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Audio/Video, Televisions

Artist Displays Video Art on Best Buy Screens


In a dramatic shift from the usual fare of live sports or snippets of 'The Rock' that has become the norm across most Best Buy HDTV displays, one Manhattan store has opened its doors to the art world, dousing its Home Entertainment section with a heaping tablespoon of hip.

Artist Borna Sammak joined forces with curator Thomas McDonnell to convince a Best Buy in SoHo to display a collection of his "video paintings" on all of its HDTVs on the lower level of the store. The installation, which combined surround sound-enhanced music with footage from nature documentaries like 'Planet Earth,' drew massive crowds, and injected a welcomed jolt of coolness that has never exactly been Best Buy's M.O. In an interview with Art in America, McDonnell noted that Best Buy was one of the few places in America that offered sufficient high-definition audio/visual equipment to absorb Sammak's work.

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Computers, Web

NYC Coffee Shops Shutting Down Laptops


Coffee shops, typically welcoming refuges for lonely bloggers, Web entrepreneurs, and monetarily-challenged job hunters, are turning away laptop users and implementing restrictions on computer time during prime business hours. According to the Wall Street Journal, an increasing number of New York coffee shops are covering their electrical outlets, requiring customers to actually eat something or spend money before they access the Net.

The WSJ specifically mentions Naidre's, Cocoa Bar, Espresso 77, and Cafe Grumpy [Ed. note: Switched has a few other scowling baristas we'd like to add to the list] as New York laptop discouragers. (Major chains such as Borders, Starbucks, and Barnes & Noble reportedly plan on keeping their current computer protocols.) While some coffee shops may have frowned upon lingering customers with small checks for some time now, the Journal attributes the growing trend of enforced restrictions to the recession.

Do you use your laptop at coffee shops?


The increasing number of unemployed job seekers paired with restaurants' mounting struggles to get revenue from paying customers means laptop-squatter crackdown. Shoot. Here comes the lunch crowd. Unfortunately, judging from our server's disgruntled expression, it looks like it's time we moved on again. [From: The Wall Street Journal, via DownloadSquad]

[Editor's note: We've recently spent some time in France, where free Wi-Fi in the traditional French cafe is increasingly prevalent and there are rarely any drink- or food-buying requirements beyond an intial purchase all day except during lunch (Noon-2pm), when it's suddenly au revoir, les laptop-users!]
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What Your Gadgets Say About You
What Does Your Tech Say About You?
As makes sense in consumer societies, most folks in developed nations -- wittingly or not -- express themselves via the stuff they accumulate. Since technological goods have become increasingly pervasive, and affordable, it only makes sense that tech companies have begun to imbue their products with 'personalities' of their own. From your ride to your ringtone, your tech -- like it or not -- can expose aspects of your personality to others. Click through to see just what we're talking about.

What Do Your Gadgets Say About You?

    What Does Your Tech Say About You?
    As makes sense in consumer societies, most folks in developed nations -- wittingly or not -- express themselves via the stuff they accumulate. Since technological goods have become increasingly pervasive, and affordable, it only makes sense that tech companies have begun to imbue their products with 'personalities' of their own. From your ride to your ringtone, your tech -- like it or not -- can expose aspects of your personality to others. Click through to see just what we're talking about.

    Your car
    Possibly the most widely recognized status symbol of the modern era, the automobile has been developed perhaps more than any other piece of machinery to appeal to certain personality types. A Mercedes, for instance, might give off the vibe that you are a high-roller, concerned with sophistication over flash. If you drive a Chevy, you're putting out that all-American vibe. And if you drive a Hummer? Well, you just suck.

    Your ringtone
    Downloadable ringtones have skyrocketed in popularity over recent years, with even your cousin's pitiful emo band hawking their own via MySpace. Since the kinds of people who use ringtones are rarely the kinds of people to courteously set their phones to silent mode when in public, the whole world's perception of you could hinge on your ringtone selection. If you pick a Young Jeezy jam, you're probably the type of person who likes to get crunk. If you download a Barry Manilow ringtone, you're probably the type of person that downloads ringtones by accident.

