Saturday, December 22, 2012

#220 - Christmas 2012

Dear blog friends.  Thank you for reading my blog this past year.  I am trying for 2 posts per month in 2013 so if you don't see one for a while please send me a reminder.  This blog let's talk about the latest in Technology and what it could mean for you!

We are still getting used to our new Motorola Droid RAZR cell phones.  Today we investigated the voice recognition capabilities.  We have Android Jelly Bean (the latest) operating system.  It has two apps that provide voice support.  Voice Command lets you use the phone functions.  You start the Voice Command app then can say things like Call Home and it will!  I have found it to be pretty accurate as long as the name you want to call isn't very ethnic or complicated.  You can also ask it to dial a number and it will.  Both are very handy for in the car dialing.  The negative is that you have to start the app by hand.  The other app is Voice Search.  Think of this as Google Search by voice.   The results vary depending on what question word you use (Where - gets google Maps, Who and What get Google search results, Temperature questions gets the Weather App, and Why questions are a mixed bag).  Voice Search takes some getting used to, but is quicker then typing in a search.

You never know where you will learn about new technologies.  I had breakfast this morning with a childhood friend.  She is a retired librarian and enjoys technology, but certainly not a geek.  She asked me if I had heard of Raspberry Pi.  After the yes I love all kinds of pies comment, she let me know that this was a credit card size computer (bare bones) that runs Linux.  Cost is $25 or $35 depending on memory and ports.  You provide the TV (one with HDMI or composite input), Keyboard, Mouse, Operating System (Linux Debian recommended, though others will work), and power supply are extra.  You actually load the Linux on an SD card that can provide storage and other program files.  The company making this product is a charity based in the UK and did this to encourage students to learn about computers.  Here is a link to their site:  http://www.raspberrypi.org/

I saw the Apple iPad mini up close and have several thoughts.  It is nicely designed and may be a great tablet for kids.  Its a bit small for the browsing I like to do.  I was constantly increasing the size of type and that got to be aggravating.  Angry Birds played great on it (as did many other game apps).  Reading a book on it worked fine.  This will probably be a pretty good sales item for Apple due to price and opening up the child owning an iPad market.  For $329 (similar to the gaming systems out there) you can keep a child actively entertained.  The dangers of the Internet remain and I have NOT seen a good parental control app for the iPad.  Let me know if you see one!

Merry Christmas to all and to all a Very Happy New Year.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

What do you think about Highland Computers website? What about their business practice and their goals in life? Honest opinions please. I would like to know.