Wednesday, March 2, 2011

APP OF THE DAY: Worksnug Pro

AR WEEK: Perfect for remote workers
APP OF THE DAY: Worksnug

This week on Pocket-lint is AR week and that can only mean one thing when it comes to App of the Day. We'll be running you through some of the best Augmented Reality-tinted apps around so that you can get in on the act. Today's choice cut from the world of apps if WorkSnug Pro.

WorkSnug (iPhone/BlackBerry)

Format
iOS 3.0 or later
Price
Free
Where
iTunes/BlackBerry device download





The idea behind this app is simple but effective app is to connect mobile workers to the nearest places to some work done. Anyone who works remotely will know, only too well, the panic that sets in when dashing around the streets from coffee to pub in desperate search of some Wi-Fi so that you can get on with some graft. That's where WorkSnug Pro comes in.



All you need to do is simply point the camera in front of you and the app will overlay a series of GPS-tagged pointers to tell you where the nearest work-friendly places are, whether that's coffee shops, pubs or libraries. All listed locations have been rated for their atmosphere, noise levels, power points, Wi-Fi, and crucially - the quality of the coffee. You can add your own reviews for the places you visit so that it becomes a network that's updated by the community that uses it. It even includes an integrated decibel meter so that you can take your own readings to add to your review.



It's not universal just yet, but many major cities are covered and if yours isn't, then simply sign up to worksnug.com and get the ball rolling.

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Tags: Apps App of the day WorkSnug Pro AR Week Augmented Reality

APP OF THE DAY: Worksnug  APP OF THE DAY: Worksnug  APP OF THE DAY: Worksnug 

APP OF THE DAY: Worksnug Pro originally appeared on http://www.pocket-lint.com on Wed, 02 Mar 2011 18:00:00 +0000

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Operations guide for servers and server farms for Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010

Describes how to operate and maintain sites and solutions in a SharePoint Server 2010 environment.

This document describes how to operate and maintain sites and solutions in a Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010 environment.
 
Download At Source
 


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Panasonic junks Jungle handheld games console

I'm a CE company, get me out of here!
Panasonic junks Jungle handheld games console. Gaming, Panasonic, Panasonic Jungle, 0

As we suspected back in October last year, Panasonic has ditched plans to launch its own MMO handheld gaming console, the Jungle.

"Panasonic decided to suspend further development due to changes in the market and in our own strategic direction," the company said in a statement published on Reuters, not eleborating any further on the reasons why it has yet again decided to withdraw from the videogames market. Maybe Sony Computer Entertainment's grandstanding announcement of the NGP could have had some impact.

If it had gone ahead, the Jungle would have been the first project for?the Panasonic Cloud Entertainment division (PCENT), the corporation's online media and gaming portal. It is not known whether that offshoot will now continue with other projects.

It's all a far cry from the bold statements coming out of Japan only five months ago: "All we can say for now is that this mean little machine features a kick ass display, touch pad,?keyboard, and other gaming controls that we'll be saying more about soon," said Panasonic.

"Stay very closely tuned unless you’re tone deaf. And then you should keep your eyes open."

Presumably, we can now close them again.

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Tags: Gaming Panasonic Panasonic Jungle

Panasonic junks Jungle handheld games console originally appeared on http://www.pocket-lint.com on Tue, 01 Mar 2011 12:16:00 +0000

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Why I plan on using the new Windows Home Server 2011

[Today's post comes to us courtesy of Sean Daniel, Senior Program Manager for the Home and Small Business Server Team]

I?m sure you have heard by now, that the Release Candidate of the new Windows Home Server 2011 is available for download.  It?s a huge milestone, and I can?t wait until the RTM.

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There has been a lot of negativity around upgrading the Windows Home Server (version 1) product, to Windows Home Server 2011 or even using it at all, all due to the Drive Extender removal.  I do understand the pain.  I do.  But I don?t understand why people instantly now hate WHS?? Yesterday, Paul Thurrott, also released an article on why he is betting on Windows Home Server 2011, and I wanted to take some time to explain my view.

Looking back, we remember that Drive Extender had some initial problems after the v1 release.  Some corner case of editing large files that lived on the server, in some rare cases, these large files were corrupt, people wanted to turn Drive Extender off, it scared them.  After Power Pack 1 came in to save the day, only then did people start to trust Drive Extender, and yes, they immediately fell in love with it.  Easy drive extension with a side benefit of duplicating files on multiple hard drives (?dup ?em if you got ?em!?). 

