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Dynamic Controls has just taken the wraps off of its new iPhone application which should be of great interest to those who use a wheelchair on a daily basis. The application — which connects with the wheelchair via Bluetooth and has a bulit-in charger for the iPhone or iPod touch — enables diagnostics to check for any problems with the chair. It also allows users to get real-time information, speed information, and compass data. Filed under: Cellphones , Transportation , Software Dynamic Controls unveils integrated iPhone app for wheelchair controls originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 20 Nov 2009 20:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink ? Textually ?|? Dynamic Controls ?|? Email this ?|? Comments

627b6cd39eairs09.jpg 150x62 Dynamic Controls unveils integrated iPhone app for wheelchair controls

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Dynamic Controls unveils integrated iPhone app for wheelchair controls

In our continuing efforts to help as many of our readers get a chance to play around with Google Wave as possible, we’re back again with our weekly Google Wave invitation donation thread. Note: Read the entire post carefully before …

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Hand Out Your Invites in the Google Wave Invitation Donation …

The preview edition of Gina and Adam’s new book, The Complete Guide to Google Wave , is now available in PDF form for your offline, ebook-reading pleasure.

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The Complete Guide to Google Wave Preview Edition PDF Available …

My Google Wave Wish List: The Document Collaboration Edition

Posted by Giggi On November - 19 - 2009

My previous post 6 Tips for Using Google Wave on your First Project was really about the initial experience a …

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My Google Wave Wish List: The Document Collaboration Edition

Google Wave (Not) For Dummies – Digits – WSJ

Posted by Giggi On November - 18 - 2009

Google Wave is a powerful, exciting, versatile tool, but you’re not alone if you can’t get your head around what it does, said Gina Trapani.

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Google Wave (Not) For Dummies – Digits – WSJ

Ari Herzog: How BudgetPulse Helps You Budget Online

Posted by Giggi On November - 17 - 2009

As we struggle to make ends meet in tough economic times, there are many well-written blogs that focus on personal development and budgeting. Recommended sites on living frugally and being successful include advice by Steve Pavlina , Erica Douglass , and Lynnae McCoy . Echoing my suggestions 12 months ago on lifestyle blogs to follow , I continue to point people to Frugal Dad and Trent Hamm’s The Simple Dollar among my favorites. New to the self-help scene is the blogging advice of BudgetPulse , a metro Washington, D.C. outfit that offers in simple terms, “a free online personal budgeting tool.” I turned to Craig Kessler, the company’s marketing director. He’s young, smart, and understands business . I’ve met him a few times. I appreciate his desire to learn, and I’m sure he can attest to my reciprocal questions back his way. In a guest blog post earlier this year, Craig traced his steps to learn online marketing . Craig shared the following as an example of his company’s latest product: Meet John. He’s 16 and is very happy after passing his driving test after weeks of practice. His birthday isn’t for another six months, when he can get a driver’s license; and already has the date crossed off on his calendar. He has been waiting for this moment for years and the thought of freedom and responsibility is finally approaching–a big moment in a teenager’s life. He has saved a percentage from his monthly allowance so he can buy a car. John knows which used car he wants, but will only be able to save $5000, which is $2000 short of the asking price. He has his heart set out on this car, but would need some financial help if he wants to buy it when he becomes a legal driver. John’s tired of the school bus. His parents can only help out a bit. How can he get some help? Buying your first car is a big moment; but not being able to afford it after working hard to save, and coming up a little short is a shame. One way John could get some financial help is to create an online savings goal and to ask his family and friends for donations. These are the people who will most likely help John if he feels comfortable asking them for assistance. John can create a “car fund” goal and email it to family and friends, where they can directly send donations for his car, check his progress, and see the amounts of other donations. For John, it’s an easy way to get some financial help, track his success in meeting goals, and keep multiple donations organized in one place. In time, John can buy that new car! To help the fictional teen, BudgetPulse is releasing a saving goals function to integrate with its personal budgeting software. It runs on the internet, sparing you any software to download. You can set up a savings goal, collect money via PayPal or Amazon, and track associated transactions–both income and expenses. You don’t have to use multiple programs to do the same task. Now you can strive to get financial help for specific goals you desire. You can visit the company’s website at BudgetPulse.com and they have a Twitter address at @BudgetPulse . More on Personal Finance

c89bcdce1420x375.jpg 150x108 Ari Herzog: How BudgetPulse Helps You Budget Online

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Ari Herzog: How BudgetPulse Helps You Budget Online

