Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Acer X960


Following the release of Acer DX900 we also heard about ACER X960 yesterday. Acer X960 does also come with an embedded GPS receiver and will do door-to-door navigation provided you bring your own software.

Acer X960 is a WinMo device and here are some of the other features:

  • 2.8-inch VGA touchscreen
  • five-way navigation button
  • widget-based user interface
  • Windows Outlook and Office
  • 3.2MP autofocus camera with flash
  • front-side camera for video calls

Brought to you by your GPS navigation site NaviGadget.

Monday, October 25, 2010

Wal-mart Devoting More Space To Blu-ray

While I love Blu-ray, I’ve been a bit apprehensive about switching out my library to the newer format. After all, all of those estimates says Blu-ray will be history in a few years, anyway. But Wal-Mart is trying to help out the HD disc cause. In fact, the super store is going to be devoting more

Saturday, October 23, 2010

Monday, October 18, 2010

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Another Viamichelin X-930 Navigation Review

Another review of the ViaMichelin X-930 has been posted this time by PC Magazine. The review has been added to my ViaMichelin X-930 Reviews where I have compiled a list of all the reviews available for this navigation system. By adding this review the overall average rating from all the reviews has slightly fallen to 62/100. PC Magazine gave the unit a “fair” and the reviewer’s main complaint was the difficult menu system. You can read the review here

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Google Gmail Adds Yelp, Flickr, Picasa And Youtube Support

Millions of people upload pictures to Flickr or search for restaurant reviews using Yelp every month.  Moreover, millions of people use Google’s Gmail email service.  So wouldn’t it be more productive to fuse the three together?

The Gmail team has done just that, announcing this past Wednesday that new tabs under the Labs setting allows users to see links to Flickr and Picasa photos, Youtube videos, and Yelp reviews from within email messages rather than having to click through to the destination site.

This might not seem like much, but given the fact that most of these sites often are the end destinations of the links we put in our email messages to friends, family and co-workers, the time savings over the course of a few months or years could be quite large.  And aside from the time savings, it makes Gmail all that much easier to use.

Gmail has become much more location-aware and socially-connected as of late.  Not only can the email platform track packages and detect address and event information, but you can add a geo-aware signature to your outbound email messages as well.

Read

Monday, September 27, 2010

Nokia App Store Confirmed For Monday Launch, Amdocs White-label Solution To Debut

Nokia is confirmed to be launching its mobile application store Monday morning at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. “Two industry sources” confirmed the rumor to Reuters, which said that the storefront will be a mashup of Nokia’s Download! store with media sharing site Mosh and widget service WidSets.

Amdocs, a provider of software and services to telecom, said it will also unveil a white-label app store at the mobile conference. Rather than offer individual apps to end consumers, Amdocs will instead offer the store itself to wireless carriers, which can then rebrand it. The company said it hopes to attract developers by supporting a wide range of phones and providing service provider subscriber data to assist in effective application targeting and placement.

via reuters

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Sunday, September 26, 2010

Hacker Rigs His Eee Pc With A 12-cell Monster Battery

An enterprising fellow known by the handle Tenacious Dre has rigged a 12-cell battery for his ASUS Eee PC, according to a post in the EeeUser Forums.

The battery boasts 12-15 hours of life when the netbook is clocked to 500 MHz and everything is off, and was created by adding the lithium ion cells from his old Pentium 2 laptop, and wiring and taping them to the Eee battery.

Granted the contraption looks more like a bomb than a battery, but then again, who’s going to mess with your bomb-strapped netbook.  You’ll never had to worry about thieves again.

via portable monkey

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Friday, September 24, 2010

Asus Eee Pc 900sd Launches

Netbooks will probably see a large presence on GPSObsessed over the coming year as they rapidly gain popularity.  I’m covering them because I believe the format will becoming a presence in the portable GPS market, especially as chipmakers start building GPS and Wi-Fi geolocation capabilities into their Systems on Chip (SoC).

ASUS has released the Eee PC 900SD with an 8 GB SSD, 512 MB of RAM, and a 0.3 megapixel webcam.  It’ll also feature a battery life of 3.5 hours and boast 10 GB of online storage space which ASUS calls the “Super Hybrid Engine”.

Although no pricing or availability dates have been made public for North America, when the ASUS Eee PC 900SD shows up it will come in blue, gold, purple, black and white color options.

via obsessable

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Thursday, September 16, 2010

Navigon 7100 And 5100


Navigon is presenting two brand new navigation systems at the CeBIT this year, the Navigon 7100 and 5100. The first impression is that they have a really stylish design. The main difference of the two models is that the Navigon 7100 has a 4.3-inch display (16:9), while screen of the Navigon 5100 is 3.5″. Some of the other features of the two systems include Bluetooth for hands free calling, free traffic information, 2D or 3D map view and voice input. A new function that we will find in these new Navigon systems is called “Real View” or “Reality View” which if I understood correctly is a new view mode that will display signposts realistically in a way that will help the user navigate more easily.

