Archive for September, 2010

screen shot 2010 09 24 at 2 12 46 am People Are Really Happy With Their iPadsApparently you can get satisfaction, if you’re the owner of an iPad that is. A report recently released by the American Customer Satisfaction Index shows that consumer satisfaction with personal computers is at an all time high, having grown 4% this year and now registering a 78 on the ASCI 100-point scale.

Leading the pack for the seventh year in row, beloved fanboy brand Apple gains 2% to hit 86 points, its highest score ever and a full 9 points ahead of its competitors Dell, Acer and HP which all scored 77s.

The secret of Apple’s success? CNBC delves deeper and reports that all this fuss is about the iPad.

“The iPad, even at this early stage, pulled up Apple’s overall numbers – which makes it the highest-scoring product Apple has, and therefore the highest-scoring product ACSI has ever tracked.”

Hmm … Fair enough. After all, I’ve never seen anyone get excited about a HP Color LaserJet printer in quite the same way (See: image above).

Photo: Josh Liba

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 People Are Really Happy With Their iPads  People Are Really Happy With Their iPads  People Are Really Happy With Their iPads  People Are Really Happy With Their iPads  People Are Really Happy With Their iPads  People Are Really Happy With Their iPads  People Are Really Happy With Their iPads  People Are Really Happy With Their iPads

 People Are Really Happy With Their iPads
 People Are Really Happy With Their iPads

 People Are Really Happy With Their iPads  People Are Really Happy With Their iPads  People Are Really Happy With Their iPads  People Are Really Happy With Their iPads  People Are Really Happy With Their iPads  People Are Really Happy With Their iPads

 People Are Really Happy With Their iPads

10x0923ub24efadobe Adobe shows off plenoptic lenses that let you refocus an image after...

Yes, you read that correctly. The fevered dreams of crime scene investigators up and down the country are being brought to reality by Adobe, with just a single extra lens and some crafty software knowhow. Basically, a plenoptic lens is composed of a litany of tiny "sub-lenses," which allow those precious photons you're capturing to be recorded from multiple perspectives. The result is that you get a bunch more data in your image and an "infinite" depth of field, meaning you can toggle at what distance you want your image to be focused after the act of taking it. These plenoptic lenses are inserted between your shooter's usual lens and its sensor, though commercialization is sadly said to still be a fair distance away. Never fear, you can get hold of a video demo much sooner than that -- you know where it's at.

Continue reading Adobe shows off plenoptic lenses that let you refocus an image after it's taken (video)

Adobe shows off plenoptic lenses that let you refocus an image after it's taken (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 23 Sep 2010 14:17:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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 “WiFi On Steroids” Is A Go. Now Google (Or Someone) Just Has To...About two and a half years ago after “losing” (but really winning, because it was forced open) the FCC’s 700Mhz spectrum auction, Google turned its sights to a new goal: the opening of the so-called “white space”. White space is the name given to the vacant airwaves between television channels, airwaves which are increasingly open as people move to cable and other methods of getting television. These airwaves have the potential to carry wireless data at speeds and distances that would make today’s WiFi seem antiquated. That’s why the white space has earned the nickname “WiFi 2.0″ or “WiFi on steroids”. And after an FCC vote today, it’s finally a go.

The FCC voted unanimously (5-0) to adopt rules for using the white space. This means that companies like Google can start getting to work coming up with ways on how they want to use them. Of course, you can bet they’ve already been thinking about that for the past two and a half years, and probably longer. So now it’s time to execute.

This is exciting for a few reasons, but the biggest is that it gives technology companies a way to innovate outside of the realm of wireless carriers or broadband providers — all of which use their quasi-monopolistic control over their industries to inhibit innovation in order to make money. In the Reuters piece about the white space vote, they note that not only is Google interested in using the space, but Microsoft, HP, Motorola, and even Sprint are as well.

Obviously, even white space WiFi won’t have the range that wireless carriers currently offer. But imagine a future where white space WiFi blankets cities and people can use WiFi phones instead of the the ones tied to carriers. Maybe I’m dreaming here, but please don’t wake me up, at least for a few minutes.

Shockingly, it doesn’t seem to be the carriers that are the ones most opposed to this opening (though some undoubtedly don’t like the idea). Instead, it’s the National Association of Broadcasters (NAB), which are afraid that the new use of the spectrum will interfere with existing TV and wireless radio signals. They had previously sued the FCC over this, but they’re apparently reviewing what to do after today’s ruling.

[photo: flickr/Ed Schpuil]

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 “WiFi On Steroids” Is A Go. Now Google (Or Someone) Just Has To...  “WiFi On Steroids” Is A Go. Now Google (Or Someone) Just Has To...  “WiFi On Steroids” Is A Go. Now Google (Or Someone) Just Has To...  “WiFi On Steroids” Is A Go. Now Google (Or Someone) Just Has To...  “WiFi On Steroids” Is A Go. Now Google (Or Someone) Just Has To...  “WiFi On Steroids” Is A Go. Now Google (Or Someone) Just Has To...  “WiFi On Steroids” Is A Go. Now Google (Or Someone) Just Has To...  “WiFi On Steroids” Is A Go. Now Google (Or Someone) Just Has To...

 “WiFi On Steroids” Is A Go. Now Google (Or Someone) Just Has To...
 “WiFi On Steroids” Is A Go. Now Google (Or Someone) Just Has To...

 “WiFi On Steroids” Is A Go. Now Google (Or Someone) Just Has To...  “WiFi On Steroids” Is A Go. Now Google (Or Someone) Just Has To...  “WiFi On Steroids” Is A Go. Now Google (Or Someone) Just Has To...  “WiFi On Steroids” Is A Go. Now Google (Or Someone) Just Has To...  “WiFi On Steroids” Is A Go. Now Google (Or Someone) Just Has To...  “WiFi On Steroids” Is A Go. Now Google (Or Someone) Just Has To...

 “WiFi On Steroids” Is A Go. Now Google (Or Someone) Just Has To...

visa paywave iphone 1 Visa rolling out payWave mobile phone payments in NY subway and taxis

DeviceFidelity's mobile twist on Visa's payWave system is a nice little solution to the fact that nobody's bothered to build contactless payment chips into US mobile phones just yet -- DeviceFidelity just stuffs the Visa smart chip circuitry into a microSD card and lets you on your way. Of course, this supplants the much needed additional storage on an Android handset, and requires a chunky add-on case for the iPhone, but at least it's a start. Visa will now start allowing those payWave-enabled devices to make contactless payments at subway turnstiles and taxi backseats in New York City as part of a new trial for the tech. Of course you've been able to do this with all sorts of chipped credit cards already, but there's something very future-ey about swiping your phone to make a payment -- now how about ditching the clunky add-ons and building some of this circuitry in by default?

Continue reading Visa rolling out payWave mobile phone payments in NY subway and taxis

Visa rolling out payWave mobile phone payments in NY subway and taxis originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 23 Sep 2010 00:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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