Category Archives: Technology and Our Lives

Cell Phone User Statistics

The Pew Research Center has released a new report titled Americans and Their Cell Phones.  With cell phone use and ownership continually rising, the survey finds a topic that applies to all of us.  Whether you are guilty of sending and receiving text, pictures, or video messages or just using your phone to avoid an awkward interaction with others, this report offers a statistic for all of these aspects of cell phone use.  A few of the stats really caught my eye as a smart phone user.

  • 42% of cell owners used their phone for entertainment when they were bored.  I am guilty of using my smart phone as entertainment while I’m waiting in line, listening to a particularly boring lecture, or when there is nothing on TV.
  •  20% of cell owners experienced frustration because their phone was taking too long to download something.
  • 51% of adult cell owners have used their phone at least one time to get information they needed immediately.   Let us not forget about those heated family or friend debates!  You need facts to help prove your side of the argument, or even just to squash that family quarrel between your mother and brother.

I do not have to worry about the frustration of cell phone ownership because of my zBoost cell phone signal booster.  My zBoost has helped me in every one of these scenarios from boredom to frustration!  Not only does it relieve me from upload and download delays, but I never have to worry about not receiving or dropping important calls.

To read Americans and Their Cell Phones in its entirety for all cell phone stats click here.

INFOGRAPHIC: Goodbye Wallets! How Mobile Payments Are Becoming the New Credit Card

Money has evolved several times in human history: barter, coins, paper, plastic, and now, phones? It’s true — commerce is the next major advancement in mobile technology. Through the use of ‘near field communications’ (NFC) chips, several companies are about to revolutionize the way we shop, replacing our wallets with our smartphones.

https://www.gplus.com/Mobile-Payments/Article/INFOGRAPHIC-Goodbye-Wallets-How-Mobile-Payments

PC World Shows You How to Work Outdoors

While the Georgia heat has us all indoors, some of you may be looking for ways to take your work outside.

PC World gives you some good tips on making the most of workout outdoors including boosting your signal with zBoost.

How to Work Outdoors

By Christopher NullPCWorld

How to Work OutdoorsLaptops, tablets, and smartphones are supposed to make us mobile: Freed of cumbersome desktop technology, we can work anywhere we want. Why, then, don’t you see legions of people at parks, beaches, or even sidewalk cafes typing away on their laptops? Mainly because they simply can’t see their screens.

It doesn’t have to be this way. A little planning and know-how can get you ahead of the game when it comes to using your gadgetry outside. Whether you’re reading ebooks on your iPhone or sneaking in a few work emails while the kids build a sand castle, here’s how best to set yourself up to work alongside Mother Nature.

Fall Into Shadow

When working outdoors, shade is your friend. In fact, if you haven’t prepared in advance for your outdoor adventure, it’s pretty much all you’ve got. Your only hope to see anything on most LCD screens is to find some shade and dig deep into it.

HoodmanThis portable, folding hood provides instant, deep shade.Anything can be used as shade in a pinch, from the obvious tree, umbrella, or side of a building to less evident objects, like a cast-off pizza box folded into a tent or, in a pinch, your own head. For head-shading, resist the urge to hold your laptop or mobile phone between you and the sun, thinking you’ll block out the light like an eclipse: That simply won’t work. Switch it around and put your head between the sun and the screen, so the shadow of your noggin falls on the display. This won’t provide much shade, but, for limited use and with small screens like your phone, it will work well enough to at least read text.

Get Shade Anywhere

If working outside is going to be a regular thing for you, you might consider investing in a portable shade device that you can take with you as part of your travel kit. A company calledHoodman offers two clever covers that hook over your laptop’s screen, shading it on all sides from sunlight while still giving you access to the keyboard. It looks a little strange–but no stranger than you will look working on your computer on the beach–and it works quite well. Best of all, the soft-sided shade collapses flat and stores easily in the included carrying case. Versions for Macs or PCs are available, both $40.

