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The future of User Interfaces

June 6th, 2010 by calin

I recently watched John Underkoffler speaking on TED (Thanks Marius) and exemplifying its vision on the future of User Interfaces. It made me realize that the user interface components are almost ready for deployment in projects. The only unknown is when they will become mainstream. There are two crucial aspects in this, one is technical, the other one social and how user behavior can change.

The user interface elements have applications that work and are already marginally used or soon to be released.

I have actually experienced the multi-touch technology, using a project developed at The Technical University of Cluj-Napoca, and one of my friends was part of the team. The project is called “A Multi-touch Collaborative Solution for Measurement Data Visualization”. I tested it with a fun application, a pile of digital images on the surface table. There were three of us at the same time, manipulating, moving and zooming individual photos on the same table.  It’s fun! Then, of course there is the more known and ready to ship Microsoft Surface.

Look at Project Natal Kinect. It will allow players to interact without any controller at all.

Technically, all we need are projects, real-world applications that combine more of these technologies into something that can be used for a purpose. And fun can be one purpose. I am more curious of user adoption. And I will assume it will become mainstream price, not 15.000 bucks for a Microsoft Surface table. Just imagine a multi-touch monitor or TV that you can also place horizontally with some accessory kit and have multi-touch table in your home or business location.

Do you remember when we were enjoying watching Sci-Fi movies where actors interacted via Voice Commands? It’s all here now. But do we use this feature? I remember playing with voice commands in Vista’s beta and never used it since. And it actually worked. I have a decent phone, but not a powerful Smartphone, that does have voice recognition capabilities that is very useful in a particular situation. When I drive, I just push the button on my Bluetooth headset, say the name, and the phone matches the name from my address book and dials. And I mean voice recognition, not matching pre-recorded voice labels. So, all computers and most phones have voice recognition capabilities. How many of you use them? Or how many people you know who interact with their PCs via voice? I assume few to none.

All that said, my curiosity is when these types of interaction will be used, even after they become mainstream and standard capabilities. What do you think?

In John Underkoffler’s demo computers and network devices are supposed to be space aware. Notice the movement of elements from one device to another. That is the part that is completely new to me in a real demo and I am looking forward to see that working. Just look at the implications. You need a real interaction between location, user input, user interface and the network. That means that when a packet is sent in your network it will have some information on the physical location of the destination address. And It’s the only way I can imagine, but haven’t found any info on that on MIT Tangible Media Group website. Please send any info on such projects.

Just imagine having the device that will interact with this new User Interfaces and network equipment in your office to add that level of interaction between colleagues. Or beyond that, through the Internet. Just imagine a standard that will aid you carry location information just like VoIP packets transport voice through the Internet.

The future looks bright and fun!

Posted in All Trends, Fun, General, Microsoft | No Comments »

No More Tinkering

November 14th, 2008 by dan

About a year ago I used to tinker with RF, exploring ways to make it more ubiquitous, friendly, widespread and easy to use. Great material for WiF:)
I’ve slowed down.

Either wireless tech got so much of the above or I’m just comfortable with my setup.
I still have a whole closet of c*frees Merakis, Foneras, Airports, Linksys, Asus and 3G all-in-one-office boxes and various antennas, mostly WiFi tech. But I only employ a simple Airport Express ‘n with AirTunes.


Somehow it all worked out and the iPhone with its GPRS/EDGE/3G+ took over my connectivity white space.
All this is not to say that my wireless saga is over. It’s more like a new chapter. A bump up in usability and solutions that just work got me closer to connectivity nirvana, having to seek more enjoyable experiences than raw hardware solutions.

Frankly I don’t even know or care what firmwares my routers have installed. I just plug them cables or modems in and there, we have a nice working wireless link.

But all that tech in my closet is probably waiting to be employed. I suppose I could WiFi my whole neighborhood with them.
Listen! Maybe you have an idea on how to mix such a multi-skilled equipment in an ingenuous wireless project. I’ll do it!
Sound it off in the comments.

Posted in All Trends, All WiFi, All Wireless, Fun, Gadgets, General, WiF, c*free | No Comments »

IPTV

January 17th, 2008 by calin
IPTV is supposed to be the next broadcast solution and replace traditional television program delivery. The concept behind IPTV is to deliver TV programs over the Internet. Watching YouTube clips in your browser is not IPTV. Take a look at VoIP (Voice over IP). When you say VoIP you may think Skype, but look further at businesses and you will find that users just pick up that business-looking black and silver handset, answer, or dial a number even if they use VoIP. My point here is that user habits must not be changed, so even if the technology behind the handset is new and more cost-efficient, you still use something that can be called a phone.The same thing should happen with IPTV. Subscribers may receive the signal through their broadband connection instead of the traditional antenna or the TV cable (analog or digital), but besides that, they will want to use their old TVs or new LCD TVs and plasma TVs to watch TV, not run a “Watch TV” application running on their computer.

So far some content providers are delivering a few solutions. Take Joost for example. It’s a great application from the founders of Skype that delivers TV shows via an application. A great selection of shows is available for every taste, it even works perfectly with my HP Pavillion dv1000 laptop’s remote, so I can “watch Joost” just like watching TV. But still, when I purchased my laptop, watching TV was not on the list of requirements and that’s because I and most buyers already own a TV set for that purpose.

