Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Archos unleashes five (five!) new And...

Archos unleashes five (five!) new Android Froyo tablets, we go hands-on

"How do you tablet?" Oh yes, that's Archos' new tag line when it comes to its growing number of Android tablets. Good timing since, you know, it just went ahead and released a quintuplet of new gadgets. The offerings range from small PMP-like devices with 2.8- and 3.4-inch screens to higher-end 4.3-, 7- and 10.1-inch tablets. All will ship with Android 2.2 "Froyo" and will include accelerometers, while only some have capactive touchscreens, front-facing cameras and 1GHz processors. There's a lot more to them all -- we're talking five different devices, of course -- so we suggest hitting the break for a short rundown of each of them along with our early impressions. And don't forget to check out the the gallery of hands-on pictures and videos below.

North American Consumer Digital Camer...

North American Consumer Digital Camera Market Faces New Demands and Challenges


InfoTrends has just released its North American Consumer Digital Camera Forecast for 2010 – 2015. With the camera market beginning to mature, repeat purchases have become critical for sales, as 95% of all cameras purchased in 2009 were bought by households that already owned a camera. Although first-time buyers still represent an opportunity, the market is largely fuelled by purchases of replacement and additional cameras. New features and products will be crucial to getting consumers back into the buying cycle.

Interchangeable lens cameras are the brightest spot in the digital camera market, as they are projected to account for 32% of all digital camera revenues in 2015. The landscape for interchangeable lens cameras is expanding. The emergence of Micro Four Thirds and mirrorless hybrid cameras means that the term “digital single-lens reflex camera” (DSLR) no longer covers the full range of products available.


The new breed of compact interchangeable lens cameras will appeal to consumers on two levels: form factor and technology. The greatest challenge for new entrants is to develop a comprehensive range of lenses and accessories, as they will drive profitability.

Another challenge facing vendors is creating products that fit into the connected experience of sharing photos anywhere, anytime. The connected experience refers to connecting devices like TVs, set top boxes, game consoles, mobile phones, photo frames, and PCs with personal and commercial content and services. Digital cameras need to integrate with this ecosystem or they will risk being left out of the equation.

Having the ability to share photos instantly and use them to interact with others will be a driver for photo activity. Digital camera vendors must develop products that provide consumers with this option so they remain relevant to today’s user experience, otherwise they run the risk of losing the battle to camera phones.

InfoTrends’ North American Consumer Digital Camera Forecast for 2010 – 2015 provides a forecast for the U.S. market in terms of units, revenue, and average selling price for the consumer (sub-$1,500) digital camera, with price segments broken out. It also includes an analysis of the key market drivers, barriers, digital camera vendors, and ongoing market issues, as well as digital camera design and technology trends. In addition, the report provides a six-year forecast for Canada’s unit sales.


Monday, August 30, 2010

Google Earth Enterprise Portable Glob...

Google Earth Enterprise Portable Globe Creator

Posted By: Travis on Wednesday, August 25th, 2010 @ 3:54 pm 
Filed under: Google,Google Earth,News
Tags:  

As many of you may know Google has just this week released the latest version of Google Earth Enterprise This release includes many upgrades to both the Fusion and Earth servers but the most notable addition is the new Portable Globe Creator.  Previously if a client wanted to access a Google Earth Enterprise database (3D Globe) disconnected from their network they would need to use VM Ware running a Earth Server with complete Google Earth Databases published to it.  Now with the new Globe Creator a virtual machine is no longer required and clients can now clip out portions of globes.

There are two applications used in the creation and deployment of portable globes:

  1. The Google Earth Portable Globe Creator tool which runs on the Enterprise Earth Server and uses the Earth Plug-In.  This cutter allows users to select a globe, define a area of interest and package and download the information in a single globe file.
  2. The portable server is a light weight python based web server that runs on the client’s machine. It include a web based interface allows users to view the globe files created and downloaded with the cutter and select globes for broadcast.  It also enable users to broadcast portable globes to other earth clients on there “disconnected” network and / or Android based smart phones.

Once the server is running earth clients can connect simply by entering the server address when prompted (http://localhost:9335).   The portable globe can also be used with the Google Earth API.

Thanks for visiting www.firstbasesolutions.com.



Sunday, August 29, 2010

Your own broadcast truck on your hip... SONY LocationPorter

Here is a great new device that news teams and broadcasters can use when they are on the road. The Sony Location Porter is designed for people doing on-site reporting yet don’t have access to a professional broadcast truck or equipment. Rather than rely on old-hand satellite technology, you can connect to the web or via a 3G connection to make that important broadcast in live streaming video.

You can plug any camcorder or live feed into the LocationPorter, and your video will be converted to H.264 MPEG-4 on the fly, so it can be easily streamed. On a single 3G connection your footage gets smooshed down to a 352×240, 5 to 15fps stream (64 to 160kbps) but the device can actually use two simultaneous 3G connections to boost the data stream up to 320kbps. And when connected to a LAN, the video can be streamed up to 30fps.