    Your cell phone
    With smartphones pervading pockets and purses everywhere, the cell phone may soon replace the automobile as the most recognizable status symbol. While a BlackBerry gives off the vibe that you are all about business, an iPhone would suggest that you mix business and pleasure -- a technological mullet, of sorts. And as for those Luddites among us with older-gen, plain-old cell phones? Well, that says we'd rather buy months' worth of groceries than a telephone.

    Your preferred MP3 player bit rate
    A CNET report has broken down MP3 listeners into types, contingent on their bit rate preferences. Folks who listen to 128kbps probably use their MP3 players' included headphones. Those who subscribe to 256kbps are highly likely to use BitTorrent, but never Limewire. Lossless fans tend be Gen X-ers, while 320kbps-listeners tend to be part of Gen Y.

    Your Vista sidebar gadgets
    Since Vista's "gadgets" feature leaves some users perplexed, Windows Vista Magazine (that's right) offered a break-down of Vista user types last year. According to the article, those who leave the sidebar alone are "unadventurous" and might be "nervous." Folks who mess with the sidebar a little bit are "naturally curious," but also "flit between things." On the other hand, Vista users who fully take advantage of the sidebar are called "individuals" who "aren't afraid to try new things." It's almost as if Windows Vista Magazine wants you to pay for Windows Vista gadgets. Weird.

    Your gadgets, in general
    If you're a gadget lover, or what's called an 'early adopter,' research shows that you're probably an assertive person. The study, conducted by Nielsen Online and Mindset Media, also found that folks who rush to the store in order to buy the newest gadget tend to have strong leadership qualities. Oh, and they also tend to be condescending jerks.

    Your Mac
    If you're a Mac user, chances are high that you're also an early adopter, so it should be no surprise that, as the owner of a Mac, you are probably an arrogant, uptight kind of person. Of course, it's not all bad. The study in question, conducted at last year's Macworld conference, shows that Mac users also tend to be more open-minded. Unless it comes to PC-users, that is.

NYPD Working on 'Talking' Guns to Prevent Friendly Fire

After Detective Omar Edwards was shot and killed by friendly fire while in plain clothes on May 28th, New York Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly began seeking a way for firearms to communicate with one another in order to stop accidents like this from happening again.

According to FOX News, the NYPD has initiated preliminary discussions about such devices with the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNL), a government research lab. Ideas include using radio frequency tags that would allow cops to precisely locate other cops in the city, and gun-to-gun infrared sensors that would warn nearby officers whenever another removed his pistol from the holster.

At this point, the ideas are only that (the radio frequency tags strike the PNL as impractical), but the PNL is set to speak to the NYPD next week. Let's hope that these discussions are fruitful, and serve to protect those who serve and protect us. [From: FOX News]

Cell Phones

Man Writes 400-Page Novel on Cell Phone


You know how you spend your commute alternating between sleeping, daydreaming, and refreshing your Facebook feed? Well, Peter Brett does something else: he writes novels... on his smartphone.

It's okay, we feel lazy too.

Brett wrote the majority of his first novel, "The Warded Man," on his phone during trips between his Brooklyn, NY home and his job in Times Square, across the East River in Manhattan. In total, he estimates writing over 100,000 words on the train over two years. The book finally hit shelves last month and is on best-seller lists in Poland and England (it has sold 2,500 copies in the US).

He began using the phone to take notes, and his thumbs eventually got quick enough to write large chunks of text -- soon he was averaging about 400 words each morning and evening. Brett listened to music on his iPod to block out distractions.

"I trained myself that at 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. every day when I got on the train, that was my writing time," Brett told the Daily News. "I had about 45 minutes each way, and everyone who takes the F [subway train] knows that 45 minutes can turn into an hour and a half."

