GPS Devices http://gps.big-fast.com News of GPS Devices Tue, 09 Feb 2010 19:18:26 +0000 http://wordpress.org/?v=2.7.1 en hourly 1 Google Aerial Imagery Hits 3 More Us Cities http://gps.big-fast.com/2010/02/google-aerial-imagery-hits-3-more-us-cities/ http://gps.big-fast.com/2010/02/google-aerial-imagery-hits-3-more-us-cities/#comments Tue, 09 Feb 2010 19:18:26 +0000 admin http://gps.big-fast.com/2010/02/google-aerial-imagery-hits-3-more-us-cities/

aerial imagery Google aerial imagery hits 3 more US cities

Back in December, Google announced the launch of aerial imagery for 2 cities in the United States. The high-resolution imagery augments the satellite imagery of Google Earth and the street-level imagery of Street View, giving viewers a look at the ground as if they were flying in a helicopter or some other low-flying aircraft. Originally available only in San Jose and San Diego, both in California, aerial imagery is now also available for Sacramento and Oakland, California, as well as Portland, Oregon.

Travel company Orbitz and online real estate bigwigs Trulia and Redfin have all implemented the new imagery via the Google Maps API. Google Maps Mania also has a collection of mashups demonstrating usage case examples of aerial imagery.

Google aerial imagery hits 3 more US cities is a post from: GPS Obsessed

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Google Aerial Imagery Hits 3 More Us Cities

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Three More Glonass Satellites Launched http://gps.big-fast.com/2010/01/three-more-glonass-satellites-launched/ http://gps.big-fast.com/2010/01/three-more-glonass-satellites-launched/#comments Thu, 07 Jan 2010 10:21:05 +0000 admin http://gps.big-fast.com/2010/01/three-more-glonass-satellites-launched/ The Russian space agency Roscosmos launched a venerable Proton rocket carrying three GLONASS-M satellites into orbit on December 14. Each 3,000-pound satellite is designed to last seven years. They join a constellation now numbering 19 satellites, although one of those is about to be decommissioned and two more are out of service for maintenance.

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Three More Glonass Satellites Launched

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Trimble Launches New Version Of Its Outdoor Gps Navigation Application On The Android http://gps.big-fast.com/2010/01/trimble-launches-new-version-of-its-outdoor-gps-navigation-application-on-the-android/ http://gps.big-fast.com/2010/01/trimble-launches-new-version-of-its-outdoor-gps-navigation-application-on-the-android/#comments Wed, 06 Jan 2010 10:21:05 +0000 admin http://gps.big-fast.com/2010/01/trimble-launches-new-version-of-its-outdoor-gps-navigation-application-on-the-android/ Trimble announced a new version of its Trimble Outdoors application for the Android Marketplace. The new version allows outdoor enthusiasts to find their way, capture their excursions with multi-media, and share with others through the Trimble Outdoors community. In November, Trimble introduced its popular AllSport GPS application, a fitness application for mobile phones, for the Android platform.

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Trimble Launches New Version Of Its Outdoor Gps Navigation Application On The Android

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Review: Acer A1 Liquid http://gps.big-fast.com/2009/12/review-acer-a1-liquid/ http://gps.big-fast.com/2009/12/review-acer-a1-liquid/#comments Sun, 27 Dec 2009 10:11:43 +0000 admin http://gps.big-fast.com/2009/12/review-acer-a1-liquid/ 1DDFC329-16BE-4F3A-BA93-93D9185EDDC5 My initial reaction to this Acer Android device was desire and excitement. On paper everything looked great, the design was sexy, the OS robust and the price tag was uber-attractive. Did it do it for me? Well, yes and no. You will have to decide.

The device isn’t as thin as the likes of the iPhone, but it is not exactly podgy either. It’s a nice width for daily use and one handed use is achievable with minimal adaption.

DSCN0643_thumb Review: Acer A1 Liquid
The left side of the device has the power button. It’s made from quite light plastic, like all the exterior buttons.

DSCN0659_thumb Review: Acer A1 Liquid
The right sees a volume rocker and a dedicated camera button. Glad to see the camera button, I’m growing increasingly tired of phone omitting the camera button, it is something most will find essential.

DSCN0652_thumb Review: Acer A1 Liquid
On the bottom is a little door leading to the charger port, an oddity is the miniUSB connector under here, Why Acer has decided to package one of these is anyone’s guess since the market has decided that microUSB will be the standard. Also present is a small hole for the mic.