Google Wave: In Theory vs. In Practice

Posted by Giggi On November - 16 - 2009

Hace cerca de un ao trabajo como vendedor para Apple en uruguay y estoy muy interesado en investigacin de las TICS y su influencia en los cambios sociales. Y en pocas palabras.quiero una Google Wave ! …

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Google Wave: In Theory vs. In Practice

Have you been one of the lucky ones to get an invite to Google Wave ? Well if you didn’t and want to know more about it, I am here to share and guide to a great resource from Gina Trapani. Over on Web Worker Daily they cover Gina …

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Trying to Understand Google Wave | Network Solutions – Small …

Only Python: Google Wave Fun

Posted by Giggi On November - 15 - 2009

After a long time waiting, I finally got an Google Wave invitation this week – just as I was starting to look forward to a work slowdown so I could start programming again in the evenings. The call of playing with a new toy was enough …

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Only Python: Google Wave Fun

The Google Wave invite rollout extravaganza started more than a month ago. While in some respects the buzz around Google Wave has started to subside, the term is still constantly one of the top trending topics on Twitter, …

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5 Impressive Real-Life Google Wave Use Cases | The Best Article …

How Can I Get Followed On Twitter?

Posted by Giggi On November - 15 - 2009

I’ve recently made a Twitter account (@Ian_H_95), and I constantly update it but I can’t seem to get many followers. Anyone who has more Twitter experiance, can you give me some tips? Thanks

How Do You Connect Twitter To A Mobile Phone?

Posted by Giggi On November - 13 - 2009

anyone got any tips for setting twitter up on phones – ive done all the devises and it wont work – HELP
my phone doesnt have internet on it. i am with tesco mobile
if anyone can help they will get 10 pionts

