Eton’s Soulra XL Solar Dock For iPhone
Eton’s last solar dock was pretty cool, but their bigger version, the Soulra XL, now comes with a larger, retractable solar panel that will juice this iPhone and iPod dock up for a much longer time. The new Soulra XL will ship shortly and will be able to soak up the sun a lot better than the previous model.
The panel measures 72 square-inches, which means that it can last up to 5 hours of continuous play before it needs some more sun. It has 8 speaker drivers (2 tweeters, 2 woofers and 4 passive radiators) with a total output of 22W, so it should be powerful enough for the cabin, a picnic, or the backyard.
You can pre-order the Soulra XL at Eton’s website for $300 (USD). It should start shipping by mid-May. In my opinion, that’s a bit pricey. For that price, you can get a Bowers & Wilkins Mini Zeppelin and the full-sized one isn’t that far behind if you’re willing to buy the older model. However, neither of those has got a solar-panel, so if you want to play in the sun, the Soulra XL looks like a good bet. Source:technabob
Cell phone data threatens users' privacy
The recent discovery that Apple’s iPhone tracks its users’ locations and automatically stores that data in unencrypted form is a “serious threat to the privacy of American citizens,” argues a Michigan State University expert on digital mapping.
Furthermore, there are no government regulations or oversight in place regarding the collection or use of that private information, said Kirk Goldsberry, assistant professor of geography.
Apple said it would fix what it called a software error in the iPhone, but Goldsberry said the case has brought bigger issues to light.
“As it stands now we’re putting a lot of blind faith in companies that are collecting, storing and using this information to do the right thing,” said Goldsberry, who blogs about the issue here. “Who knows how many other companies are doing the same thing. We should have somebody to hold them accountable for the privacy of the public at large.”
The issue surfaced April 20 when U.K. security researchers Pete Warden and Allasdair Allan announced their discovery that the iPhone keeps track of where its users go and saves every detail to a secret file on the device. That information is then copied to whatever computer is used to synchronize the iPhone, be it a home, work or school computer.
The secret file contains latitude and longitude of the phone’s recorded coordinates along with a timestamp, meaning anyone who has access to the phone or computer could know the owner’s movements using a simple program, according to a Guardian newspaper article.
The discovery, Goldsberry noted, set off a wave of media coverage, with some experts warning of the potential threat and others downplaying the risks.
In a New York Times column ( “Your iPhone is tracking you. So what?” ), David Pogue argued the data is stored “only on your own computer, in a buried and layman-incomprehensible form” and that the vast majority of iPhone users have nothing to worry about.
Maybe so, Goldsberry said, but even if 99.9 percent of iPhone users have nothing to fear, that means many still do. “There are literally millions of iPhone users out there and if only hundreds have this information used against them, I think that’s a big problem,” he said. “That’s not to mention the millions of users outside the United States – different places have different attitudes and different laws.”
Goldsberry researched the issue by mapping six months of his own cross-country movements on his iPhone. As an expert in GIS, or geographic information systems, mapping, he took it a step further than the original researchers by creating more sophisticated, precise maps that reveal a very detailed pictured of his own travel behavior.
In one example he produced a detailed map of a weeklong work trip to Seattle in April, which shows, among other things, a “creepy” detailed map of his attendance at a professional baseball game. “Anybody with access to my geographic data and basic GIS skills could easily discern that I was at Safeco Field to watch the Mariners beat the Blue Jays,” he writes in his blog.
Goldsberry said there are likely tens of thousands of GIS-trained experts like himself who could easily turn the iPhone’s raw data into a detailed map. “We have lecture halls full of students here at MSU that can do this,” he said.
Apple said iPhone data are stored for as long as a year due to a software error. The company promised to limit the size of the file, encrypt the file and stop backing up the file to the user’s computer. Computers are much more vulnerable to hacking attempts than phones.
Goldsberry applauded the move, but added: “I can’t help but wonder whether other companies have access to the existing one year of data for millions of users.”
Thus far, the Federal Communications Commission and U.S. Sen. Al Franken have asked Apple to explain the presence of the GPS log, the New York Times reported. Source:media-newswire
Furthermore, there are no government regulations or oversight in place regarding the collection or use of that private information, said Kirk Goldsberry, assistant professor of geography.
Apple said it would fix what it called a software error in the iPhone, but Goldsberry said the case has brought bigger issues to light.
“As it stands now we’re putting a lot of blind faith in companies that are collecting, storing and using this information to do the right thing,” said Goldsberry, who blogs about the issue here. “Who knows how many other companies are doing the same thing. We should have somebody to hold them accountable for the privacy of the public at large.”
