line toolset.

    Homebrew is available for free on GitHub, and the main page has complete instructions for various types of installation (and reasons why you’d pick each one). Check it out, and have a merry CLI-mas!

    TUAWHomebrew, the perfect gift for command line lovers originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Fri, 25 Dec 2009 16:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Testing for Type 1.5

    Hi,

    I got the results back for tests I took to determine if I am Type 1.5. I’m not sure I understand the results. I believe I am negative, but what do you think?

    ICA-CF: <1.2 [titers]
    IgG: <5 [JDF Units]
    GAD: <1.0 [U/mL]

    What’s interesting is that they ran the TPO [Thyroxide Peroxidase ABS] test, too, which indicates the presence of either Hashimoto’s or Graves and I came back at 42 against a scale of 0-60, which translates to negative. It’s ironic because I have a number of other autoimmune diseases and have been told years ago by an endocrinologist that I have Hashimoto’s. Now my TSH has gone from perfectly normal to almost non-existent. I’m thinking that the score of 42 may be an average of old cells with Hashimoto’s and newer cells with Graves. Is this possible?

    Of course, then there are those like me who test negative to a lot of autoimmune things.

    Any comments will be appreciated.

    Lynn

  • WM6.5.X Unnoticed Features

    WM653-28014-VGA I’ve been playing with WM6.5.X since it first appeared, and am currently running one of the latest (WM6.5.3 builds) 28014 on my Diamond (my own custom ROM can be got from here, and I’ll be supporting the HD2 as well when I get mine back and HardSPL is out).

    There are a few neat things that as far as I can tell no-one else has picked up on, so I thought I’d get knowledge of them out in to the real world.

    Icon soft keys have text

    One of the major changes in the later builds (23037+) has been the replacement of the even sized start menu bar and soft key bar with a much larger, capacitive friendly (a few people are saying that’s the main reason for this update to WM6.5) soft key bar and moving the Start and Close icons to the bottom of the screen. This change has also lead to the replacement of many of the textual buttons in Windows Mobile with icons. This has the downside that not all are that intuitive…

    Pressing and holding on an icon gives you a popup with text of what the button does, so you now won’t get lost in WM!

     Menupopup hidden Menu popup

    Icons in messaging are the same as press and hold

    I’ve often wanted to delete or move one email in a long list of them, and this normally requires either a long press on the item or going through the menus to get to what ever option you want.

    There’s now a new feature that lets you tap on the icon in the left of the list of emails, which has the same effect as a press and hold, bringing up a context menu.

    Context Menu

    Tapping on the icon is a much faster thing for me at least, and is a great improvement on the long menus.

    This works in all parts of the Pocket Outlook program.

    Disabling of GPRS when connected to PC

    Something I only recently noticed is that when you connect a device with a recent ROM to a computer running ActiveSync or WMDC and it allows connecting to the internet, the cellular data connection on the device gets stopped, and the ActiveSync one is used instead. That leads to faster charging and lower data costs for those not on unlimited data plans!

    (I checked this on my HD2 running WM6.5 build 21869 and it didn’t do it there, so I assume it’s a new WM6.5.X feature).

    Swipe gestures
    WM6.5 brings the new gestures API for swipe, tap and hold, and it’s nice to see Microsoft using it in there own applications.

    Both Pocket Outlook and Pictures & Videos support gestures to move between accounts and images respectively. This is certainly a move in the right direction, though it would be great to have gestures in more applications!

    YouTube videos will be up shortly, for more clarity…

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  • Hourtime Podcast: The Lair of the White Watch

    Here’s another red-hot watch podcast for all you watch fans out there. Happy Holidays and enjoy.

    MP3 Download
    Listen in iTunes


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  • Take Action: Fix the Census Prisoner Miscounts

    When the census-takers come a-knocking, they need to make sure that they count prisoners as residents of the area they call home, not of the jails where they temporarily find themselves.

    As so many issues do, the matter boils down to a question of who has the power and where the cash is going. The predominantly rural areas where prisons are located get an artificial population bump, while the cities many inmates hail from get the short end of the stick, which translates into less funding a fewer elected representatives. The system stays in place, however, because representatives from districts where the bulk of the population is comprised of non-voting incarcerated persons don’t want to lose their positions.

    This political gerrymandering is unacceptable. Tell Commerce Secretary Gary Locke to fix the census prisoner miscounts for next year.