No mention of what phone he uses in the article, but a glance at Brett's Web site reveals that it was an HP iPaq smartphone. We figured, with all that typing, that it wasn't an iPhone. [From: Daily News]

Green Tech

Empire State Building Goes Green

Empire State Building Going GreenOne of the biggest challenges in greening our cities lies in reducing the energy consumption of existing buildings. Newer constructions are built with efficiency in mind, but older buildings (such as the iconic Empire State Building) were erected without even a passing thought to carbon emissions.

The Clinton Climate Initiative has been working with cities around the world to implement large scale projects to reduce emissions and energy consumption, and has just announced the $20 million dollar eco-renovation of the Empire State Building, reports CleanTechnica. The tallest building in New York will receive new, triple-glazed, insulated windows (to increase efficiency in the summer and winter), an upgraded lighting system, new furnaces, and updated air conditioning systems, according to Clean Technica. The renovations are expected to lower the building's energy consumption by 38-percent.

The improvements are expected to pay for themselves within approximately three years of their completion, projected to occur by the end of 2010. Additional improvements made to tenant areas will continue through 2013, and may yield further reductions in energy consumption.

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Car Tech

Personal Car Elevator the Hot Perk for New NYC Apartment Building


As if the gulf between rich and poor wasn't obvious enough...

200 Eleventh Avenue, a new super luxury residence setting up shop across from Chelsea Piers in New York City, is boasting about its exclusive personal car elevator system. When you drive in to the elevator, dubbed the "En-suite Sky Garage," it takes you and your wheels up to the private 300-square-foot garage connected to your apartment. There's no need to push any buttons, because the elevator can recognize your ride. Drive in and the lift automagically senses your car and begins to rise.

Trust us, we would totally move in at 200 Eleventh Avenue if a one-bedroom apartment in the building didn't cost over $3 million. It looks like we're stuck in our current digs for now. It's too bad really... Our building doesn't even have a 'people' elevator. [From: DVICE]

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Green Tech

Wireless Water Meters to Give NYC Residents Exact Water Usage Bills


On the environmental tip, Mayor Bloomberg has announced that New York City will install 826,000 wireless water meters by 2011. Under the new system, readings will be sent to a network of rooftop receivers throughout the city every six hours, enabling the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) to bill property owners every month with exact water usage -- with the bill available online. Under the current system, water use is estimated and folks are billed every three months. The new system will cost taxpayers $250 million, and installation (free for property owners) is already underway in Brooklyn, Manhattan and Queens.

When it is fully installed, New York will be the largest city in the world to use wireless water metering. According to the New York Times, it's estimated that a 5 to 10 percent reduction in water use could save the city up to $90 million annually.

[Via Vos Iz Neias; Thanks, Yossi]

Computers, Green Tech

First Robo-Train Starts Running in NYC Subway


If you ride New York City's L train between Brooklyn and Manhattan at odd hours of the day, get ready for a little more automation in your lifestyle. As of today, the L will become the first NY subway line to be fully controlled by Communications Based Train Control, or CBTC, initially used overnights and during non-peak hours. It allows the trains to effectively run themselves, closer and faster than their meatbag conductors could otherwise, which should mean more trains more often. However, those fleshy conductors have something their robotic replacements don't: contracts. Because of that there will still be human conductors watching the controls and, we'd imagine, napping occasionally. At least they're not striking. [Thanks, Zoli]

Computers, Summer Fun

Coney Island's Robotic 'Waterboard Thrill Ride' Evokes Guantanamo

Robot torture.

Like us, you're worried about the coming robot invasion. But who isn't? Well, certainly not the artist who recreated a Guantanamo Bay-style waterboarding torture scene with robots out in New York's Coney Island. He's got his 'bots under strict control.

The installation, just steps from the location of the famous annual July 4 hot dog eating contest and the Cyclone roller coaster, depicts robots – one as a guard, one as a detainee – in a scene not meant for the faint of heart.

At the "Waterboard Thrill Ride," visitors pay a buck to look through a barred window while a hooded robot pours water into the face of an orange jumpsuit-wearing robot, who goes into a series of violent convulsions for 15 seconds.

