Latest Tech News - New!
Home | About AliceAsk Alice | FREE Newsletter | Alice's Articles | WineGirl |
 
My Favorite
Buzzword:

Get ready for the Wireless MAN, baby. Or short for Wireless Metropolitan Area Network.
> All About The MAN

Spam Overload Dept:
According to a recent survey, about 65 percent of Net users spend 10 minutes or more a day dealing with spam. About 37 percent of respondents get 100 junk messages a day, and 63 percent get 50 or more.
Source:
Symantec and Insightexpress

Tech Essentials:
Ben Sullivan's Tech Blog | Beta News | Gizmodo| Alice & Bill.com|
 Everything Burns | CNET |
News.com |
NY Times |
SiliconValley |
Slashdot |
The Register |
Tom's Hardware |Walt Mossberg

Business Magazines:

Business 2.0 | Business Week | CFO Economist | Fast Company | Forbes | Fortune | Inc. |
|
Newsweek | Red Herring | Smart Money | Time | US News |
Wired



Syndicate
my Site
 

  Alice Hill's Technology Watch
 
Friday, August 13, 2004
iPod Cameras
Remember when everything was iMac-colored see-through plastic? There were transparent green telephones, and red see-through answering machines and on and on.

Today, Kyocera has partnered with Apple to create digital cameras in the distinctive iPod Mini's 5 color scheme. Which can only mean one thing: an onslaught of iPod Mini-inspired answering machines and cordless phones and so on.

Here we go again....


Metal Rubber
There is a great article from Popular Science on a new material called Metal Rubber. The hope is that it will lead to a breakthrough in wearable computing, but for now, it's mostly just really interesting. See for yourself:

"By Laura Allen: Terrible, horrible things can be done to this millimeters-thick patch of shimmering material crafted by chemists at NanoSonic in Blacksburg, Virginia. Twist it, stretch it double, fry it to 200 degrees C, douse it with jet fuel - the stuff survives. After the torment, it snaps like rubber back to its original shape, all the while conducting electricity like solid metal. 'Any other material would lose its conductivity,' says Jennifer Hoyt Lalli, NanoSonic's director of nanocomposites.

"The abused substance is called Metal Rubber, and, according to NanoSonic, its particular properties make it unique in the world of material chemistry. As a result, the company's small office has been flooded with calls from Fortune 500 companies and government agencies eager to test Metal Rubber's use in everything from artificial muscles to smart clothes to shape-shifting airplane wings."


Wireless Radio Wave-Blocking Paint
Ok Now We've Really Seen It All Dept: DefendAir Radio Shield Paint ($68.00) "This specially formulated flat interior paint can help reduce the transmission of wireless radio waves through walls, ceilings and doors. Create a field of protection inside your home or office. Some radio waves may pass through depending on signal strength and other conditions.

"With 1 mil dry film thickness the product can be used to prevent radio wave bleeding and block radio interference and noise. Shielding range 100MHz-2.6GHz (see graph). Can shield frequencies up to 5GHz with multiple coats. Actual performance depends on the user environment. We recommend multiple coats for better shielding."


D-Link's New Wireless Pocket Router
WiFi companies are finally getting wise to the fact that we want wireless networking when we hit the road. I've gotten many a cavity search when going through airport security because of my alarming array of routers and cables and power adapters. But I digress....

The AirPlus G DWL-G730AP Wireless Pocket Router/AP (Say that one three times quickly) is $99.



 
Thursday, August 12, 2004
802.11n??
A new group called WWiSE (which right off the bat sounds STUpiD to us) has propsed a new WiFi standard called 802.11n. That part sounds SMaRT, esepcially since it will be backwards compatible with 802.11b and 802.11g. The proposed speed will be a blazing 540 Mbps which sounds great as well, although will probably cause your head to grow tumors while you download files. But again, this is all going to take awhile if waiting for 802.11g is any indicator.


DOOM III Easter Eggs
PlanetDOOM has a great section on the latest and greatest Easter eggs hidden in Doom III.

Includes a shot at Valve, a code from the original Doom and all sorts of other things you have to really love the series to appreciate. And we mean really...


AOL to Offer Cheap PCs
UPDATED: AOL just announced that it was going to start selling ultra-cheap ($300) PCs plus a printer to groups that have not yet signed up for dial-up. To us this sounds like a desperate act that has failed in the past - the "FREE or nearly Free PC If You do X" concept went down in flames with many a start-up.

Reuters reported, "The launch is part of a broad strategy at the recovering online service, which watched 2.2 million members abandon its service. Over the past two years, the company has attempted to find new sources of revenue by appealing to different categories of customers including the Spanish-speaking and teen markets. Executives said it hoped to attract the 27 percent of U.S. households comprised of seniors, African Americans and Hispanics who do not yet own a PC."