  • Why so few paid apps on Android? Blame Google Checkout

    android-market-16-smThe new monthly report on location-based apps from Dutch app store analytics firm Distimo and American location-detection technology maker Skyhook Wireless opens with a striking stat: Only 21 percent of the location-based Android mobile apps in Google’s Android Market app store have a price tag. Most are free.

    Why is that? After all, Apple’s app store has over 100,000 apps, of which 57 percent have a price tag. And BlackBerry’s store is 49 percent paid apps. Doesn’t anyone want to make money off the not new phone platform?

    Distimo co-founder and CEO Vincent Hoogsteder says it’s combination of two factors. “First, Android Market has significantly more free applications because of Google’s less strict approval process,” he emailed me. Apple’s mystery-box approval system has delayed product launches and prompted some developers to abandon the iPhone. Getting an app into Android Market is much less of a dice roll. Also, Android’s open-source operating system attracts software developers who enjoy giving away their works, rather than trying to make a sideline business out of them. These factors raise the ratio of free apps in the store.

    Second, Hoogsteder says that from his experience working with app developers, Google’s requirement that payments be made through Google Checkout has put off many of them.

    distimo“The majority of iPhone users have a credit card attached to their iTunes account and are therefore able to buy applications in the Apple App Store with just one click,” Hoogsteder said. “Users with an Android phone use their regular Google Account, which does not require them to sign up for Google Checkout. The first moment the user is asked to provide his credit card details is after he actually decides to buy a first app in the Android Market.”

    Having to haul out a credit card and type it into a phone, or go to a computer to do it, is enough of a hurdle that Hoogsteder believes many Android phone owners choose to stick with the free apps instead. App developers, seeing that the paying Android customer base are much smaller and less spendy than their iPhone counterparts, don’t rush to build an Android version of their app.

    15392v5-max-250x250So what’s it going to take to change that? Hoogsteder thinks carrier billing, where Android app purchases show up on your phone bill instead of your credit card, will get people to start buying. T-Mobile began offering carrier billing for some phones earlier this month. We’ll see how well it goes. He also thinks the pending arrival of hugely popular paid iPhone apps, such as the $50-and-up turn-by-turn navigation apps from TomTom and Navigon, will get Android users to punch in their credit cards and become regular paying customers of Android Market, and will socialize the idea that yes, it’s OK to give your Droid your MasterCard number.

    Me, I think carrier billing won’t catch on in America the way it has in Hoogsteder’s Netherlands. Americans have balked for years and years at having purchases billed to our phone service contracts. We don’t trust the phone companies not to run up the tab with service charges and taxes, or to make expensive billing errors.

    I also think pundits underestimate the power of the Google brand beneath which Android sits. We’re used to getting mind-bendingly powerful, innovative tools from Google for free. Never mind that the apps are built by third parties. Never mind that Android is open-sourced. Most people don’t really know what that means. What matters is: Android equals Google. Since when have we paid Google for anything?

    [Screenshot: Engadget]


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  • It’s a Merry Christmas for AAPL shareholders, stock at all-time high

    Filed under: ,

    On December 14th, I posted an opinion piece sharing my thoughts that AAPL stock would hit $300 a share in a year (for which I received quite a lot of critical feedback). Two days later, on December 16th, Morgan Stanley’s Katy Huberty issued a report stating she believes there is a 25% change that AAPL will be between $325 and $435 in the next twelve months (she also believes it could fall to $150 if Google’s Android takes off and Apple drops the ball).

    Huberty based her bullish outlook on the scenario that iPhone sales are on pace to capture 10-15% of the handset market by 2012 – and this doesn’t even include soaring Mac sales or the impending iSlate.

    Well, the stock isn’t at $325 yet, but on December 24th, AAPL did close at an all-time high of $209.04. Not bad considering on December 8th, the stock was down almost 8% on its previous high of $208 on November 16th. Christmas Eve’s 3.4% one-day gain was driven primarily by the news that Apple has booked the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts for an event on January 26th.

    So, where does the stock go from here? Traditionally, there is an early-January slide for AAPL that coincides with the “buy on rumor, sell on news” MacWorld Expo event, but since MacWorld is going to be Apple-free from now on, who knows if that will happen this year. And even if the early January slide hits AAPL, the company has so much going for it besides the rumored iSlate, I’m beginning to think my $300 target is rather conservative. But that’s the future. For now the $209 share price is a nice Christmas gift.

