Archive for August 20th, 2008

For the most part, the only person you can socialize with on a handheld GPS navigator is the chick who tells you to turn left after 100 yards.

Garmin wants to change that. The device manufacturer has partnered with location-based app company ULocate to bring its Where.com software, previously available only on compatible cell phones and carriers, to some of its devices. (It hasn’t said which ones specifically.) This will give Garmin owners access to Where’s own Buddy Beacon software, which shares users’ current locations with friends. It can be hooked up to Where’s Facebook application, too, so you can tell your friends where you’re.

Personally, sharing my location isn’t exactly what first comes to mind when I use an in-car GPS navigator, but some of Where’s other services sound helpful: Yelp reviews, gas price comparisons from GasBuddy, and a handful of others. Unfortunately, a Where representative told me on Tuesday, those aren’t encompassed in the Garmin deal.

Location-sharing has been met with some skepticism. Many people thought that location-based social-networking and friend-finding applications would explode after the launch of the iPhone 3G, but we still haven’t seen an epidemic of location-sharing take off. Many cell phone owners seem to be perfectly OK not having everyone on their Facebook friends list know where they are.

I might be sold if Where makes its gas price widget available to Garmin. That’s something that Ms. “After 1.1 miles, take the exit right” hasn’t yet been able to offer me.

This post was updated at 6:22 a.m. PT on Tuesday to clarify that only the Buddy Beacon widget will be available on choose Garmin devices.

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

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Nike Swift Suit

China has hyped the XXIX Olympiad as the “green Olympics” with everything from adding a tiny bit of clean power (versus coal) for Beijing to earning an energy-effeciency award for the Olympic Village.

Critics say China hasn’t done enough to clean up its act, and even Beijing officials admit they won’t continue all the same pollution controls once the Olympic flame moves on.

Perhaps one small, but lasting token of the “green Olympics” is Nike’s uniforms and shoes for both American and Chinese athletes. The sports gear company worked with Team USA the Chinese Olympic Committee to create high-tech, high-performance outfits for the games.

But what’s truly innovative was Nike’s extensive use of recycled polyester. In particular, the Quick Suit for the track and field events is entirely made of 100% recycled polyester. This means the fibers are reclaimed from soda bottles and post-industrial scraps.

The company claims that this suit has a 7% drag reduction over the one it designed for the Athens Olympics. This could cut 0.02 seconds off a sprinter’s time in a 100m race, and in the Olympics, those fractions may be the difference between gold and silver.

Nike’s new Quick Suit is proof that a business can combine environmental responsibility with advanced technology. And that’s not the only improvement Olympians are wearing.

The footwear — especially those on the ‘Redeem Team’ for U.S. basketball — is 18% lighter than the average Nike shoe. Both the basketball shoes and the track and field shoes use a new Flywire design that radically reduces the weight and ends the use of multiple layers of material to create support in the shoes.

All of this could be a long-term environmental gain because using less material in shoes means using less resources overall. Plus, the shoes would have less to recycle after they’re worn out. The Flywire technology is available to the public in Nike’s Hyperdunk shoes.

Hopefully this “making more out of less” concept will extend throughout Nike’s product line. That could help the green Olympics last well after Beijing passes the torch.

For more visit Source:[green.yahoo]

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Beam’s SMS report can be useful to keep on top of your accounts and to spot fraud.

Intuit has just launched a useful but limited little financial tracking utility for your mobile phone: Quicken Beam. You tell it about your financial accounts, like your bank and your credit card, and then it will alert you when balances reach a certain point. You can also send it a text message and it will message you back current balances or current transactions. There’s a mobile Web version for iPhones.

Beam has the benefit of being simple, but it is not deep. It will tell you about only your last five transactions in an account, and it doesn’t offer personal financial trend data, like Mint does.

Mint, for its part, can send you SMS alerts, but you can’t request information from it via SMS, and there’s still no mobile Web site for the service.

Another useful way to get information about your accounts when you’re on the go: the PageOnce iPhone app.

Beam is free, though, which is uncommon for an Intuit app; even Quicken Online (which competes with the free Mint), costs $2.99 a month.

Oh yay! I'm broke!

Related: Why Mint works.

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

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Social site Buzznet, whose CEO makes it clear that he’s hoping to compete with the likes of MySpace and MTV on the pop culture front, has nabbed a new executive from TMZ.com. Alan Citron, former general manager of the AOL-owned entertainment site, will become head of “special projects” …

Source [The social]

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DOW JONES NEWSWIRES The American Customer Satisfaction Index edged down in the second quarter despite large gains in on the internet commerce, and the drop might signal more trouble ahead for the world economy. The index, produced by the University of Michigan’s Ross School of Business, fell 0.1 point to 75.1 on a 100-point scale, after a 0.3-point […] For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

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The 2008 Olympics in Beijing are over for Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss, the founders of would-be Facebook rival ConnectU who earned spots on the U.S. rowing team. The identical twins ended up placing sixth overall in the men’s pair event; they don’t take home any medals, but …

Source [The social]

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For the most part, the only person you can socialize with on a handheld GPS navigator is the chick who tells you to turn left after 100 yards.

Garmin wants to change that. The device manufacturer has partnered with location-based app company ULocate to bring its Where.com software, previously …

Source [The social]

Comments No Comments »

DOW JONES NEWSWIRES The American Customer Satisfaction Index edged down in the second quarter despite massive gains in on the web commerce, and the drop might signal more trouble ahead for the world economy. The index, produced by the University of Michigan’s Ross School of Business, fell 0.1 point to 75.1 on a 100-point scale, after a 0.3-point […] For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

Comments No Comments »

Social site Buzznet, whose CEO makes it clear that he’s hoping to compete with the likes of MySpace and MTV on the pop culture front, has nabbed a new executive from TMZ.com. Alan Citron, former general manager of the AOL-owned entertainment site, will become head of “special projects” …

Source [The social]

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