Microsoft to Temporarily Stop Auto-Update of SP2
Matt Cameron At OverClockers Corner has the following info on the Service Pak 2 debacle: "Microsoft said that they will be giving customers a tool to prevent SP2 to from being automatically installed on their computer via Automatic Update or Windows Update. Microsoft originally was going to 'force' the new service pack upon users but because there is so much controversy over the potential of applications no longer working after install the Service Pack, Microsoft has decide to make it a choice of the users."


Innovative Bus/Train
New Buzzword Dept: Get ready for the DMV or dual-mode vehicle.

Japan is experimenting with a combo bus/train that can break free of railway tracks and use roads, or bust out of traffic and use the railway lines. Sounds like a lot of logistical management is needed to avoid train collisions, but the new cars are lighter for railway use and hopefully will help cut down track damage as a result.




 
Tuesday, August 10, 2004
High Tech Toast
Ok, so maybe this isn't the most "tech" thing going, but we will always applaud anyone who takes an ancient design or ho hum product and seriously updates it. In this case, Trabo's Black "Tech combi toaster ABS black, double function 'pop-up' and traditional (pull-up), electronic timer, stop and cancel function, removable crumb tray. Removable cable. LED On/Off. Cool walls." It's like the Death Star of Toasters!


Lighted Umbrella
This is definitely shaping up to be weird tech day, or is that near-tech day? Never mind.

Here is an umbrella sold in the UK (naturally) that illuminates you as you walk. I guess that these should appeal to the demographic of people desperate for attention or those truly lost in the dark. The rest of us will get by with the $4 cheapies you buy off the street corner when it rains.



 
Monday, August 09, 2004
TiVo Halves Prices to Drive Sales
The BBC just announced that TiVo is slashing prices 50 percent to get 10 million users by 2008. If you haven't purchased a TiVo yet (ARE YOU THAT CLUELESS????) this is your chance to experience the magic for a mere $100.

Do we need to drive you to a store?? TiVo will change your life. Period.


Forget the H2, Here Comes The SMARTRUCK III
Beep Beep Dept: Gizmo.com has a great piece on the ultimate truck, the SmarTruck III. Here are some highlights:

"For the Air Force, it can be a command-and-control center designed to monitor airfields and their vast surrounding areas. For the Border Patrol and U.S. Marshals, SMARTRUCK III will detect the movement of personnel or vehicles in remote areas. For Homeland Security, it is configured to monitor both bio threats and personnel movements.

"For a war zone, it brings state-of-the-art communications and detection systems while offering up-armored protection to withstand terrorist and insurgent roadside attacks. The SmarTruck III was built for the NAC, the Army's official link to developing collaborative technologies with commercial and academic partners, by Integrated Concepts & Research Corporation (ICRC) of Madison Heights, MI, and Heart International of Grand Blanc, MI."


Get the Most Out of Doom 3
Doom 3 is heating up the Internet again, and it even made me order a new PC! To get the most out of the game, I found this awesome guide from UpsetChaps that basically has everything you need to get the most out of Doom 3.



They also have a great FAQ on:
How do I alter my default FOV?
How do I access the console?
Movement 'bobbing' is giving me motion sickness, what can I do?
How do I benchmark?
How do I record and playback demos?
Can I setup Doom3 for Custom Resolutions / Widescreen?
Doom3 regularly crashes or is unstable, what can I do?

Check it out!


Date Rescue
Here's a fun use of technology. Fake rescue calls are now available on Cingular and Virgin to help people escape bad dates from Hell.

According to a report from AP: "For both Cingular and Virgin Mobile, the prerecorded messages are created at a high-tech central command in California's Silicon Valley. There, five people with doctorates in linguistics dream up excuses for folks to repeat before suddenly dropping a date gone sour. Dan Enthoven, director of marketing for BeVocal, the California company that designs complex voice-driven software for the telecom market, said the number of rescue calls go up on weekends, especially Fridays at about 8 p.m. BeVocal's two rescue-call clients in North America, Cingular and Virgin Mobile, generate at least 10,000 calls a month, he said."


 


F R O M   A L I C E

Hey Gang:

Not sure who on earth I am? Read this
informative article.

Syndicate this Site

>>More Tech News


Alice Hill.com

Copyright 2004
Underground Networks, Inc.
Hosted by Dreamhost
 
 
 

<----Subscribers and Counting!

copyright 2004, Alice Hill, Inc.  All Rights Reserved


 Subscribe 
with Bloglines