    Disclaimer: This author owns shares in AAPL. Opinions in this post are those of the author only and should not be considered as investment advice.

    TUAWIt’s a Merry Christmas for AAPL shareholders, stock at all-time high originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Fri, 25 Dec 2009 15:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • GM to offer consumer test drives at NAIAS, other auto shows?

    Filed under: ,

    General Motors feels it has a lineup stuffed with vastly improved products and it wants to get as many customers behind the wheel of a new Chevy, Cadillac, GMC or Buick to prove its point. Anyone can head over to the local dealership for a test drive, but the General is reportedly looking for even more ways to get you to evaluate a new GM product, including test drives right at your local auto show.

    The Detroit News reports that GM is working with officials from COBO and the city of Detroit to set up a driving route so that consumers can test the automaker’s products on-site. Vehicles likely be featured include new products such as the 2010 Buick LaCrosse, Chevy Equinox, GMC Terrain and Cadillac SRX. The test drive area at COBO is reportedly part of GM’s totally revamped 85,000 sq ft exhibit space, which includes more interactive displays and plenty of areas to show off new technology like direct injection and the Voltec system. Obviously, the General needed to make some major changes, since it won’t need displays for Pontiac, Saab and Saturn in 2010.

    Customer test drives were piloted at the New England Auto Show earlier this year, where Cadillac reportedly put over 1,400 people behind the wheel. GM is also looking to set up drives at several other major shows, including Chicago in February, but the biggest push will take place in major metropolitan areas on the east and west coasts, where GM product consideration is weakest.

    Auto show test drives make perfect sense, considering that millions of showgoers attend these events every year. People who pay $12 to look at cars in a crammed and crowded convention center are likely the exact same people to get excited about new products. Why not give them seat time and let the word-of-mouth flow?

    [Source: The Detroit News]

    GM to offer consumer test drives at NAIAS, other auto shows? originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 25 Dec 2009 15:15:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • LVDTs ideally suited to high duty cycle applications

    Applications that call for continuous or repetitive measurement can place considerable demands on transducers. Demands that RDP Electronics Ltd’s range of LVDTs are well suited to meet.

    Process industries, production environments and destructive testing applications need reliable, repeatable results often involving continual feedback with very high cycle lives. RDP has an extensive selection of LVDTs embracing a range of displacements, as well as miniature versions and types developed for special applications. Used in environments subject to vibration LVDTs are not subject to the problems associated with potentiometers for example. With vibration present it is not uncommon for small sections of potentiometer wipers to fail prematurely. But no such problems for LVDTs. The spring return versions can be subject to hundreds of thousands of cycles. Captive LVDT versions are good for millions of cycles and correctly installed, unguided LVDTs will perform indefinitely.

    Further information and guidance on specifying LVDTs can be obtained from the RDP engineering support team on 01902 457512 or call to request a brochure. Full specifications can be viewed online at http://www.rdpe.com/uk/men-disp.htm.

    – ENDS –

  • MENSI relaunches its Machine Assembly and Testing Division

    MENSI, widely renowned for the design and the manufacture of Transfer Machines and of Special Customized Machining Centres, relaunches on the market with new strenght and enthusiasm its Machine Assembly and Testing Division, which has indeed always represented a leading sector even from the early beginning of their business activity.

    With their three-decade long experience in the design and in the making of assembly machines, MENSI offers innovative solutions and high-quality systems aiming at satisfying the different and various and sometimes complex requests of their customers, in order to grant high productivity without any wastes.

    The main characteristics of the assembly units or assembly stations are represented by the total absence of downtime, by the fast programming features and by the quick and inexpensive change of program for different assembly groups.

    Assembly Machines:
    Assembly machines enable to assembly parts or subgroups onto bigger object in the following sectors/fields of application by using pneumatic, electronic and other systems:
    automotive, bicycles, sanitary fittings, hydraulic and pneumatic fittings, gas valves, gate valves, ball valves etc.

    Testing Machines:
    Testing machines allow to test the structure of the body and its correct functioning by using high-precision equipment, such as pressure transducers and devices for the detection of the value of air taken in and stabilized in the body.

  • Why the Predator drone encryption doesn’t matter

    predatorBruce Schneier wrote a great piece on the unencrypted Predator drone video feeds, noting that the drones were built for a post-Soviet, pre-insurgent era and that encryption, in the case of a live feed, is more of a problem than a threat.