The issue surfaced April 20 when U.K. security researchers Pete Warden and Allasdair Allan announced their discovery that the iPhone keeps track of where its users go and saves every detail to a secret file on the device. That information is then copied to whatever computer is used to synchronize the iPhone, be it a home, work or school computer.
The secret file contains latitude and longitude of the phone’s recorded coordinates along with a timestamp, meaning anyone who has access to the phone or computer could know the owner’s movements using a simple program, according to a Guardian newspaper article.
The discovery, Goldsberry noted, set off a wave of media coverage, with some experts warning of the potential threat and others downplaying the risks.
In a New York Times column ( “Your iPhone is tracking you. So what?” ), David Pogue argued the data is stored “only on your own computer, in a buried and layman-incomprehensible form” and that the vast majority of iPhone users have nothing to worry about.
Maybe so, Goldsberry said, but even if 99.9 percent of iPhone users have nothing to fear, that means many still do. “There are literally millions of iPhone users out there and if only hundreds have this information used against them, I think that’s a big problem,” he said. “That’s not to mention the millions of users outside the United States – different places have different attitudes and different laws.”
Goldsberry researched the issue by mapping six months of his own cross-country movements on his iPhone. As an expert in GIS, or geographic information systems, mapping, he took it a step further than the original researchers by creating more sophisticated, precise maps that reveal a very detailed pictured of his own travel behavior.
In one example he produced a detailed map of a weeklong work trip to Seattle in April, which shows, among other things, a “creepy” detailed map of his attendance at a professional baseball game. “Anybody with access to my geographic data and basic GIS skills could easily discern that I was at Safeco Field to watch the Mariners beat the Blue Jays,” he writes in his blog.
Goldsberry said there are likely tens of thousands of GIS-trained experts like himself who could easily turn the iPhone’s raw data into a detailed map. “We have lecture halls full of students here at MSU that can do this,” he said.
Apple said iPhone data are stored for as long as a year due to a software error. The company promised to limit the size of the file, encrypt the file and stop backing up the file to the user’s computer. Computers are much more vulnerable to hacking attempts than phones.
Goldsberry applauded the move, but added: “I can’t help but wonder whether other companies have access to the existing one year of data for millions of users.”
Thus far, the Federal Communications Commission and U.S. Sen. Al Franken have asked Apple to explain the presence of the GPS log, the New York Times reported. Source:media-newswire
Smartphone braves odds
Nokia’s C5-03 may be likened to a football goalkeeper standing resolutely firm amid hordes of frenzied and determined attackers.
With the unprecedented demand for the iOS-powered iPhones, the ever-increasing popularity of Android-powered smartphones, and more significantly, Nokia’s recent announcement to use Microsoft Corp.’s Windows Phone 7 operating system as the foundation for the Finnish giant’s upcoming mobile phones, we may now be looking at one of the few remaining standard-bearers of the Symbian OS.
Somehow, this also makes the C5-03, a prized commodity for those who find it tough to imagine a Nokia mobile phone using a different OS.
And what’s not to love about the C5-03? It’s priced just around P9,000, which is way below the price tag of an iPhone and most of Android-powered smartphones.
Dated Symbian
It’s sad that it comes equipped with a dated Symbian^1 OS (otherwise known as the Symbian S60 5th edition). To compensate for this handicap, Nokia equipped this tri-band with a 10.2 Mbps HSDPA, a 2 Mbps HSUPA support, as well as Bluetooth 2.0 and Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g connectivity.
The C5-03 also comes with a 40MB internal storage and can support microSD cards with up to 32 GB, so plenty of space to store Ovi store apps and games.
Unlike the alphanumeric keypad employed by its predecessors, the C5-03 opted for the virtual keys on its 3.2-inch TFT resistive touchscreen display (with a 360 x 640 pixel resolution).
The only actual keys in front are the three buttons below the screen for activating Call, Menu and End functions.
The resistive touchscreen works well, though not as good as its capacitive counterpart.
Younger crowd
Like its earlier versions, the C5-03 is designed to attract the younger crowd. Its plastic shell has rounded edges with the bottom sporting a unique color accent, a welcome break from predominantly white-gray-black-colored smartphones.
It’s compact and lightweight enough (10.58cm long, 5.1cm wide, 1.38cm thick and 93g) to be carried around.
But what is more endearing to know is that 80 percent of the C5-03’s body comes from recycled material and, thus, is recyclable.