Outdoor Out the Gate

Fujitsu Stylistic Q550The field of outdoor-ready laptops is small, but it includes this Fujitsu Stylistic Q550 tablet.If you’re a true outdoorsman, you may want to consider one of the small number of laptops that are available with so-called “indoor/outdoor” displays, designed for visibility inside or outside. When shopping, look for “I/O,” “Outdoor View,” or “Enhanced Outdoor” as part of the screen specs, or just ask–sometimes this key feature can be omitted completely from a list of a computer’s specs.

This technology has been especially popular with older-style tablet PCs as well as a few newer slate tablets. Some current devices that include the technology are the Fujitsu Stylistic Q550, the HP EliteBook 2760p, and most of the Panasonic Toughbookline.

Compare and Contrast

Using a high-contrast color scheme will improve your outdoor viewing experience, no matter how much shade you have, by turning your working experience into a black-and-white one that scrubs out many of the shades of gray (and splashes of color) to which office users are accustomed. The result is a stripped-down computing experience, but one that will make outdoor viewing considerably easier.

Set contrast options in Windows 7.Windows’ high contrast themes aren’t the prettiest on the block, but they make outdoor operating easier.In Windows 7, open the Personalization Control Panel and scroll down a bit below the Aero Themes. You’ll see the Basic and High Contrast Themes listed here. Experiment with the four high-contrast options to find the one that works the best for you–though adjusting to a white-on-black color scheme can be jarring and will take some acclimation time.

Your LCD brightness should generally be set to the maximum available (though this will put more strain on your battery), and you might also consider increasing the text size by using the “Larger – 150%” setting on the home screen of the Display Control panel, to make things even easier to read.

Get E-Inked

Got a lot of reading to do but don’t want to put it on paper? Electronic ink devices like Amazon’s Kindle are perfect for this kind of work, since the reflective screen is designed to work without backlighting. The result: Text on a Kindle looks even better under bright light than in the dark.

The newest Kindle can accept a wide variety of file formats, including Word, PDF, RTF, HTML, plain text, and various image formats for display on the device. Simply email the documents as attachments to the address noted on your Kindle’s Settings page under “Device Email.” Amazon offers copious additional details on the ins and outs of sending personal documents to your Kindle at this link. But remember that older Kindle models have different supported formats.

Surf’s Up, Sand’s Out

If your outdoor working adventure is taking you somewhere more exotic than the backyard, be sure to prepare for those twin menaces of all electronic devices, water and sand. Water is well understood as an electronic hazard, but sand can quickly brick anything with moving parts: A single grain of the stuff can kill your digital camera’s zoom mechanism or prevent the shutter from opening and closing, not to mention scratching the screen of your tablet or laptop.

Waterproof iPad case from TrendyDigitalBag your laptop, tablet, or cell phone with an instant waterproofing system like this one from Trendy Digital.Protection from the elements can be as simple as keeping your gadgets in a sealed Ziploc bag when they aren’t in use, or as complicated as investing in a custom, ruggedized, waterproof case. A wide variety of cases for all manner of devices are available. You can check out brands like OtterBoxXGear, andTrendyDigital to get started.

Now About That Web Connection…

Seeing your screen is one thing. Getting online is another. In parks, on beaches, and even in backyards, getting a Wi-Fi or cellular signal can be a challenge. Short of petitioning your carrier to erect a cell phone tower closer to the waterfront, these tricks can increase your chances of getting a wireless signal from a remote location.

Wi-Fi: If you’re simply working in the backyard and are trying to access the Wi-Fi signal inside your house, you can accomplish this in a few ways. You can extend the signal outdoors by relocating your router near that side of the house or add a repeater to extend the signal outdoors. Aftermarket antennas can also be used with some routers to increase their signal strength, hopefully letting you reach your hammock in the gazebo with a Wi-Fi signal. If changing your router setup doesn’t work, you can invest in a new Wi-Fi card for your laptop with an external, high-gain antenna, increasing your available range.

