Apple Watch: Early impressions

In case you haven't heard, a smartwatch from a little fruit company in California started shipping today. It has an Apple Watch in house, along with some early thoughts (very early, mind you, as we're going to take some time before running our full Apple Watch review).
Out of all the big new Apple products from the last 15 years – the iPod, iPhone, iPad and now the Watch – the Apple Watch makes the least striking first impression. Okay, well maybe if you've never used a smartwatch, you'll be blown away from the first moment you see notifications and voice control on your wrist, but we've already been there many times over. There were no "holy shit!" moments after strapping on the Apple Watch.

But that isn't to say this won't be a damn good smartwatch, and potentially a game-changer for wearables. And as the hours pass by in our first day with the Apple Watch, our appreciation has only grown.
First, there's an attention to detail here that we haven't yet seen in wearables. The software is a bit more complicated, with a steeper learning curve, than you might expect from Apple, but once you start getting used to the UI and navigation methods, you realize everything is placed very intuitively.
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For example, "glances" (quick access cards for individual apps) live below the main clock face, just a swipe away. You check on notifications with a swipe down, just like on smartphones. Pressing the Digital Crown button is similar to the iPhone's home button: single tap to either go back or to your app home screen, double-tap to jump between your most recent app and the clock face. A long-press summons Siri. A second button below jumps to a list of frequent contacts.
The Digital Crown makes sense. While many smartwatch makers have used faux crowns as buttons, Apple is the first we've seen to let you actually wind it as a navigation tool. Twisting the crown on your main apps screen zooms in and out, so you can get a broader or closer look on the watch's tiny screen. In other areas, it replaces swiping your finger to scroll through a list or longer message.

While on most smartwatches alerts feel like a tiny motor buzzing your wrist, the Apple Watch feels like your wrist is actually being tapped. Little details like this aren't game-changers on their own, but they do add a more human element to the experience.

BMW to Introduce Scooters to U.S.

BMW plans to bring their first scooters to the United States. At the International Motorcycle Shows event in Long Beach, the company says it plans to introduce next year to their U.S. lineup the C 600
     Sport and C 650 GT.
     For LA Times, BMW Motorrad USA vice president Pieter de Waal said these scooters are a “step in  the dark” for the company that has produced motorcycles since 1923. He said BMW expects 70 percent of its scooter sales to come from Italy, France, and Spain, where BMW has garnered “overwhelming support” from the market to produce the two-wheelers.



Pricing hasn’t yet been announced either, but De Waal estimates that the scooters will cost about $10,000 when they enter the U.S. market next fall, most likely as a 2013 model.

The two scooters share the same 647 cubic-centimeter two-cylinder engine. The 2-cylinder inline engine of the C 600 Sport and C 650 GT is an all new development by BMW Motorrad with a displacement of 647 cc. In both models, its rated power output is 44 kW (60 hp) at 7500 rpm, and its max torque of 66 Nm is available at 6000 rpm. The power is transferred via a directly integrated CVT, or continuously variable transmission.


 They’re capable of reaching a top speed of 100 mph. By comparison, the most powerful Vespa you can buy has an engine less than half as large and makes just 22 horsepower.

The differing characteristics of the concepts behind these two maxi scooters appeal to a wide target group: the C 600 Sport for the riders with sports ambitions, and the C 650 GT for customers attaching greater importance to comfort and touring ability.

The BMW C 600 Sport has a taller seat, flatter handlebars, and sportier styling. The C 650 GT will differ by having a larger saddle, higher handlebars, and adjustable backrests.

How they’ll do in the U.S. is “a step in the dark,” said Pieter de Waal, vice president of BMW Motorrad USA. Scooters aren’t nearly as commonplace in the U.S. as they are in Europe, and their sales are correlated with gas prices.



LG Debuting 55-inch Ultra-Thin OLED TV at CES, May Sell Later This Year


 LG Debuting 55-inch Ultra-Thin OLED TV at CES, May Sell Later This Year



 Jumbo-screen TV lovers, hide your checkbooks — it sounds like LG will be the first electronics manufacturer to sell a monster-sized 3D organic light-emitting diode (OLED) TV later this year. Hey, what better way to celebrate 2012 (you know, the year the world ends!) than by earmarking a bunch of money to fill your living room with 55 inches of “emissive electroluminescent” resplendence?