"Robot waterboarding became a way of exploring the issue without doing any harm," artist Steve Powers told the New York Times. "It's putting a unique experience on the table. And it doesn't take a great leap of the imagination to look in there and say: 'That's really what's going on? That's crazy.'"

But isn't Coney Island a place for family fun? No worry there, as a sign on the outside shows SpongeBob SquarePants saying "It don't GITMO better!"

Maybe don't take the kids.

[Source: Associated Press.]

Advice, MySpace

NYC Department of Health Is Teens' New MySpace Friend



The New York City Department of Health is pretty all right. Yesterday it launched a new MySpace campaign, 'NYC Teen MindSpace,' designed to help teens deal, on their own turf. The DOH says that about a third of NYC youth admit to feeling depressed, and 20% say they don't talk to anyone when they feel bad or have a serious problem.

Mindspace, which can be accessed like any other MySpace profile, encourages at-risk teens to seek help for mental health issues, substance abuse, and dating violence. The page features profiles and video clips from fictional characters dealing with damaging relationships, drugs, and the whole shebang. Users can follow the characters' stories, and take online quizzes and polls on themes like their take on prescription drugs, depression, etc.

Young people with problems or questions can send confidential e-mails to counselors and get referrals and advice without even picking up the phone. This seems like a really good idea, actually. In our day, there was just 'Degrassi Junior High,' which was amazing in its own right but had no hotline, just a lot of hilarious hair.

The site also features a playlist and downloadable music to suit the mood. And its pretty good, surprisingly. The Secret Machines? Gang of Four? When did the DOH suddenly get so awesome? [NYC Teen MindSpace, via wcbstv]

Computers

Apple Questions NYC's GreeNYC Program and Logo

Apple Gets Arrogant, Attacks NYC's GreeNYC Program and LogoApple Gets Arrogant, Attacks NYC's GreeNYC Program and Logo

New York -- 'The Big Apple' -- has filed for a trademark for it's new GreeNYC logo that is being plastered on the city's new hybrid taxis and buses. Thats the logo above, the infinity sign as an apple, with stem and leaf. Next to that is the Apple (formerly Apple Computers) logo. The silver apple shape with a leaf and a bite taken out of it.

Apple thinks the GreeNYC logo is a bit too similar to the Apple logo and has asked that the city's trademark request be denied. Apple claims the new logo will cause confusion and "seriously injure the reputation which [Apple] has established for its goods and services."

But before we go off carrying torches and pitchforks to Steve Jobs' front door perhaps we should see what a patent lawyer has to say about it. Nilay Patel at our sister site Engadget says that this is actually standard practice. Thousands of these types of petitions are filed every year by just about every company out there. Its part of the initial 30 day vetting process of any trademark request. In the end Patel seems to think its likely that Apple and the city of New York will come to some licensing agreement and everyone will just forget this ever happened. And we were really looking forward to forming an angry mob...

We still think this is a bit absurd. New York has been known as the Big Apple since the 1920s, more than 50 years before there was an Apple Computers to speak of.

From Wired and Engadget

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Cell Phones, iPhone

Man Jumps Onto Subway Tracks for His iPhone

Man Risks Life for iPhone, Would You?

We've posted many, many stories about the iPhone that have likely inspired much technolust in all of you Apple fans out there. That said, we've also posted a number of stories about people killed by their phones, and we're planning on posting more, 'cause they just keep coming.

The latest killer-mobile story involves a man who lost his life while trying to retrieve a dropped iPhone. Bijan Rezvani apparently has only been reading the former type of story, and none of the latter, as he risked his life by jumping onto a live NYC subway track to retrieve a dropped iPhone.

That's right, Rezvani, a tourist visiting NYC, apparently dropped his iPhone onto the tracks while snapping some pictures. Rezvani leapt onto the rails and retrieved his iPhone. He somehow managed to get back up onto the subway platform before either he or his iPhone were crushed. This is the exact same stunt a woman attempted in 2004, but with far more tragic results.