    The problem is, the world has changed. Today’s insurgent adversaries don’t have KGB-level intelligence gathering or cryptanalytic capabilities. At the same time, computer and network data gathering has become much cheaper and easier, so they have technical capabilities the Soviets could only dream of. Defending against these sorts of adversaries doesn’t require military-grade encryption only where it counts; it requires commercial-grade encryption everywhere possible.

    While I agree with him whole-heartedly – Bruce knows his stuff – this is a huge PR mess for drone warfare. Luckily, these are drones and drones don’t have feelings and I suspect that once insurgents notice that they’re on a drone’s live feed, it’s probably too late.


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  • When life gives you sweet potatoes . . .

    Pumpkin pie ice cream is one of my favorites. I used to wait for it to come out every year. Last year, I bought a half-gallon, and ate a single, wonderful teaspoonful of it.

    This year, we have our ice cream maker, and several weeks ago Mrs. ShottleBop made a batch of pumpkin pie ice cream for me, using unsweetened canned pumpkin. Yesterday, I wanted more. We hit Smart & Final, Trader Joe’s, and Ralphs, looking for canned pumpkin. Nada. BUT, we had bought a box of sweet potatoes recently. So we baked a sweet potato, and Mrs. ShottleBop made sweet potato pie ice cream. I cleaned out what was left in the freezer bowl after the rest had been scooped into single-serving bowls and placed in the freezer. It makes a good substitute (yes, heavier on the carbs and sugar* than pumpkin, but not enough to worry about, when you consider it’s divided into 8 portions, and when you really want that flavor).

    All amounts (except for the number of eggs) approximate.

    One medium sweet potato, baked to softness.
    Quart of coconut cream
    1/4 or so of SF syrup (we used vanilla bean, but caramel, almond, etc. would work as well).
    However many packets of TruVia you want for additional sweetness
    Pumpkin pie spices (we use the Trader Joe’s premix) to taste
    3 eggs

    Mix everything up in the blender, then pour into the freezer bowl and start your machine.

    Fresh, it’s soft and creamy; frozen, it’s like a rock. 30 seconds in the microwave makes it acceptably spoonable.

    ____________
    From Calorie King (info for one medium-sized sweet potato):

    Total Carbs 23.6g; Dietary Fiber 3.8g; Sugars 9.6g (divide by 8 for the amount in a single serving of the ice cream; the other ingredients add hardly any more, and there’s enough fat to keep it from hitting your BG right away).

  • Dozen Daily Deals for December 25, 2009

    Filed under: ,

    ‘Tis the season shop until your brains melt (or skip it all entirely, depending on your interpretation of the term holiday). In that spirit, for the next few weeks we’ll be rounding up a dozen daily deals courtesy our friends at DealNews.com. Each afternoon tune in to TUAW for this handy summary. Keep in mind that while our posts will live on, the deals won’t. Each is lovingly generated by the deal-bot every day, so get ‘em while they’re hot. Enjoy!

    • Apple Store: [iMac] Refurbished Apple iMac 22″ LED-Backlit Desktops from $999 + free shipping, more
    • Shop4Tech: [Digital Camcorders] 4GB Pen DVR Digital Camcorder for $33 + free shipping
    • iTunes Music Store: [iPhone / iPod Apps] Mega Man II for iPhone downloads for $1
    • Best Buy: [Media Receivers] Sling Media SlingCatcher Digital Media Receiver for $100 + $7 s&h
    • Swift Ink: [Printer Supplies] Swiftink.com coupons: 40% off Canon, Epson, and Brother ink
    • MidnightBox: [Computer Speakers] Refurbished Logitech AudioHub Laptop Speaker for $19 + $4 s&h
    • Cellular Factory: [Cell Phone Accessories] Cellular Factory Roundup: Dual Cigarette Lighter Adapter for $1 + free shipping, more
    • Buy.com: [iPhone] Sunpak iCharge Case and Battery for Apple iPhone for $50 + free shipping
    • B&H Photo Video: [Digital SLR Cameras] Nikon D3000 10.2MP Digital SLR Camera w/ lens for $450 + free shipping
    • Sam’s Club: [40″ – 42″ LCD TVs] Philips 42″ 1080p Widescreen LCD HDTV for $598 + free shipping
    • HandHeldItems: [Cell Phone Accessories] HandHeldItems.com: Up to 80% off HTC cell phone accessories + 30% off coupon
    • Staples: [USB Hard Drives] Seagate Expansion 640GB Portable USB 2.0 External Hard Drive for $100 + free shipping

    TUAWDozen Daily Deals for December 25, 2009 originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Fri, 25 Dec 2009 14:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Two GPS app updates for travelers

    Filed under: , , ,

    News in the GPS world keeps swirling around, and for downloaders it’s not too late to get some holiday GPS cheer. Here’s a couple of updates of note.