Removing DE was a very tough decision, but I ultimately agree with the decision given what I know.

But without drive extender, is the product not awesome? is your data not safe?  This blog post is intended to tell you why I think WHS 2011 is still awesome, and still keeps my data safe.  I am a new father (she?s 8 months old at the time of writing this) and I?m a hobbyist photographer.  My photos are probably the most important digital content to me, then my countless hours of work I?ve spent on my documents, then my e-mail, then all that other stuff, like ripped CDs and DVDs, and some HD DVDs.

Let?s start with the ?Just Awesome? stuff? most of this bucket falls into the Remote Web Access site, so from the outside in we go!

Remote Access is just Awesome!

For one, right from the get-go you can customize the RWA about as much as you want:

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(This picture can be found on Sean's Photoblog here)

Remember, you also still get that free 3rd level web domain and matching trusted web certificate (from GoDaddy.com) on the home server.com domain name.  Did I mention free security?

You get remote access to computers behind your network, but this time it?s powered by RDS Gateway for Server 2008 R2!  Yes, that means you can get dual monitor support, and you can take advantage of better optimization for remote access to your PC and better security using that same web certificate for encryption!  Thus no longer using security protocols from 8 years ago.

Remote Silverlight Video Streaming

Yes, no more media chewing up your processor; now a built-in, secure, streaming engine based on Silverlight, with (if you have a fast enough processor) media transcoding:

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I also just *love* the photo slide shows.  Sending access to the folks and letting them just watch 1000s of photos via a slide show, priceless:

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A Silverlight Music Player that you can make, save and use playlists on, which you can quickly switch music around in.  I even use this player in my living room when I have get a get together.  People just understand how to use it:

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The ability to download files to my local machine, or to move files around without downloading.  Yes, that?s right, delete, copy, cut and paste things all over the shared folders without actually having to download it.

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That?s a pretty powerful remote access story, one you won?t find with add-ins that run this flawlessly on the WHS v1 product? oh wait, I?m not finished, check out the iPhone formatted remote access webpage:

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And it looks just as good on an Android and Windows Phone 7!

While we?re talking about media, let?s focus on the internal network. With full DLNA 2.0 compatible streaming, you can stream to your XBOX 360, PlayStation 3, DLNA capable TV, iPad (with application), Windows 7 PC (or slate!) or any other DLNA compliant device.  You can also configure which folders participate in the streaming, simply by adding them to the set of defaults.

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Now included in WHS 2011, is the Launchpad, which enables you to easily backup your PC, access your Remote Web Access site (without having to know the URL, even if it changes!), Shared folders, and if you?re an admin, the Dashboard.  It?s also completely extensible by the SDK, so developers can kick it up a notch and add more functionality:

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That?s a whole lot of awesome packed into one box!  I want to switch gears now and talk about how WHS 2011 protects my data, and why I think it?s safe.  To me, the leading cause of data loss is usually hardware failure, most often than not, it?s a hard drive failure.  Although there is the rare instance it can be a natural disaster, which happened to my uncle about this time last year.

Last but not least, is something you can?t see, that excites me the most.  The Windows Home Server 2011 SDK (still in beta) is HUGE compared to the v1 product.  Moreover, it?s SHARED with both Windows Small Business Server 2011 Essentials, and Windows Storage Server 2008 R2 Essentials.  What does that mean? it means that things designed for business, can easily be used in the home (and vice versa).  That means lots and lots of add-ins! and high quality ones at that.  Nothing like developing for 3 platforms, instead of just one.

Data Protection, Why My Data is Safe on WHS 2011!

Data protection is all about having data on multiple drives.  Take a look at RAID configurations.  RAID5 is one of the most popular RAID configurations in the small and medium businesses, it?s probably sufficient for a home too, but sometimes it can be challenging to set up.  RAID5 is a drive configuration that exclusively uses up to 1 of a set of 3 or more drives to maintain ?parity? bits.  These parity bits are used to rebuild data on a drive if it?s lost.  The system can run in limited capacity as soon as this drive dies without the end user knowing it.  All in all, it?s a sweet system, but loose that 2nd drive before you can rebuild the array, and your data is toast! RAID1, or mirroring can also be used (check out this video where we show it being setup for SBS 2011 Essentials, which is the same as for WHS 2011), and can be used by our more technical WHS owners.

