iPods and Cars


Xeni:

BMW is revving up some vehicle models (including the 330Ci coupe I reviewed) with a new sound system integrated with the Apple iPod. What’s new and cool about this: it’s touted as the first-ever fully integrated iPod/car interface you can drive right off the dealer lot. Costs under $500 as an upgrade to price of the new car. Plenty of aftermarket systems are available to hook your iPod (or other digital music players) to your car stereo, but many of these use your FM radio or a cassette player to interface, reducing sound quality in the process. Here, the sound quality was super-sweet.

Keep in mind that Democrat Pat Leahy and Republican Orrin Hatch are carrying water for Hollywood with the induce act – which would outlaw the iPod. Noah Adams

New Study: Who is building large WiFi Networks, and why

Nancy Gohring:

The University of Georgia?s New Media Consortium recently conducted a study examining large Wi-Fi deployments in the United States: The study differentiates between what it calls Wi-Fi clouds, which have continuous coverage and Wi-Fi zones, which offer interrupted coverage. The researchers found 38 clouds and 16 zones. The study examines who owns the networks and what the owners hope to gain from building the networks. It?s a thorough report on the intentions of hotspot builders today.
The next step will be trying to figure out if the intentions of hotspot network developers are being met. For example, 43 percent of cloud developers cited stimulating economic development as a motivating factor for building the network. But it?s not clear if large Wi-Fi networks in small towns actually succeed in stimulating economic development

With respect to economic development, my view is that we need to, somehow, as fast as possible, offer true, economic bi-directional high speed internet to all Badger resident (speeds 20x+ faster than current rather slow “broadband” services). These type of pervasive networks will support video, VOIP as well as personal web services.

Best Law Money Can Buy: House votes to support junk faxes!

Dan Gillmor:

In one of the most dishonestly named bills of all time, the House recently passed the “Junk Fax Prevention Act of 2004“. The legislation would, in fact, open the floodgates for these intrusions into our lives.
The bill, S 2603, would allow anyone who’s done any kind of business with you during the last seven years — seven years! — to send you faxes without getting your permission first. You would have to opt out each time.
The FCC’s latest regulations, which proposed to tighten the current rules against junk faxes, were too much for corporate America and its marketing wizards who continue to invade every corner of our lives. Their power with Congress is far greater than yours, so far.
At least they could tell the truth, naming S 2603 the “Junk Fax Enabling Act.”

Contact Tammy Baldwin and urge her to repeal this absurdity.

GPS used to spy on Detectives

Jacqueline Seibel:

Suspicious that his detectives were not hard at work solving the latest crimes in Muskego, Police Chief John Johnson spied on his own investigators using high-tech surveillance equipment usually used to keep tabs on drug dealers and gangbangers.
Secretly placing a global positioning system tracker in a squad car shared by the department’s two detectives, police supervisors learned that the pair were driving to a tanning salon, shopping at the Geoffrey Beene Outlet Store in Kenosha County and running personal errands while on duty, according to reports released Tuesday.

This is not a new story, there have been previous examples of GPS (Global Positioning System) used to track rental car users among others.