Wireless networking meets social networking in WeFi (free). This useful software does double-duty: It helps you find reliable hot spots and then connect to them, and also helps you connect with your friends, and find new ones. Run the program and it shows nearby hot spots, with details about each such as signal strength and whether the network is encrypted. You can also have the program send you to a Web page where you can see all the hot spots mapped out. New to this version of WeFi is its ability to show information about each hot spot such as whether it is a school, coffee shop, restaurant, home, and so on. And a new feature allows you to find hot spots not just in your immediate WiFi range, but beyond it as well, by consulting the WeFit database.
(more…)
Posts Tagged ‘program’
WiFi Connects You With Wireless Hotspots–And With People
Sunday, June 6th, 2010Tags: ability, addition, beginning, box, click, coffee, coffee shop, Connects, Custom, database, default, default home page, default search engine, double duty, engine, example, expertise, feature, fi, geolocation, home, hot spot, hot spots, Hotspots-, information, Install, installation, list, location, maps, mile, network, networking, New, new feature, page, People, PriceGong, problem, process, program, range, restaurant, run, school, search, shop, shopping, shopping software, shortcoming, signal, signal strength, site, social networking, software, spot, step, strength, tab, toolbar, Touch, uncheck, upload, useful software, version, We, web, web page, WeFi, WeFit, WiFi, Wireless, wireless hotspots, wireless networking
Posted in Internet, technology in home appliances | Comments Off
PG&E admits to flaws in some smart meters
Sunday, June 6th, 2010PG&E admits to flaws in some smart meters

California utility Pacific Gas & Electric has released a report acknowledging that thousands of its smart meters have had technical problems and that its customer service has been insufficient.
The company has been the source of ire by customers in California who have complained that their utility bills went up after the two-way digital meters were installed. More than 5 million meters have been installed since 2007.
Prompted by customer complaints over billing accuracy, California regulators ordered PG&E to provide details of its smart-meter program.
On Monday, the utility released four years’ worth of project management reports (PDF) and the results of a review that identified “issues” related to wireless communication, data storage, meter installation, and accuracy.
(more…)
Tags: accuracy, advantage, billing, california regulators, california utility, call, center, chief customer officer, communication, communication data, company, company executives, concern, conference, control energy, customer, customer complaints, customer service programs, data storage, digital meters, display, Electric, energy, energy usage, Gas, goal, industry, information, installation, ire, Jose, jose mercury news, management, management reports, Mercury, meter, meter installation, Monday, News, number, offer, officer, Pacific, PDF, percent, pg e, portal, president, press, program, project, quality, report, response, review, San, san jose mercury, san jose mercury news, senior vice president, service, smart meter, smart meters, SmartMeter, source, statement, storage, technology, usage, utility, vice, web, worth
Posted in technology in home appliances | Comments Off
Flexible Glass for Brighter, Lighter Displays
Sunday, June 6th, 2010Flexible Glass for Brighter, Lighter Displays
Electronics printed on flexible glass could challenge LCDs in many devices.
Lightweight, flexible electronics printed over large areas could take the weight out of e-readers and cell phones and could potentially be less expensive. However, it’s a challenge to adapt the processes and materials used to make today’s rigid glass displays to new substrates, such as plastic. Glass manufacturer Corning now suggests an alternative: It’s testing a flexible glass substrate for printed electronics that the company says will offer the performance of glass with the flexibility of plastic.
Most screens currently on the market–in televisions, computers, portable electronics, and other devices–are liquid-crystal displays (LCDs) controlled by thin-film silicon transistor arrays built on rigid glass backplanes. Corning, along with Samsung Corning Precision Materials, a company jointly owned with Samsung, currently supplies more than half the display glass used to make LCDs. But as consumers increasingly adopt portable electronics where weight, durability, and energy efficiency are more critical, new display technologies are emerging that may better meet these needs, and challenge the dominance of LCDs. Corning’s work on flexible glass is a direct response to the emergence of new display technologies, says Jill VanDewoestine, program manager for flexible substrates at Corning. VanDewoestine is demonstrating the glass in an exhibit booth this week at the Society for Information Display’s annual conference in Seattle.
