Sunday, September 28, 2014

TECH INFO: Wearables - What Are They?



Do you have a device that you wear that measures your physical activity and uploads it to a website where you can compete with friends with badges? How about a watch that lights up when you receive an email, or glasses that are able to search for something online when you tell them to? These are all examples of wearables, which are basically computing devices that you wear somewhere on your body that enhance your access to technology - maps, websites, search engines,apps - in some way.


Examples of wearables

Before going too much further into what wearables are, it's probably important to distinguish what wearables aren't: they are not devices that are implanted in your body, such as a pacemaker or hearing aids. Wearables are devices that have computing architecture built into them, and can be taken on and off. In addition to the examples given above in the first paragraph, here are a few more instances of wearables: 
  • GPS assistance that is implanted into sunglasses and gives you turn by turn road navigation 
  • Heart rate monitors that tell you when you need to slow down and speed up, saving records in a database you can bring to your next doctor's appointment 
  • An alert button that skiers wear clipped to their jacket in case of an avalanche; if they run into trouble, the alert broadcasts their location 
  • You've probably also heard of Google Glass, a pair of glasses that allows you to search for anything you need online, monitor your environment, send a message, navigate, and much more. 

In a recent Pew Internet Research study (.PDF), many industry pundits agree that wearables are the natural next iteration of Web ecosystem development, along withaugmented reality and the Internet of Things. Here's what a few of them had to say:


On how wearables and the Web will work together: "...mobile, wearable, and embedded computing will be tied together in the Internet of Things, allowing people and their surroundings to tap into artificial intelligence - enhanced cloud-based information storage and sharing...."The most useful impact is the ability to connect people. From that, everything flows."


How wearables will give us quick feedback on our daily lives, especially in regards to health: "We will grow accustomed to seeing the world through multiple data layers. This will change a lot of social practices, such as dating, job interviewing and professional networking, and gaming, as well as policing and espionage.”


“We may well see wearable devices and/or home and workplace sensors that can help us make ongoing lifestyle changes and provide early detection for disease risks, not just disease. We may literally be able to adjust both medications and lifestyle changes on a day-by-day basis or even an hour-by-hour basis, thus enormously magnifying the effectiveness of an ever more understaffed medical delivery system.”


"The greatest impact will be medical — due to wearable devices and 'telemedicine’ — and more devices will be implanted. It will happen due to fewer doctors, more bandwidth (for those in cities or better off financially) and demand by the public and the interest of younger physicians. The data of the Internet of Things can be beneficial for individuals, especially when our own bodies start telling us things before we have symptoms.”


How wearables and instant access to online services could improve lives:"The most powerful effect embedded/wearable devices and the Internet of Things will have is to free us from technology, 

while allowing us to continue to benefit from it to the same and an even greater degree... It will 

bring scientific advancement through international collaboration; increased constituent voice in 

political discourse; and a freedom from technology devices that will allow our attention to return to more subtle and fundamental aspects of living."


Will privacy be an issue? Potentially, but the tradeoffs are seen as more valuable: "“Privacy issues will be outweighed by the perceived benefits of being online and interacting with others all the time. I see wearable, or even embedded, technology managing even the most mundane aspects of our daily lives, from what we need at the grocery store to when it's time to change A/C filters to scheduling routine medical appointments and tests.”


From futuristic glasses that search the Web on demand to sophisticated smartwatches that do much more than just tell time, wearables are increasingly becoming more integrated into what we tap into online and off. As the Web continues to evolve, we will see wearables become more sophisticated, giving us better access to communication, online services, and everything we access on the World Wide Web.

Saturday, September 27, 2014

WEEK REVIEW: Apple's rotten week - Bent phones, broken software, and shattered security




1. Rotten Apple

Apple's entire claim to fame is simplicity. Apple's hardware—be it Macs, iPads, or iPhones—is impeccably designed, paired with software that's just as tailored and thoughtful. Unnecessary complications are ruthlessly eliminated; everything just works. Even we at Windows-focused PCWorld have to acknowledge that.

And that's why the events of this week are so damned disappointing.