WWAN: Again, if you’re near home and outdoor cellular signal strength (either for voice or data usage) is no good, you can use a femtocell to boost the signal. Verizon’s Wireless Network Extender and AT&T’s MicroCell attach to your home broadband connection and act as a sort of mini tower. Femtocell range is typically under 150 feet, so locate the unit near the backyard.

zBoostzBoost signal-boosting device.

However, if you’re in a public place and need a better signal, a few hacks can boost the number of bars you get on certain phones by one or two, although few of the hacks are very pretty. The website Wisebread experimented with an admittedly ugly wire-and-cans trick and claimed a three-bar improvement in a cellular signal. Rick Broida has some additional tips on the subject, including a discussion of zBoost, which is a more appropriate range-boosting solution for newer phones, MiFi units, and mobile hotspots–all of which increasingly lack the external antenna connector required for tricks like the cantenna described above.

Don’t Forget the Juice

As a final consideration, remember that working outdoors usually means being disconnected from the grid, and since upping the contrast and other tweaks can drain your battery faster, you may find your laptop fading before your sunscreen does.

The solution is simple, if on the expensive side: Upgrade to an extended-cell battery, using a “battery slice,” which is a flat battery that locks onto the bottom of a laptop–or simply carry spare batteries with you to get considerably more running time when you’re working remotely. For smaller devices such as cameras or dedicated voice recorders, rechargeable batteries generally provide more bang for the buck.

More esoteric power solutions–like solar recharging systems–won’t offer much help. Most of them just don’t have the power required to provide much of a boost to anything beyond a cell phone or camera–and even then, their internal batteries will need to be charged before you head out.

However, before draining your gadgets out in the wild, you can follow some proven tips to helpboost the battery life of your laptop and smartphone.

Related Articles

What gear and tricks do you use to work outside of the office? Please share your tips in the comments below. For more advice, see the following articles.

CNN: “New ‘iPhone 4S’ might come to Sprint, T-Mobile”

(CNN) — Maybe the hotly anticipated iPhone 5 won’t be an iPhone 5 at all.

But it might be available on more carriers.

The emerging theory, based on reports from industry analysts, is that the next model of Apple’s smartphone will be called the iPhone 4S and be an update of the current model, not a radical advance.

Multiple sites this weekend were citing a report by Peter Misek, an analyst with Jefferies & Co.

“According to our industry checks, the device should be called iPhone 4S and include minor cosmetic changes, better cameras, A5 dual-core processor, and HSPA+ support,” Misek wrote in a report Friday.

Other analysts have offered similar predictions.

But Misek also wrote that Sprint, T-Mobile and China Mobile will be added as iPhone carriers, citing more “industry checks.”

The A5 dual-core processor is the same one that’s in the iPad 2. A dual-core processor is considered faster at running two programs at once than the single-core A4 processor in the iPhone 4.

The term “HSPA+ is a reference to high-speed processing. The phone reportedly will not utilize long-term evolution (LTE) technology, which is frequently marketed as 4G coverage.

The reports, and speculation, come as Apple’s traditional iPhone freshen-up approaches.

Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference begins June 6. That’s been used as Apple’s launching pad for the latest iPhone the past few years, but Apple has suggested the event will focus almost exclusively on software this year.

The tech-community’s hunch is that a new iPhone will be unveiled in the fall and rolled out in time for the holidays.

Mommy Blog: Zazoo Kids Alarm Clock

As a mom to a 4 year old and 18 month old, sleep is a precious commodity in our house. Now our daughter can’t get out of the crib …yet so she is there until we go to get her but our 4 year old on the other hand has his moments. For the most part both are amazing sleepers but he goes through spells of getting up and since he can’t tell time just yet he goes by whether it is dark or light or a potty call or he “got scared Mommy”.  This alarm clock sounds like the perfect gift for him.   Maybe it will work and maybe not but I think a few extra minutes of sleep are worth the cost.

http://gadgetwise.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/04/22/longer-sleep-for-your-children-and-you/?nl=technology&emc=cta4

“Consumers Overwhelmed by Increased Volume of Local Deals”

Microsoft commissioned a recent  Bing/Impulse Research survey, investigating the new coupon craze that has been so prevalent lately. As a subscriber to Groupon, Living Social, Half Off Depot, ScoutMob and many others.. I can attest that it is sometimes quite overwhelming to open your email box and see deals flashing in front of you.

