07/01/2008

News roundup: Mobiquity, bags at British airports and...

A concept
A new term seems to be born: Mobiquity (original in French: “mobiquité”, mixture of mobility and ubiquity, that arrives from Francis Pisani blog, contributor of “Ciberpaís”, via Renalid). It refers to the ability to accede to the information while we are moving, through radio networks. Little by little, we know that it is possible in hotels, buses, trains or aeroplanes, via wifi, or from any place through 3G or HSDPA mobile phone. Many apps have now mobile versions: digital cartography software (Google Maps mobile or Live for Search mobile), emails management, news and RSS readers (Yahoo! Go). More, many webpages have versions prepared for small screens. The future is mobile.

A news
Meanwhile, some British airports, from Monday 7-1-2008, are allowing to go with more than one bag as hand luggage. In fact, with two, as the BBC informs. But the norm is not applied to all the places, but only to which they have surpassed safety inspections. Thus, in London, Heathrow and London City can allow more than one bag, but not Gatwick or Luton. This partial measurement is confused and rare, in the style of the Spanish antitobacco law, and already it brings about confusion and controversy. Easyjet, for example, has declared that maintains the one-bag norm, by that disparity of criteria between airports.

A Web
Flashearth is a Web mash-up that superposes satellite images of several sources. Thus, when a place in the map is located, it is possible to choose what series of aerial photos is wanted to see in that zone: the one of Google, the one of Yahoo, the one of Microsoft, the one of Ask or the one of the NASA, everything in a single website. The interface is done in Flash, a system to pack images, sounds and videos and to show them in Internet, and is quite light.

A 'extra omnes' webcam
Through dondeviajar.es, Nautilia has discovered that the Vatican has one webcam in front of the tomb of Juan Pablo II. If there is some devotee dark tourist reading, he will be able to see an illustrious grave without needing moving.

Faithful clients
A British couple takes 22 years living in Travelodge hotels (those that studies the sleepwalkers or gives to lodging to Joseph and Maria), explain “The Guardian”. These long-term guests say that it is cheaper and sure to live in the hotel that in their house. The current room, near Sheffield, in that they have been for 10 years, has been baptised by the chain like Davidson' Suite, in honour to these faithful clients.


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1 comments:

Indite07 said...

Will be adding mobiquity to my vocabulary from now on

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