DSCN0644_thumb Review: Acer A1 Liquid
The front face is smothered in delicious black gloss,  Of course, in direct light this will be marred by finger prints but it’s offset by the white surround and ends up looking very elegant at all times. At 3.5 it’s are real shame there is no Multitouch in Android 1.6.

DSCN0662_thumb Review: Acer A1 Liquid
The top of the device has a nice feature. LED notifications. Under the black, transparent plastic lies a number of notification lights for battery charging, new mail and call indicator. Designed for the shirt breast pocket I guessing and brilliant when in use. There is also a 3.5mm headphone jack. Great stuff.

DSCN0658_thumb Review: Acer A1 Liquid
The back of the device sees the raised housing for the 5.0 megapixel camera and a small grill for the loudspeaker. No flash or self portrait mirror however. The loudspeaker sounds fair enough however it is too close to the plastic and you can here something of a plasticy reverberation from the cover when the loud speaker is active. Much like a cheaper sound system this shows up the device’s elegant design and reminds you of the price tag.

DSCN0650_thumb Review: Acer A1 Liquid
Under the “rip away” back cover is the battery compartment. Like the S200 this has a little clip to secure the battery and I like this. Sim card and MicroSD are also here.

Android OS is flavoured 1.6. There are only a couple of modifications by Acer, mainly some fan type affairs on the sides of the expanded desktop. These fans hold media on the far left and website bookmarks on the far right. Without and heavy modifications like HTC Sense of Moto Blur we are able to experience an also raw Android experience and it’s wonderful.

If you look at these two unboxing videos you will see just how speedy the device is. This is the biggest plus point of the phone. Android feels natural. There is little in the way of lag, in fact I might be so bold to say that I have yet to experience any lag. the odd loading screen but nothing unexpected. A click of an icon and your application is right there. Simply stunning. Even though the processor runs at 768mhz and the 1ghz processor are about to take over the market, this device just nails Android. Fast and stable.

Some of the more perceptive will notice the device has done away with some of the usual suspects when it comes to operating buttons. Gone is the d-pad or trackball as well as the two call buttons. Instead the Acer dares to rely on the screen from most functions. The four buttons we are left with are mostly non-standard function buttons. The Square is a home button, the search button is the only standard here, a back button is pretty handy and the menu button is maybe a little more unrecognisable.
A small problem is that these buttons are touch sensitive, as oppose to being clicky buttons.The only light up when you touch them so using them an night can be problematic especially when you accidentally hit the back button instead of menu. 

The screen is beautifully sensitive. Acer has for some reason down played the capacitive display which is odd. I’m quite taken by it, even though it does not have that glass quality feel of the iPhone it manages to still feel solid and responsive.

Battery life is so-so, I’m still in the honeymoon period and the phone has stood up to moderate – heavy usage each day. I don’t make that many phone calls however I would have Twitter set to check every 5 minutes and probably spend about 2 hours interacting with the net in some shape of form. The battery is generally on about 30% by the end of the day. However, it’s interchangeable so it may not be the biggest concern.

All good so far, what’s the problems? Well, there are three.

First. The quality of the camera is pretty awful. I’m shock this is marketed as a 5.0 megapixel. Of course, megapixel isn’t the best way to grade a camera. The pictures here are from a trip to a petting zoo, in the middle of the afternoon, might have be a little over cast but the light levels were ample of a few snaps. The camera was slow to focus, slow to snap and the output was pretty murky. This was on auto and no end of fiddling would help improve these shots.

2009-12-12 15.53.03 2009-12-12 15.53.27 2009-12-12 15.55.30 2009-12-12 15.56.01 2009-12-12 15.56.38 2009-12-12 15.34.42  2009-12-12 15.38.46  2009-12-12 15.40.29 2009-12-12 15.40.46 2009-12-12 15.41.41       2009-12-12 15.49.07 

Secondly. the phone is housed in a glossy plastic housing. Glossy plastic tends to be slippy, especially in cold weather. The phone has slipped from my hands a number of times. It’s a real pain given the screen is super sensitive when fumbling around, trying to catch it, you’ll invariably hit a button you are not wanting to hit. I lost an email thanks to this and called someone I really didn’t want to speak to.

Thirdly and most of all, once signal is lost, it seems to stay lost. Moving from town to town I noticed that the phone received no service and it didn’t latch back onto anything until I turned the phone off and on again. Quite a serious problem if you ask me. I paid close attention when heading back home again, to find the same thing happened again.
The aerial is not as strong as one would care for. Comparing it to my Touch Pro2 the Acer spent a lot of time with 1-2 bars less at any given moment. Not woeful, just not stellar.

