Posts Tagged ‘alarm’

OnTimeRx for Palm – A Personal Pharmacist Right at Your Fingertips

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

OnTimeRxOnTimeRx is a great tool to remind you of the important medicines you need to take in at the right time. This will serve as your own personal pharmacist and at the same time nurse by reminding you every time you need to take in your medicines and how much the doses are. This way, you will not miss drinking your medicines no matter how busy you are.

OnTimeRx is a handy application to have as it is very easy to use and will definitely make your life a lot less complicated.  It doesn’t  only remind you of your daily medications but it can hold other important details about your health. Putting in your 911 information on the OnTimeRx will help save you time  should you need to access the file when an emergency occurs.

This isn’t limited to English alone because OnTimeRx can be localized in other languages. This application is designed and developed by a Pharmacist that is why having OnTimeRx on your Palm is truly like having your very own Pharmacist.
Features for OnTimeRx for Palm:

  • Automatic snooze reminders make it hard to forget any scheduled event.
  • All alarm responses are recorded in the activity Log.
  • Easily verify when doses were taken and tasks were done or not done.
  • Drug supply is automatically calculated when each dose is taken.
  • Remaining Days Supply is displayed on each Alarm Screen.
  • The overall compliance rate is displayed on the Log Screen.
  • The compliance rate for each drug is displayed in Log Details.
  • 911 data can be as simple or as detailed as desired.
  • Sensitive personal health data can be protected with a PIN-protected security feature in Preferences.

Minimum Requirements:

  • Requires Palm OS v3.5 or higher
  • Requires Classic emulator to run on Palm Pre phones

Display Dimensions
160 x 160, 320 x 320, 320 x 480, 480 x 320
Operating System
Palm OS 3.5, Palm OS 4, Palm OS 5, Works on Classic


Try it for FREE today: OnTimeRx for Palm

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Tags: OnTimeRx, OnTimeRx for Palm, OnTimeRx Palm OS v3.5 apps, Palm OS 3.5 apps, Palm OS 4 apps, palm os 5 apps



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Butler For Palm Treo – It’s Like Having Your Very Own Personal Secretary

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

ButlerButler for Palm Treo is indeed like having an efficient personal secretary who knows about everything about you and anticipates your every need.  If you need to go somewhere and should be reminded of that appointment, then your Butler will keep on reminding you until you finally acknowledge that you are on your feet and about to prepare for that appointment.

Another nice thing about having the Butler is that you can customize your alarm not only with the usual beeps and rings but you can use your favorite song as your alarm or any MP3 file.  Neat huh? You have an alarm and you also have a player.

An important job description of the Butler that you should not miss is its security function.  In the unfortunate event that somebody steals your Treo, you can lock it remotely via SMS. Now that’s a security function that sets the Butler above the rest.

Remember though that the Butler is made only for the Palm Treo.
Features for Butler for Palm Treo:

  • Alarms – Repeating alarms with ringtones or MP3 (No need to buy an MP3 Player)
  • Alerts – Nags you like a pager to make sure you don’t miss anything
  • Security – Remote lock allows you do lock or delete your Treo via SMS if it’s stolen
  • Navigation – Launch apps or calls from anywhere by holding down a key
  • LED – Turn it off at night!
  • Keyguard – That shows you the time and doesn’t block the screen!
  • Volume Keys- To scroll the page, or switch through your last opened applications.
  • Housekeeping – Keeps your system in shape to reduce damaging resets!
  • And More…
  • More than a dozen utilities that make your Treo work better and harder.
  • ‘ recently purchased Butler and have been more than thrilled with its performance. I have been told by numerous people that you are above and beyond when it comes to consumer feedback so I wanted to offer my congratulations on an amazing product. I am a relatively new Treo user but am becoming more and more addicted to the phone with each passing day and your utility has really made the difference in my experience’ -Jonathan
  • ‘I love Butler. It’s the best program on my Treo!’ -Philipp
  • ‘Most of the features in Butler should have been included with the Treo.’ -Todd
  • 100% Guarantee: If for any reason you don’t think Butler is fantastic – I will give you a 100% refund.

