Archives for 2012

Pocket TV Seeks to Turn your TV into a Giant Android Device

A new crowdfunding effort has caught my eye this week with a project to turn your television into an Android tablet. It does seem a bit counterproductive at first since I can buy quite a few tablets for the cost of my TV but on looking at the details it seems that if it is priced right it could make a very solid tool for people on the go, work wise and for vacation.

However the Pocket TV is an interesting device. The builders have created a computer on a dongle powered by a 1GHz Cortex A9 processor that runs the Android 4.0 operating system and is designed to plug into a TV’s HDMI port. Once connected it permits you to display your Android environment on the big screen.

The dongle enables you to bring the environment with you wherever you go so that you can use it in say a hotel room and it would give you video conferencing capabilities if you so wanted. It also allows you to access data and videos that you have stored in the cloud, giving a traveler even more flexibility. Included with the dongle is a standard IR remote that enables you to control the device while using the big screen since it does not convert it to touch screen capabilities

The funding process is going quite well for the effort. As of this morning it had a bit over $94,000 pledged of the $100,000 that it is seeking and it still has 33 days to go, so it looks like it will reach its goal with time, and possibly money to spare.

The more I learned about the device the more interested I was in Pocket TV. I can really see this as a boon when you have short trips and just need something to respond to check social media, play a game or two or respond to email but dislike carrying a notebook or tablet, and with the large screen it can be much more convenient than a smartphone in some environments.

The Pocket TV is the first from a startup called Infinitec, a technology developer that is based in Dubai, making it the first high-tech project I have seen from that country. It has been around for some time, having opened its doors in 2008 and was founded by Ahmad Zahran and David McKern and got its start developing USB memory drives.

Another day, another MLB Contest

I was watching a ball game the other day and on came an ad that featured Cal Ripken Jr. I was in a local watering hole and so could not hear what he was saying as he snagged foul ball after foul ball as a spectator in the stands (and he is still wearing his jersey)

Then it flashed up that this was a new contest from Major League Baseball called “Stay in the Game Sweepstakes.” This is the kind of sweepstakes that I like, just enter and cross your fingers, so it is a level playing field for me.

The event is cosponsored by One A Day vitamins as well as the Cal Ripken Jr. and the purpose of the promotion appears to encourage people to stay in shape, particularly as they get older, and that if you have not been exercising it is not too late to start, judging by the accompanying video.

The One a Day partner is also donating to Cal Ripken Sr.’s Foundation that brings baseball and softball programs to disadvantaged youths in America and also helps teach them life lessons. There is nothing on the web page that exactly explains the purpose of the promotion, which is too bad, particularly if it is for a good cause.

The prizes look pretty good- first place is a round trip for five to the 2013 MLB All-Star Game with Cal Ripken Jr. That will include round trip airfare, 5 VIP gift bags, 3 night stay for you and your posse, $500 in cash as well as tickets to the 2013 MLB Home Run Derby. Each week prior to the awarding of the grand prize a $100 gift card that can be used on the MLB web site will be awarded so you too can have a Cal Ripken Jr. jersey if you so wish! Or the classic Billy Ripken baseball card.

Casey Martin Swings and Drives Way Back to the U.S. Open

It’s often tough to give the TV guys props. But the Golf Channel got it right. The U.S. Open sectional qualifiers all added up magnificently to the motto “Longest Day In Golf.”

But beyond the desire to tell viewers how hard they were working, halfway through the day one or more of the announcers could have had a little fun.

The catch phrase of the day could have changed to “Best Day In golf.” Or, it could have been the “Most Unheralded Day In Golf.”

Certainly, both slogans began to unfold early in Creswell, Ore. A field of 37 — the smallest of the sectionals around the country — started in the rain at 7 a.m. More than 13 hours later in near darkness, Casey Martin emerged as medalist.

Casey Martin

Yes, that Casey Martin. He’s age 40 now. And he’s 14 years removed from his debut at the U.S. Open at the same Olympic Club in San Francisco where he played with cart, after a contentious battle with golf’s hierarchy, and finished 23rd.

Martin suffers from Klippel Trenaunay Weber syndrome, a birth defect in his right leg. Basically, he drags his right leg. He successfully sued the PGA Tour in 2001 for the right to use a golf cart during competition under the Americans with Disabilities Act.

But Martin, who hasn’t played professionally since 2006, is mostly known as the head golf coach at the University of Oregon. But awhile back he decided to try to qualify again as a part-time player who spends more time coaching and recruiting than worrying about the past or honing his skills.

But Martin’s still got game. He was in the last group on Monday, leading the qualifier by one stroke. It was few minutes before nightfall. There were maybe 30 people on the 18th hole at Emerald Valley Golf Club watching. Martin had about 45 feet for a two-putt par to keep his lead. He left a four-footer with his first effort. And then he sealed his return to the U.S. Open with a putt toward a hole he said he couldn’t see.