    First, Gokivo [iTunes link] just announced a new pricing option that allows you to download Gokivo for just $0.99 for the first 30 days, and then pay $4.99 per month/$39.99 a year for service from then on out. We reviewed the app in November. It was middle of the road (pardon the pun) in performance and features, but it does have live traffic and text to speech for announcing turns, so it might be worth a look at this lower price.

    Meanwhile, Navigon [iTunes link] has launched a version for Mexico at $49.99. The Mexico version includes many of Navigon’s premium navigation capabilities such as Google Local Search, Enhanced Pedestrian Mode, Speed Assistant, Route Planning and even a localized point-of-interest database. If you’re doing some driving south of the border, or happen to live down there, it should be on your list of travel options.

    I expect the new year will bring a slew of enhancements and new products for the iPhone and iPod touch — who knows, maybe we’ll even get to see a tablet navigator before 2010 is through.

    TUAWTwo GPS app updates for travelers originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Fri, 25 Dec 2009 14:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Apple’s rumored tablet to be named iSlate?

    islate-apple

    Some slick domain name and trademark sleuthing from MacRumors and TechCrunch uncovered information about several islate-containing domains and the companion trademark “ISLATE” that may point to Apple as the company behind this mark. It all began with MacRumors which uncovered information about the domain islate.com, a TLD that passed through several hands until 2007 where it landed with the registrar MarkMonitor, a well-known registrar that handles and hides domain registrations for large companies including Apple. Close inspection of the domain name history reveals a brief lapse in late 2007 which exposed Apple as the actual owner of the domain. A look at other TLDs reveals that MarkMonitor also registered islate.co.uk, islate.biz, islate.info, islate.jp and islate.cn in the month of November 2006. Other country designations such as, islate.de and islate.fr, don’t fit into the puzzle as they are registered to known companies with islate.de being registered to a Innovative Dynamics GmbH and islate.fr being registered to the IP property law firm of Wilson & Bertherlot. The mystery deepens when one takes a look at the “ISLATE” trademark information uncovered by TechCrunch, though. Hit the jump to read on.

    Moving away from the domain information and looking at the trademark information, an unknown Delaware company called Slate Computing filed a trademark the word ISLATE on November 21, 2006 in both the US and the EU. Listed on the EU application was the legal representative Edwards, Angell, Palmer & Dodge, a law firm with a history of working with Apple. Also curious is the priority company listed on the EU application — Trinidad & Tobago, a country used by Apple in other EU trademarks applications. Slate Computing seemingly does not appear to exist online or in real life but the extensive business description provided on the trademark application fits Apple to a tee, leading TechCrunch to hypothesize that the mysterious company is a shell for Apple. Piecing everything together, Apple, either through MarkMonitor or a shell company called Slate Computing, may have registered a series of iSlate TLDs and filed a trademark for “ISLATE” in both the EU and the US. BGR readers with an opinion chime in and let us know what you think — is Apple behind all this activity surround the name “islate”? Is iSlate really destined to be the name of the rumored tablet? We’re not feeling the name one way or another.

    Read [MacRumors] Read [TechCrunch]

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  • WMExperts reviews the HTC HD2

    HD2%20with%20case

    WMExperts have reviewed the HTC HD2, and seem to be more satisfied than most with the device. The felt the device was very responsive, the large screen bringing a new dimension to photos, videos and web surfing and found both the picture and video quality to be amongst the best they have seen on a camera phone yet.

    Their main complaint appeared to be the protruding camera lens, which they felt made the device wobbly on a table and placed the lens unit at risk.

    They concluded:

    I had concerns that the HD2 was simply going to be too big. The initial pictures gave me the impression that it couldn’t be comfortable to carry, hold or use. I’m glad that first impression was way off target.

    I found the HD2 very comfortable, and the large 4.3-inch screen a joy to use. The capacitive screen is nice, but had HTC chosen a resistive screen, I believe the HD2 would still be a solid performer. Call quality is very good and the Snapdragon processor moves things along nicely.