I’m honestly loving this device and given the price I think this is a must for anyone wanting the move to Android. The network problems may present a significant problem for some users but hopefully it a problem solely relating to the device I am using or an update will appear in the future.
Screaming ahead of the Heroes, G1’s and Magic’s the Liquid is fast and stable. The same level of customisation hasn’t been worked in here, but that all depends on taste. For sheer performance the Acer trounces the others. The price is excellent and whilst the build quality isn’t on the same level as HTC, Samsung or Motorola it’s not quite as bad so you might expect.

Thanks go out to Clove who have supplied us this review device

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Specs:

Network – GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900, HSDPA 1900 / 2100
Size – 115 x 62.5 x 12.5 mm
Weight – 135 g
Display – TFT capacitive touchscreen, 256K colors
Size – 80 x 800 pixels, 3.5 inches
Memory – Internal 256MB RAM, 512MB ROM
Card slot – microSD up to 32GB
Data – GPRS, EDGE, 3G, HSDPA, 7.2 Mbps; HSUPA, 2.0 Mbps
WLAN – Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g
Bluetooth – v2.1 with A2DP
USB -  miniUSB
Camera – 5 MP, 2560?1920 pixels, autofocus
CPU Qualcomm Snapdragon 8250 768 MHz processor
GPS with A-GPS support
Acer UI 3.0
Accelerometer sensor for auto-rotate
Proximity sensor for auto turn-off
MP3/WAV/WMA/eAAC+ player
MP4/WMV/H.264/H.263 player
Facebook and Flickr integration
Pocket Office (Word, Excel, PowerPoint, OneNote, PDF viewer)
Voice memo
3.5mm audio jack
Battery – Standard battery, Li-Ion 1350 mAh
Stand-by Up to 400 h
Talk time Up to 5 h

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Review: Acer A1 Liquid

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Fring Brings World’s First Fring & Skype Video Calls On Mobile http://gps.big-fast.com/2009/11/fring-brings-world%e2%80%99s-first-fring-skype-video-calls-on-mobile/ http://gps.big-fast.com/2009/11/fring-brings-world%e2%80%99s-first-fring-skype-video-calls-on-mobile/#comments Mon, 30 Nov 2009 09:46:47 +0000 admin http://gps.big-fast.com/2009/11/fring-brings-world%e2%80%99s-first-fring-skype-video-calls-on-mobile/ 9-fring Fring Brings World’s First Fring & Skype Video Calls On MobileLONDON, November 24, 2009. fring, the multi-award winning mobile application that lets users communicate and share web-based experiences from their mobile devices, today announces the world’s first mobile video calls over internet protocol (IP).

fring video enables users to conduct video calls with other fringsters as well as with Skype contacts over their device’s Wi-Fi or 3G internet connection.

This video feature is embedded within the fring application that enables free voice calls to other fring users, Skype and GTalk buddies as well as friends on regular phone lines via Skype-Out and hundreds of popular SIP services. fring users live chat, update profiles, share files and talk with friends from several Instant Messaging services like MSN, AIM, GoogleTalk and Skype, in addition to interacting with popular online social networks including Twitter, Facebook, Last.fm and more, all from one integrated fring contact list.

Avi Shechter, Co-Founder & CEO of fring: “As the mobile VoIP trail-blazers since this industry’s inception, we have a responsibility to continue breaking the mobile-internet barriers, and bringing users all the choices, richness and always-on connectivity that internet communications on mobile can deliver.”

Shechter continued, “fring was the first to bring Nokia, iPhone and Android users the choice to make free calls together with live chat over their devices’ internet connection, the first to enable cost-saving mobile twitter over internet, and now we’re proud to continue leading the field with the world’s first mobile video over internet including fring and Skype mobile video calls.”

The new fring version with video calls support is currently available to users with Nokia X6, N97 mini, N97, 5800, N95 8G, N95 and N82 devices. Versions for other handsets and operating systems will be launched very shortly.

via Press Release

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Fring Brings World’s First Fring & Skype Video Calls On Mobile

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T-mobile’s Employees Selling Your Personal Information http://gps.big-fast.com/2009/11/t-mobile%e2%80%99s-employees-selling-your-personal-information/ http://gps.big-fast.com/2009/11/t-mobile%e2%80%99s-employees-selling-your-personal-information/#comments Thu, 19 Nov 2009 09:41:18 +0000 admin http://gps.big-fast.com/2009/11/t-mobile%e2%80%99s-employees-selling-your-personal-information/ t-mobile-blocks-truphone-281

In a follow up to this story I noticed a post on Pocket Gamer naming the company. That would be T-Mobile. read on for more:

[Editor's note: the title of this story originally read 'Mobile operator under investigation...' After publication the operator in question was revealed as T-Mobile. The text of the story is unaltered.]