What does Windows Home Server 2011 do?  It keeps the data you choose on a second hard drive.  Yep, the data on all your client computers is automatically backed up nightly to the Home Server.  That?s up to 10 PCs safely backed up, every night.  So now the data on your clients, is also on your server.  Even if you get a Facebook Virus, you can roll back to the day before.  This is exactly the same functionality as WHS v1, except it?s faster, and more robust.

What about the data on the server?  Server?s hold data, isn?t that data safe?  Yes of course it is.  You can backup that data to an internal, or better yet, external hard drive!  Unlike WHS v1, this has HUGE improvements.  First, the backup is automated.  Automated backups take the human error factor out, and the backup uses snapshots, so even open files are captured.  I think I remembered to backup my WHS v1 about once/month.  Now I?m getting 2x/day!  And you know what, I choose the defaults because the server on my data doesn?t change that often.  You can bump this up to as often as every 30 minutes.  That?s your data, on another hard drive, 30 minute window of possible loss, but if I can?t trust a hard drive for 30 minutes, I?ve got problems with all the data that DOES change on my client computers, because that backs up every 24 hours!  [And you can?t tell me that the purchase of an external hard drive isn?t worth your data backup,  With or Without Drive Extender]

And?. if you want to do RAID, you can do RAID, you can do RAID1, RAID5, or even RAID10!  If you want to do cloud backup (which I do because I?m too lazy to take the backup hard drive out of my house), you can do that, as a few providers are building add-ins.

So what did I really loose with Drive Extender being gone?

  • In the event of a hard drive failure, all my data isn?t still available until I put in a new hard drive and restore that drive back to its original state, if I didn?t configure RAID.
  • I can?t easily extend my storage when I have a disk that?s running out of space.
  • I can?t grow my share sizes past the size of all the hard drives in the system
  • My server storage responds faster because I?m not using DEMigrate.exe all the time

None of the above actually pertains to data loss.  It?s all convenience.  It was definitely nice to have in WHS v1, but I don?t think it?s absolutely needed in a server in the home.

Massive Data Collections

Let?s talk about Massive Data Collections quickly.  Because WHS v1 made it so easy to grow your data collections, far beyond the size of one disk, without having to worry, ?have I locked myself in to only X amount of data??. 

Let?s talk about my photo collection.  It?s 80GB right now.  That?s still not 1TB.  I?m an amateur photographer, one that shoots a lot of photos, with a Canon 5D Mark II (a 21mp camera).  I still have tones of space on a single 2TB drive to grow. 

What about Video collections?  My Canon 5D Mark II takes 1080p video.  I use it a lot, that?s probably what jumped my photo collection from 60-80G in a year? but I?m still within reason.  My video collection, is a rip of all my DVDs, and some HD-DVDs, and it?s still only 130GB, that?s still less than 1TB, and I still have all the DVDs in the closet, my music collection is 40GB? still have all the CDs.  But I agree these data collections can get quite huge.  This is probably the one place folks will actually miss Drive Extender.  I couldn?t agree more. 

? But maybe it?s time to take a hard look at what data you?re hording on your server.  Do you really need to be a digital hoarder and save everything?  People save a lot, and it costs money, but do you really need it all? The guys at TechCrunch say ?I assure you that you will never print those 10,000 pictures you have stored in iPhoto. Never. Ever.?. 

If you absolutely *must* keep all that data, you should have a plan for it anyways.  It?s not like if you store magazines for comic books, you don?t put aside space in a closet for them.  With a plan, you can easily map out your storage needs, and growth.  In fact, a few people even have growth charts of their storage growth from WHS v1, so you *know* the storage you?re going to need!  I also suggest turning on File System Resource Manager and cataloging exactly which data is being used.  I bet after a year, you use less than 30% of it.

So bottom line, I stay trim with my data (rule #1 of becoming a better photographer is forcing yourself to throw away 70% of your photos), I feel like Windows Home Server 2011 is the right product for me, for simplified access to my data. Simplified Management of my network, and extremely safe data protection plans.  Moreover, because it?s Windows, it just works with other things in my house. 

I liked Drive Extender too, but the product isn?t dead, in fact, it?s still awesome!