Originally released last year as the RVT-SD100, the Location Porter allows a cameraman to transmit real time footage using either 3G connectivity or the internet.

This removes the presence of a mobile unit, i.e. your average news van. It is portable too since you could carry it across your shoulder with a sling-strap.



It can receive images from up to 12 locations at the same time.



This year Sony has unveiled two new versions of the nimble Location Porter, the RVT-SD200 and RVT-MR200. The SD200 is an upgrade of its predecessor while the MR200 can transmit and receive video footage from 12 different locations.

All that’s needed is for a monitor to be connected and viola! You’ve got an instant command center. This broad functionality marks an immense leap from the original SD100′s one-on-one use.

Sony expects the devices to be a hit not only among TV stations, but local government and emergency services as well.

That is, if they can shell out the dough. A single RVT-SD200/MR200 costs somewhere in the neighborhood of $20,000. Yikes!

Saturday, August 28, 2010

GD300 Android for TIGR

U.S. Army Brigade Combat Team Exercise Demonstrates Value of On-the-Move Networking

Joint Tactical Radio System technologies and the Warfighter Information Network-Tactical (WIN-T) seamlessly connect individual soldiers, ground sensors, aerial relays and vehicles to the company, battalion, brigade and higher echelons while on the move

WHITE SANDS MISSILE RANGE, N.M. – During a recent U.S. Army Brigade Combat Team Integration exercise, General Dynamics C4 Systems-led programs successfully demonstrated critical networking and communications capabilities that connected command posts, on-the-move forces and dismounted soldiers. General Dynamics C4 Systems is a business unit of General Dynamics (NYSE: GD).

During the exercise, widely dispersed Army units exchanged command-and-control messages, location information, voice, electronic chat and imagery while on the move. Using the Joint Tactical Radio System’s Soldier Radio Waveform and involving sensors, aerial platforms, vehicles and command posts, the seamless, ad-hoc networking extended connectivity to dismounted soldiers for the first time.





Monday, August 9th, 2010 at 1:11 PM PST
General Dynamics GD300 Pip-Boy Android for soldiers

Android is no stranger to the battlefield, as multiple applications have been made with the platform for military operations. This time around, though, we’re seeing some hardware in the mix, the arm-mounted Android computer from General Dynamics.

The General Dynamics GD300 is an 8-ounce GPS unit that’s worn on the wrist, sports an 8 hour battery life, and has a touch screen that will allow a solder to navigate the device with their gloves on, which just sounds to be a resistive screen.

General Dynamics spokesperson Mike DiBiase had this to say about the device,

We expect the [device to] become the most important 8 ounces of tactical communications and situational awareness equipment that a warfighter can carry.


  • 600MHz ARM® Cortex™ A8 processor
  • 256MB DDR memory
  • 8GB on-board Flash + microSD card expansion
  • 3.5” 800 x 480 WVGA sunlight readable display
  • Glove-friendly touch screen
  • Fully integrated high sensitivity SIRF Star III GPS
  • High gain quadrafilar-helix antenna
  • Auto load moving map with pan/zoom
  • 1550 mAH single cell Lithium Ion
  • Hibernation and standby modes
  • MIL-STD 810G
  • IP54
  • Flexible expansion docking connector
  • Wrist Mount Radio Interface Kit (RIK)
  • Four programmable radio control buttons
  • Radio interface cabling system

Those are some pretty positive words to say about the device, and the OS for that matter. The GD300, which reminds us of the Pip-Boy 3000 device from the game Fallout 3, runs on a 600Mhz CPU with a 3.5 inch touch screen, 8GB of flash memory onboard, a sunlight-readable display, and comes with your standard set of Android buttons.

The 3.5-inch touch-screen display lets warfighters move information around, zoom in or out or place digital ‘markers’ on tactical maps with the touch of a gloved finger.

The GD300 comes with military apps like the Tactical Ground Reporting (TIGR) System, which is currently being used in the military, pre-installed in the unit. Who knows if the GD300 will be the one military operations device that “warfighters” will come to rely on in the battlefield, or if there will be many different devices floating around in the future.

Either way, the GD300 looks like a good start, and the military praises Android for being so adaptive to their needs. Looks like being an open OS is more helpful that even Google may have thought. It’s cool to see that Android is being taken very seriously on so many different fronts, and it doesn’t seem like that will be slowing down anytime soon. We’ve already seen the Android car, let’s hope we see the Android Tank next.


WIN-T, JTRS HMS, Land Warrior, Command Post of the Future (CPOF) and the Tactical Ground Reporting System (TIGR) integrate very effectively and demonstrate the importance of the network to bringing critical mission data to the warfighter.”


* Warfighter Information Network – Tactical (WIN-T) demonstrating the ability to extend the network by connecting an aerial layer to enhance warfighter situational awareness on the ground.