    My only nit with the HD2 is the camera design. I would have preferred a flush backing to the phone to make it more contoured and maybe more secure from accidental drops. Performance wise, the camera is amongst the best I’ve used.

    So, would I go out and buy a non-U.S. model? I’d be reluctant to take the plunge because I have gotten too accustomed to 3G data speeds, and a U.S. version likely is on the way.  If you can live without 3G, then it may be worth considering.

    Read their full review here.

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  • GROU.PS DIY Social Network Platform Reaches 2 Million Users, Becomes More Customizable

    GROU.PS, a do-it-yourself social network focused on moderated online collaboration has steadily gained an impressive amount of users and added compelling features to its application. The social network platform has just hit 2 million users, adding another million members in just 6 months.

    And GROU.PS has amped up its offering for publishers by launching Elastic Modules, which gives publishers the ability to change the way the data is displayed to their visitors. To date, the highest reach of look and feel customization was at the template level; the
    publisher could only change the skin of their site. Now publishers can actually modify the backend of the social network they’ve created.

    GROU.PS counts Don Dodge, developer evangelist at Google, is among the community builders that have chosen GROU.PS as their online platform. “Don Dodge’s Startup List” is sort of a Crunchbase for Boston area.

    The startup’s networks are attractive to users because it lets you run all of your group’s collaboration tools from one GROU.PS domain using a single login. The system supports wikis, photos, links, blogs, calendars, chat, forums, maps, profiles, and subgroups – each of which is available as a plug-and-play module for your community. These modules also allow users to pull in their data from other third party services (flickr, Digg, blogs, etc).

    The startup, which has over 40,000 networks on its platform, also recently added ActivityRank Pipelines, a point and reward system that lets moderators of a social network measure and rank members’ content contributions and then extend moderation privileges to members based on these rankings. And the social network is launching a subscription model that will allow moderators to charge subscription fees to members (GROU.PS gets a 50% cut on any fees charges).

    GROU.PS just raised $1 million in funding, bringing the startup’s total funding up to over $2 million. But while the social network is growing, it is still faces major competition form the leader in the space, Ning, which recently hit 37 million users with 1.6 million social networks created on the platform.

    Crunch Network: CrunchBoard because it’s time for you to find a new Job2.0


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  • Klipsch headquarters walkthrough: behind the scenes and between the ears

    Every time trade shows such as CES and CEDIA open their doors, the collective masses are flooded with headphone after headphone, speaker after speaker. After awhile, one driver looks just as round as the next, and frankly, you start to take for granted what all goes into bringing the tunes we all dig to our ears, dens and underutilized kitchens. One of the mainstays in the audio industry opened their doors up to us this past weekend, and it didn’t take much arm pulling to get us inside. We’ve generally found the design and sound qualities associated with Klipsch gear to be top-shelf, and we’ve struggled in the past to find too many gripes with the headphones and sound systems we’ve had the opportunity to review. Needless to say, we were quite curious to hear about (and see) what all goes into imagining, designing, testing and qualifying the ‘buds and speakers that we’ve enjoyed for so many years, and if you share that same level of curiosity, join us after the break for the full walkthrough (and a few heretofore unreleased secrets, to boot).

    Continue reading Klipsch headquarters walkthrough: behind the scenes and between the ears

    Klipsch headquarters walkthrough: behind the scenes and between the ears originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 25 Dec 2009 13:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Diagnosis Problems, Help/Advice Anyone?

    Okay. So this is my very first time here. I will try to write clearly and concisely.

    Prior to 2000 I have had episodes of Hypoglycemic shock and even some situations where I could have passed-out and who knows what.

    In 2003 I had some health problems, such as weight related (BMI number was/is higher than should be) and fatigue (and some other symptoms, including circulatory problems and chest pains), so I had my blood checked. My Cholesterol was high and my Potassium low! I am 5’6" and around 180-190 (overlapping pot-belly, so-called love-handles on the sides, chin-fat, thighs are fatty, upper underarms are full of fat nodules nearer to my armpits).

    Prior to 1992 I was slim and fairly energetic, but my life was very stressful.

    Anyways; in 2003 I had to work for a whole year as an overnight security guard (official California State licensed) at the entrance of a 55-plus retirement condo community. And my life was a mess. The reasons for having to take this job are various, suffice it to say my wife was not a citizen and had not yet been given her papers to be able to go to work, so I had to make enough money for the two of us.