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Augmented reality in action - maintenance and repair

AR WEEK: Will we ever need a mechanic again?
Augmented reality in action - maintenance and repair. Science, Augmented Reality, Features, Interviews, Steve Feiner, AR Week, 0

Picture the scene. It’s late. You’re driving down the motorway on a snowy Christmas Eve when disaster strikes and that ratting somewhere in your engine reaches breaking point. Your car slows to a stop and with it your dream of getting home in time for turkey. Or so you think, but that's only if you're looking at this scene as someone from 2011.

This is the future, and a not too distant one at that. So, you get out of your car with no automotive repair knowledge whatsoever and open the bonnet to see what mystery awaits. As you prop up the metal lid, a series of tiny projectors flicker on like the lights of a kitchen fridge and, instructed by your car’s internal system, they display virtual, computer generated directions of exactly what the problem is and, more importantly, what you need to do to fix it. This is the goal of Steve Feiner, Professor of Computer Science at Columbia University and augmented reality pioneer.

“Well, there are a few problems with using fixed projectors for AR,” he explains to Pocket-lint grounding our dream down a crackly line from his office in New York.

“First, they’re limited in the volume that they can project and, second, not all surfaces are good for projecting onto. You could probably do it onto the nice, shiny metal parts of a car not long after you’ve driven it out of the showroom but once it’s covered in grease and whatever else, I’m not so sure.”

Instead, Feiner and his team on the ARMAR project (Augmented Reailty for Maintainence and Repair) have been focusing on the use of head-mounted displays (HMDs) since inception in 2009. Funded and partnered by the US Marine Corps, they’ve managed to build a set a virtual set of instructions and guidance system for soldiers out in the field to perform repairs and maintenance tasks to the LAV-25A1 armored personnel carrier, what Feiner describes as essentially “a smallish tank”.

The system works by overlaying the computer generated graphical assistance over the soldier's real view of the inside of the vehicle as supplied by a camera attached to their headwear. Their movements are tracked such that a red arrow from over the shoulder can point them in the right direction for the next part of the task and, once in field of view, a simple animation of the missing part and where it should go leads into the correct mechanical move.

“We got to test the system out with at the Marines’s Aberdeen training ground using people who had enlisted and just taken the course to become mechanics. These were kids who grew up fiddling with cars and taking radios apart to see what’s inside, and they all really liked the AR system. Some would even hang out while we were setting up the tests. These were all people who’d grown up with 3D and computer games and they were really interested in what we were doing.”

The full ARMAR set up was tested against a group just working from a normal set of PDF instructions on an LCD screen inside the vehicles as well a third set of subjects with an HMD with virtual instructions that just hung in the air, i.e. not with the animations over the parts where they should be. As had been hoped, even with trained mechanics, those using the full AR set up performed the task significantly better.

Feiner and his team actually tracked the movements of the subjects’ heads to see how efficient their work time was. Those using the ARMAR system used 37 per cent less head travel than those with the PDF instructions whom themselves ended up spending much of the task with their heads bobbing back and forth between the LCD screen and parts of the vehicle they were fixing.

“If you looked at the head movements of someone who knew exactly what to do without instructions at all, in the case of AR, it was very close to that; not perfect, but very close.”

A highly successful piece of work then. So, have the US Marines adopted AR in their armoured vehicles as standard? Not quite yet.

“It’s not really ready yet. It needs to be counted on, so the software needs to be amazing,” explains Feiner detailing the ongoing work on the project at Columbia.

“Unlike mobile AR, which if it doesn’t work 100 per cent of the time, it doesn’t matter, this has to be relied upon absolutely and, at the time, what we had come up with wasn’t bulletproof.”

The hardware itself hadn’t quite been what Feiner had wanted either. It turned out that the top grade HMDs were too big to allow the mechanics to turn their heads properly in the small turret space they had to work inside the vehicles. Two years of ironing out the creases later, though, and the puzzle is nearly complete

“We’re approaching that point where the stuff is ready to go. We’re just trying to problem solve the issues.”

“We have computer power, bandwidth is good enough to get information through and the tracking is good as well but there are still problems when we need really small details - such as getting down to the level of one small screw among a very small area of hundreds - but that’s coming because there are lots of people out there working on that.”

