November 23, 2024

Apps That Know What You Want, Before You Do

And then there is Silicon Valley, where mind-reading personal assistants come in the form of a cellphone app.

A range of start-ups and big companies like Google are working on what is known as predictive search — new tools that act as robotic personal assistants, anticipating what you need before you ask for it. Glance at your phone in the morning, for instance, and see an alert that you need to leave early for your next meeting because of traffic, even though you never told your phone you had a meeting, or where it was.

How does the phone know? Because an application has read your e-mail, scanned your calendar, tracked your location, parsed traffic patterns and figured out you need an extra half-hour to drive to the meeting.

The technology is the latest development in Web search, and one of the first that is tailored to mobile devices. It does not even require people to enter a search query. Your context — location, time of day and digital activity — is the query, say the engineers who build these services.

Many technologists agree that these services will probably become mainstream, eventually incorporated in alarm clocks, refrigerators and bathroom mirrors. Already, an app called Google Now is an important part of Google’s Internet-connected glasses. As a Glass wearer walks through the airport, her hands full of luggage, it could show her an alert that her flight is delayed.

Google Now is “kind of blowing my mind right now,” said Danny Sullivan, a founding editor of Search Engine Land who has been studying search for two decades. “I mean, I’m pretty jaded, right? I’ve seen all types of things that were supposed to revolutionize search, but pretty much they haven’t. Google Now is doing that.”

But for some people, predictive search — also in services like Cue, reQall, Donna, Tempo AI, MindMeld and Evernote — is the latest intrusion into our lives, another disruption pinging and buzzing in our pockets, mining our digital lives for personal information and straddling the line between helpful and creepy.

“To the question of creepiness, the answer is it depends who you ask,” said Andrea M. Matwyshyn, an assistant professor at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, who studies the legal implications of technology. “What works for a group of 30-something engineers in Silicon Valley may not be representative of the way that 60-year-old executives in New York tend to use their phones.”

Many software programmers have dreamed of building a tool like this for years. The technology is emerging now because people are desperate for ways to deal with the inundation of digital information, and because much of it is stored in the cloud where apps can easily access it.

“We can’t go on with eight meetings and 200 e-mails a day,” said N. Rao Machiraju, co-founder and chief executive of reQall, which sells its technology to other companies to make their own personal assistant apps. “We have a technology that isn’t waiting for you to ask it a question, but is anticipating what you need and when is the best time to deliver that.”

The services guess what you want to know based on the digital breadcrumbs you leave, like calendar entries, e-mails, social network activity and the places you take your phone. Many use outside services for things like coupons, news and traffic.

Google Now, which came to some Android phones a year ago and iPhones in April, tells you when it is time to leave for a dinner reservation. That is because it noticed an OpenTable e-mail in your Gmail in-box, knows your location from your phone’s GPS and checked Google Maps for traffic conditions.

A couple days before you travel, it will show you weather in your destination, and when you arrive, currency exchange information and the time back home. Ask aloud that Google Now remind you to pick up milk next time you step in a grocery store, and an alert will appear when you are at Safeway.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/30/technology/apps-that-know-what-you-want-before-you-do.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

State of the Art: 12 Gifts That Go Beyond the Predictable

That’s partly because you’re young, of course. But it’s also because you’re responsible only for opening the presents, not shopping for them.

This year, there will be a lot of the usual under the tree: iPod Touches, iPads, phones. Kindles and Nooks. Cameras.

But if you look hard enough, you can find less predictable tech gifts — things they certainly don’t own already. Here are some high-tech suggestions. Call it the 12 Gifts of Christmas.

AUDIOBULBS ($300 a pair). A home sound system can be a deeply satisfying luxury (some might say necessity). Installing it, though, is rarely as fulfilling.

These speakers, however, are as easy to install as screwing in a light bulb — because they are light bulbs. They’re compact fluorescents with built-in speakers. They turn any lamp or recessed lighting fixture into a speaker, without any new wires trailing across the floor. The power isn’t exactly, you know, Megadeth, but it’s distortion-free and clear.

You plug your sound source (CD player or TV, for example) into the wireless base; it even has an iPhone/iPod charging jack. All you need is a new set of jokes along the lines of, “How many politicians does it take to screw in a speaker?”

BEDOL WATER CLOCK ($19). These bedside alarm clocks (various colors and styles) are cheap, insubstantial, mass-produced and basic. They’re impressive, though, because of their power source: water.

No battery, no power cord. Each is a plastic reservoir with a big, clear LCD display on the front. Every few weeks, you pour in ordinary water. A tiny submerged panel creates a galvanic-battery effect, producing just enough electricity to power the clock.

Don’t count on seeing water-powered laptops, refrigerators and cars any time soon. But on its own small scale, the water clock is a marvel.

POWERTRIP ($109). At its core, the PowerTrip is just a rechargeable battery — an emergency power source for your other electronics. It holds enough power to charge an iPad once or a phone four times.

But there’s more to it than that. On one side is a standard plug to a wall power outlet for charging. On another side is a solar panel, so you can recharge it on a windowsill.

On the far end, a USB jack, just like the one on a computer. Any gadget that can charge from a computer can therefore charge from the PowerTrip. (It also comes with standard Apple, Mini USB and Micro USB jacks.)

It also doubles (or would that be triples?) as a flash drive with four gigabytes of storage (or eight, for $119), for your backing-up convenience.

CANON X MARK I MOUSE SLIM ($28). A comfortable, solid, wireless two-button mouse with a numeric keypad and calculator built-in. Sounds silly, maybe, but it’s actually rather great, especially if you crunch numbers for a living.

TRUCONNECT MI-FI ($90). The Mi-Fi looks like a fat metal credit card — but it’s a portable, personal, pocketable Wi-Fi hot spot. Up to five laptops or iPod Touches can get online anywhere you go. The trouble with the Mi-Fi has always been the fees — usually $60 a month. That’s fine if you’re some executive on an expense account, but steep if you only sometimes travel.

The TruConnect model is exactly the same as the Mi-Fi models sold through Sprint, Verizon, Virgin and others, but with pricing that’s far better suited to the occasional road warrior: $5 a month, plus 3.9 cents a megabyte.

That’s a hard-to-gauge statistic, of course — how many megabytes does it cost to check your e-mail or call up a Web site? But the per-megabyte price is roughly what you’d pay for “tethering” on a cellphone (where your cellphone acts as the hot spot) — and with the TruConnect, you pay only for what you actually use.

LOOXCIE 2 ($150). Goofy name, cool idea: a wearable Bluetooth camcorder (it goes over your ear) that’s always rolling. If something worthwhile happens, you tap a button to retain the last 30 seconds, and even post it online.

You can also start and stop manually, as with a camcorder. The clever part is that you review the footage on your phone. Why pay for a screen and storage on the Looxcie itself, when you have one already in your pocket?

GRIFFIN CINEMASEAT 2 ( $11.50). You sling this leatherette iPod frame over the front headrest of your car, for the entertainment pleasure of those in the back seats. That’s it. Great idea, nicely executed — there’s even a mesh pocket for earbuds — and it’s about $1,000 less expensive than a DVD screen installed by the factory.

PRANKPACK ($20 for three). Your lucky recipient tears off the wrapping paper to reveal — the Bathe Brew (“Shower Coffee Maker + Soap Dispenser”) or the iDrive (steering-wheel mount for your iPad).

E-mail: pogue@nytimes.com

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=2cf72f07bf7153653bb8f8d9e39db2ed