I am currently in Miyazaki /Japan, attending the Infinity Ventures Summit (IVS), one of Asia’s most prestigious web industry events. Organizing VC company Infinity Venture Partners reserved some hours of the program to give a total of twelve 12 Japanese start-ups the chance to present their services onstage to a panel of judges and an international crowd of over 300 people. A speech recognition and transcribing service called Moji Moji TV was selected as “Best Startup” of the IVS Fall 2009 Launch Pad (that ended just now). Here are short profiles of all the services that demo’d at the event. (Please note some of the companies have yet to launch homepages in English, but some do offer globalized services, too.) One Winner and five runners-up: Moji Moji TV by Catalog (winner of the demo pad) Best of show went to Moji Moji TV , which appears to be a very powerful speech recognition and transcribing service for videos launched in private alpha last month. The engine supports Japanese only, but English and Chinese versions are in the works. Moji Moji extracts audio from a video (self-made movies, YouTube clips etc.) and automatically displays the spoken words as text, which then can be edited by the users. The text can be used to tag and sub movies, and it’s also possible to search for certain words or expressions within them. There’s also an iPhone app called Shabetter that automatically transcribes what you say into the iPhone mic and posts it to Twitter. More information on Moji Moji TV in English can be found here . This video (in English) shows how Moji Moji TV works: V-Sido by Wataru Yoshizaki (runner-up) Most robots used for entertainment, in research and other areas have one common problem: They can only move in a slow, mechanical and chopping motion. Developed by robot fanatic Wataru Yamazaki, V-Sido is a software-based, real-time control system for humanoids that helps make them move smoother. Spysee by Ohma (second runner-up) Spysee is a person search engine whose English version launched at TechCrunch 50 this year (Spysee was a demo pit company ). A Chinese version is in the works. The service pulls information and media on individuals from the web and presents them on a person-specific page (example: Barack Obama ). Spysee’s original Japanese version went live last year and has gone through several iterations since. One example is the way Spysee monetizes its service now: It allows users to donate real money to individuals who need help in funding their personal goals ( Cheering Spysee ), getting a cut of the donation in return. m-police by milog (third runner-up) m-police is a fully automatized site monitoring system that’s able to detect profanity, insults and “legally problematic” sentences on the web and subdivides relevant expressions into 16 different categories. The company says about 5% of all posts in the Japanese blogosphere can be regarded as being relevant for m-police, and 22% of those can be called potentially dangerous. Some Japanese social networks employ up to 300 “surveillance officers” to keep their sites clean. m-police can push down costs from 6 Yen (7 cent) per post monitored by human beings to 3 Yen. AEGISGUARD by KLab (fourth runner-up) AEGISGUARD is anti-virus software that’s not only free to download but also completely available in English. The main purpose of the program is to protect your important files and folders from viruses (of which more than 5 million exist today) and malware by granting only white-listed programs access to them. AEGISGUARD developer KLab says this way, unknown or new viruses are effectively fenced out. The solution can be installed with conventional, blacklist-based antivirus software on the same PC. Symphonic Motion by AITIA (fourth runner-up) Symphonic Motion is an augmented reality-based entertainment engine that’s not designed for mobile devices for a change but rather for large-sized displays (that can be several meters in diameter). The technology uses “physical” AR, meaning you can get in front of the camera and move CG elements you see on the screen around by moving your arms, for example. Maker AITIA is marketing the solution as interactive, fun digital signage applications to corporations, exhibitions and event organizers ( demo movie ). The six other demo companies: OpenSocial Host by HeartRails OpenSocial Host is an integrated platform for developing, distributing and managing OpenSocial applications, e.g. for sites like MySpace , hi5 or Japan’s biggest social network Mixi .(which opened its site for external developers back in September this year). OpenSocial Host supports mobile apps, offers paid and free options, but it’s Japanese only. Location Amplifier by Koozyt The key idea behind Location Amplifier is to “amplify” the real world by pushing “rich”, location-based content onto mobile phones, for example location-based games or guides. At IVS, maker Koozyt demonstrated how a person’s movements can be tracked even inside buildings (where GPS regularly fails). It’s also possible to use Location Amp to walk from exhibit to exhibit in a museum and let your mobile device tell you what you’re currently looking at ( demo movies ). The technology is based on PlaceEngine , a service that relies on Wi-Fi to estimate your location, even when there’s no GPS. Zeke CMS Social Game Kit by Ubiquitous Entertainment Ubiquitous Entertainment CEO Ryo Shimizu demo’d Zeke CMS Social Game Kit , a (Japanese-only) platform for developing games to be deployed in social networks like Facebook or Japan’s biggest social network Mixi . One of the games that was built using the system is called “Tokyo Treasure”, a scavenger hunt, which combines AR elements with the real world, using the iPhone camera (”It’s game over when you’re tagged!”). Droidget AR by GClue Droidget AR was described as the world’s first widget framework for augmented reality services on Android. These widgets can be “picked up” at the physical place where they’ve been left by other people and used instantly, without the user having to access the web. Example: When you’re in a restaurant, switch on the camera on your Android phone, point it at the door and click on the AR tag you see to instantly access the menu ( demo movies ). Jitsu Kuukan Toushi Keitai by KDDI au one Labs KDDI , Japans second biggest telecommunications company, presented an augmented reality application that launched in June this year for a limited number of Japanese cell phones. Their Jitsu Kuukan Toushi Keitai app (which roughly translates to: cell phone that allows real space transparency) works just like many of the other mobile AR apps out there. It uses GPS, the phone’s camera, 6-axis sensor and screen to locate where you are and point you to where you want to go through tags. But if you point the phone to a wall or a human being, you can also “see through” them, meaning the app will display tags located behind them. This video shows how Toushi Keitai’s “see-through” function works: Odette Solution by ORSO Odette Solution lets you create mobile Flash sites (nearly 100% of Japanese mobile phones have Flash Lite installed). The Japanese-only, cloud-based ASP service offers various templates whose elements you can edit in various ways, for example by drag and drop. But you can also create mobile web pages by putting together different elements. Odette Solution will be launched next spring. Crunch Network : CrunchBoard because it’s time for you to find a new Job2.0

