Showing posts with label technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label technology. Show all posts

Thursday, July 18, 2013

Top Ten Driving Apps




10.) XLR8P

P
Ok, so giving your hybrid or electric car a fake V8 soundtrack is pretty stupid and useless. Still, when you're really bored in heavy traffic, it can brighten your day.P
Download it here for iOS, or here for Android.
P

9.) Ian Hawkins Speed HudP

The Ten Best Driving Apps
Download it here for Android.

8.) FlitsmeisterP

The Ten Best Driving AppsSEXPAND
Download it here for Android.
P

7.) TorqueP

The Ten Best Driving AppsSEXPANDP
Digital gauges for everything.P
Download it here for Android.
P

6.) Greatest DriveP

The Ten Best Driving AppsSEXPAND
Download it here for iOS.
P

5.) TrapsterP

The Ten Best Driving AppsSEXPAND
Download it here for iOS, or here for Android.
P

4.) Nokia Here DriveP

The Ten Best Driving AppsSEXPANDP
Download it from here, or go for Navigon instead.
P

3.) SpotifyP

The Ten Best Driving AppsSEXPAND
Download it here for iOS, or here for Android.
P

2.) Google MapsP

The Ten Best Driving AppsSEXPANDP
When it comes to having the resources to be the best, you can't really beat Google.
Download it here for Android, or here for iOS.

1.) WazeP

The Ten Best Driving AppsSEXPAND
Download it here for iOS, or here for Android.


Thursday, June 20, 2013

Apples New Dash Concept

Apple is ready to take over your dash, and iOS for the Car could finally allow your ride to keep pace with the device in your pocket.
Apple unveiled a thorough overhaul of iOS at WWDC, with a complete redesign of the user interface, scads of added functionality and a range of built-in app updates, but one of the more notable — if overlooked — features was iOS in the Car. It’s just the latest in Apple’s continued push into vehicles that started in the early 2000s with iPod integration and has swelled to be a standard interface on 95 percent of vehicles sold in the U.S. today. But now they’re taking it a massive step further.
Apple is proposing the first comprehensive integration of a mobile OS into your dashboard, with Maps joining phone functionality, iTunes Radio and the ability to see, hear, and dictate responses to iMessages. And all of it is controlled by either software buttons on the dash or through voice commands interpreted by Siri, Apple’s digital assistant.
“What if you could get iOS on the screen that’s built into your car?” asked Apple’s SVP Eddy Cue during the WWDC keynote.
But for Apple, its automaker partners, and the suppliers that develop components, there are more questions and challenges than answers and solutions. How the system will be implemented and how much control both Apple and the major automakers will cede will prove to be the biggest sticking points going forward.
However, a dozen automakers are eager to integrate iOS in the Car to their vehicles in 2014. It’s a broad swath of the automotive landscape, with luxury marques (Mercedes-Benz, Infiniti and Jaguar) joining more blue-collar brands like Honda, Nissan, Chevrolet, Kia and Hyundai. Even Volvo is getting in on the action. And so is Ferrari.
Not just because Chevy was the first automaker to integrate Siri Eyes Free into its budget-oriented Sonic and Spark models, but because MyLink would be the perfect conduit for iOS in the Car. It’s a stripped-down, bare-bones system with limited functionality, acting more like a dumb screen than a full-fledged infotainment system. And that’s exactly the kind of portal iOS in the Car needs — a basic system that essentially acts as a screen to serve as a new version of iPod-out (or even Airplay).But it’s telling that Apple used a mock-up of the Chevrolet MyLinksystem during its demo.
That’s unlike the more technologically advanced systems from Cadillac, BMW and Ford, none of which were on the list. Those automakers have the cash and resources to spend to develop their own systems, unlike brands like Jaguar and Hyundai that have been straining to bring out their own offerings.
Of the nine automakers that were splashed across the screen at last year’s WWDC during the announcement of Siri Eyes Free — the voice-controlled integration of your phone with your car — only two have brought the functionality to market, with BMW promising integration later this year.
Because of the long development cycles required to engineer and manufacturer a vehicle, it’s hard for automakers and their suppliers to quickly implement new features at the pace we’ve come to expect from consumer electronics. But by ceding some control to a third party — in this case, Apple — automakers could integrated the latest and greatest with a minimum of outlay on their own. And this is likely the opening salvo in a larger initiative that starts with Apple.
“We got a taste of this last year with Siri integration, but [Apple] wasn’t quite ready to announce an automotive grade system,” Koslowski said of the iOS in the Car announcement. “With iOS 7 they are.”
But there are a series of technical hurdles for Apple, automakers and suppliers to overcome to allow the complete iOS takeover of your dash. How will it take over the embedded display? How much control are automakers willing to cede to an outside party? How willing are suppliers to work iOS integration into their products? And how can the system keep distractions to a minimum while offering the features its customers expect?
None of those questions have been answered by any of the automakers Wired reach out to for comment. Instead, we received the same statement below from Honda, Hyundai/Kia, Nissan/Infiniti and Mercedes-Benz:
We look forward to bringing iOS in-car integration to our lineup next year. With enhanced in-car integration, users will be able to interact using their voice with Siri or the car’s built-in controls to make phone calls, access their music, send and receive messages and get directions. Supporting cars will be available starting in 2014.
One source at an automaker confided that, “I don’t know exactly how it’s going to work.” That’s an eerily similar sentiment echoed by most automakers we asked after last year’s announcement of Siri Eyes Free.
Technical challenges aside iOS in the Car is the first major move by a consumer electronics company to bring the features of your phone directly into your vehicle. It picks up where MirrorLink has failed and where Google has yet to compete.
“Apple talked about this as being an OS for the infotainment head unit,” says Koslowski. “And it’s a pretty bold move.”


Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Zachary Quinto vs. Leonard Nimoy: "The Challenge" Audi Commercial


In preparation for the release of upcoming Star Trek Into Darkness, which opens in theaters on May 17th, Audi teamed up with the film franchise and produced a commercial featuring both the original Spock and the successor (Leonard Nimoy and Zachary Quinto) in a battle of wits. This may be only entertaining to geeks like myself but surely everyone can appreciate the splendor of the Audi as Zachary Quinto so lavishly boards it as if it were the Enterprise itself! Well, I guess you would have to be a geek to identify with that as well huh...

Suffice it to say that the original Spock, Leonard Nimoy, steals the show from the franchise's new Spock, Zachary Quinto. I particularly enjoyed the Bilbo Baggins chant he so candidly sang. Zachary Quinto has quite a task before him to fill such big shoes! So far he's doing grand :). 

After we are led to believe Leonard Nimoy to be the winner of the Challenge, the final scene of the commercial serves as enlightenment as Audi manages to amaze both these Vulcan's and we all realize that the winner was Audi all along. 

The video was ultimately clever and entertaining. I am excited to see how the movie pans out.


Monday, April 8, 2013

Google Does Not Want You To Drive


Getting you to take your eyes off the road could be worth billions in new search revenue to Google.




Google has never said exactly how it will make money off the self-driving vehicles it has been developing. Will it manufacture cars? Try to become the operating system for our highways?

The patent, titled “User interface for displaying internal state of autonomous driving system,” covers the idea of a vehicle dashboard that uses lights to cue a driver when it’s safe to relinquish control of their vehicle to a computer.

The patent includes an extremely telling schematic (shown below) of a driver behind the wheel of a self-driving car. Because what will people do when the car is driving? Obviously, they’re going to play with their iPhones.

While Google has never said how it plans to commercialize automated vehicles, it’s clear that keeping people’s eyes on the Web instead of on the road could itself mean a substantial boost to the company’s revenues.

Baloney, you say. Well, getting people to use Google services instead of doing something else is already a key strategy of Google’s. That is one reason the company can afford to maintain its free Android operating system for smartphones. All those phones mean more people on the Internet, searching via Google, and clicking on ads.

So just how much could Google earn by making sure drivers are not distracted from the Internet?

Based on U.S. Census Data there are 250 million adults in the U.S., of which 119 million work. Of those, 76 percent drive to work alone spending about 25 minutes to get there. Round trip, call it an hour. Times 260 workdays per year. That comes to about 23,514,400,000 extra person-hours a year to play with phones out of about 1,460,000,000,000 hours American adults spend awake each year. Or about 1.6% more free time overall.