* Joint Tactical Radio System (JTRS) Handheld, Manpack, Small Form Fit (HMS) Rifleman Radios (AN/PRC-154) connecting squad leaders with their teams using Land Warrior Systems; as well as JTRS HMS Manpack radios (AN/PRC-155) integrated into command posts, vehicular Network Integration Kits (NIKs) and Manpackable Network Integration Kits (MNIKs) across geographically dispersed platoons.


* HMS Small Form Fit (SFF) radios were also integrated into Unattended Ground Sensors (UGS), the Shadow Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV), Persistent Ground Surveillance Systems (PGSS) Aerostat, as well as the UH-60 and Apache helicopters to instantly extend the reach of the network.


* Command Post of the Future (CPOF) and Tactical Ground Reporting (TIGR) to equip command posts with command and control capabilities traditionally reserved for higher echelons.

Thursday, August 26, 2010

AVC/H.264 is the Go

MPEG LA's AVC License Will Not Charge Royalties for Internet Video that is Free to End Users through Life of License

(DENVER, CO, US – 26 August 2010) – MPEG LA announced today that its AVC Patent Portfolio License will continue not to charge royalties for Internet Video that is free to end users (known as "Internet Broadcast AVC Video") during the entire life of this License. MPEG LA previously announced it would not charge royalties for such video through December 31, 2015 (see http://www.mpegla.com/Lists/MPEG%20LA%20News%20List/Attachments/226/n-10-02-02.pdf ), and today's announcement makes clear that royalties will continue not to be charged for such video beyond that time. Products and services other than Internet Broadcast AVC Video continue to be royalty-bearing.

MPEG LA's AVC Patent Portfolio License provides access to essential patent rights for the AVC/H.264 (MPEG-4 Part 10) digital video coding standard. In addition to Internet Broadcast AVC Video, MPEG LA's AVC Patent Portfolio License provides coverage for devices that decode and encode AVC video, AVC video sold to end users for a fee on a title or subscription basis and free television video services. AVC video is used in set-top boxes, media player and other personal computer software, mobile devices including telephones and mobile television receivers, Blu-ray Disc™ players and recorders, Blu-ray video optical discs, game machines, personal media player devices and still and video cameras.

For more information about MPEG LA's AVC License or to request a copy of the License, please visit http://www.mpegla.com/main/programs/AVC/Pages/Intro.aspx

I-O Data's HDPN-U500/V portable hard ...

I-O Data's HDPN-U500/V portable hard drive pulls video from your camcorder, plays it on your TV

Looking for a quick and easy way to bridge the gap between your camcorder and your TV? Then you might want to consider I-O Data's new 500GB HDPN-U500/V portable hard drive, which packs a USB port to pull video directly off a compatible Sanyo Xacti, JVC Everio, or Sony Handycam camcorder, and an HDMI port to let you play that video on your TV straight from the hard drive. Of course, it'll also function just fine as a regular external hard drive for your computer, and it boasts a shock-resistant design that should let you toss it around a bit without too much worry. No word on a release over here just yet, but folks in Japan should be able to pick this one up next month for ¥15,330, or about $180.

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

ViewSonic to bring 3D camcorder, fram...

ViewSonic to bring 3D camcorder, frame, more to IFA

The European arm of ViewSonic said it will bring a number of new products to the IFA trade show in Berlin at the start of September, including an affordable 3D camcorder, a 3D digital camera, a portable 3D TV and its promised dual-boot tablet. The camcorder will have the capability to record 720p HD video, sport a glasses-free 3D display and cost $300. Other technical details are thus far unknown, and a 3D still camera will also be debuted at the show.

Other 3D products on display will include a handheld 3D TV, the size of which is not known. A 3D digital photo frame will also be shown off.

At the same time, ViewSonic will bring out a seven-inch Android-powered ViewPad 7 tablet and a 10-inch tablet that can dual boot to either Android and Windows. The former will have 3G and Wi-Fi radios, front- and rear-facing cameras, assisted GPS, a microSD card slot, Bluetooth, a tilt sensor and USB. The latter will be powered by an
Intel chip.

When these devices reach the market hasn't been revealed, but the official announcements from the show are just over a week away.


Read more: http://www.electronista.com/articles/10/08/25/viewsonic.debuting.3d.camcorder.camera.at.ifa/#ixzz0xedkbMC0

Garmin recalls 1.25 million nuvi GPS ...

Garmin recalls 1.25 million nuvi GPS units over battery fire

Garmin issued a voluntary recall for about 1.25 million nüvi navigation devices on Wednesday. The request was due to the potential to catch fires, which is the result of the combination of a battery manufactured by a third party and a specific circuit board design. Nearly 800,000 of the affected units were sold in the US, and may include nüvi 200W, 250W, 260W and nüvi 700-series models...