Apple suffered from a series of humiliating pitfalls: OS X, iOS, Macs, iPhones, nothingwas safe. Hardware bent; software broke; security crumbled. All of a sudden, things aren't seeming so magical in Cupertino. Let's relive Apple's no good, very bad week


2. Bendgate

The 4.7-inch iPhone 6 and 5.5-inch iPhone 6 Plus supersized the iPhone formula but simultaneously—magically, even—slimmed down to thinner widths than the barely-there iPhone 5s. But as it turns out, a big slab of ultra-thin aluminum has some downsides, too. Namely, the brand-new phones have been warping from the stress of simply being carried around in people's pockets. Cue the Internet explosion.

To be fair, phone warping is nothing new, and Apple says only nine people have formally complained about the issue, despitenumerous other accounts. But the PR damage is done—and Samsung's Galaxy Note 3 phablet sure doesn't twist like that.



3. iOS 8gate

The company managed to quell Bendgate in mere hours… by releasing a borked iOS 8.0.1 update that disabled the iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus's TouchID sensor and prevented phones from connecting to cellular networks.

Bra—vo. Ironically, the entire purpose of the 8.0.1 update was to fix a bug that prevented HealthKit from being deployed in the original iOS 8 rollout.

Apple yanked the update, but not before a small legion of early adopters had downloaded it. Adding insult to digital injury, rolling back the update via iCloud backups dumps you back on iOS 7. The only way to return to vanilla iOS 8 for now is by connecting to iTunes on your computer.


4. Apple is Shellshocked

The final blow is no fault of Apple's, but it's still gotta hurt. Late Wednesday, security researchers announced "Shellshock," a critical flaw in the Bash shell command line tool found in many Unix systems, including OS X Mavericks. Shellshock has the potential to be bigger than the devastating "Heartbleed" bug found in OpenSSL earlier this year.

The bug has been confirmed to work in OS X Mavericks (update: though Apple says it isn't vulnerable by default). This StackExchange thread explains how to test whether your Mac is in danger, and it also offers a highly technical way to plug the hole. Apple's sure to officially patch it sooner rather than later. PCWorld's Bash bug report has all the details. 


5. A bad run

And if you feel like expanding your horizons beyond this calendar week, there have been numerous other Apple snafus this month: The obligatory iPhone preorder fiasco. That iCloud hack that okay was technically social engineering rather than a "hack" but still.Tales of iOS 8 apps crashing at much higher rates than in iOS 7.

Will it all blow over in time? Sure. Does Apple still make exquisite products? Yep. But this brief interlude proving that the men and women behind the trademark Apple magic are indeed only human, and possible of making very human mistakes--well, it can't be over soon enough.


SOURCE: Pcworld

Thursday, September 25, 2014

BlackBerry Passport hands-on: 5 things you'll love and 4 things you'll hate




BlackBerry has officially announced pricing and availability details for its new Passport smartphone, which was previously unveiled and detailed through a variety of blog posts on the company’s Inside BlackBerry blog. (Specific pricing and availability information can be found at the end of this post.)


I was fortunate enough to spend some time with the Passport before the announcement. The device is unlike any smartphone I’ve seen before. It’s big. It’s square. It has actual buttons—a lot of them. It’s kind of awkward. It’s definitely not for everybody.


That’s all OK; the Passport is one of the most interesting and unique devices the company has ever made.


Before getting into specifics, I want to specify that this story isn’t a full-on Passport review or evaluation. As I sit on a flight from Boston to San Francisco, writing this post on my Passport, I’ve been using the device for less than a week, not nearly enough time to provide a complete evaluation of the hardware, software and all of the Passport’s various features.

Instead, this story is meant to tell you some things (good and bad) that you didn’t know about the device and to fill you in on what the Passport is and who might be its ideal user.

What You’ll Love About The BlackBerry Passport



1. BlackBerry Passport Physical, Err, Touch...Physical/Touch Keyboard is Best of Both Worlds


The most unique thing about the BlackBerry Passport is its keyboard, which is both traditional/physical BlackBerry keypad and touch keyboard. It’s composed of three sets of physical buttons and up to four additional rows of on-screen touch keys. The physical buttons themselves are touch enabled so you can use a number of gestures for navigation and faster typing. (Check out the video below to see the keyboard in action.)