Another solution is Apple TV, which lets you easily watch the video content from your computer on your TV screen. The solution is well done, but still, you have to go through your PC to watch content on your TV.

The last one I mention is a Romanian service I came across yesterday called i-tv that offers the same channel list that most cable TV providers on your computer for a monthly fee comparable to that of conventional cable TV providers.

While all these are good solutions, none of them let me plug in a cable into back of the TV set and watch content without a PC in the home.

Expect an IPTV offer from any of your mobile phone, fixed phone, cable TV or your Internet provider in the years to come!

Posted in All Trends, Fun, General | No Comments »

Wireless Home Automation (is Fun)

January 16th, 2008 by calin

Actionec has released the official information on the zControl since my previous post.

Actiontec’s product interconnects any devices that use the Z-Wave protocol such as Motion Sensors, Cameras, Doors, Thermostats, Blinds etc. Z-Wave operates at 900Mhz with a range of 30 m and a bandwidth of up to 40Kbits/s. Although the through output may seem small, it is more that enough to send and receive status information and issue commands.

Interaction with the zControl is done via its a Web-based interface and may be accessed virtually from anywhere (assuming you have an Internet connection in your home and your router/gateway is properly configured to access the zControl remotely). Discovery of your Z-Wave enabled devices can be either automatic or a configuration wizard can be used for that purpose.

Now I’m looking forward to a review of the zControl in a real-life environment. I’ll keep you posted if I find anything. Until then, enjoy these two demos: Z-Wave World and Z-Wave.com.
Njoy your day!

Posted in All Trends, All Wireless, Fun, Gadgets, General, Travel | 1 Comment »

WiFi on a plane

December 13th, 2007 by marius

I was talking about this with friends months ago, and finally someone did it. Who? Yahoo!

betablue.jpg

JetBlue is the first domestic carrier to test high altitude connectivity. You can bring your WiFi enabled gadgets, your BlackBerry’s and start browsing the web. IM on Yahoo! post twits on Twitter or whatever you want. It’s an Airbus A320 and it’s called BetaBlue as presented on JetBlue’s website, and the services are free to customers and provided exclusively by JetBlue and LiveTV™, Yahoo!®, and BlackBerry®.

jetbluestatus.jpg
Yahoo! went another step and even added special Status messages like “Head in the clouds – seriously”, “Sleeping on the Plane” and “Ugh! Crying baby on flight

I have been predicting this a while ago, and now that it’s here, I just want to say “kudos” to everyone involved, and nice winds for the pilots.

Otherwise the cabin will be filled with flying gadgets ;-)

Sources for this article: Yahoo Messenger Blog, JetBlue Airways

This is why Wireless is FUN, and this is why I’m sorry I stopped writing here lately. I just hope I will have enough time to start writing again and bring you nice and fresh Wireless news, gossips and maybe not only wireless…

Just remember: Wireless IS FUN!

Posted in All Trends, All WiFi, All Wireless, Fun, General, Travel, Yahoo! | No Comments »

One Feature iPhone Bug

October 6th, 2007 by dan

iphone bug

Just the other day I was flipping the manner switch on the iPhone to kill time only to notice this weird landscape-like-rotation of the ringer icon.
Of course this could mean anything from an all-landscape GUI gone wild from it’s factory OS lock, to whatever conspiracy you might want to go blurbing about. Comments section open for your ranting pleasure.

Posted in All Apple, Fun, Gadgets | 2 Comments »

iPhone – UNLOCKED

September 13th, 2007 by dan

It’s true! Done! Basta! I did it! It took me less than half an hour! My iPhone is unlocked!

It’s maybe the first trully unlocked iPhones in Romania and among the few in the World by this method! But I can attest it works! Brilliantly!

Kudos to the dev team and the guys at Engadget who pointed this out. To have yours unlocked, go over to http://iphone.unlock.no/ and follow the exact steps. It’s the method I used and the one that now gives me full use on Vodafone RO and Orange. Simple!

Here’s a screenshot I took of the unlocking process:
picture-72.png

Posted in All Apple, All Trends, All WiFi, All Wireless, Fun, Gadgets, General, WiF | 1 Comment »

And now they rule the world!

September 5th, 2007 by dan

meet-the-new-ipod-fam.jpg

Don’t come here! Go to Engadget! They cover this Apple event aplenty! :P
I love you, my dear readers, but I’m there as well! Or go to Apple.com and start spending.

But do come back for sugga-lovin-thrills about what the above all means! I’ll make sure you’ll find that unique insight here!

To tip you off, focus not so much on the new hardware, but drool on the new iTunes WiFi Music Store! That’s where history is now being written! ;)

Posted in All Apple, All Trends, All WiFi, All Wireless, Fun, Gadgets, General, WiF, c*free | No Comments »

I have the iPhone!