Some of the findings in this report that I found interesting:

The Numbers Behind the Deals Craze

  • Everyone loves a good deal. Approximately half (47 percent) of adults surveyed said they use more local deals and coupons than last year.

 

  • People are struggling to manage their deals
    • Sixty-three percent of adults will search two to 10 different coupon sources every week, and 11 percent will search through more than 10 sources.
    • Nearly 50 percent of adults surveyed will spend more than 15 minutes each week searching for deals, with almost one-quarter of adults surveyed spending between 30 and 60 minutes on the hunt.

 

  • Deals just might get you that second date. Ninety percent of women said they would go on a second date with someone who paid for dinner with a coupon.

 

  • Vacation deals or bust. Nearly 80 percent of people said they were likely to pick their summer vacation destination based on whether they could find a deal or redeem a coupon to save money.

 

  • Moms live for good deals.
    • Eighty-one percent of moms will search multiple sources every week in their effort to find coupons and local deals.
    • When it comes to moms versus women in general, moms are approximately twice as likely to search 10 or more coupon sources every week.
    • Single moms lead the pack in frugality, with 96 percent saying they are “coupon believers,” compared with 92 percent of adults overall.

To read the whole release, click here.

We asked our fellow Wi-Ex’ers: “What’s Your Favorite App?”

Since the Wi-Ex zBoost is a Gadget-for-your-Gadget, we’re pretty into our smartphones over here at Wi-Ex. Here are some of our favorite Apps for our smartphones!

 Frankie, Sales.  iPhone – Couch to 10K

 Bethany, Marketing. iPhone — Words with Friends

Kate, Marketing.  Blackberry Tour — Pandora

Julie, Marketing.  Blackberry Curve — Scoutmob

Lloyd, CEO. iPhone — New Pro-Thomson Reuters and Red Laser

Desiree, Sales. Droid Global -– Daily Bible and Bubble Buster

John, Operations.  iPhone — Shazam

Robert, Engineering.  iPhone — Siri

Roman, Customer Support. Droid Incredible — Shazam

Carol, IT.  iPhone — Business Card Reader

Catherine, Customer Support.  iPhone — Words with Friends

Cellphone Only Homes Becoming the Norm

As smartphones get smarter and cellphone plans get cheaper while expanding benefits, landlines are becoming more obsolete. While cell phones were once thought as a convenient way to contact people out of the home, they have now become a necessary lifeline, whether for business or personal use, that keep people connected their entire day.

A recent J.D. Power and Associates Report[1] shows that 56% of wireless phone calls are made indoors, which is an increase of 16% since 2003.

Following the trend of increased indoor wireless calls, one in four American homes (26.6%) are cellphone only, according to National Center for Health Statistics[2].  As the trend of cellphone only homes shows no signs of slowing down or being reversed, Stephen Blumberg at the Center for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Center for Health Statistics says, “The phrase ‘home telephone number’ is going the way of rotary dial phones and party lines.”

The only problem with cellphone only homes, the J.D. Power and Associates Report points out is, the quality of cellphone reception is getting worse. Cellphone signal weakens as is has to pass through obstacles such as walls, windows and roofs.

With the loss of landlines and the weakening of cell reception, cell phone signal boosters, such as Wi-Ex’s zBoost line, are also becoming a necessary accessory to keep people connected.

CNN: Android or iPhone? Surveys show smartphone users are fickle

In the summer of 2010, the iPhone was most popular. Now 31% of consumers plan to purchase an Android device

Editor’s note: Amy Gahran writes about mobile tech for CNN.com. She is a San Francisco Bay Area writer and media consultant whose blog, Contentious.com, explores how people communicate in the online age.

