Thursday, 14 April 2011

  • TomTom Touts New Safety Features

    Personal Navigation Devices are great for getting from point A to point B, but what about keeping you safe? It's a major concern, of course, and TomTom is working to make it even more of a priority. The company has this week revealed their Active Driver Feedback and WEBFLEET OptiDrive, two new features focused at further increasing TomTom?s safety and efficiency benefits for businesses.

    Active Driver Feedback promotes safe driving by providing drivers immediate feedback on their driving performance via their TomTom PRO navigation devices, while WEBFLEET OptiDrive gives business management an easy tool to help their drivers drive more safely and in a greener way. We're told that both features will become available in Europe during the course of Q2 2011, and that a subscription to TomTom WEBFLEET is required. Further details are below, and we're hoping similar features roll out to North Americans soon.

    TomTom Makes Driving Safer with Active Driver Feedback

    AMSTERDAM--(BUSINESS WIRE)--TomTom today announces Active Driver Feedback and WEBFLEET OptiDrive?; two new features focused at further increasing TomTom?s safety and efficiency benefits for businesses.

        ?We believe that empowering drivers is a key success factor in promoting a safe driving policy?

    Active Driver Feedback promotes safe driving by providing drivers immediate feedback on their driving performance via their TomTom PRO navigation devices. WEBFLEET OptiDrive? gives business management an easy tool to help their drivers drive more safely and in a greener way.

    ?We believe that empowering drivers is a key success factor in promoting a safe driving policy? said Thomas Schmidt, Managing Director of TomTom Business Solutions. ?The active feedback functionality truly puts the driver centre stage in the quest by businesses to improve safety and efficiency on the road.?

    Both new features tackle the issues of fuel efficiency, driving style, idling and speeding.

    Active Driver Feedback features include:

        * Fuel consumption information displayed in the status bar
        * Driver prompts when speeding, harsh steering and breaking, and idling
        * EcoStatistics menu providing the driver with a summary of their performance by trip, day or total


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  • Dog shaped wooden speaker

    You?ve seen Janet?s reviews of other Motz wooden speakers (see related posts listed below) from Pyramid Distribution. Their latest offering is a cute doggie shaped speaker made of Apricot wood. It?s rechargeable via USB and can play music for 5 hrs per charge. This little speaker will work with any device that uses a 3.5mm headphone jack. Just connect a line out cable from your audio player?s headphone plug it into the Motz dog?s ummm?. well? use your imagination on that one :) The Motz Pet Shaped Speaker will ship on 4/22 and costs $39.99.


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  • CrackBerry on the BlackBerry PlayBook

    BlackBerry PlayBook

    At long last, RIM and BlackBerry are getting into the tablet game to take on the likes of Android's Motorola Xoom and Samsung Galaxy Tab (for starters) and, of course, the iPad. The PlayBook falls into the 7-inch category, and it packs a lot of power into that small space.

    So how will the BlackBerry Playbook stand up to the likes of the Xoom et al? We'll have to see when it goes on sale on April 17 at a starting price of $499. But reviews are starting to roll in, and we look no further than ol' CrackBerry Kevin Michaluk himself, who leads off with the following:

    "With solid hardware specs, an operating system that utilizes a gesture-based user interface to deliver true multitasking capabilities and a web browser that supports Adobe Flash, on paper the PlayBook appears to have the raw talent to be a contender."

    And don't forget about the PlayBook's untested coup de grace: It will eventually be able to run Android applications, folks.

    We're going to spend the next few hours poring over CrackBerry's PlayBook review, that's for sure. And we suggest you do, too. Keep your enemies close, and your frenemies closer, they say. Here are some links to get you started:

     

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  • Adobe's Creative Suite 5.5 Gives Devs a Flash Alternative

    Creative Suite 5.5 lets designers and developers deliver mobile apps on Android, iOS, the BlackBerry Tablet OS, and other platforms. It also lets them create browser-based content across screens using HTML5, and deliver premium video content, casual games and rich Internet applications through Adobe Flash Player. Adobe's approach with CS5.5 means devs can now write browser apps that don't require Flash.

    Adobe (Nasdaq: ADBE) on Monday announced Creative Suite 5.5, a mid-point update between major releases of the suite.

    In a tip of its hat to the realities of browser display, Adobe has included HTML5 support in CS 5.5.

    With CS 5.5, Adobe is also targeting the mobile platform. Further, it has unveiled a subscription model and is changing the timing of rollouts of Creative Suite versions.

    "In the past, we have had 18-month CS release schedules between our milestone releases," Adobe spokesperson Vanessa Rios told TechNewsWorld. "Now, we're moving to a schedule of milestone releases every two years, but with mid-cycle releases in between that are focused on keeping customers ahead in the areas where technology is shifting."