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Four GPS Point-and-Shoot Cameras

Comparison of Four GPS Cameras

There are four GPS equipped cameras - two have compasses as well. The Ricoh is a hardened camera but really lacks "camera" qualities but makes it up with some additional features for voice notes as well as extended GPS features. WHat is noteabe for the Rocoh is that the GPS, Compass, and Bar-code features are third party add-ons. The Ricoh costs around $1000 more over better cameras. Its video provision is "tired". My suggestion - buy four SONY DSC-HX5V for the price of one equipped Ricoh?


Manufacturer / ModelRicho 500SEPanasonic DMC ZS7RSONY DSC-HX5VSamsung HZ35W
TypePoint and ShootPoint and Shoot
Point and Shoot
Point and Shoot
A-Focus Points-59-
Image Size8Mp12.1Mp10.2Mp14Mp
Optical Zoom3X12X10X15X
ISO- 1600 - 320032003200
JPEGxxxx
MPEG-AVCHDAVCHDAVCHD
AVIx-
--
Video320x240740p1080i720i
GPS(3rd Party)xxx
Compass
(3rd Party)-x-
Media TypeSDSDSD and Memory StickSD
Price Current Sept 2010$1350$365$349$349
LinkRicoh 500S
Panasonic DMC ZS7R
SONY DSC-HX5V
Samsung HZ35W

CODEC Frustrations .... and some solutions

A good place to find hard to find CODECs... and what they are and who may have them... not all are created equally and there is some distress between where Apple wants to go and Windows Media Player...

Some popular codecs

Below were listed - by name and purpose - some of the most popular audio/speech and video codecs.

AUDIO CODECS

- AAC: music with digital rights (DRM)
- ACELP.live: music (VoiceAge)
- AIFF: music (Macintosh)
- AU: music (Sun)
- MP3: music (Fraunhofer IIS)
- Ogg Vorbis: music (open source standard)
- RA, RAM: music (RealNetworks streaming)
- WMA: music (
Microsoft)

SPEECH CODECS

- µ-Law PCM: telephone circuit (U.S.)
- ACELP.net: general speech (VoiceAge)
- ACELP.wide: high quality (VoiceAge)
- A-Law PCM: telephone circuit (Europe)
- AMR-NB: GSM, 3GPP (ETSI narrowband)
- AMR-WB: GSM, 3GPP (ETSI wideband)
- DV Audio: MiniDV, audio
- G.711: audio/videoconferencing (ITU)
- G.722: audio/videoconferencing (ITU)
- G.723.1: VoIP, audio/videoconferencing (ITU)
- G.728: audio/videoconferencing (ITU)
- G.729: audio/videoconferencing (ITU)
- GSM 06.10: GSM, cellphone (unknown)

VIDEO CODECS

- AVI: movies (Microsoft)
- Cinepak: movies (SuperMac Technologies)
- H.261: videoconferencing (ITU)
- H.263: videoconferencing (ITU)
- H.264: videoconferencing (ITU)
- Indeo: movies (Intel)
- MPEG-1: movies (Moving Pictures Experts Group)
-
MPEG-2: movies (Moving Pictures Experts Group)
- MPEG-4: movies (Moving Pictures Experts Group)
- RM, RV: movies and streaming (RealNetworks)
- Sorenson: movies (Sorenson Media)
- WMV: movies and streaming (Microsoft)





FFDShow FFDShow is a DirectShow decoding filter for decompressing DivX movies. It supports all of the following movie file types: XviD, H.264, FLV1, WMV, MPEG-1 and MPEG-2, MPEG-4.


MediaPlayer CodecPack - MediaPlayer has a good following for harder to find codecs.

Package Components:


● DivX 7.4 Pro Video Codec.
● DivX h.264 Video (Decoder) Codec.
● XviD 1.2.2 Video (Encoder) Codec - Koepi's 07/06/09 Build.
● ffdshow Video Codec 20100524 x86 Revision 3452 by xxl.
● ffdshow Video Codec 20100531 x64 Revision 3466 by clsid.
● Microsoft - Windows Media 9 Video Codec 9.0.1.369.
● On2 Technologies VP7 Video (Decoder) Codec 7.0.8.
● On2 Technologies VP6 Video Codec 6.4.2.
● Flash Video Splitter 1.2.908 x86 & x64.
● Ligos Indeo XP Video Codec 5.2820.15.58.
● Intel Indeo Video Codec 4.51.16.2.
● Intel Indeo Video Codec 3.24.1.2.

● InterVideo Video Filter 7.0.27.191.
● CyberLink DVD Video/SP Filter 6.0.2.2806.
● AC3Filter 1.63b x86 & x64.
● AC3File 0.7b x86 & x64.
● Spdifer 0.3b x86 & x64.

● Core AAC Playback Filter 1.2.0.573 + AAC Parser Filter 1.1.0 By Tom Judd.
● Core Vorbis Playback Filter 1.1.0.79 + OGG Splitter 1.2.908 By Gabest.
● RadLight OFR Playback Filter 1.0.0.1 - for OptimFROG.
● Lame MP3 3.98.2 ACM Codec.
● DSP-worx Bass source filter 1.11.