August 19th, 2007 by dan

Yes! Finally I have my geeky hands on the all-mighty Apple iPhone! Remember the already famous “iPhone release date“? I lived to see it available then in my pocket!
I’m sorry I won’t be writing more on it but this thing is too darn addictive to ‘waste’ time blogging. Going back to playing on it! :)

Pics were uploaded via computer, but this text is *proudly typed on an iPhone*! Enjoy!

wif_on_iphone.jpg

iphonesmall3.jpg

iphonesmall5.jpg

iphone_small41.jpg

ipodsmall2.jpg

Posted in All Apple, All Trends, All WiFi, All Wireless, DRM, Events, Fun, Gadgets, General, WiF | 8 Comments »

Fridays @ Starbucks

August 3rd, 2007 by dan

030820072201.jpg

My good blogging friend Dennis Smith made early morning honors today at Starbucks and I felt I could not miss the opportunity to prove that, even if Frisco (US) and Bucharest (RO) are 8 years walking distance apart, good habits have the same brown sugar taste!

“I’m doing my Dan Berte imitation this morning, as there’s nobody I know who spends more time doing what he loves, and doing so via Wi-Fi with a strong cup of coffee in hand (Dan – I raise my Venti Rift Valley Blend in your honor!).”

Needless to say that my WiFi habits rock! And Dennis knows that well so he was following! He was riding T-Mo wireless and I was using Vodafone’s. He gets free Venti at SBX. I don’t! :P

Lovely Friday! :)

Posted in All WiFi, All Wireless, Fun, Gadgets, General | 1 Comment »

Dan Berte -> danberte.com

August 2nd, 2007 by dan

dan berte dot com

Okay, it took me a while to sort things up and decide. I’ve been harrassed by fellow bloggers to start my own blog, as a personal development tracker. As if WirelessIsFun was not enough!! :) Well, dear friends, all your danberte-related dreams came true. Since I have so little time to blog cool shit I do like Lindzon here does, I thought of using Twitter feeds (and *that* I update often!) to govern the microsite you can find http://www.danberte.com
I chose to link to my LinkedIn page, my Twitter page, my Twitter RSS feed and my bio. Let me know if you’d like to add something to it or would like to see something else there!

Posted in Fun, General, WiF | No Comments »

iPhone display at AT&T runs freakin XP!

August 2nd, 2007 by dan

iphone demoooh

a picture is worth more than 1mil iPhones!
I hate you, AT&T! Apple basher!

Posted in All Apple, Fun, Gadgets, General, Microsoft, Security | 1 Comment »

3G / HSDPA + EvDo Burnout Tests

July 31st, 2007 by marius

modems Tonight was one of the rare occasions to play with all these beauties at once. Will spare you of too much introductory stuff and jump right into the testing results.

[+] click picture to enlarge

Toys in test:
1. Reference RDS/RCS 1Mbit cable connection via 54Mb WiFi – http://www.rdsnet.ro/
2. Vodafone 3G/HSDPA 3.6Mbs Huawei USB ‘SmartModem’ – http://www.vodafone.ro/ [product page link]
3. Orange 3G/HSDPA 3.6Mbs Option ICON II USB Modem – http://www.orange.ro/ [product page link]
4. Zapp Mobile 2.4Mbs Z010 CDMA 1xEV-DO wireless modem http://www.zapp.ro/ [product page link]

Testing machine and area:
1.83Ghz Core 2 Duo 2GB RAM Apple Macbook with a/b/g/n – enabled Airport WiFi card.
All tests were performed in a residential area in Bucharest, RO. Time 11:00ish PM. Moderate network loads.
Additional testing was performed on a WinXP Dell 1.6Ghz Core2Duo machine. Performance obtained was about 30% lower!!

Testing on:
- Local (short path) download – Zapp data driver library
Test file – Software image WL-500gx – Deluxe (v 2.1) – 1x/EV-DO [3.20MB]

- External (overseas) download – Revision3 / Diggnation
Test file – diggnation–0108–2007-07-26multipass–large.h264.mov [108MB]

- Ping to google.com

Without further ado, the results:

============================================

The control RDS cable connection needs no introduction or explanations. It performed as expected, capping out at the 1Mbs mark. Response times were great -inline with expectations- but maybe reported a tad lower as the WiFi router adds its own slowdown. This said, here are the screenshots.
Short path:
rds local
Overseas:
rds-external-dld.png

— google.com ping statistics —
12 packets transmitted, 12 packets received, 0% packet loss
round-trip min/avg/max/stddev = 67.475/68.679/71.692/1.056 ms

============================================

The Vodafone HSDPA SmartModem. I had a really good experience using this modem with speeds in excess of 300KBs (3-4Mbs). Unfortunately I was unable to replicate the performance tonight. Granted, and this goes for the other two players, the quality of the link, signal strength, network load and cell performance affect the max speeds attainable. Vodafone RO provides 3G+ (HSDPA) 3.6Mbs service in major cities and a guaranteed minimum of 1.4Mbs. What I managed to get was a not-so-flashy minimum with an excellent signal strength.
The proof-
Short path:
vf local ed
External:
vf ext

— google.com ping statistics —
12 packets transmitted, 11 packets received, 8% packet loss
round-trip min/avg/max/stddev = 278.274/313.286/609.070/93.856 ms