    It was during this time that I began to have frequent urination, dryness of my mouth and thrush on my tongue just after awaking and if I forgot to drink enough, I was constantly thirsty (now I do not even feel thirst or hunger when I should, nor do I shiver or sweat when I should !!!), and often I would wake up with my fingers turning from red to brown, sometimes even to almost greyish-to-black! My lower legs would suffer swelling (Edema) and injuries, especially to my legs, would take too long to heal! These symptoms have since gotten worse. And on my feet, fortunately in only a few places (mostly on the outer side next to my little toe) I would feel constant itchyness. My skin has become dry. I also developed eczema on my forehead between my eyebrows and around the nostril-fold of my nose…which (my nose) tends to get, every now and then, one or more infected pores (acne).

    The worst thing is that if I accidentally eat anything with MSG or Caffeine or excess sugar my condition gets serious!

    One time, a few years ago, we went out to buy Chinese take-out and I specifically told them not to put any MSG (they had a sign suggesting they can accomodate). After eating my food, within minutes, I was fighting for my life! I had a Ketoacidic reaction so severe. At least I had the sense to drink A LOT of water. But the symptoms of that attack were really scary ( I had similar attacks prior to that but not as severe). My vision was impaired by flashes of what looks like micro-lightning, I had serious trouble breathing, I was struggling to avoid losing consciousness, I even poured the other half of the One Liter of cold water on my head (which helped a bit)! I was shaking and feeling very nervous and insecure!

    I’ve noticed that I have also got a problem with Caffeine: if I drink regular Coca Cola (in the UK they do not have the Decaffeinated sugar version…what they have here is Decaffeinated with Aspartame…which I know is toxic), or caffeinated black tea (coffee is out of the question!), I start to feel like my brain has trouble controlling my natural breathing and I have to force myself to breathe! Even then, unless I take Ascorbic Acid to break-up (the molecules)the accumulation of caffeine, one side of my brain feels very unpleasantly stuffy and lacking access to oxygen!

    Obviously I have long since…due to not having health insurance back home in the US….learned to use the Internet and Merck manual to try and figure out what my symptoms may be due to and what action, dietary and otherwise, I might take to remove or at least reduce those symptoms.

    Anyway; I just had my blood tested by the NHS here (this is the British National Health System…which is availble to all persons living in the UK legally….). This was after consulting with my new doctor (GP – Physician) here. The test showed elevated cholesterol, but no major indication of Diabetes Melitus 2 (adult onset type)!!! I find this result upsetting; not because anyone in their right mind wants to be diabetic, but because all my symptoms, including sudden mini-bouts of Hypertension that have also failed being detected, would seem to be signs of Diabetes or some other Endochrinal disease (Hyperthyroidism, Graves…).

    I did fast 10 hours before going (which was not easy, as you know), and drank only a little water a couple of hours before being tested.

    True: I have been taking Potassium Gluconate 99 milligrams per day…which I usually break into two pieces and take with my meals. And I have been eating as healthy a diet as I can, given that we are not doing well financially and we cannot afford to buy enough of the best possible fresh (life-force-rich) natural-state foods, such as certain types of fresh vegetables, fruits, etc. And I did stop eating cheese again! The cost of fresh produce in the UK is ridiculous! Even in the USA on the East Coast as compared to California; the price of healthy, fresh produce is too high!

    So: here are my two questions:

    1. If this is not Diabetes 2, then does anyone have a theory? Mind you: My GP here seems not to care to tell me what else it might be; saying that he does not know what is causing these symptoms and that he does not think I should be too concerned!!!

    2. If this is Diabetes 2 then how can I find out for sure and get authorized to receive the kind of discounts on things like testing strips and Keto-strips…whose costs, without NHS reduction of cost, are too high for me to buy on my own?
    I even bought my own Glucose meter two years ago, but I quit using it because I could not afford the sticks…and yes, sometimes my Sugar was too high or too low…but rarely, and since I abandoned my kit when I moved over here I could not test when I have had my recent most severe symptoms (which seem related to Caffeine and/or excess glucose and abnormally fast internal dehydration)??

    Also; I heard from someone here that the NHS has issued secret instructions to GPs (doctors) not to prioritize diagnosis for non-British patients (the recent financial crisis here has obviously begun to have a very negative financial impact on the NHS). Anyone here in the UK with similar concerns??