The Information Commissioner’s Office has told BBC News that staff at one of the UK’s major mobile network operator’s are under investigation for selling customer data to brokers, who then forwarded the information to rival companies that called customers as contracts came to an end.
The firm in question (which hasn’t been named) apparently alerted the privacy watchdog after it became suspicious of the private data trading, and has since been aiding investigators in uncovering the details.
"We are considering the evidence with a view to prosecuting those responsible and I am keen to go much further and close down the entire unlawful industry in personal data," Information commissioner Christopher Graham said, adding, "The existing paltry fines… are simply not enough to deter people from engaging in this lucrative criminal activity. The threat of jail, not fines, will prove a stronger deterrent."
The case highlights the profitability of selling private data, which is illegal without the customer’s express permission, and the Ministry of Justice is currently considering tougher penalties for illegal data trading.

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T-mobile’s Employees Selling Your Personal Information

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Garmins Between $100 And $120 For Black Friday http://gps.big-fast.com/2009/11/garmins-between-100-and-120-for-black-friday/ http://gps.big-fast.com/2009/11/garmins-between-100-and-120-for-black-friday/#comments Sat, 07 Nov 2009 09:41:33 +0000 admin http://gps.big-fast.com/2009/11/garmins-between-100-and-120-for-black-friday/ garmin-nuvi-android Garmins Between $100 And $120 For Black Friday
Garmin is expected to have a few models specially designed for the American Black Friday madness. These GPS navigation systems will cost somewhere between $100 and $120 according to Twice. Also according to Cliff Pemble who is the president and COO of Garmin the sales of nuviphone were “slow” so a TV ad campaign was just launched. Reporting on the Android based nuviphone – he said it is slated for 2010.

Garmin doesn’t sound like they are too concerned about this new generation of competitors coming from GPS enabled smart phones. These new navigation apps still require a costly data plan and usually a higher end phone.

Garmins between $100 and $120 for Black Friday

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Garmins Between $100 And $120 For Black Friday

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Firefox Heading To Android http://gps.big-fast.com/2009/10/firefox-heading-to-android/ http://gps.big-fast.com/2009/10/firefox-heading-to-android/#comments Tue, 20 Oct 2009 09:41:21 +0000 admin http://gps.big-fast.com/2009/10/firefox-heading-to-android/ fennec_logo2_thumb Firefox Heading To Android With little or no chance of ever being able to make it through the draconian approval process of Apple’s iTunes App Store, Mozilla, the not-for-profit organization behind the Firefox browser, is betting on two major, if emerging, mobile operating platforms: Maemo, Nokia’s new Linux-based operating system, and Google’s Android OS. But don’t count on Mozilla supporting RIM’s BlackBerry OS anytime soon.

This weekend, during my onstage interview with Mozilla CEO John Lilly, I asked him what his plans were to get Firefox going on mobiles, especially since Webkit had gained so much attention and market share. “It is a different day, same story on the mobile as it was on the desktop,” Lilly quipped. On the desktop, Firefox continues to try to disrupt the entrenched incumbent, Microsoft’s Internet Explorer.

“Sure, we are behind, but we didn’t want to do a browser that didn’t do the whole web,” Lilly said. “We wanted to build a browser that did everything — Javascript, CSS, Flash, SVG, video and audio. What that meant was we had to wait for a while for devices to get better to handle this modern browser.” Lilly said that Mozilla’s mobile browser, code-named Fennec, is Firefox with the most advanced rendering engine. “It is the most advanced mobile browser,” he said. Fennec is based on the Firefox 3.6 engine, which is not even available on the desktop just yet.

fennecmaemo3_thumb_thumb Firefox Heading To Android

And Lilly isn’t just tooting his own horn. I’ve been playing around with an early version of Nokia’s N900 device, and Firefox is perhaps its single biggest standout feature. It works just like it does on a desktop and, thanks to the seamless integration of AwesomeBar, a smarter version of a URL bar that uses Mozilla Weave, I can get access to all my bookmarks, my browsing history and other preferences. (Related Post: “Coming Soon: A Mozilla App for the iPhone“)

When I asked Lilly about why Mozilla is interested in the Nokia Maemo, which is still not a viable platform, he explained that Mozilla was betting on the future and Maemo was a modern mobile OS built with the Internet in mind. “Nokia is invisible in the U.S., but that is not the case in rest of the world,” Lilly said. Even if N900 doesn’t prove to be the device that gets explosive adoption, then the next Maemo device will be the one that gets traction. Mozilla will release Firefox for Windows Mobile and then Android, he said.