When I reviewed the BlackBerry Z10 in January 2013, I fell in love with its on-screen keyboard and associated predictive text system. It was completely unique, and it worked well. However, it’s still a touch keypad, which can’t match a physical keypad for rapid typing, at least not the way I type. As soon as the BlackBerry Q10 was available to me, the first BlackBerry 10 device with a “real,” physical keypad, I relegated the Z10 to The Land of Misfit Tech Toys (a.k.a., my dusty bottom desk drawer), where it has quietly resided ever since.


The Passport’s combination of touch-enabled physical buttons and on-screen keys is refreshing in a world of cookie-cutter mobile keyboards. Most importantly, it can help you get more work done on your smartphone. The thought of typing out this post on my new iPhone 6 quite literally gives me chills. The job wasn’t exactly enjoyable on the Passport, but it was better than whipping out my 15-inch laptop to write on the plane in my cramped economy seat.


The Passport keyboard has a steep learning curve. Not everyone will want to spend the time necessary to master the system. (More on that later.) But the Passport keyboard is the most innovative keypad I’ve ever used, and I appreciate it more as I spend additional time with it.


2. BlackBerry Passport Battery Life


The BlackBerry Passport packs a big honking battery. Its capacity is 3,450 mAh, to be exact, and you get about 25 hours of “mixed use,” according to BlackBerry.


For context, the new iPhone 6 Plus reportedly has a 2,915 mAh battery, which gets you about 16 days of standby time, according to Apple, compared to the Passport’s reported 18 days. Samsung’s new Galaxy Note 4 has a 3,220 mAh battery.


Even taking photos during an Oakland Athletics game didn't kill the BlackBerry Passport's epic battery life.

I turned on my fully-charged BlackBerry Passport (on AT&T) at 8 a.m. Monday in Boston just before the plane took off. I wrote non-stop for about three hours of my six-hour flight, while listening to music. I surfed the Web a bit when I got to San Francisco, performed other random tasks and took a bunch of pictures at the Oakland A’s game that night. I streamed another baseball game for a while and responded to a number of messages. I purposely didn’t charge my Passport at all. It still had 38 percent battery life as I edited this post on Tuesday, nearly 29 hours later. That’s impressive.


Unfortunately, the battery is fixed and can’t easily be swapped out. This is disappointing; the majority of past BlackBerry phones had removable power packs, making this feature a staple of BlackBerry devices.


3. BlackBerry Passport Design and Build Quality



The BlackBerry Passport is a high-end device, which is evident in its design and build quality. BlackBerry’s Director of Software Product Management, Michael Clewley, who gave me a breakdown of the device, says the internal steel structure of Toronto’s TD Centre inspired its design; the Passport has a similar brushed stainless steel band that wraps around the entire outer edge of the phone. The band is a solid piece of steel, not a set of connected components. That lends a solid feeling to the handset.


However, it’s relevant and necessary to note that I did have a hardware issue with the first Passport device I received, and it was serious enough that I had to swap it out for another device. When I first removed my review unit from its packaging and tried to put on its case, the removable panel that covers the nano-SIM and memory card slots got caught and came off halfway. It wouldn’t snap back into place, so I had to force it open. When I popped the cover back in place, my Passport went into a reboot loop, and it was stuck until I removed the cover again. If I replaced the cover, the device rebooted. After some experimentation, I determined that the cover was causing the power/wake/sleep button to stick and start the reboot loop.


BRIAN SACCO




It wasn’t a good start with the device, and I don’t know if my trouble with the case was the cause of the problem, but I’m sure it didn’t help. Either way, the Passport I’m using now feels very sturdy, and it’s a great-looking smartphone, but I wouldn’t be surprised if I’m not the only one who has issues with the power key.


4. BlackBerry Passport Speakerphone and Voice Quality


The BlackBerry Passport has a top-notch speakerphone. That’s important because it’s a phone, after all, and its 128 mm (L) x 90.3 mm (W) x 9.3 mm (D) size makes it awkward to hold up against your face in some cases, especially if you have tiny hands or a weirdly minute cranium.