The Navigon 7100 is expected in Europe sometime this summer with a price of 450 euros for the version with regional maps and 500 euros for the Europea maps version. Finally the Navigon 5100 will cost 350 euros.

Via SlashGear

Monday, September 13, 2010

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Rumor: Tele Atlas Firing 125 Employees In New Hampshire

New Hampshire’s WCAX News is reporting that Tele Atlas, a global digital mapping provider, will be cutting 6% of its staff or roughly 125 jobs.  Yesterday there was a conference call between Tele Atlas management and the 500 employees working at a company office in Lebanon, New Hampshire–which I believe is the United States headquarters.  After the call it was confirmed by both employees and via an email to WCAX from Tele Atlas, that the company is indeed trimming its staff.  The details are kind of sketchy at the moment, but one thing is for sure: the poor economy has struck again.

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Sunday, August 8, 2010

Qstarz Bt-q818xt Bluetooth Gps Receiver


People at QSTARZ recently informed us about their latest bluetooth GPS receiver called QSTARZ BT-Q818XT. The most amazing feature Q818XT is that it can update your position 10 times per second (10Hz) giving you great resolution which may come in handy if you’re into high speed action sports such as the ones that Red Bull may sponsor. BT-Q818XT will give you twice the resolution of BT-Q1000ex Xtreme Recorder which we had talked about here at Navigadget before.

Some features of this new bluetooth GPS receiver include a 3 level switch for instant control (10Hz, 1Hz, Off), 66 channel GPS receiver with -165dBm sensitivity, and up to 42 hours of battery life.

Q818XT measures 72.2 (L) X 46.5 (W) X 20 (H) mm, and can charge in less than 3 hours via mini USB.

We’ll see if we can get our hands on one of these before anyone else and maybe do review + giveaway. Stay tuned.

Brought to you by your GPS navigation site NaviGadget.

QSTARZ BT-Q818XT bluetooth GPS receiver


Thursday, August 5, 2010

Building Safe Jobsites

By James Neely/Guest Author

For residents in urban areas, construction is a part of life. Almost all city dwellers will encounter a construction site at some point in their day, and some will see bulldozers and dump trucks when they look out the front window. But where does all that construction equipment go at the end of the workday? It’s not feasible to pack everything up and cart it back to a warehouse or secure parking area, and for that reason many contractors will leave vehicles and equipment in place on the jobsite where they become tempting targets for theft. In order to reduce the chances of losing equipment and materials over the course of a job, more and more companies have begun protecting their construction equipment with GPS tracking systems.

A GPS tracking device placed inside a vehicle or on a piece of equipment or material will send signals at intervals to a computer, allowing construction managers to monitor their assets even when away from the job site. If a piece of equipment is stolen, law enforcement officers can recover it much more quickly with the information provided by the tracking unit than they could without that information. Companies that choose not to implement GPS tracking technology on the job site see thousands of dollars in losses each year due to theft since many of the vehicles stolen will never be recovered, while those that do monitor their equipment with the technology see savings in the thousands.

In addition to location monitoring, GPS tracking also provides construction managers with information about their employees’ driving habits. They can tell which drivers maintain the speed limit in their company vehicles, which ones leave equipment idling over the lunch break, and which ones take a detour for personal reasons while driving the company vehicle on the clock. Information can be viewed in real time or as a report at the end of the day, with each stop noted along with the length of time spent at each place. With this information in hand, managers can implement training programs that teach drivers how to conserve fuel and they can address any problem behavior that crops up.

Companies across the nation currently face economic struggles, but GPS tracking provides construction businesses with the knowledge and resources they need to make the most of every dollar. Savings garnered by conserving fuel and protecting assets from theft will quickly justify the cost of implementing GPS tracking units for the jobsite.

Building Safe Jobsites is a post from: GPS Obsessed

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Quick Reads: Garmin Nuvi 1860, Apisphere Raises Money, Ouidoo Ar Phone



Geomate.jr maker raises cash: Apisphere, maker of the Geomate.jr handheld geocaching device and location-based enterprise software has raised $4.6 million in funding.

Ouidoo augmented reality phone with GPS: A company called QderoPateo is attempting to make a mobile phone specifically for augmented reality called the Ouidoo. According to co-founder Steve Chao, the Ouidoo combines GPS, accelerometers and gyrometers to calculate location 10 times more accurately than GPS alone.

Garmin nuvi 1860 coming out in UK: This 4.8-inch GPS includes a web browser, Wi-Fi and a camera that can geotag pictures. Other features are typical though the price tag is a bit atypical in a market not so favorable to the PND–about £499 (US$800).

Quick reads: Garmin nuvi 1860, Apisphere raises money, Ouidoo AR phone is a post from: GPS Obsessed