Metaio and Qualcomm are two of such companies sponsoring just that kind of research. The ARMAR set up is a pre-mapped environment which the computer in charge has a copy of. To get the real and the virtual to line up, it’s a case of knowing the starting point of the mechanic’s head and accurately tracking its movements through the space from there. The other option is for the software to recognise real world objects through the camera and to adjust the computer generated components in real time.

The likes of a smartphone can already track physical edges as well as faces, of course, and Feiner is confident that a detailed enough system is getting near. Proof of such advancement was one of his own student’s apps, FARMAR, which reached the latter stages of Qualcomm’s augmented reality developer challenge. One area where the system doesn’t need to be perfect, though, is the graphics themselves, in fact, it’s of paramount importance that they’re not.

“It’s no good if we develop the animations to the point where they look like the real thing. The mechanics need to be able to differentiate between the real and the virtual otherwise it becomes impossible to know which bits to fix. But, if you think about it, all manuals and instructions have used caricature-type drawings, so what we have right now fits just right.”

The big question, of course, is should this system become “bulletproof” as Feiner puts it, if the US Marines do use this as standard in their vehicles, does that mean that we, the consumer, will ever get a taste of AR in our maintenance and repairs as well?

“Oh, absolutely. I believe this is for end users and not just professionals; folks who might know a few low level things - how to use a screwdriver and a wrench - but not in what order to do stuff. It should show you what to do next and how to do it as well. So it’s not just ‘this screw here’ but ‘tighten this one carefully but not too tight’ or ‘be careful with this task because this part here will pop up’.

“Most of all though, to be really successful, this stuff has to be fun and not burdensome or no one will use it.”

If that means cutting down on garage bills, mending your own boiler and never having to call Ikea because the manual’s not clear enough, then we’re pretty sure that’ll make AR enjoyable enough on its own.

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Tags: Science Augmented Reality Features Interviews Steve Feiner AR Week

Augmented reality in action - maintenance and repair originally appeared on http://www.pocket-lint.com on Tue, 01 Mar 2011 15:30:00 +0000

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iPhone 5 screen surfaces - suggests thinner bezel

Larger screen size rumoured
iPhone 5 screen surfaces - suggests thinner bezel. Phones, Apple, iPhone 5, Smartphones, 0

There have been several rumours that the iPhone 5 will have a bigger screen size, with some suggesting that it will feature an edge-to-edge display. And, according to a pic appearing on a Chinese website (which deals in and resells iPhone parts), that could be the case.

The picture shows what is claimed to be the digitiser panel of a fifth gen iPhone, and if genuine, the bezel is markedly thinner than the one on the iPhone 4. It therefore allows for a larger display within the same sized body as the current generation handset. Indeed, it matches other suggestions circulating around the web that the iPhone 5 will feature a 4-inch screen.

Obviously, it's early days yet, and we're pretty sure that Cupertino has its hands full prepping the launch of the iPad 2 (on Wednesday), so it could be some time before we see whether this sheet of plastic ever makes it onto a device.

There's no point hanging around in Californian bars just yet.

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Tags: Phones Apple iPhone 5 Smartphones

iPhone 5 screen surfaces - suggests thinner bezel. Phones, Apple, iPhone 5, Smartphones, 1  iPhone 5 screen surfaces - suggests thinner bezel. Phones, Apple, iPhone 5, Smartphones, 2 

iPhone 5 screen surfaces - suggests thinner bezel originally appeared on http://www.pocket-lint.com on Mon, 28 Feb 2011 09:52:19 +0000

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Liveblog: Apple's March 2 iPad event

March is upon us, and that means we're gearing up to do live coverage of Apple's latest media event in San Francisco. What's expected out of this event? Apple hinted heavily in its invitation that some new iPad news is on the way, and many believe the company plans to release an updated version of its iOS tablet. Whether that updated version will be a major makeover or a speed bump in the same package is up for debate, though. Apple is said to be adding a front- and rear-facing camera to the device for use with FaceTime. It will also likely be thinner and lighter.

This is the time of year Apple usually gives the press a sneak peek into the next major version of iOS, so we're keeping our fingers crossed for new details on the software front. 

Whatever ends up happening, Senior Apple Editor Jacqui Cheng will be on the scene to bring you the updates as they happen. The event is set to take place at 10am PST (GMT-0800) on Wednesday March 2, 2011 (see it in your timezone).

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