Given Google’s revenue of $46 billion a year (and assuming the rest of the world behaves like Americans) the calculation suggests that by freeing up commuters to surf the Internet driverless cars are worth an additional $736 million in search revenue to Google.

Oh, and let’s not forget the point of this patent: Google’s car will tell you when it’s safe to start searching.


Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Driving with the Black Box


     The National Highway Traffic Safety Board is proposing that the event data recorder be mandatorily installed during the manufacturing of all new vehicles beginning on September 1, 2014. Also known as the Black Box, it is said to have the capability of improving safety technology because it will be able to detect design problems and safety hazards within any vehicle. 
     Although it may be improving safety on U.S. Roadways some are raising the question that it may be crossing privacy barriers. The Black Box can detect all of the following; speed, brake pedal position, location of vehicle, if the passengers are wearing a seatbelt, and if air bags were deployed during a crash. 
     Insurance companies, lawyers, and police departments seem to be in the highest benefits of this new device. Insurance companies will be able to increase or lower your rates depending on the data provided to them by the device. Lawyers will be able to provide more significant data in wreck-less driving or DWI cases, and policemen will be able to quickly note the speed a vehicle was going before being involved in a crash. The Center for Auto Safety seems to provide sufficient information that the data recorders will in fact be benefiting more than anything. In all, the new device is going to approve the safety of most drivers on the roadway.


Friday, February 8, 2013

Driverless Technology from Google Inc.


     With breakthrough technology from Google Inc., you may soon be able to sit back, relax, and take a nap in the driver seat of a moving vehicle. With the collaboration of 15 engineers, Google has developed the driver-less car technology. Operating much like the cruise control mode installed in many cars today, the driver-less system allows human drivers to take control of the car if they wish to do so. Although, that is unnecessary, because the creation is organized by elaborate maps that include the details of speed limits down to the slight curvature of the lane lines in the roadway.

     Unfortunately, most law makers are finding it difficult to digest this new innovation. The laws seem to be inadequate in the sense that they were initially structured with the notion that humans would be operating the vehicles. However, Nevada seems to be in favor of the technology. According to the Nevada Department of Motor Vehicles, they have promptly accommodated the new machinery by passing a law on June, 29 2011 that permits the operation of driver-less cars, and even issued the first license for a self-driven car.

     The self-driving car may perhaps cause a revolution in terms of driving. Concerns of designating a sober driver on a night out could easily vanish if a vehicle has the capability to reliably drive your group home without a worry of harm. It certainly raises questions for many folks in terms of receiving moving violations as well. How will we hold a vehicle at fault in the event of an accident? Much more, determine if the human or contraption was in control? Clearly there is much work to be done in order to iron out these trepidation's,  but it is surely an exciting prospect of future normality.

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Monday, October 22, 2012

Invisible Steering Wheel


     Astoundingly, the new cutting-edge technology for automobile safety happens to abandon the need for a steering wheel. Japanese automaker, Nissan, created new features that are designed to prevent collisions as opposed to typical safety features that accommodate safety during a collision. With this new technology in hand, Nissan executives plan to eliminate deaths and severe injuries involving Nissan vehicles by the year 2015. Taking a defensive driving course, online, with comedy can also help eliminate the risk accident and injury on the roadway.
     The ‘camera and processing module’, mounted on the rear-view mirror, detects the condition and direction of the roadway ahead then communicates the data to the ‘steering angle actuator’ resulting in the superlative driving performance. The vehicle nearly drives itself.
     The “autonomous emergency steering” feature intends to maneuver the vehicle to the left or right in order to avoid an accident when the breaks are not capable to stop the vehicle in time. The technology is also able to accurately detect and avoid unexpected debris and/or pedestrians.  
     When parking, Nissan also added a feature to distinguish if the driver mistakenly presses the accelerator instead of the brake.
     Nissan said that the ‘digital drive’ car will be the first of its kind to be produced commercially, and they plan to initially install the technology in the 2014 Infiniti G37S model.