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Showing posts with label system. Show all posts
Showing posts with label system. Show all posts

Monday, June 13, 2011

We Sample Pioneer’s AppRadio Infotainment System, Discover It’s Not a Kludge of Overwhelming Jankitude

As in-car infotainment goes, Audi’s latest MMI system is seriously impressive. It maintains the intuitive nature of the company’s earlier attempts at in-car infotainment and seamlessly delivers Google-sourced content as an overlay via a T-Mobile connection while delivering an in-car wireless hotspot. It’s also out of date as you read this.

The new trend, as evidenced by Saab’s in-the-works iQon and Toyota’s launching-imminently Entune, is leveraging the competitive, constantly updated nature of mobile-phone hardware and software to deliver the wired world to the driver’s seat. We had a chance to play with Entune last week during the Prius V press preview and if we didn’t come away floored by the UI, it’s at least not a well-meaning kludge of overwhelming jankitude like MyFord Touch.

We could say the same of AppRadio—and did, even, in the above headline—which is Pioneer’s foray into the aftermarket phone-based infotainment space, which, like Entune, relies primarily on your smartphone to power it. Unlike Entune, which also works with Android and BlackBerry phones, AppRadio only works with the iPhone and iPod Touch.

While the name suggests an infinite array of digital doohickies sprouting from your head unit like so many distracted-driver lawsuits waiting to happen, the reality is a bit more sensible than that. Only approved apps developed using Pioneer’s API are available for use on the system. At launch, the golden five are Google Maps, the ubiquitous Pandora internet radio service, traffic information from industry heavyweight Inrix, music subscription service Rdio and MotionX’s GPS Drive navigation app. The ins and outs of the vetting process aren’t crystal-clear, but essentially, a developer with an application already available in the iTunes store can pitch it to Pioneer. If approved, the company will allow access to their API for automotive-suitability tweaking. Which, in Pandora’s case, meant removing some of the more driver-distracting features like station creation. In fact, many app features are disabled unless the vehicle’s handbrake is engaged. We imagine that creative installers will defeat this feature posthaste.

When it arrives in June, don’t count on AppRadio as a central hub for your hyperconnected dee-luxe sound system, though. While you can plug in a backup camera, you can’t connect even a 1/8-inch auxiliary in. During the press presentation, the demo video featured a Volkswagen driver with shabby-chic hair routing his entire life through his iPhone, including a coffee date with an impatient girl named Sara in Moorpark, California (“Where life can be this good”). He’s apparently AppRadio’s target market, as the unit features no satellite-radio input, no USB connectivity and no provision for your retro six-disc changer. We imagine that in the future, Pioneer will offer pricier AppRadio head units with more versatility; assuming the iPhone-centric model doesn’t utterly fall on its face in the market, future Android support’s practically a given.

Is AppRadio an under-$500 replacement for a fully integrated system with nicely weighted and knurled knobs? No, but it does free one from the expense of repairing an Audi. Plus, there’s no additional data plan to buy and assuming the developers want to stay relevant in the marketplace, it will be continually updated over time. While Pioneer remains mum on whether AppRadio will be compatible with the upcoming iPhone 5, the unit does contain a MicroSD slot to enable firmware updates. While the iPad is not officially supported, it may work. Your mileage may vary, all that and whatnot.

We have 160-GB iPod Classic packed with music and an iPhone 4 that we use for communications. While we could plug in the iPod for music and use Bluetooth for hands-free calling, we’d lose on-screen app availability. Also, as a double-DIN-sized unit, it won’t fit in our old Porsche’s single-DIN slot. AppRadio’s a compelling start in a space that’s sure to grow, but it doesn’t fit the way we currently use in-car technology. Pioneer’s bet, however, is that we’re not most people.


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Sunday, June 5, 2011

Ford and Health Industry Collaborate on Concept System to Monitor Your Health … In Your Car

May 19, 2011 at 3:21pm by Alexander Stoklosa

Yesterday, Ford and several health industry partners unveiled a vision of a future in which its SYNC device becomes not just a voice-activated infotainment system, but a “health and wellness” tool for drivers and occupants of a vehicle. The system will not attempt to cure your sniffles with a song; instead, it would serve as a platform for extending the reach of healthcare and disease monitoring. Before you cry “Big Brother,” Ford reminds us that drivers suffering from chronic illnesses such as diabetes or heart disease can pose an acute safety risk to themselves and others when behind the wheel.