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89e8e2dd1bl 2009.jpg 150x112 Infinity Ventures Summit In Miyazaki, Japan: 12 Demos From Japanese Startups

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Infinity Ventures Summit In Miyazaki, Japan: 12 Demos From Japanese Startups

Facebook: Please Back Developers vs iPhone

Posted by Giggi On November - 13 - 2009

In July of last year, I wrote about The New Apple Walled Garden . The post was about the irony of developers and advocates who were otherwise open standards and open source champions being absolutely pro-iPhone, a platform that is closed and proprietary in every sense. Since that post, the horror that was foreshadowed by some has been realized – rejected apps , rejected apps , rejected apps . We documented the troubles here at Techcrunch and the overall response was nothing more than long comment threads, complaints, and a few wise people changing their minds . The complaints to date are from some bloggers and a small number of application developers, incidents that Apple are able to write-off as being minor, as they have a dedicated fan base and growing market share to fall back on. That was, until yesterday. Yesterday, a high-profile iPhone developer became fed up with the nature of the platform and decided it was time to call it quits . Joe Hewitt of Facebook not only pronounced that it was time for him to move onto ‘other projects’, but had the courage to state that his reason was because of the closed nature of the iPhone platform and his frustration with the approval process. Joe is not just the guy who wrote the Facebook application, within 12 hours of the first iPhone launching he released a library for app developers to create iPhone-like applications. This was back in the first generation, when iPhone ‘applications’ were nothing more than websites. Without any documentation from Apple, and with sheer enthusiasm for the new-born platform, Joe created a library for other developers that would help them build applications that would mimic native iPhone applications built by Apple. As somebody who downloaded the very early releases of Joe’s library, I could immediately see that most, if not all, of the first iPhone applications were built on, or at least inspired by, the iUI library he released. The credibility that Joe has and the work that he did not only inspired developers, but it gave them an easy path to developing the first generation of software for the iPhone. With the statements that Joe made yesterday, Apple has not only lost another developer that it can write-off, but has lost somebody who was an early adopter of their platform and an impetus for others. Most iPhone and Apple fans would retort that “Apple make great products, and it is winning in a market where the consumer has free choice”. I agree that they make great products, I am writing this post on a Macbook. I was beside myself with excitement when I found out about Rhapsody, about OS X, about the new Mach kernel, about FreeBSD code being used for userland (my code is in there, somewhere). I was so enthusiastic about the second coming of Jobs that I had an email exchange with him about incorporating OpenSSL, amongst other things, when the early dev previews were out. I was totally sold, because an operating system was being built and released that combined the best of UNIX with the best of great interfaces. Finally, the open source on desktops conundrum had been solved, I cheered. The biggest non-Microsoft company had adopted what we knew was good, as a way to compete against the standard. It validated my belief in the BSD license, and I was completely spellbound and a fan (although not in the more recent fanboi sense). It was not until the iPhone was released that I felt let down. I felt betrayed . I wanted to hack , and I wanted to do so standing on the shoulder of a giant who was gaining market, a giant who was my old friend. I hold a very strong belief in the open market, a concept which at a theoretical level is difficult to argue against. The iPhone took advantage of a market where the competition was completely clueless. It took an intelligent and smart outsider to recognize that. What has shaken my belief in the open market is that an otherwise good company can enter a market, show them how it is done – but do it in a bad way for the overall ecosystem, and at the same time win the support of people who would otherwise philosophically disagree with them, completely on the basis of that company being not-Microsoft and, well, being sexy . I never believed that Microsoft were evil, first because as a user and developer I had a choice. Second, Microsoft gave me free tools to learn how to code. And last, despite the position Microsoft were in on the desktop they never asked me to send them my code so that they could test it against their black-box of what is ‘compliant’. Microsoft never sent me a letter to say that speech bubbles can not be used in my application. Microsoft platforms let me run whatever-the-hell voice provider I wanted . Microsoft, as far as I can recall, also never told me that I could not have a sense of humor (the ironic 1984 reference has already been done, thanks Jon). Developers today also have a choice with mobile applications, and the sooner more developers raise their blinkers and realize that the popularity of the iPhone is built on the applications they are building, the sooner we can either get rid of this mess and see Apple change, or see a new more open alternative thrive. Hewitt’s statements, as a model iPhone developer from a large company, can be the tipping point. The only thing holding this back right now are Facebook themselves, who seem keen on preserving a business relationship and casting Hewitt off as a rogue. Facebook came out today , and in a more official capacity (ie. somebody with ‘communications’ in their title, as opposed to ‘developer’), said that “Facebooks relationship with Apple and our commitment to the iPhone platform remain strong”, and that “Theres been a fair amount of confusion and speculation about Joes comments” ( chuckle, chuckle ) and that “Facebook has a great team of engineers taking over iPhone related development”. Joe is probably taking some heat from his employer right now, and he probably knew he would before he made any comment. Facebook could have simply shifted Joe to another project (Android, I hope), and many wouldn’t have noticed – but he stood up for what he believes in, and what many have been thinking, and he deserves the full support and credit from everybody who believes in transparency and free opinion, regardless of which side of the iPhone debate your opinions may reside. If it comes down to Facebook vs iPhone, Facebook wins. If Apple hold to their position on being the gatekeeper for everything on their platform, we only win if the developers say no. An iPhone platform with applications only from Apple and no third-parties is no longer a viable platform, and no longer a device that consumers will purchase because they are making decisions based on applications and access, not on the brand or suburb engraved on the back of it (I hope). Facebook should recognize this and back Joe all the way. If they do, it will show that that interest of what they want to do takes precedence over what a handset manufacturer wants to do. Apple can squash small developers, but if a big developer were to set aside short-term business interest for a moment, they will win in the longer term. If only we could all do that and not be blinded, perhaps, well, the free market could work again. Crunch Network : CrunchBoard because it’s time for you to find a new Job2.0