● Haali Media Splitter 20/05/10 x86 & x64 - For MP4, MKV, OGM and AVI container files.
● Matroska Source Splitter 1.2.908 x86 & x64.
● MP4 Source Splitter 1.2.908 x86 & x64.
● MPEG Source Splitter 1.2.908 x86 & x64.
● RealMedia Source Splitter 1.2.908 x86 & x64.
● AVI - AC3/DTS Converter + DTS/AC3 Source Filter x86 & x64 By Gabest.

● VSFilter 2.39.5 x86 & 2.37 x64 - Subtitle Readers.
● CDXA Reader 1.2.908 - Also known as Form 2 Mode 2 CD or XCD x86 & x64.
● GSpot Codec Information Appliance 2.70a.



Cloud Cap adopts Red Hen Spatial Media Standards





Product Updates

Cloud Cap Technology is proud to announce new video export features to be included in the upcoming update release of our ViewPoint gimbal user interface software. These new features include:

  1. Creation of metadata and video for export to Red Hen System's MediaMapper Server (MMS) and desktop GIS application plug-ins. Red Hen solutions extend the value of aerial video, allowing users to geo-tag multimedia to create and share work products using industry-standard GIS mapping and mission planning tools.
  2. Exporting the entire ViewPoint user display, including the video, moving map, and selected telemetry data, to an AVI or MPEG file.
  3. Export quality settings for making small, email-friendly videos, or large, presentation-quality videos.

These new features will improve users’ ability to easily export video to Red Hen’s MMS and desktop software or share video files with customers and other users not running ViewPoint. Goodrich

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Leaked images show Sony A55 and A33 D...

Leaked images show Sony A55 and A33 DSLRs



Several leaked images show Sony's upcoming A55 and A33 DSLRs that recently surfaced in a separate report. The A55 is expected to get a 16 megapixel sensor with an ISO range of 100 to 12,800 and support for 1080i video. Users will also be able to take advantage of 10FPS burst shooting, a swivel LCD and integrated GPS for automatic geotagging.

The A33 offers many of the same basic specs, but with a 14 megapixel sensor and no integrated GPS. The camera supports slightly slower burst shooting at 7FPS. Both models also offer dual memory slots and 15 autofocus points.

Read more: http://www.electronista.com/articles/10/08/18/release.dates.still.unclear/#ixzz0x3bAoZc6

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Shooting Pics That Pop [The Mossberg ...

Shooting Pics That Pop [The Mossberg Solution]

Thanks to the success of movies like “Avatar” and the excitement over 3-D televisions and gaming, it has become a lot harder to laugh off the idea of wearing dorky 3-D glasses while watching TV or sitting at computer.

This week, I tested a device that lets you create your own 3-D content. I used Fuji Film’s FinePix Real 3D W3 (fujifilmusa.com/products/3D), a $500 digital camera due in stores the first week of September. This digital camera has two lenses, two 10-megapixel sensors and two shutters that work like your eyes, simultaneously capturing two images from two angles with the press of one button. After capturing an image or video in 3-D, an internal processor merges these two images into one, which can be seen on the back of the camera in a stunning display—no special glasses required.

But to see photos and videos in their beautiful 3-D format outside of the camera’s 3.5-inch display screen, you need to view them on a 3-D TV or laptop while wearing special glasses.

If you own a 3-D television that has an HDMI 1.4 input, like certain models made by Sony, Panasonic, Samsung and LG, this camera can plug into those TVs to play back the images or videos you’ve captured. As is the case for all 3-D viewing on these TVs, you won’t actually see anything in 3-D unless you wear special glasses, which can run more than a $100 a pair.

You can view FinePix 3-D photos on any computer that has Nvidia Corp.’s 3D Vision System built-in, as long as you’re wearing Nvidia’s 3D Vision Glasses.

Other systems may also work, but Fuji Film hasn’t officially tested those, according to a representative.

And since most people don’t yet own 3-D TVs, laptops and glasses, you’ll have a hard time sharing your 3-D content with all your friends. Most of us will be frustrated that we can’t share 3-D digital content like we share other digital content—using our computers and smartphones to send it via email or social networks.

If you’re desperate to share your FinePix 3-D images, Fuji Film will print your photos out on special 5×7-inch 3-D paper through its SeeHere.com website. These prints don’t require glasses for viewing, and the handful I saw looked remarkably good. But they cost a whopping $7 a print and take up to 10 days to get via the mail, which is enough to make anyone think twice.

The FinePix Real 3D W3 camera itself is rather good looking and forgivably chunky given what it includes: the parts for two cameras built into one; a special processor for combining two images; and a serious 3-D display screen.

This model is a big improvement to its predecessor, the FinePix Real 3D, which came out last year for $100 more and was one of the first 3-D cameras available for consumers. That original camera was comparatively bulkier and heavier, and it had many more buttons rather than solid switches and a settings dial.