Ford and its partners, Medtronic, SDI Health, and WellDoc, believe they can keep passengers connected to doctors and monitoring services by using SYNC and existing health industry technologies and data analysis. The rapid proliferation of wireless tech and micro sensors has resulted in such conveniences as implanted blood-glucose monitors that can pair with Bluetooth-enabled devices to transfer blood sugar data to a cloud computer in real time. These could be set up to pair with Ford’s SYNC system, for example. An app called Allergy Alert (pictured above) is another proposal. It would let vehicle occupants know the pollen levels in the air around them; a simple “location” command geolocates the car, pulls pollen data from a network, and then verbally recites the pollen levels and sources to occupants while displaying them in the central multi-function screen.

While Ford made it clear that its research into health-monitoring app integration into its vehicles is intended for series production someday, the full cloud-based capabilities are still several years away from landing in the hands of consumers.

Tags: Ford, infotainment, Sync |


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Sunday, May 15, 2011

A bona fide high-end home theater speaker system that won't break the bank

The complete GoldenEar Technology TritonCinema Two multichannel home theater system

(Credit: GoldenEar Technology)

A few months ago I had the pleasure of reviewing GoldenEar Technology's least expensive home theater system. The SuperCinema 3 ($1,750) comes with five small satellite speakers and a smallish subwoofer, but the sound was big and beautiful. More than that, the sound was distinctly high-end in its flavor. It was easy to tell it was designed primarily for home theater, but for those buyers who also have a hankering for audiophile-quality sound.

Home Theater magazine's Darryl Wilkinson recently reviewed a large GoldenEar system, the TritonCinema Two, which retails for $3,495. The five-piece system consists of a pair of Triton Two tower speakers, a SuperSat 50C center, and a pair of SuperSat 3 satellite speakers to handle surround duties. What, no subwoofer? No, the TritonCinema Two system doesn't need one; each tower speaker houses a pair of 5x9-inch front-mounted quadratic subwoofer bass drivers coupled with dual side-mounted 7x10-inch planar bass radiators, and a 1,200-watt switching amplifier. That's great, and you don't have to find a spot in your room for a humongous subwoofer.

Looking over the review it definitely sounds like Wilkinson was as impressed by the big GoldenEar system as I was by the little SuperCinema 3, saying, "The TritonCinema Two system is spectacularly spectacular." He thought the sound was comparable to large electrostatic speakers, and that's high praise indeed for a home theater system. Wilkinson awarded the TritonCinema Two five-star ratings (the maximum) for Performance, Value, and Build Quality.

If you have a question or comment for Steve Guttenberg, you can submit it here. However, because our editors and writers receive hundreds of requests, we cannot tell you when you may receive a response.

Steve Guttenberg writes for a number of magazines and Web sites, including Home Entertainment, Tone Audio, and Stereophile. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET.


View the original article here

Monday, May 9, 2011

A bona fide high-end home theater speaker system that won't break the bank

The complete GoldenEar Technology TritonCinema Two multichannel home theater system

(Credit: GoldenEar Technology)

A few months ago I had the pleasure of reviewing GoldenEar Technology's least expensive home theater system. The SuperCinema 3 ($1,750) comes with five small satellite speakers and a smallish subwoofer, but the sound was big and beautiful. More than that, the sound was distinctly high-end in its flavor. It was easy to tell it was designed primarily for home theater, but for those buyers who also have a hankering for audiophile-quality sound.

Home Theater magazine's Darryl Wilkinson recently reviewed a large GoldenEar system, the TritonCinema Two, which retails for $3,495. The five-piece system consists of a pair of Triton Two tower speakers, a SuperSat 50C center, and a pair of SuperSat 3 satellite speakers to handle surround duties. What, no subwoofer? No, the TritonCinema Two system doesn't need one; each tower speaker houses a pair of 5x9-inch front-mounted quadratic subwoofer bass drivers coupled with dual side-mounted 7x10-inch planar bass radiators, and a 1,200-watt switching amplifier. That's great, and you don't have to find a spot in your room for a humongous subwoofer.

Looking over the review it definitely sounds like Wilkinson was as impressed by the big GoldenEar system as I was by the little SuperCinema 3, saying, "The TritonCinema Two system is spectacularly spectacular." He thought the sound was comparable to large electrostatic speakers, and that's high praise indeed for a home theater system. Wilkinson awarded the TritonCinema Two five-star ratings (the maximum) for Performance, Value, and Build Quality.

If you have a question or comment for Steve Guttenberg, you can submit it here. However, because our editors and writers receive hundreds of requests, we cannot tell you when you may receive a response.

Steve Guttenberg writes for a number of magazines and Web sites, including Home Entertainment, Tone Audio, and Stereophile. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET.


View the original article here