Motorola to put projectors in Smart Phones

by Elizabeth Blair York | August 9th, 2007

According to their press release, Motorola and  Microvision signed a deal this week to implement projectors in the next generation of Motorola’s SmartPhones.

The technology will  project pictures and video on the wall.  On the road, this will mean a new tool for giving presentations and at home and in personal life - a way to share video and pictures without doing the ‘pass the phone’ dance.

Check out Microvision’s “Pico Projector Display” for details of their projector technology. Very slick.

The site quotes Rob Shaddock, CTO of Motorola Mobile; “Working together with Microvision, we are pursuing ways that projection technology can redefine how mobile consumers view and interact with the media they take with them.”

Already, seniors are pointing out that this technology will allow them a larger viewscreen for things like text and pix messages.

Microvisiondemonstrated its Pico projector in a mobile device  for the first time last May during the Society of Information Display conference in Long Beach, Calif.

Next up is a working model of the projector embedded in a Motorola phone. The partnership has not yet revealed the estimated time to arrival.

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  • 4 Ways to Simplify: Email & Internet

    by Elizabeth Blair York | July 17th, 2007

    With more and more of us going online from a SmartPhone or a PDA, there’s a need to simplify the experience. There’s nothing that can plug up your productivity than finding that you spend more time organizing and navigating than actually working and learning.

    And the truth is, doing some general housekeeping a couple of times a year is a necessary part of maintaining our online lives.

    Here’s 4 things I recently did as a Spring (in the midst of summer) Cleaning exersize:

    1) Started using the Subject Line of my emails more efficiently. Instead of replying to someone who wants my phone number with the number in the text of the email - I put it in the Subject Line. I got the idea from Jeff and Calvin over at Tech Republic and I can tell you - people getting their emails off a Treo or Blackberry really appreciate when you can put as much beef in the subject line as possible, and often respond in the same manner - my email ‘conversations’ have become much more clear and simple.  (Read their article for some more great email tips.)

    2) Created a useful homepage. It was recently pointed out to me that I was spending too much time going to each site and blog that I regularly read for information. So I sat back and looked at my start page (I default to Yahoo, don’t shoot!) and decided to do it smarter. Using the MyYahoo feature, I was able to build a homepage that includes the RSS feeds of the last 3 posts from the 6 blogs I MUST read daily, plus ticklers for news topics I regularly track (’Bluetooth’, ‘IT Security’, etc.). I was able to keep the things I already liked - like top news from BBC and Reuters and stock quotes.

    3) Cleaned out my ‘links’ folder. I did it by hand, but there was an easier way: With the help of software like AM Deadlink (get it here free), you can comb out the old links in your ‘favorites’ folder and keep just the ones that matter. I gave myself bonus points for organizing everything into a few reasonable subfolders.

    4) Dumped the Instant Message clients I wasn’t using. While it is well and good to be available to your assoicates, clients, and management - these chat clients suck bandwidth and can even create security holes. It was time to weigh the reality of what I used and didn’t. An interoffice client like Sametime or Reuters plus one more should be enough. If it isn’t, look into combining on a platform like Trillian.

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  • Making the office mobile: RIM connects the BlackBerry to your office line

    by Elizabeth Blair York | May 11th, 2007

    For Blackberry users, the world is about to get a lot simpler.

    Research In Motion (RIM) rolled out the “BlackBerry Mobile Voice System (BlackBerry MVS)” this week.

    It is an integrated enterprise solution tthat allows corporations to covert their BlackBerry smartphone users to securely authenticated members of the the company’s PBX telephone system.

    The new BlackBerry Mobile Voice System comes in 3 components:

    • BlackBerry MVS Client (a component of BlackBerry Device Software)
    • BlackBerry MVS Connectors (a component of BlackBerry Enterprise Server)
    • Ascendent Voice Mobility Suite (a software suite that interfaces with heterogeneous PBXs)

    Once all three are installed, BlackBerry smartphones will become, essentially, recognized extensions. They will be able to send, receive and manage enterprise calls from their handset. Users will have a single “Reach Me Anywhere” phone number that simultaneously rings their desk phone and BlackBerry smartphone.

    For those mobile warriors who live on the road or in their home office, the application of this new suite has some nice benefits. A Blackberry synched to the company’s PBX will allow them to access desk phone functions such as transfer, park, and extension dialing on the BlackBerry. Plus, outgoing calls will displayed with the corporate identity on Caller ID.

    The system comes completes with the sndard security features, IT policies and system management functionality provided within the BlackBerry Enterprise Solution, including the ability to automatically authenticate mobile users to the PBX to help ensure that only authorized users and devices are accessing the corporate telephony system.

    “RIM’s ability to deliver a robust, feature-rich platform that securely integrates with enterprise data systems has always been a major contributing factor to the success of the BlackBerry Enterprise Solution,” said Mike Lazaridis, President and Co-CEO at Research In Motion. “The ability to now deliver the same value proposition for both voice and data systems provides another unique dimension to the BlackBerry platform and presents another major opportunity for customers to maximize their return on wireless investments.”

    BlackBerry MVS will be previewed at the Wireless Enterprise Symposium 2007 in Orlando, Florida and is expected to be available from RIM and Ascendent Systems later this month.

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