I really enjoyed capturing photos of friends or landscapes because these looked more dynamic in 3-D. From a helpful booklet of tips for making better 3-D photos that comes with this camera, I learned to make sure I was standing about four to five feet away from my subject and to take photos with varying degrees of depth in them, including a foreground and background. Friends who stuck out their arms while holding objects looked like they were reaching out at me when I played the photos back on the preview screen. And videos were even more impressive.

MOSSBERG

The FinePix Real 3D W3 has a “2D—3D” button (lower right) to go from shooting in 2-D to 3-D.
Memory Issue

The 3-D images take up twice the memory of 2-D images because the camera is capturing two images and combining them into one, a process that involves saving the two original images. The FinePix Real 3D W3 accepts SD and SD-HC (high capacity) cards; I used one that was four gigabytes and costs less than $15.

If you’d rather shoot a regular 2-D image or video, simply touch a “2D–3D” button on the camera. Advanced 2-D modes let you use each of the camera’s sensors and lenses independent of one another, as if you were shooting with two different cameras. One can zoom in on a shot while the other shoots at a wide angle; one can capture an image in black and white while the other captures it in color, and so on.

While this camera’s 3-D images and videos look incredible, most people will be frustrated by the limited viewing options and the inability to share them with every friend. As is often the case with 3-D, it can be gorgeous and fun to play with, but still too limiting to enjoy.

Edited by Walter S. Mossberg

Android: The Future Of Consumer GPS –...

Android: The Future Of Consumer GPS – Part II

After yesterday’s magnum opus about how Android will transform the consumer GPS industry, today’s shorter post is a few random thoughts on how the big three handheld GPS makers might be affected by Android, and how they might respond. Personally, I think it’s going to be tough for them to adapt. Up until recently, handheld GPS units have been a fairly limited specialty market, allowing manufacturers to control interfaces and map data, and charge exorbitant prices due to limited competition. In most consumer electronics fields, prices drop even as capabilities increase; that really hasn’t been the case for handheld GPS. Android has the capability to turn GPS into a commodity market, meaning less control and more competition, leading to lower prices. And this is an environment that the old-school GPS vendors may have trouble with.

Magellan: Magellan is still struggling to overcome the disastrous premiere of their Triton line in 2008: decent hardware with capabilities unique at the time (raster imagery, 3-axis compass) sabotaged by horribly buggy software. Most of these problems got fixed, but too late to make a difference. Magellan was acquired late in 2008 by MiTAC (parent company of Mio, and they’ve just recently announced a new series of Explorist models, due out this fall. For standard GPS models, the specs on these look pretty good, and the prices are very competitive. But in the long run, I don’t see how they can compete with more-capable Android models that are likely to sell in the same price range or even lower. Putting someone else’s Android unit into a Magellan body with a better antenna and waterproof/field-rugged design might be a better way to go. They already have some experience using that approach with their new case for the iPhone, which enhances the iPhone’s GPS abilities while offering better protection against the elements; they just have to do it more cheaply.

DeLorme: DeLorme has moved into second place for handheld GPS units with their PN series, the first consumer models with raster/aerial imagery, and the first models with an affordable subscription plan for this imagery. They’ve also come out with a new model recently, the PN-60, with an upgraded interface and the ability to interface with SPOT communicators for satellite text messaging. But $400 for a GPS with a 2.2” display? No touchscreen? No apps? Their $250 xMap software lets you upload GIS data (raster and vector) to their PN models, but you can already put raster imagery on Android models, and GIS vector data can’t be too far behind. I don’t see this proprietary hardware line as having much of a future, and they don’t have much experience with alternative hardware.

Garmin: Garmin seems to develop an OS for their GPS units, and then use it as long as they can. The OS developed for their eMap model in 1999 was adapted and upgraded for most of their handheld models through 2006, culminating in the classic 60/76Cx series. These were probably the best-selling handheld consumer GPS series of all time, and four years later are still among their most popular units. They’re only 2.5 years into their next-gen GPS OS, the one that powers the Colorado/Oregon/Dakota/62/78 series, and they’ve certainly released a ton of variant models in these lines. The question is whether they can move past their own proprietary hardware and software designs and move quickly to an Android platform, using their strong GPS expertise to bring additional features that will differentiate their models from the rest of the market.

