Clicking on the Web: Learn about smartphones on web
By Howard Lestrud
Many of us received what we wanted for Christmas and have been spending our following days incorporating some of our gifts into our lifestyles.
That gift may have been a new computer, a new television, a new car or a new phone.
My new gift was a smartphone and I, indeed, am still familiarizing myself with it.
We are for sure in that now connectivity generation.
Many of us have resisted joining the new connectivity, but others of us have welcomed it with eagerness to learn.
One of my best instructors has been my eight-year-old grandson Ryan.
I have been one of those who has thought it rude when people hang onto their phone and check messages, or whatever when they are with you.
Just the other night, Judy and I went to Applebee’s for dinner and were waiting on a bench for our name to be called.
As we sat there, six other people were near us (of all ages) and they were connected to their phones.
Bluebird Pidion BIP-6000
Bluebird Pidion BIP-6000 Versatile, highly configurable rugged handheld runs Windows CE/Windows Mobile OR Android
(by Conrad H. Blickenstorfer)
The Pidion line of rugged and industrial handhelds is made by Bluebird , a Korean company that has been in the mobile computer hardware business since 1998. Specializing in products serving enterprise mobility (AIDC) and payment industries, Bluebird's offerings also include bardcode scanners, RFID readers, and printer-integrated handhelds. The BIP-6000 described on this page is the company's entry into rugged industrial handhelds with optional gun-style handle.
The Pidion BIP-6000 is a PDA-style ruggedized handheld computer that also comes in a pistol grip/RFID reader version (called the BIP-6000MaxID) for data capture-intensive applications. Offering exceptional versatility in terms of optional configurations, the BIP-6000 is a bit larger than it looks, but it's still a fairly compact device. Its resistive touch


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These coordinates are not from your phone's GPS signal, but from your location as guesstimated by the embedded technology from Skyhook Wireless.
The reason is that you don't need two data network services on the struggling AT&T network to get this to work because it is both small enough to be a phone and more »