Why? Because he thinks there is a lot of overlap among folks who use Firefox and those who might buy Android-based devices.  When I asked why not develop Firefox for BlackBerry, Lilly said that because the BlackBerry is a Java-based platform, Mozilla had no interest in building a browser for it, regardless of the number of devices in use. Mozilla also has some misgivings about Symbian, preferring to develop for Maemo instead.

“Until recently, Android was Java, but they released Android NDK which uses C/C++ and that is what we program in, so we are now looking at developing Firefox for Android,” said Jay Sullivan, vice president of Mobile for Mozilla.

“Mozilla Firefox will be the first mobile browser to support add-ons,” boasted Sullivan, pointing to the fact that nearly 2 billion Firefox add-ons have been downloaded to date, and they’ve spawned successful companies such as StumbleUpon. He expects similar traction for Firefox on the mobile. “We have been spending a lot of time on making sure that JavaScript and our engine work really fast on ARM processors,” Sullivan said. “That has taken some time.”

The reason: Mozilla wants developers to embrace the more open HTML5 standards instead of developing separately for different mobile platforms. “For a company of 20 people, it is hard to support multiple platforms,” Lilly said. “Even if one platform takes 20 percent of the  market, there are other platforms you still need to develop for, and that isn’t easy for a small company. So that is why we are with Google in supporting HTML5 technologies.”

Like Lilly, Sullivan acknowledges that they have their work cut out for them: Webkit-based browsers and Opera are the dominant players in mobile, and Firefox will need to prove itself.  The good news is that mobile is a much bigger market than desktops; multiple browsers and companies can thrive. With Nokia, Mozilla has a willing (and somewhat desperate) ally, and that is a good start.

[Source – Gigaom]

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The Red Light Camera Detector Skips Gps Navigation, Charges $200 Anyway http://gps.big-fast.com/2009/10/the-red-light-camera-detector-skips-gps-navigation-charges-200-anyway/ http://gps.big-fast.com/2009/10/the-red-light-camera-detector-skips-gps-navigation-charges-200-anyway/#comments Fri, 16 Oct 2009 09:36:26 +0000 admin http://gps.big-fast.com/2009/10/the-red-light-camera-detector-skips-gps-navigation-charges-200-anyway/ red light detector The Red Light Camera Detector skips GPS navigation, charges $200 anywayThe Engadget Mobile folks made it really tough to justify the price tag of the Garmin-Asus nuviphone G60 in a comprehensive review of the GPS-oriented GPS handset yesterday. But Hammacher Schlemmer makes it even more difficult to justify the price of the Red Light Camera Detector by passing it off as a GPS navigator without any navigation features. As you can figure out from the name, the Red Light Camera Detector forgoes the GPS navigation to simply focus on speed camera and red light locations in the United States and Canada. It has a database of 6, 000, displaying their presence visually on a map and audibly. The camera database is updated monthly from chamber of commerce and state contract data, but at a nickel under $200 why wouldn’t you just buy a fully geared GPS navigator with speed camera warnings as an add-on? Focusing on a tiny market niche isn’t always the best way to go folks.

Read

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The Red Light Camera Detector Skips Gps Navigation, Charges $200 Anyway

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Blackra1n Now Available http://gps.big-fast.com/2009/10/blackra1n-now-available/ http://gps.big-fast.com/2009/10/blackra1n-now-available/#comments Tue, 13 Oct 2009 09:36:14 +0000 admin http://gps.big-fast.com/2009/10/blackra1n-now-available/ blackra1n_thumb Blackra1n Now Available

Geohot’s done it again! Beating the iPhone Dev Team to the punch, he’s just released an iPhone 3.1.2 jailbreak dubbed as blackra1n that not only works on the iPhone 3G S, but all versions of the iPhone and iPod Touch. It’s even compatible with the 3G iPod Touch though tethered. To boot it, you’ll have to rerun blackra1n again. This time around, it’s Mac users turn to be left in the dark as this maiden version of blackra1n only works with Windows. Geohot also reasserts the warning issued by the iPhone Dev Team for all those who have unlocked their iPhones – don’t upgrade to firmware 3.1.2 using iTunes. Once you’ve done this, the baseband can no longer be downgraded, and in effect, cannot be unlocked anymore.

So, are you ready to take this iPhone 3.1.2 blackra1n jailbreak for spin? If you do muster up the courage to try this out, don’t forget to hit us up in the comments section below as we’d certainly love to hear your take on this latest iPhone jailbreak.

[blackra1n, PMPtoday via bgr]

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Blackra1n Now Available

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