Notes: The application (Vodafone Mobile Connect for Mac) needs to be downloaded from the VF website. It weights around 15MB and it’s fairly easy to install and use. The drawback is that an additional “Activate” click has to be performed in order to enable the connection in the pref pane. The link is pushed through a VF APN proxy that strongly compresses the traffic (esp JPG images). That adds a certain lag and forbids use of some web bandwidth testing apps.
VMC:
vmc
[+] click to enlarge

============================================

Orange touts a fresh 3.6Mbs capability in its network. Although generally slower compared to Vodafone, with a poorer link quality, the very ugly Option modem has performed on par (if not a tad better) with its competitor. Here is the proof:
Short path:
org loc
And overseas:
org ext dld

— google.com ping statistics —
12 packets transmitted, 12 packets received, 0% packet loss
round-trip min/avg/max/stddev = 267.750/283.606/298.381/8.540 ms

Notes: Orange has performed notably better than VF in the response time test, with almost half the average round-trip time. Great news for VoIP applications. Its Mac application I had to request at Orange Customer Service and was later forwarded in an email. The whole process took around 10 minutes. GlobeTrotter Connect weighs around 2MB and is spartan. It required a restart (not typical for OSX) to work without asking for one. The traffic is also routed through a proxy but optimization is only provided through separate APN.
Orange took no pride in customizing the packaging of their modem, sign of eagerness to take it to the market. More so, the documentation has Mac screenshots of an app you expect to find in the package but can only get separately, on request.
Not so cool!
The app:
orange GlobeTrotter Connect
[+] click to enlarge

============================================

Zapp…oh Zapp…used to rock when its antenna was in good shape. Anything between 1.4Mbs and 2.0Mbs was possible. It’s generally a connection that can handle many streams at a time without degrading the ongoing transfers. It scales in an intelligent way. Plus, unlike Vodafone and Orange, the connection is direct without a pass trough a proxy for compression.
On the short path the Z010 would usually do 150KBs and on the diggnation file it would normally fly at a sustainable 180KBs!
I’ll add the screenshots though, but with a big fat disclaimer: this is not how a *healthy* Zapp modem performs!
Local (their own freakin servers):
zpp local
A la longue:
zpp ext

— google.com ping statistics —
12 packets transmitted, 12 packets received, 0% packet loss
round-trip min/avg/max/stddev = 254.470/386.584/1362.356/296.632 ms

Notes: It breaks my heart to bash Zapp so badly after serving me 140ishKbs downloads for years in times when Orange/Vodafone only had shitty EDGE (150ishMbs) with this poor performance due to the faulty modem. Yet I think the ping results are relevant, the Z010 still doing good at 254.470 minimum round-trip time! Mkay… we have some spoilers here as I knew what to expect of some modems in test. Also sadly reporting that the CDMA modem was only here for a broader image of the competing technologies, less for actual results. It’s had a long service life feeding my mobile lifestyle and unfortunately it has the antenna bruised, which translates in very poor reception – read performance!
The Z010 needs no drivers for Mac running OSX, a compatible driver already rests in the OS’s library. With the connection set up in the pref pane, call is initiated in 2 clicks and established in less than 3 seconds! No other apps involved! Sweet!
Unfortunately the Z010 is no longer offered by Zapp but can be purchased by special request. It features a battery of its own that improves overall performance and lowers the drain on the notebook battery. It also has a b/w LCD screen that displays data such as signal strength, time/date and battery level. SMS can also be received on the device.

============================================

The conclusion is optional for a buying decision. Both Orange and Vodafone do well in normal-real life tests! Both offers are compelling, reasonably and approachable priced for near-unlimited traffic (8GB/month). Both modems come free with subscription and are both Mac and PC compatible. If on the PC counterpart the modems have PnP installation – the drivers are stored on the modems themselves – you’ll have a little more trouble getting them for your Mac. Be advised! Request those drivers before you are on the road and need further internet access! :)

Not surprisingly, both modems do shitty jobs on Bill Gates-flavoured machines. With Orange capping downloads at around 85KBs I went no further testing and lit up the Mac. And there numbers started looking like the ones on the marketing fliers. ;)

Overall brief: sexiness/performance/ergonomic; grades from 1-5

Vodafone 3G/HSDPA SmartModem: 5 / 3 / 4
Orange 3G/HSDPA Option ICON II USB Modem: 1 / 3 / 3
Zapp Z010 CDMA 1xEV-DO: 3 / 4 / 3

===== 5 cigarettes were smoked during the making of this review. please do not try this at home. smoking is bad for your health!! =====

Posted in All Apple, All WiFi, All Wireless, Fun, Gadgets, General, Google, Microsoft, Skype | 6 Comments »

Back to the streets

July 26th, 2007 by dan

wifi cafeWhat happens if you jump from entrepreneurship to full time corporate dude? First, you cease good ol’ habits such as doing email where rubber meets the road in the wireless industry – the WiFi’ed caffe!
Luckily sometimes big guys that work in tall buildings come back to the streets to smell that roasted coffee flavor and sniff those 802.11 airwaves, hopefully one of them free. Had my chance for a couple of days to bring the love back so here I am, feeding heavily on all that online stuff that makes me smarter and more competitive, at Bourbon Cocktails&Coffee in the lovely harbor city of Constantza.
Usually people would be sunbathing and stuff here but instead I’m wirelessbathing in all free nets I can find and hop on.
During my two day stay I ran across plentiful networks to do my job on, all ranging from 1Mbits to 6Mbits, all in key locations such as rep building, hotel, cafe and… parking lot!