Such stupidity/bravery, of course, inspires thoughts of just what any of us might jump onto train tracks for. In a quick poll among Switched bloggers we came up with a few things we'd think about making the leap for, including a wayward puppy, a passport and cash. [Laptop magazine, which published an interview with Rezvani, also offers up this longer list of jump-worthy gadgets.] Notably, none of those things was a gadget of any sort.

From Gothamist and Laptop.


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Cell Phones, Computers, BlackBerry, E-Mail Addiction

NYC Hopes to Launch Subway Text Message Alert System

MTA Seeking Text Message and E-Mail Alert SystemThe New York State Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) is looking for a vendor to put together what may end up being the largest text message and e-mail alert system in the country. The MTA said that, following massive flooding of the NYC subway tunnels on August 8th, the need for such a system became clear.

The alerts will inform passengers about construction, train re-routing, and unplanned disruptions such as those from fire and flooding. The system is expected to draw up to a million subscribers.

Commuter rail lines, such as Metro North, have an alert system, but it can take as much as an hour for the messages to be sent out. The MTA plans to fold the commuter lines into the new system which they say will be much more timely.

Currently, subway passengers can subscribe to an e-mail list for planned disruptions, but are forced to rely on announcements made over station and train PA systems for up-to-the-minute updates regarding unexpected interruptions. As any subway passenger knows, such announcement are usually completely incomprehensible.

From Textually.org

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Cell Phones

Cell Phones in Subways: Not For 911

Cell Phones in Subways: Not For 911

Last month, we reported that New York City's subway system was being wired to bring cell phone reception to its subterranean stations. Besides bringing the conveniences of e-mail and voice to this otherwise uncharted territory, many New Yorkers felt a sense of relief that emergency calls from underground would now be possible. However, it seems that's not exactly what the Metropolitan Transit Authority had in mind with last month's announcement. In fact, by the sounds of recent statements made by the MTA, an emergency is the last time it would want people to reach for their mobiles.

MTA officials have indicated that during an emergency, all travelers should give their undivided attention to MTA employees -- not to their handsets. Additionally, the MTA fears that hundreds of panicked travelers simultaneously calling 911 to report the same emergency could flood phone lines unnecessarily if the emergency has already been reported. We saw similar outages occur during Hurricane Katrina and the Minneapolis bridge collapse, so this concern isn't completely without merit.

Another concern raised by the MTA about cell phones in stations is much more ominous. According to MTA spokesman Jeremy Soffin speaking to the Daily News, a cell phone may serve as an "accidental detonator during such an [emergency] incident." Though Soffin, somewhat oddly, doesn't elaborate on this statement, he seems to be suggesting that during an underground emergency, a flurry of cell phone activity could potentially set off a device that just happens to be there waiting to go off, but has nothing to do with the current emergency.

Are we then to believe that there are any number of explosive devices out there in New York's underground that the MTA doesn't know about?

From textually.org and Daily News

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Cell Phones

Man Fired After GPS Showed He Was Not at Work

GPS Phone
There's no point in lying anymore. With new technology, someone will always catch you whether it's on camera, through spyware, or GPS. Take the following anecdote as a lesson: It seems John Halpin, a supervising carpenter for the New York City school system, was let go after he was caught skipping out early and falsifying his time sheets.

Turns out the Board of Education was tracking his movements with a GPS receiver built into his employer-provided cell phone. Over five months, administrators noticed multiple discrepancies between where John should have been, and where the GPS data showed he actually was. In response to the data, an administrative judge suggested the 21 year veteran Halpin get the axe.

Halpin tried to fight the termination, saying he was never informed the phone could be used to track his movements, and questioned the accuracy of the data. Unfortunately for Halpin, this did not convince administrative Judge Tynia Richard, who found him guilty of submitting false time records.

From Boing Boing

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CNET provides the latest tech news, unbiased reviews, videos, podcasts, software, and downloads, making tech products easy to find, understand and use.

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