Two separate speaker ports are built into the base of the device, which helps amplify and direct sound. I use the speakerphones on a variety of different devices regularly for interviews, and the Passport’s speakerphone is one of the loudest I’ve used. Clewley even suggests that it could replace a Polycom or other dedicated speakerphone in some cases.


The Passport also uses a number of fancy-sounding audio technologies designed to improve and enhance call quality through the earpiece, but I haven’t used the phone in that way enough to comment.


5. The BlackBerry Passport and BlackBerry Blend



BlackBerry Blend is a new piece of software designed to let you access a set of native BlackBerry Passport apps using your PC, Mac, iPad or Android tablet. (It doesn’t work with iPhones or Android smartphones, according to BlackBerry.) Blend lets you connect your corporate Passport to non-BlackBerry devices and use them to securely access work email, contacts, calendar and various others resources via your VPN connection. No data is ever stored on Blend-connected devices, so it’s not a security risk. (You cannot, however, share you BlackBerry’s Internet connection using Blend.)


I haven’t tried the app yet, because BlackBerry didn’t make it available to me along with my evaluation device. The company did give me an in-depth demonstration. Honestly, the software interface I saw looked functional but clunky and outdated.



When it comes to smartphones, BlackBerry Blend only works with the BlackBerry Passport.


What BlackBerry Blend represents, though, is perhaps just as important as how well it looks and functions. The BlackBerry Passport is the first BlackBerry device in years that knows what it is and whom it’s for. It isn’t trying to be everything to everyone. BlackBerry is well aware that its target user also has a Mac and/or a PC, and probably an iPad or Android tablet. Blend aims to improve the interaction with all of your different devices and platforms.

Clewley says Blend is also IT-friendly, because it can lower total cost of ownership per user and address BYOD concerns. Companies that issue corporate Passports can train users on Blend so they never have to connect personal devices to corporate networks, and IT only has to issue one Passport for secure access on a variety of different devices.

The BlackBerry Passport has a clear identity, an apparent purpose, and it is a tangible sign of renewed focus at BlackBerry.


There’s a lot to appreciate about the BlackBerry Passport...but it does have some downsides.
What You Might Not Love (Maybe Even Hate) About The BlackBerry Passport


1. That Unique, But Challenging, BlackBerry Passport Keyboard



As much as I like the Passport keyboard, it will almost certainly be a bit much for some people. As previously stated, there’s a significant learning curve. Some of the integrated touch features and gestures work better than others. It takes time to learn them—and in some cases, learn to avoid them.


The BlackBerry Passport also packs a voice search tool.

I suspect more than a few people who at one point loved their old BlackBerry’s keyboard will find the Passport’s combination of touch and physical keys overwhelming. You need to take the time to not only learn and understand how it works, but also practice a bit to master the features, or you won’t appreciate its unique functionality. If you’re the kind of person who likes to read user guides and know how to use all of a device’s features, the Passport could be a good fit. If you want an interface that immediately makes sense, that doesn’t require time and a bit of effort to learn, the Passport probably isn’t right for you.


2. BlackBerry Passport Is Big and Bulky

Like the BlackBerry Passport’s keyboard, the device’s size and shape takes some getting used to. You can call it a large phone or even a “phablet,” though BlackBerry says it’s still a phone but the thing is big and square. Thanks to the physical keypad and the square display—in contrast to the long, thin screens found on most phones and tablets today—the form factor can be challenging, even a turnoff.

The Passport is almost exactly the same size as an actual traveler’s passport, but thicker. It’s big but compared to the unwieldy iPhone 6 Plus, it’s not too big, at least not for me.

I’m having more trouble getting used to how it fits in my hands. I say hands, plural, because this isn’t a device you’ll want to use with one hand. It’s very awkward typing with one thumb while holding the Passport with the rest of your hand, so much so that it’s almost impossible and definitely not economical.

blackberry passport diagonalBRIAN SACCO



I have large hands, and I’m still trying to find the ideal way to hold the Passport comfortably when typing. The long, short physical keyboard is at the base of the device when it’s held upright. You have to slide the bottom of your hand off of it to get a good typing position, which isn’t ideal. When you do, the device feels top heavy and unbalanced.