Of couse both my N70 and my HSDPA SmartModem from Vodafone could have taken over in case there was no WiFi to grab. But for some reason I love WiFi and simply like to enable the Airport on my Mac and enjoy it from there.

Now missing a more portable device to play with nets for when taking the Macbook out feels cumbersome. I’m considering one of those new HTC touch smartphones. Anyone tried one?

Posted in All Apple, All Trends, All WiFi, All Wireless, Fun, Gadgets, General, Travel, WiF, c*free | No Comments »

Fontenna unboxed

July 20th, 2007 by dan

FON.com’s new precious has landed via UPS at my office today. I paid a fair €46.95 EUR for their small Fonera router and Fontenna antenna, the latter on discount. The package took exactly two weeks to deliver.
I wrote quite a lot about the Fonera so there’s no real news there. But the Fontenna I did not yet test so keep abreast!

Till I get my own oppinion (read other good reviews at ElFonBlog’s for example) will share some unboxing pics below.

fontenna fonera boxunboxed

fontenna fonera boxunboxed

Update 2: second one just arrived.
Update 1: the thing comes with two double-adhesive 3M pads (I’d call 3M best quality) to help fasten it on windows. It doesn’t have a smart mechanism to allow aiming and pointing in various directions, but it assumes you’d have a stiff “reach neighbor across the street, period” usage. Say you’re lucky to fit in this description, don’t jump like crazy about those pads. My Fontenna falls off the window every other morning. Guaranteed alarm clock! The sun takes care those pads forget they have to be sticky. ;)
Mine now rests on the floor, pathethic and helpless, till I figgure out a way to fasten it – most likely to look for some suction cups. (yeah, I know, some already pointed out they would have loved those for their Foneras, let alone the antenna)
Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in All WiFi, All Wireless, Fun, Gadgets, General, c*free | 2 Comments »

Zapp WiFi Cabs

June 26th, 2007 by dan

Following on a cool wireless story where Zapp, Romanian CDMA mobile operator, launched a new service that WiFies Bucharest cabs! That’s a really schrewd move for mobility and innovation.

But I wonder what their ROI is. The business model is based on 10 minutes of free access then pre-paid card access. Given one would spend an average of 25 minutes in a cab, why would one buy a 1h card for just 15minutes? Yeah, ok, it’s good to have later on a different location, but…

I would assume it’s just an image push. (it works!).

Nevertheless cost per cab is:
- router – ASUS WL-500G w. USB port ~$40
- Z010 EvDo modem ~$20
- unlimited in-network airtime

ROI is thereafter obtained after selling ~50 $2/1h prepaid cards of roughly 30-40h usage. A week per cab, maybe, presuming clients buy the cheapest value card – http://zapp.ro/offer/data/zoe/zoecard/

Risks: nearby accidental users that would hop on the 10 minute free airtime. Probably 60% of actual usage per mobile hotspot. Not so bad as routers are set for DoD (dial on demand).

Related: I wanted to plant a hotspot in my car (a Smart ForTwo at the time) and brand it “free hotspot in range of this car”. Never took the time to do it. Envious!

Later edit: Virgil of yottablog goes further with the analysis here. Go read with confidence!

Posted in All Trends, All WiFi, All Wireless, Fun, Travel, c*free | 5 Comments »

Whisher 2.0 beta program

June 5th, 2007 by dan

Whisher decided to go back to the drawing board soon after the release of their first WiFi sharing a while back. That development cycle is now over so the Ferran, Mike and their dev. teams invite you to participate in a beta program.
To join in you have to -
+ be knowledgeable in WiFi technologies and networking, we’re not asking for gurus, but we need people who know what an SSID is
+ have at least one laptop computer with WiFi, be it a PC with Windows or a Mac. A desktop with a USB or PCI WiFi adapter is also good.
+ have at least one WiFi access point or router, and be knowledgeable in its configuration and management.
be willing to test a software application and report frequently and consistently using an online bug tracking platform

The guys also offer two prizes, one for the most active tester, and another randomly drawn amongst all participants. The prize for each winner consists of a Linksys WRT300N Wireless-N router and a matching WUSB300N Wireless-N USB adapter, so that you can enjoy Wirelessisfun.com better! :))

To reach the team email them at beta@whisher.com! And don’t forget to tell them we sent you there! ;)

Posted in All Wireless, Events, Fun, General, Whisher | No Comments »

Wallstrip, man! Wallstrip!