I’d like to think so – I’ve been a Garmin fanboy for 10 years now, and even now that I own a Droid X, you’ll have to pry my 60Cx out of my cold dead hands. But their recent history isn’t encouraging. Their first attempt to move Garmin technology to a cellphone platform, the nuvifone, was universally despised by reviewers. Their second effort, the Garminfone, was based on the Android platform, and received much more favorable reviews; the car navigation software of the Garminfone is generally considered to be the best Android car navigation system so far. If the phone had come out in the latter half of 2009 as originally scheduled, it could have been a huge success. But instead, it was first released in June 2010, and was crippled by:

  • Older software; it ran Android 1.6 when every other phone being released at the same time ran Android 2.1
  • A custom interface that makes it very difficult to upgrade to more recent Android versions
  • Slow processor
  • 3 MP camera
  • A screen pixel count 1/4 of its similarly-priced competitors, and a smaller screen
  • Garmin car navigation software on competing models that, while not as good, was free
  • Lousy battery life
  • No headphone jack

In short, simply not competitive with other Android phones. A month-and-a-half after being introduced for $199.99, it was already discounted by $70, and was part of a “buy one, get one free” package from T-Mobile. Even with that, it’s only sold about 20,000 units, which Garmin themselves acknowledged as a disappoint performance in their latest quarterly report..

If Garmin is going to survive in the consumer market, they’re going to have to move faster than that in developing products. And they’re going to have to give up control of the overall interface in favor of Android’s standard, putting their interface into just their applications. And they need to leverage their GPS engineering capabilities and map data into advantages that make their units stand out. If they don’t, they’re going to have a tough time surviving in this new market.

Monday, August 16, 2010

Flash 10.1 Graduates From Beta, Appea...

Flash 10.1 Graduates From Beta, Appears on Android Market

androidflash

Over the years cell phones have gotten progressively better in terms of both ahrdware and sfotware. Now a days, it’s much more common to find a typical cell phone much closer resembling a handhelp computer than a cell phone of yesteryear. Anyways, due to this surge in advancement, the mobile web has gotten much more true to the desktop experience when talking about some of these smartphones.

However, there are some problems that remain for various handsets currently on the market. The iPhone, for instnacen, does not feature support for Adobe’s Flash platform due to Steve Jobs expressing his disinterest in the platform.

Android, on the other hand, is in a different boat. For quite some time Adobe has expressed interest indeveloping for the platform and when Android 2.2 rolled around it brought with it support for the Flash platform. At the time, Flash 10.1 was in beta but today we are pleased to announce that it has released beta and is now available to download in the Android Market.

Unfortunately, it seems that only Nexus One owners are currently able to snag the downlaod but over the next couple of weeks as more handsets are updated to 2.2 they most likely will recieve the final Flash 10.1 build as well.

Android: The Future Of Consumer GPS –...

Free Geography Tools - Android: The Future Of Consumer GPS – Part I

I’ve owned a handheld GPS ever since the first “consumer-grade” model, the Motorola Traxar, was released in 1993: $900, 6 AA batteries, 8 satellites max, could only record waypoints, and about the size and weight of a brick. Man, was that an awesome GPS unit! I’ve upgraded several times since then, and am glad that handhelds have improved as much as they have. But I’ve always chafed at their restricted ability to record information out in the field: waypoints with a name and short description, tracks with a name, and that’s pretty much it.

Back in January, I posted my “wishlist” for a field-ready GPS unit; I had hoped that the newer Garmin Oregon models might satisfy most of those requirements, but a lousy touch interface makes those units too difficult to work with. I tried to put together a“field-ready” semi-rugged Windows netbook that met most of my needs, but the poor screen visibility in sunlight conditions was just too great a restriction on its use; while still handy to have, full utility required either shade or a cloth draped over my head. I had pretty much given up on finding what I wanted, and was about to buy one of the new Garmin 62-series GPS units as an upgrade from my trusty Garmin 60Cx; nowhere near all the features I wanted, but enough extra ones (aerial/raster imagery, three-axis compass) to justify the purchase.

A recent upgrade in local cellular antennas finally let me dump my landline phone, and move over to a full-time cellular connection. As part of that process, I decided to pick up an Android smartphone, specifically a Motorola Droid X. While I knew it came with a GPS, that wasn’t the primary reason for getting it – I just wanted a phone that would allow me to stay connected to email and Internet when I was out and about. But having used it for a few weeks now, I’m now convinced that GPS-capable Android-powered units, phones or otherwise, are going to completely transform both the handheld and automotive GPS markets.

Here’s a comparison of my Droid X with the comparable top-of-the-line Garmin unit, the Oregon 550. Bold text indicates which unit IMHO has the advantage in that category.