(CNN) – Is Android “the new black”? New research from Nielsen indicates that consumer tastes in smartphones may be as variable as fashion trends.

Way back in the summer of 2010 — ages ago in mobile-phone technology time — a third of U.S. consumers who were planning to purchase a new smartphone reported a preference for the Apple iPhone.

About one fourth planned to get an Android phone, and 13% planned to get a BlackBerry.

Today, Nielsen reports: “Those same surveys for January-March 2011 show just how much things have changed: According to the latest figures, 31% of consumers who plan to get a new smartphone indicated Android was now their preferred OS. Apple’s iOS has slipped slightly in popularity to 30%, and RIM Blackberry is down to 11%.”

Perhaps even more telling: “Almost 20% of consumers are unsure of [which smartphone] to choose next.”

This variability makes one thing clear: It’s difficult to predict with any level of certainty which mobile devices will be popular in the future.

So whenever you hear predictions such as International Data Corp’s recent forecast that by 2015, Windows Phone 7 will be the #2 smartphone platform worldwide, take it with a huge grain of salt.

Because of this variability, it’s likely that companies which develop mobile services and content will increasingly deliver their offerings via a mobile web browser, rather than via “native” mobile apps designed to run on a specific mobile platform.

Developing several versions of a native app is a big, costly software development and maintenance effort.

Browser-based experiences are inherently cross-platform. While such mobile “web apps” cannot deliver the full range of features as native apps, often they are good enough to get the job done for most mobile users, while substantially improving the economics of those offerings.

The opinions expressed in this post are solely those of Amy Gahran.

Bits blog: Is the iPad 2 a Lot Better Than the Original?

Thinner iPad 2Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
 
Apple says the iPad 2 is 33 percent thinner than the original model.

Over the weekend, Chris Dixon, an entrepreneur and co-founder of the social site Hunch, lamented on Twitter that he still had not purchased a new iPad 2. Although Mr. Dixon hopes to buy the highly coveted device soon, he questioned whether it was a “must have” upgrade from the first generation iPad.

I responded, along with a number of other Twitter users, that the new model had changed everything for me. I personally find that I use the iPad 2 for about 15 hours a week; when I owned the first-generation iPad, I used it for only one to two hours a week.

For me, there are several explanations. The iPad 2 answered a number of complaints I had with the previous model, which always felt a little too heavy and slow. Although the new model is only slightly smaller around the edges — Apple shaved millimeters off the exterior bezel — it is quite a bit thinner and lighter. As a result it is easier to hold when reading or surfing the Web. It is also more manageable on a morning commute.

Others I spoke with who have upgraded iPads also liked it better than the original version.

“Although the new iPad isn’t dramatically thinner, lighter or faster than the first, the collection of small improvements Apple has made make it feel like a huge deal,” said Alex Rainert, a designer who is head of product at the location-based start-up Foursquare. “The first iPad always felt a bit too heavy when typing or surfing the Web. The changes to the second generation make it feel like a fundamentally more usable device.”

For me, the iPad 2 also feels considerably faster than its predecessor. In part this is because the new smart cover, as I’ve written in the past, turns the device on as soon as you open it.  Typing is quicker, apps are more responsive, and the Web browser to me feels almost as fast as that of a desktop computer. In the past, the browser was extremely slow with image-heavy Web sites.

Justin Ouellette, a developer at BetaWorks, noted that the small increases in performance on the iPad went further than they would on a desktop computer.

“The iPad kind of ‘becomes’ whatever app you’re currently running, and being more powerful and physically slighter allows it to deliver that transparent experience ever more convincingly,” Mr. Ouellette wrote in an e-mail. “The best user interface is one you don’t notice because it never lags or causes you trouble.”

What do you think? For those of you who have upgraded to an iPad 2, do you think it’s a big improvement? Is it a “must have” upgrade?

http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/04/18/do-the-ipad-2-upgrades-make-it-a-must-have-device/?ref=technology