May 23rd, 2007 by dan

One of my favorite podcasts, Wallstrip, ‘a sassy investment Web show for the generation YouTube’, got sold to CBS for … $5mln. :)
This is awesome news and I’m really happy for my buddy Howard Lindzon (the creator) who started it late 2006 with initial funding of $600k.

To be honest I didn’t expect the business to move to the next level so soon and definitely did not expect so many Benjamins to fill Lindzon’s safe boxes.
But a job done right with the right attitude, the hottest chick on the block and … a little bit of magic (can’t tell what it is, but they have nailed it), Wallstrip have done it!

Good job guys! Fuck yeah, Lindzon! :)

Posted in All Trends, Fun, General | 2 Comments »

How I saved 20 bucks

May 10th, 2007 by dan

shuffle_cable.jpg

Almost everyone who got a second generation iPod Shuffle complained they had to carry the bulky dock with them to be able to transfer files or charge the minute mp3 player. Apple decided to drop the big USB jack the previous version had and go for a weird 3.5 audio jack port that transfers data to USB.

If Apple would have listened to their users nobody would have liked to get a simple USB to 3.5 cable in the box instead of the shiny dock. “Oh, Apple drops costs by shipping the thing with this cheap cable”. Some, though, did consider that a small cable was a more convenient to carry around. Myself included. But instead of buying a Proporta $20 cable or alike I decided to take the time and make one myself.

Searched the net for diagrams and pin-outs and found a couple of good articles on such fabrications. Since no store had the much needed 4-pin 3.5 jack for sale I went for one of those A/V cables ($2ish) and cut the jack off. A USB cable extender one can find bundled in just about any USB WiFi adapter for example, which I have in abundance laying around, made for the actual USB link.

Past the careful soldering time and my clownish wire switch that almost fried my Macbook’s ports, the project took no longer than an hour to complete. The cable is about 2 inches long and is really convenient to carry in a pocket. It even looks good! (see the picture with the ‘baby iPod’ connected through it). And it was so much fun and relaxing. Yeah, you there! Pick up that soldering iron once in a while and mod smth! :)

Posted in All Apple, Fun, Gadgets, General, WiF | 7 Comments »

How to avoid WiFi interference from neighboring signals

May 8th, 2007 by dan

atc_wifi.png

Somebody out there in the myst of the web googled “HOW DO I FIND THE wireless channel THAT IS BEING USED BY MY NEIGHBORS” and reached wirelessisfun.com

I know this query is really relevant so I decided to quickly post a few tips on how to avoid that upsetting interference.
Current WiFi regulations allow a limited number of channels as follows: 11 Channels (USA, Canada), 13 Channels (Europe), 14 Channels (Japan) for the 2.4Ghz band.

11 channels permits exactly like the number says: eleven concurrent networks broadcasting in the same area (typical up to 300 feet with no obstacles) without interference. When there’s one single router broadcasting on the same channel another router is already tuned to, interference occurs. WiFi clients can’t tell which signal is which and that makes the connection highly unstable, if not unusable. It’s like having two people talking at the same time in a small room! More so, running more routers than the number of channels available also spells trouble. In the urban realm this is sadly an occurrence that can not be avoided.

There’s little to be done when this happens but fortunately there are some tricks to make your WiFi work again.

TIP – Pick that channel that is used less and by the faintest signal
The first trick is to scan the radio spectrum with a widget or a special utility.
For Macs a great widget is AirTrafficControl and for Windows one can use an application called Netstumbler. Once you got acquainted with what channels each neighboring network occupies note which signals are lower and less stable. It’s likely those access points are at the limit of their reach, therefore generate lesser noise for your home networks. Now set your router to chose the channel the weakest signal uses, also keeping an eye to the availability of the channel among more stronger signals.

The more expensive alternative is to buy 802.11a compatible hardware (a router and a PC card). Most latest high-end laptops come with built in 802.11a/b/g/n compatible cards so there’s no need to upgrade. Please check with the manufacturer to see if your card is compatible with these standards. Though still a flavor of WiFi, 802.11a uses the less crowded 5Ghz band and because of the double frequency compared to regular 2.4Ghz WiFi, it allows just as many more simultaneous non-overlapping signals.

Posted in All WiFi, All Wireless, Fun, Gadgets, General, Security | 4 Comments »

Wireless India

May 7th, 2007 by dan

Boy, do they need wireless in India! :)
electric_wire_3.jpg
[source] via John Cioflica.

Posted in All Wireless, Fun, General | 1 Comment »

Nothing, on sale now

May 6th, 2007 by dan

nothing.jpg
Apple minimalism is contagious and mind ticklish. That’s how some chaps decided to sell more than them: “nothing

Tag-lined as the product for the person who has it all, “nothing’s” sales pitch is
What better present for the person who has everything than a poignant reminder that they want for nothing? This lovingly crafted vial of emptiness is filled to the brim with unfettered nothingness. Free from the burden of possessions, the weight of responsibility, Nothing is as idiotic as it is brilliant.

Indeed even old Macbeth, though mad as a kipper, realised that life, whilst full of sound and fury (and that was before iPods) is inherently daft and ultimately signifies Nothing. And let us not forget, that ‘Nothing’ is so important that most of our universe – and the contents of a lot of people’s heads – appears to be made up of it.