93b6d0739brotten.jpg 122x150 Facebook: Please Back Developers vs iPhone

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Facebook: Please Back Developers vs iPhone

Google Wave Gets a Feature for "Following" | WebProNews

Posted by Giggi On November - 12 - 2009

Google has added a “follow” feature to Google Wave . The feature is designed to let users stay up to date on public waves of interest. In other words, if there are waves out there that are available to everybody, and you want to follow …

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Google Wave Gets a Feature for "Following" | WebProNews

When we taught you the first Google Wave search you should know (with:public), Wave automatically added public waves you read to your inbox, and an empty inbox quickly became hard to come by. Today, Wave fixes that with a handy …

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Google Wave Adds Follow/Unfollow Feature for a Cleaner Inbox …

Google Wave Declutters The Inbox With Following Feature

Posted by Giggi On November - 12 - 2009

This morning, Google is making a slight update to Wave to help users unclog their inbox from public waves . Previously, you could see …

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Google Wave Declutters The Inbox With Following Feature

Google Wave « Tiny Cat Pants

Posted by Giggi On November - 12 - 2009

I got my coveted Google Wave invite yesterday. Not that I had any idea what Google Wave really was, but whatever. When the future comes knocking, you don’t sit around wondering if you will need the future in the future, you know? …

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Google Wave Tiny Cat Pants

SACRAMENTO, CA–(Marketwire – 11/09/09) – Accela, Inc . today announced that the California Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development (OSHPD) has selected Accela Automation software as the nexus of a comprehensive online environment that will track hospital and skilled nursing facility construction projects across the state. OSHPD’s Facilities Development Division (FDD) will utilize …

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Accela Signs Contract With California Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development to Track Hospital … (Marketwire via Yahoo! Finance)

Sandro Tosi: Another round of Google Wave invites

Posted by Giggi On November - 10 - 2009

Another round of Google Wave invites. Big-G just gave me another number of invites for Wave : if you want one, just leave your gmail address as comment to this post (only here, it’s easier). Pubblicato da Sandro Tosi a 10:54 …

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Sandro Tosi: Another round of Google Wave invites

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