Look for the OLED TV to make a splash at the Consumer Electronics Show in Vegas next week, says LG spokesperson Ken Hong (via Bloomberg). Contrary to some reports, it won’t be the world’s largest TV — that distinction still goes to Panasonic’s 152-inch 3D Plasma TV, which’ll set you back $500,000 — but it’ll certainly be the biggest OLED screen in the offing.


A quick refresher: OLED tech uses organic carbon-based compounds that display red, green or blue light in response to electric current. Unlike an LCD screen, OLED screens don’t require crystals that “twist” and “untwist.” They tend to produce sharper, cleaner images, have ultrafast refresh rates and since they don’t need a backlight (to illuminate the crystals in LCDs) they use considerably less power and can fit in thinner frames.

Speaking of thin, LG says its 55-inch OLED display is a trifling four millimeters thick and weighs just 16.5 pounds. Read that again: four millimeters. Note to James Bond and Jason Bourne: Don’t bother clobbering bad guys with one of these, because you might as well use tissue paper.

And just in case: Don’t confuse OLED with LED screens — LED TVs are just a different kind of LCD TV. They’re still using LCD tech for the picture, but with LED backlighting instead of “cold cathode” (CCFL) illumination. They’re a midpoint between LCDs and OLEDs, using less power (LED backlighting) and allowing for thinner display bezels without charging OLED prices.

In other words, don’t expect LG’s 55-inch OLED TV to be cheap. NPD DisplaySearch estimates it’ll cost a whopping $8,000 when it goes on sale, probably sometime in the third quarter of 2012

Go Daddy looses 21,000 domains in 1 day

Go Daddy looses 21,000 domains in 1 day





It appears that companies supporting SOPA are starting to understand that support for the act could cost you alot of customers.
Simply put the act would criminalize any use of any copyrighted information without explicit permission from it’s owner.  Meaning say you decided to post a video that has music in it, if you didn’t pay a fee to the owner you could be prosecuted for threat of the property.  This bill is BAD NEWS and should die.  Several other Bills are circulating that are better and would handle issues better.

Social media platform Reddit is at the forefront of objections with this Act.  It’s users have called for folks to close their GODADDY accounts.

Google and Mozilla renew default search deal for Firefox









Recent speculation had it that Google was attempting to KILL off the competition by funding reports that showed Google’s Chrome browser at the top of the Browser War’s.

This coming just after the recent expiration of the Search Engine Deal that brings in capitol to fund the Mozilla project.

Word out of the BBC this morning is that Google has renewed that deal and will remain the default search engine in the Firefox browser for the next 3 years.

Mozilla relies very heavily on the income from the search partnerships.

With Firefox now, the latest of Mozilla’s incarnation.  Mozilla hopes to be closing the Gap between them Chrome and IE once more.

Ultra-D to replace 3D released at CES 2012


Ultra-D to replace 3D released at CES 2012








Tired of the 3D glasses already?  Getting headaches from them like ME!!!!

A solution appears to be on the horizon.  It still remains to be seen if 3D is the same FAD we saw in the 50's and 60's when it comes to Satellite and Cable content.  As well as BluRay releases.

Stream TV Networks, Inc’s product will allow users for the first time to control the amount of 3D rendering which should help those that find 3D movies to be UNCOMFORTABLE.  The product also is said to NOT REQUIRE Glasses.  The process also will allow for conversion of 2D movies to 3D as well.  This is a technology that should be watched closely as it’s developing.  We could start to see it in TV, Converter Boxes, Tablets, Desktop PCs, Gaming, Laptops, Digital Signage, Mobile Phones, Digital Picture Frames very soon.

Intel Shows Off Its Smart Phone and Tablet for 2012

Intel Shows Off Its Smart Phone and Tablet for 2012





2012 appears to be the year that the BIG Chipmaker pushes further into the Mobile Market.  With it’s latest “Atom” processor dubbed Medfield.  It’s lower power and all in one chip approach could bring the chip giant the leg up in this lucrative, market.

Intel released the prototype of a Smart Phone running Google’s Android OS on the Medfield.

The Chip and devices will be directly targeting the domination that ARM processors have held on the Mobile,  Smartphone and Tablet markets.  Recent news out of AMD also reported a shift toward capturing a piece of this market as well.