It’s a statement, an empty gesture if you will, a nod at the futility of ownership, and yet despite ‘Nothing’ being nothing, it is of course packed with millions of protons, neutrons and what have you, which is pretty good for Nothing.

The good news is it’s priced around USD $6.28 / €5.17 which is a lot better than T-Mobile’s Pay As You Go WiFi, $6.00 per login for the first 60 minutes, whether or not the minutes are fully used; $0.10 per minute thereafter or The Cloud’s rip-off 30 Minute Time Debit Pass (£2.99).
Plus, ‘nothing’ comes in a beautiful package!

Posted in Fun, General | No Comments »

Wirless is fun

May 1st, 2007 by dan

My good friend Robert sent me this pica a few days ago to remind me why wireless is fun :)
The snapshot is from a new deluxe lounge downtown and it reads “Free wirless internet”. Too cool, too sad! Now laugh!

wirless.jpg

Posted in All WiFi, All Wireless, Fun, General, WiF | 1 Comment »

Saturation Point

April 27th, 2007 by Mojohito

Where I am sitting as I type, in the southeast corner of my urban house, my WiFi sniffer reports as many as nine separate wireless networks passing through my home. Most of these have some form of security, but a couple clearly have not been changed from the default settings, with SSID’s such as “SSID” or “Untitled”, and have no security, so I hop on for my web, keeping my mail.app firmly closed (as we all know, these mail programs have no security of their own and rely on the network’s security to keep your password private). However, more than half of the wireless networks on my corner still use the default broadcasting channel (6) so there is a tremendous amount of interference. As a result, even the one or two networks I can get connectivity through only work some of the time; I don’t need to tell you how frustrating an unreliable internet connection is.

So I find myself now paying for broadband and hooking up my own wireless access point, even as I’m bathing in the excessive microwave radiation of all of my neighbors’ networks. Of course I use encryption, and change the broadcast channel to one not being used in the vicinity, and of course, now my network works great. But I hardly feel triumphant; there are nine more wireless networks in my neighborhood than are really necessary – mine being one of them.

See, I believe that internet access ought to be completely free to all people, and WiFi begins to make this possible, but people are still thinking in terms of protecting their precious bandwidth, and their precious data. (In fact, hotspot hosts now need to be concerned about protecting their very precious freedom, as recent court cases have demonstrated that the owner of an open hotspot can be held criminally culpable for illegal activity across their network based on the fact that their IP is connected to their name and that’s proof enough for the American justice system. Owners of open hotspots, read up on this!)

So if I do want to take on the risks of acting on my ideology of Free Internet, I need to run two wireless access points off of my broadband connection – one encrypted for my own traffic, and one wide open free for all – just adding more noise to the ether.

We have the same problems everywhere: too much WiFi, all WEP’d, and all interfering. Some businesses I know have given up WiFi with robust encryption and returned to wired networks – yes, they have turned off the WiFi for the reliability of ethernet! Obviously THEY weren’t having fun, and I can’t blame them. Those businesses – cafes, restaurants, libraries – who promote their free WiFi are few and far between in my city.

I live in an urban area where I can walk to all of the services I really need within fifteen minutes, but there isn’t a cafe offering free WiFi for three kilometers from here. WiFi has become almost totally inconvenient. Everywhere I use it, wires work better (though that doesn’t mean that I actually run the cable!). Services like FON are getting a bad rap for everything from shoddy hardware to censoring the community they depend on, and anyway it sounds like the hotspots are few and far between, so there’s not much incentive to sign up.

Standards keep getting better when I look at the specs on paper – N is better than G is better than B – and now we’ve got WiFi TV, WiFi MP3, and WiFi phone – but the system, the platform, the real mobility, is getting worse. Wireless IS fun, when we learn enough about it to make it easy – especially for the non-geeks out there – and I’m excited to be working with people who are thinking up ways to make it more fun, and more easy.

What’s the next evolution of wireless going to look like?

Posted in All WiFi, All Wireless, Fun, Security, WiF | No Comments »

Power Outage! What to do next?

April 24th, 2007 by dan

wif_gear.jpg
Use your mobile setup!
It’s really rare that we get to experience grid failures these days. And so it should! This is 2007!!!
Oddly enough we had such a power outage today and, from what we’ve been told, the grid failed in almost every corner of the city! If your business is in tech and telco you probably rely on more than one computer, a good connection to the Internet and a big load of office gadgetry that is energy-dependant.
In a few seconds I realized that the cable modem and the WiFi router are off so there’s no connectivity. Luckily my setup is mobile so here’s how I got back online in minutes:

- I work on a Macbook and, if unplugged, I get about 3-4h of work time on one charge.
- If WiFi or the ISP fail, there’s a backup connection at hand – a mobile 2.4Mbs EvDo USB modem from Zapp Mobile.

While the outage lasted about 30 minutes and it took the cable company an extra 15minutes to re-broadcast, I should have been offline and out of business for about an hour. Plugging the USB modem and clicking connect was easy. Sure, some have redundant connections and UPS power savers in their offices. Albeit being able to save work and wait for the power to bring back the net is not the way to go.