Flexible substrates can also be used to print large-area electronics, including displays and solar cells on roll-to-roll systems like those used to print newspapers, potentially enabling cost-cutting volume production, says VanDewoestine. Companies including Hewlett-Packard, Phicot, Plastic Logic, and Prime View International are working on lightweight, flexible plastic and metal-based display backplanes. These technologies aren’t on the market yet, and it’s not clear that they will match the performance of silicon-on-glass when brought to high-volume production.
“Glass is a great surface for building thin-film devices on,” says Carl Taussig, director of the Information Surfaces Lab at Hewlett-Packard Labs in Palo Alto, CA. Glass is impermeable, meaning water can’t seep into it and damage organic electronics (which tends to be a problem with plastic), and its surface is also very smooth, which means it’s much easier to build perfectly structured, high-performance electronics on top of it. Glass can furthermore be used to make transparent displays, which isn’t possible with metal. And it has the advantage of compatibility with high-temperature processing. Electronics made at high temperatures tend to have better performance; their structure is better, so they switch faster, which in a display means a crisper, more beautiful picture.
Corning’s flexible display glass is just 75 micrometers thick. VanDewoestine acknowledges that the concept of manufacturing durable electronics on flexible glass is counterintuitive. “People think manufacturing on flexible glass is impossible because they think about TVs getting broken by Wii remotes,” she says. The company is not saying how tough and strong the material is, but representatives say these properties should match those of thicker glass because the strength of glass is independent of its thickness.
Corning has sent out samples of the flexible glass to manufacturing partners to test on roll-to-roll manufacturing lines. VanDewoestine says the company’s partners are building electronic devices on the substrate; the company expects to reveal some of this work in scientific publications later this year, but is not currently disclosing any details.
Jennifer Lewis, professor of materials science and engineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, says she is excited about the potential for flexible glass. “This will enable a broader array of materials to be integrated into flexible electronics, and likely ones with better performance than could be achieved on plastic substrates,” she says.
But there is some skepticism about the compatibility of glass with roll-to-roll manufacturing. HP’s Taussig, who is developing roll-to-roll processes for plastic display backplanes, says: “Unfortunately, glass is brittle, so it is still susceptible to scratches, which can lead to cracks and catastrophic failure, which is the last thing you want in a roll-to-roll line.”
VanDewoestine says Corning is aware of such concerns and is addressing the problem by developing packaging that will protect the glass during transport and manufacturing. “The reason flexible glass works is that we make very pure glass with a damage-free surface, and then package it so that it remains defect-free,” she says. The packaging is similar in concept to the packaging the company uses to make glass optical fibers, which are about 125 micrometers wide and flexible.
Tags: advantage, alternative, array, booth, Brighter, cell, challenge, company, compatibility, concept, conference, Corning, crisper, direct response, director, display, display glass, Displays, dominance, durability, efficiency, Electronics, emergence, energy, energy efficiency, engineering, exhibit, failure, flexibility, Flexible, flexible plastic, flexible substrates, Glass, glass displays, glass manufacturer, glass substrate, Hewlett, Illinois, information, information display, International, Lab, large area electronics, LCDs, Lighter, Lightweight, line, liquid crystal displays, Logic, manager, manufacturer, manufacturing, market, material, metal, packaging, Packard, performance, Phicot, picture, plastic, plastic glass, plastic logic, portable electronics, potential, Precision, Prime, prime view, problem, processing, production, professor, program, reason, response, Samsung, samsung corning, science, seep, silicon, silicon transistor, skepticism, Society, solar cells, strength, structure, substrate, surface, Surfaces, thickness, thin film silicon, thing, today, top, transistor, transport, University, Urbana, View, volume, volume production, water, week, weight, Wii, work, year
Posted in technology in home appliances | Comments Off