It was a day of stuff like that, most notably on the eighth hole of Martin’s second round. He couldn’t find his errant tee shot and was about to return to the tee. His caddie found the ball at the last second, ironically resting under a golf cart. Martin punched it out and then sank a 30-foot chip from over bunker. What could have been a double bogey became a birdie.

“I had a kind of peace,” Martin later told reporters, explaining the hole. “Like something’s going on here.”

What is going on now is that more than a decade after the highest court in the country said he could use a cart in competition, Martin is going to use it again in the country’s national championship.

All those years ago, Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer, golf’s elder sentinels, spoke out against players using carts on the PGA Tour. They weren’t against Martin, but in favor, they said, of the maintaining the traditions of golf. It was hard to see the difference.

What is easier to see is that Martin can still play golf, and he’s now about to play again with the sport’s best. I can’t wait for someone to interview Nicklaus or Palmer, and I can’t wait for the U.S. Open. It’s likely going to again be the “Best Week in Golf,” and now there’s one more reason.

Ericsson Study Shows Mobile Will Rule Internet

People always say that it’s a small world, and with the Internet it seems smaller as everyone appears to be connected in one manner or another. Now Ericsson has taken the time to quantify how well connected everybody is in a recent report.

The company has just released its second annual “ Traffic and Market Report-On the Pulse of the Networked Society” that shows how connected the world is now and makes some predictions as to where it is headed.

There is way too much information to provide any sort of thumbnail here but I will mention a few interesting factoids, at least ones that are interesting to me. Not too surprising is the growth of mobile subscriptions which will grow to 9 billion in 2017. How many people will there be at that time I wonder?

Anyway a few other interesting facts is that 50% of the world’s population will have access to 4G and 85% access to 3G by 2017, with 3 billion smartphone users in that year as well. Mobile data traffic is just booming and double from Q1 2011 to Q1 2012, with primarily video driving the growth. The report estimates that mobile data traffic will grow by 15 times between 2011 and 2017.

The overall conclusion of the report is that mobile is the wave of the future and that it s being driven by users that want anywhere, anytime connectivity to video, music and the Internet. This is great news for developer of mobile apps that are targeting sports fans. I suspect that in many ways sports fans are at the foprefront of this move and expect to see a growth in the number and quality of apps as opportunities in this space appear to be growing at a very good rate.

Timeout Tuesday: GoPro Signs ‘Kelly F*cking Slater’ — Many More Hours of Video Consumption Ahead

Over the last year or so, we’ve noticed that when we’re out skiing it’s not uncommon to see more and more people with the little boxy GoPro camera mounted on their helmets. But news from last week of GoPro signing 11-time surfing champion Kelly Slater to its team of athletes speaks to a bigger agenda for the cool-cam company: Hell, it’s already on its way to becoming a new media powerhouse of its own.

You want social, user-contributed content? GoPro’s got that in spades, using user-submitted videos in its national broadcast commercials. Those home-spun efforts trail the professional athlete/professional production videos GoPro puts out on its own, usually with some cool new music to boot. The company also gives away a bunch of GoPro gear every day. Is this the new way to sports media or what? I mean, I like SportsCenter as much as the next guy, but I could lose hours watching stuff like this:

And a million and a half people so far have watched the GoPro video of Holly Beck diving alongside a whale shark, and probably not just because she’s wearing a bikini while doing so:

Oh yeah and GoPro also earlier this year signed snowboarder Shaun White to its team of cool athletes. This isn’t something that’s going to happen, it’s already here. Call Slater a late jumper on the bandwagon. But we’re looking forward to wasting plenty of time watching him on the waves.

Google Buys Social Chat Developer Meebo

Google has moved to enhance its Google+ social media site with the purchase of Meebo, an instant messaging and communications company that will bring a host of tools and capabilities and users to Google.

The terms of the deal have so far not been announced although numbers in the $100 million range have been bandied about by TechCrunch and others. Meebo, a seven year old company has raised $70 million in funding over the course of its history. From the post on the Meebo blog it appears that much if not all of its team will be moving over to Google.

A key feature will be the Meebo Bar, a feature that permits users to chat that sits on a number of web pages. This enables advertisers to sit just below an audience of prospective customers. Meebo has a number of other capabilities that will likely find their way to Google+ such as the ability to customize content streams to meet your interests.

The addition of the Meebo audience, estimated at approximately 100 million users, will also be a big boost if many come over to Google +, which has an estimated 170 million users, still a far cry from rival Facebook’s almost 1 billion users.

Google+ has been growing steadily since it was introduced but when we talk to or visit sports teams they only have a focus on Facebook. Rarely do I see a site that also promotes Google+ as well, although this is occurring more frequently. Hopefully this and additional efforts by Google will fix that issue since with more competition I believe we will see better apps and web pages.