Both ends meet when I saw that the mobile setup I use when out of the office took over the local setup with flying colours! This is so 2007! :D

Posted in All Apple, All Trends, All WiFi, All Wireless, Fun, Gadgets, General, Travel, WiF | 2 Comments »

Wireless connectivity unleashed

April 22nd, 2007 by dan

Yes, my dear followers, for the past year I’ve been using the last incarnation (mid-2005) iBook 12″ from Apple that was phased out in early 2006. It was a great road buddy and my life on the go has been taken to another level using it. Its awesome portability (12″), great battery life and unbelievable power from such an obsolete configuration allowed me to roam hundreds of hotspots, record podcasts and edit demanding video. I browsed maybe a million websites, configured around a hundred WiFi routers, sent 5000 emails and received twice as many, blogged hundreds of posts, beta-tested around 200 Skype builds, delivered a few world-class presentations and played a few days Unreal Tournament 2004 with the little devil.

But I was never really happy with the performance when I had to record a live skype conference call for a podcast or when the whole thing slowed down because of the 30+ tabs open in Safari, a few IM clients running in the background, the RSS reader, the email app and maybe iTunes streaming a chill out online radio station. Maxing out the RAM to 1.5GB did not help much either so I always had to chose judiciously what apps to run simultaneously.
Of course it’s a great machine for basic web browsing, normal IM and now-and-then Skype calls, some basic editing of the last vacation video and such. But we take mobile computing serious here at wirelessisfun.com as following the crazy www demands insane multitasking and multithreading.

The most relevant feature, though, is the ability to cover all or most wireless standards. The iBook could “see” 802.11b/g networks but the very new ‘n’ and the isolated ‘a’ running on 5Ghz standards were things I couldn’t really experience. You can laugh, but NASA still uses 3×86 computers in their space missions, okay?! :)

I just bought a brand new Intel Core 2 Duo Macbook that has no problem connecting to 802.11a/b/g/n WiFi networks and, should cables really really really be needed, it can do Gigabit Ethernet! I completely love it! It’s not the black one (because Macs are historically white) and as a matter of fact it’s that machine one can get for around 1060 Euros in Europe.
I’ll provide it with some extra RAM soon and cap it at 2GB (it now has 1GB) so I can effectively run multiple apps and XP decently in Parallels.

The new Macbook is the 5th mobile machine I own in 5 years (I change my laptop almost every year). An older post about the previous ones here! Good times for Wirelessisfun.com! Stand by for an Airport Extreme Base Station review in the next couple of days!

Posted in All Apple, All WiFi, All Wireless, Fun, Gadgets, General, WiF | No Comments »

Alledged zombie attack on wireless networking

April 20th, 2007 by dan

In case your WiFi is dead, your DSL modem does not respond to ping, your Blackberry acts as if its job was to show the time not to send/receive email, you stopped being slumped by Twitter updates from you friends…. that means the world has been taken over by zombies! And these guys could not stop them!

Posted in Fun | 2 Comments »

Michael Dell Uses Ubuntu!

April 18th, 2007 by dan

I missed Michael Dell’s bio on the corporate website but I didn’t miss the big story on Dell going with Linux and the note that Michael Dell’s OS of choice is Ubuntu.
Entrepreneur Martin V., Dell’s friend, bloggs about a recent email in which this story was confirmed.

Dell’s lappie software:

Ubuntu 7.04 Feisty Fawn
VMWare Workstation 6 Beta
OpenOffice.org 2.2
Automatix2
Firefox 2.0.0.3
Evolution Groupware 2.10

Posted in All Trends, Fun, General, Linux, Microsoft | 1 Comment »

The real reason why OSX Leopard is delayed

April 16th, 2007 by dan

“Vista sucks, there’s no need to rush”

Can’t remember where I read this statement, but it’s one absolute truth hidden behind a joke! :)

Posted in All Apple, Fun, General, Microsoft | No Comments »

Visual ID for WiFi Networks

April 13th, 2007 by dan

I have been imagining an avatar-based enhancement of current WiFi nets forever.
No, there’s no sign of such an upgrade to 802.11 networks yet.

But it’s easy to have the hack become mainstream because of two very important reasons:

1. 802.11 broadcasts SSID as a clear text password for auth.
2. 2007 routers have plenty of user-accesible flash memory a small avatar could be fitted in.

wireless_networks_cut.jpg

Any enhancements and changes needed for the operating systems to display such a visual ID would be minimal. Just as a WiFi hotspot sends out a textual identification string (the network name) there’s little reason to believe they couldn’t send out some sort of avatar too.

Just imagine how much personality a visual identification could give to a wireless network?
Businesses could take advantage of it by broadcasting their own brand and creating awareness, hotspot operators could enhance their visibility and home users could have the customization their IM avatar brings.

It’s all up to the industry, I say. Need not wait for some new draft on behalf of WiFi Alliance. I have the feeling we’d be in 2012 by then.

Come on guys! Asus? Linksys?

Posted in All Trends, All WiFi, All Wireless, Fun, General, WiF | 2 Comments »

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