On the right side of the phone lies the volume rocker and the lock button. On the top is the audio jack and the microUSB port while the charger slot is on the bottom. The 5 MP camera located on the back offers 4x optical zoom but there’s no sign of a flash so prepare for some blurry photos if you are in low-light environment.
The on-screen menu is pretty straightforward to navigate as it is nicely laid out in grid format (though that could be changed to a list if you so desired). Social networking apps (Facebook, Twitter and YouTube appear as standard, but also in the mix are Hi5, MySpace and Friendster) are already bundled in their own folder just like the music player and gallery that are also separated from the app folder, thus simplifying media file access. Source:technology.inquirer
Google, Apple Keep Gobbling Smartphone Share from RIM
Google's Android smartphone share rose to 34.7 percent in March, up from 33 percent in February, according to new comScore mobile subscriber stats released May 6.
Google is expected to make some significant announcements regarding its Android platform May 10 at its Google I/O developer show.
Apple's iPhone share ticked up to 25.5 percent from 25.2 percent over the same period, suggesting that the Verizon iPhone 4 is continuing to attract some buyers.
ComScore said Apple's actual hardware market share grew 1.1 percent to 7.9 percent, thanks to Verizon's iPhone 4 sales. Apple will reportedly not launch an iPhone 5 this summer, though it is expected to tether its next iPhone more closely with cloud-computing offerings.
Research in Motion's Blackberry market share continued its swoon in March, falling to 27 percent, from 28.9 percent through February, according to the researcher.
The declines aren't new or random; Blackberry share stood at 30.4 percent in January and was as high as 33.4 percent in November before Google and Apple captured a strong holiday season, knocking RIM from the top smartphone perch Android now commands.
RIM just closed its 10th annual Blackberry World developer's conference by giving out over 6,000 PlayBook tablet computers to the show's attendees.
The company also announced significant mobile-device management software for enterprises, including the ability to segment work and play content and manage Apple iOS and Android handsets and tablets
However, the company showed off only one major new phone, the Blackberry Bold 9900.
While this thin device appeared to be a quality entry with a 3.1-inch touch-screen and a QWERTY keyboard, RIM irked analysts by failing to provide satisfactory guidance for smartphones based on the PlayBook's QNX operating system.
RIM isn't the only suffering smartphone maker.
Microsoft Windows Phone isn't faring much better, falling to 7.5 percent from 7.7 percent U.S. share. The company continues to struggle with platform updates for its new phones.
The struggles of RIM and Microsoft, coupled with the long overdue retrenching of Nokia, reaffirm pundits' predictions that the smartphone market is increasingly becoming a two-horse race between Google and Apple. Source:eweek
Google is expected to make some significant announcements regarding its Android platform May 10 at its Google I/O developer show.
Apple's iPhone share ticked up to 25.5 percent from 25.2 percent over the same period, suggesting that the Verizon iPhone 4 is continuing to attract some buyers.
ComScore said Apple's actual hardware market share grew 1.1 percent to 7.9 percent, thanks to Verizon's iPhone 4 sales. Apple will reportedly not launch an iPhone 5 this summer, though it is expected to tether its next iPhone more closely with cloud-computing offerings.
Research in Motion's Blackberry market share continued its swoon in March, falling to 27 percent, from 28.9 percent through February, according to the researcher.
The declines aren't new or random; Blackberry share stood at 30.4 percent in January and was as high as 33.4 percent in November before Google and Apple captured a strong holiday season, knocking RIM from the top smartphone perch Android now commands.
RIM just closed its 10th annual Blackberry World developer's conference by giving out over 6,000 PlayBook tablet computers to the show's attendees.
The company also announced significant mobile-device management software for enterprises, including the ability to segment work and play content and manage Apple iOS and Android handsets and tablets
However, the company showed off only one major new phone, the Blackberry Bold 9900.
While this thin device appeared to be a quality entry with a 3.1-inch touch-screen and a QWERTY keyboard, RIM irked analysts by failing to provide satisfactory guidance for smartphones based on the PlayBook's QNX operating system.
RIM isn't the only suffering smartphone maker.
Microsoft Windows Phone isn't faring much better, falling to 7.5 percent from 7.7 percent U.S. share. The company continues to struggle with platform updates for its new phones.
The struggles of RIM and Microsoft, coupled with the long overdue retrenching of Nokia, reaffirm pundits' predictions that the smartphone market is increasingly becoming a two-horse race between Google and Apple. Source:eweek
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