Motorola Droid XGarmin Oregon 550Comments
Price$569 list$499 listThe Garmin is often discounted by about $100; the Droid X currently isn’t, but will likely drop dramatically in price over the next six months. This doesn’t include cellular plan costs.
Weight6 oz.6.8 oz.
Processor Speed1 GHz200 MHz (?)
Storage RAM8 GB2 GB
microSD expansionComes with 16 GB, can take up to 32 GB4 GB
Display size4.3” diagonal3” diagonal
Screen Resolution480 x 840240 x 400
DPI240157
Color Depth16 (24)16Droid X screen is 24-bit-color capable, but some specs indicate that the OS is only displaying 16-bit color
Daylight Screen VisibilityGoodVery goodBiggest problem with Droid X screen is glare; screen protector helps with that.
Shade/Indoor Screen VisibilityOutstandingVery good
GPS Satellites1212+Unclear from specs
WAAS/EGNOSNo?YesUnclear from specs
Assisted GPSYesNoNetwork signal reduces TTFF
Three-axis compassYesYes
Camera8 MP5 MP
Multiple camera modesYesNoDroid X has standard, macro, panorama, plus multiple exposure controls
VideoYes – 720p HDNo
Barometric AltimeterNoYes
CalculatorYesYesDroid X has advantage because you can download and install multiple calculator apps
TouchscreenYes; multi-touch capacitiveYes; resistiveA draw; multi-touch is useful, but resistive can be used with gloves on
Keyboard data entryYes; multiple QWERTY keyboards available, some with text predictionYes; A-Z keyboardYou can choose your preferred data entry mode with the Droid.
Voice-to-text data entryYes, with wireless connectionNo
Voice recordingYesNo
Text data limitsLimited only by unit’s memoryLimited by waypoint data fields – about 80 characters
Wireless connectivityWiFi; 3G; BluetoothProprietary wireless interfaceWith a Garmin, you can only transfer wireless data between compatible units
Battery life5-6 hours (?)16 hoursFor Droid X, depends on screen brightness, whether you have the wireless connections on, etc..
Field-ruggedNoYesGarmin is IPX7-waterproof
Built-in mapsYesYesGarmin has baseline vector map; Droid has Google Maps
Free up-to-date online maps and POI dataYesNoGarmin’s detailed vector maps have to be purchased; updates cost extra. Droid has access to continuously-updated maps for free, but these typically require the unit to be online.
Offline raster mapsYes with third-party appsYes with Garmin Custom Maps, BirdsEye subscription
Offline vector dataYes with third-party appsYes with free/paid Garmin mapsGarmin data ecosystem still far superior here.
Car navigationYes (free, but requires wireless connection)Yes (requires paid Garmin maps)Draw; Droid has voice, 3D navigation, but requires wireless connection; Garmin works offline.
Waypoints, tracks, routesYes with third-party appsYesDroid third-party apps give you more freedom with what you do with the data
GeocachingYes with third-party appsYes
Ability to add additional applicationsYESNO

I could go on, but just from the above, the Droid X is at least competitive with the Garmin feature-wise, and you could easily make the argument that overall it’s far superior. The few categories where the Droid X falls short (WAAS, ruggedness, battery life) can be partially remedied with add-ons: you can use it with a WAAS-capable Bluetooth GPS transmitter, spare batteries are cheap on eBay, and cases offer some level of physical protection. But more to the point, they are due to the Droid X being designed to be primarily a cellphone, not a GPS unit. It really shouldn’t be hard at all to design a unit that remedies those failings, and sell it at a reasonable cost.

Here’s a link to a mil-spec ruggedized Android GPS unit already available; currently costs $1200, but divide that by the factor of 3-5 that military contractors typically add on and you’d have a reasonably-priced consumer unit. Less-expensive consumer Android models with GPS are on the way, like the Samsung Yepp at about $350, or this Archos mini-tablet for $150; it’s not that big a stretch to think that fully field-qualified versions of those units could be made and sold fairly cheaply. And I’m especially intrigued by the Notion Ink Adam, an Android-based tablet due out late this year or early next year. The Adam will be offered with an optional 10.1” Pixel Qi LCD screen, which can be switched from a standard transmissive LCD mode to a sunlight-visible transflective color mode, and then to a low-power black-and-white e-Ink-like mode. With GPS, WiFi, 3G, and built-in camera, this model will sell for $498, or less than a Wifi-only iPad.

But hardware is only a small part of Android’s advantage; the big advantage is that you can put applications onto an Android unit to add functionality, something you can’t do with standard Garmin GPS units. There are already hundreds of position/geography/location-aware apps available for Android units, and that number grows every day. There’s currently only a very limited number of GIS-related apps, but I’d be surprised if many more of those don’t show up soon. And even with the limited number of apps currently available, you can already do far more with an GPS-equipped Android unit than with a standard handheld GPS. Given the impending death of the classic Windows Mobile platform, the primarily OS for many portable GIS and data acquisition apps like ArcPad and Terrasync, it would make sense for companies like Trimble and Ashtech to look at Android as a viable platform for future hardware and software development.

I suppose that the Apple iPhone/iTouch/iPad/iOs ecosystem could be a viable alternative to Android-based models – the hardware and software are certainly good enough – but I doubt it will be. Anyone can license the Android OS and create a hardware device that uses it, which means more models, more competition, and lower prices. Apple has firm and exclusive control of all hardware that runs iOS, which means fewer models and higher prices. I think they’re repeating the same mistakes that resulted in Windows dominating the PC market, but whatever; at least for now, it’s a lucrative market for them.

All for now – a few more random thoughts tomorrow.