I appreciate the size of the Passport’s display, which lets you see more of a Web page and utilize more screen real estate when working on presentations or documents. It can be awkward, though, especially when typing out long messages—or writing stories like the one you’re reading.


3. BlackBerry Passport Buggy Software Mars Experience

My biggest complaint about the BlackBerry Passport: The overall software experience is buggy and seemingly unfinished. (My device runs BlackBerry OS 10.3.0.675.) Apps crash somewhat frequently, and many are momentarily unresponsive when I return to them from other apps. I have occasional problems switching camera modes. The BlackBerry Browser hangs and crashes when I try to adjust certain settings. These are just a few examples.

The level of “bugginess” in the software is surprising. It brings back memories of past BlackBerry device launches plagued with software issues. In this day and age, I frankly expect more.


The BlackBerry Passport can run Android apps originating in the Amazon App Store.



The Passport is the first BlackBerry device that comes preloaded with the Amazon App Store for Android. There’s still an official BlackBerry app store called BlackBerry World, which is for native BlackBerry apps developed in the past and for corporate apps. The Amazon App Store, with more than 200,000 Android apps, is for consumer apps. I think. I’m still not sure. It’s confusing—and the two store experiences feel different.

The Passport runs Android apps. All of the apps in the Amazon store are supposed to work on the Passport—but some don’t, or at least don’t work well. For example, I had to reboot my Passport a number of times to get Amazon’s own Kindle, Instant Video and Music apps to work. You often have to zoom in or resize apps to make them look right on the Passport, too, since they were designed for different displays.

The Amazon App Store gives BlackBerry users access to more apps, but the overall app experience is disjointed and poor compared to other leading mobile platforms.



4. BlackBerry Passport Is One More Device To Add To Your Collection

BlackBerry was clear during my Passport demonstration that the device is meant for a very specific type of user: Someone who likely already carries two (or more) phones, a tablet (or two), a PC, a wearable and maybe even a few more devices, and who prioritizes productivity over anything else. That’s the word that came up more than any other during my meeting with BlackBerry: Productivity.

blackberry passport squareBLACKBERRY



The Passport is a business device, and it excels in many related areas. But it also falls short in some of the others, which means you’ll probably need another phone if you want the best possible overall smartphone experience.

There’s something to be said about carrying two smartphones—in fact, I said it in a post I wrote a couple of years ago. However, if you’re a one-phone person, as some of the most productive businesspeople are, the Passport may not be a good fit. Simply put, the overall experience doesn’t match other high-end devices on different platforms. If I had to pick a single phone to use for both work and play, it wouldn’t be the Passport.

Things to Love (And Hate) About the BlackBerry Passport: Conclusion



I like the BlackBerry Passport. I like it a lot. It’s not a device I’ll stop using after I’m done reviewing it. (The Land of Misfit Tech Toys is packed with devices I haven’t touched since I finished evaluating them.)

The keyboard is great, if a bit oversized and unwieldy. Battery life is spectacular. It’s built well, and its large display helps make me more productive on my mobile device. If you’re a smartphone “power user” who values the ability to work on your handset over play, you’ll find a friend in the Passport.


The square BlackBerry Passport focuses exclusively on productivity, for good and for ill.

However, the software experience is lacking, largely due to general bugginess. The keyboard takes a while to get used to, and some of the keyboard-based gestures don’t work as well as they could. The device is big, and it could definitely be too big for certain people. If you only want to carry one device, you could do better overall than the Passport.

That said, BlackBerry deserves some credit for creating a smartphone that’s truly innovative, truly unique, and justdifferent. The smartphone world is boring these days, at least from a hardware perspective. Major manufacturers blatantly copy each other. It’s refreshing to see a new product such as the BlackBerry Passport.

The unlocked BlackBerry Passport (32GB) is available now for $599 in the United States via ShopBlackBerry.com. BlackBerry expects its wireless carrier partners to sell a subsidized version of the device some time this year for around $250 on contract.


This article was originally published on CIO.com.

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