    The Guts of CS 5.5

    The Creative Suite 5.5 Master Collection consists of Adobe Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, Acrobat, Flash Builder, Flash Catalyst, Flash Professional, Dreamweaver, Adobe Premiere Pro and After Effects.

    These products can be purchased separately or as components of one or more of the five Creative Suite editions.

    CS5.5 Premium Suite lets designers use Adobe InDesign together with the integrated Folio Producer toolset to add interactivity to page layouts for publication on tablet PCs. They'll be able to add video, audio, panoramic views, 360-degree object rotation, and integration of HTML and HTML5 content, among other things.

    Creative Suite 5.5 lets designers and developers deliver mobile apps on Android, iOS, the BlackBerry Tablet OS, and other platforms. It also lets them create browser-based content across screens using HTML5, and deliver premium video content, casual games and rich Internet applications through Adobe Flash Player.

    Adobe's approach with CS5.5 means devs can now write browser apps that don't require Flash, Al Hilwa, a program director at IDC, told TechNewsWorld.

    Adobe and HTML5

    Adobe's support for HTML5 in CS 5.5 is the latest in a series of steps the company has taken since it clashed with Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) CEO Steve Jobs over an open letter he wrote criticizing Flash and expressing support for HTML5 back in April of 2010.

    However, Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) and Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) then threw their weight behind HTML5, and Adobe bowed to the inevitable. In August, it shipped the Dreamweaver CS5 HTML5 Pack as part of the Dreamweaver CS5 11.0.3 updater; then in October, it released its own HTML5 video player. Last month, Adobe launched an experimental Flash-to-HTML5 conversion tool, Wallaby.

    Still, devs won't be able to write once in CS 5.5 and publish in both Flash and HTML5.

    "Dreamweaver has enhanced HTML5, but there is no way to double-publish," Adobe's Rios said. "Wallaby, which is on Adobe Labs, is an option to create in Flash Professional and then publish out to HTML5."

    Cozying Up to iOS

    Although Apple banned Flash from its operating systems following Jobs' outburst, Adobe appears to remain hopeful of getting back onto devices from Cupertino.

    Adobe is offering a new Photoshop Touch SDK that lets devs build tablet apps that interact with Photoshop from Android, BlackBerry PlayBook and iOS devices. Further, Adobe has announced three new iPad apps for Photoshop: Adobe Color Lava; Adobe Eazel; and Adobe Nav.

    The iPad apps were developed with the SDK "as examples of what can be done with this new interaction between Photoshop CS5 and mobile and tablet devices," Cari Gushiken, spokesperson for Adobe Photoshop, told TechNewsWorld.

    Adobe is speaking with developers, artists, hardware and software providers, and other partners about using the SDK to create their own apps, and "they are excited about the possibilities and the potential," Gushiken added.

    Apps written for iOS can now run on that platform because the Adobe AIR runtime environment is allowed on iOS, IDC's Hilwa noted.

    This will "let apple give developers what they need or are demanding without having to retreat from Jobs' inflammatory comments," Charles King, principal at Pund-IT, told TechNewsWorld.

    In future, perhaps Apple might seek to kiss and make up with Adobe, he speculated.

    "If Apple is thinking rationally, it will likely allow Flash at some point soon," Hilwa remarked. "But I get a sense that this [Apple ban on Flash] is political and philosophical more than rational."

    Pushing Into Subscriptions

    With CS5.5, Adobe has launched a subscription-based pricing plan. Subscribers can use Adobe Photoshop for US$35 a month, Adobe Design Premium CS5.5 for $95 a month, and the Adobe Creative Suite 5.5 Master Collection for $130 a month.

    That beats Adobe's purchase prices. The CS5.5 Master Collection, for example, will be priced at about $2,600, and CS5.5 Design Premium at about $1,900.

    The subscription plans "make the latest Creative Suite features available to a much wider range of customers," Adobe's Rios said, adding that Adobe doesn't expect the subscription plans will cannibalize sales.

    The subscription plan is "a natural entry point for developers or companies new to Creative Suite or who want to stick a toe into Adobe's waters without making a significant initial investment," Pund-IT's King remarked.

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  • Microsoft claims its next major OS update will blow away Android browsing


    Youtube link for mobile viewing

    So at Microsoft's MIX developer conference today in Las Vegas, Microsoft VP of Windows Phone Program Management Joe Belfiore did a little HTML test showing IE9 on a future version of Windows Phone. And it appears to blow the Nexus S and iPhone 4 out of the water.

    What's odd is that I can't even get the Nexus One I have here to run it that well. Want to try it yourself? What sort of magical sorcery has Microsoft unleashed? Dunno. But you can give it a shot at this link if you want.

    Oh, and our other question is this: How many major updates will Android see before Microsoft gets its "Mango" update out the door? Zing! [Geekwire via WPCentral]

     

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