Minimum Requirements:

  • This application is specifically for the Treo and it won’t run on other devices

Display Dimensions
160 x 160, 320 x 320
Operating System
Palm OS 5

Try it for FREE today : Butler for Palm Treo

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Tags: Butler for Palm, Butler for Palm Treo, Butler for Treo, Palm Treo Applications, Treo Applications, Treo Apps



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The Morning Countdown Clock keeps track of time left

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

countdown_clock

Losing track of time is never a good thing, especially when you need to get moving in order to get to work on time.  Instead of worrying that you’ll glance at the clock and suddenly 30 minutes have disappeared out from under you, get this clock that helps you keep track of the minutes.  With it you’ll always know just how much time you have to get up and going.  If you’re not so bad at keeping track of your time, this might be a great gadget for your school age kids that like to procrastinate getting ready.

The clock not only displays the time, but announces the time you have left before you need to leave.  You set two different alarms on it, one to get up and one for when it’s time to leave.  Then the clock will announce the remaining time at 1 hour, 45 minutes, 30, 20, 15, 10, 5, 3, 2, 1, 30 seconds, 20, and then the 10 second countdown.  That is a lot for it to announce, but you’ll never lose track of time again, whether you like it or not.  To purchase the Morning Countdown Clock it will cost you $33 from the Japan Trend Shop.

Source: OhGizmo


Check out the Coolest Gadgets 2008 Gift Guides, Christmas shopping made easy.
[ The Morning Countdown Clock keeps track of time left copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]




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Wrists-On With Casio’s Old-School Calculator Watch

Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009

casio-1

This is my new watch, acquired after an experiment in riding a fixed-gear bike whilst drunk resulted in the loss and/or theft of my old, twin-dialled watch.

Faced with buying a replacement, my geek-genes immediately kicked in and I picked up something I first yearned for as a d20-rolling, miniature-painting, ZX Spectrum-programming schoolboy: The Casio Calculator Watch. This is, according to the almost inch-thick instruction manual, the DBC-32. It cost me €35.

So, how is it? In short, it’s a fragile piece of junk, but I love it.

As you can see from the pictures, the watch, although barely a few days old, has already received some dings: both the the glass and to the bezel down below the keypad. The metal itself, chosen because it looked both classier and tougher than the plastic models, has more in common with a foil cupcake casing than actual metal. This has the advantage of making the watch very light, but the disadvantage of bruising as easily as a haemophiliac in a mosh-pit. In fact, the “brushed metal” finish is already well on its way to becoming a “scarred metal” finish.

But it’s all made up for in the functionality, right? Well, sort of. Apart from the obvious calculator mode, you also get a stopwatch (itself infinitely less useful day-to-day than a countdown timer), dual time, an alarm and a rather quaint “database” for storing “up to” 25 phone numbers. I didn’t buy this watch for any of these additions — I got it purely for the aesthetic — which is probably just as well. Modern interfaces, touch interfaces especially, have spoiled us. I still have the muscle memory from my digital watch-wearing school days to control this but faced with anything harder than switching on the backlight I reach in my pocket for my iPod Touch.

And about that light. You can set it to come on automatically when you tilt the watch to look at the screen. But there is a rather tiresome safety measure — if you choose the auto mode, it actually switches off after six hours to save on batteries. This is, of course, admitting that the function doesn’t work properly to begin with.

I tested the calculator. 2+2. The answer? Inexplicably, 2+2=1, until you realize that the plus and the division signs are rendered so as to be almost identical. I tried again and achieved the more usual answer of four. There’s a rumor on the street of an Orwell Edition which gives the answer five, although this is unsubstantiated.

Do I recommend this watch? Not really. I’d spring a little more and go for a more sturdy model, one which is perhaps water resistant, too. But it looks good, and despite the flaws it works perfectly as a timepiece. The final joke, though, is visible in tiny letters above the watch’s screen. Look closely and you’ll see the legend “10 Year Battery”. As if there would still be anything left to power in a decade’s time. $70.

Product page [Casio]



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Hands-On With the Google Ion

Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009

pr_g2_handson_f7

Webmonkey editor Michael Calore went to Google’s I/O developer conference last week and triumphantly returned with a new Android phone (dubbed the Ion) in his mighty paw. The handset is essentially an HTC Dream — the next-generation version of the T-Mobile G1 — with a few cosmetic tweaks and loaded with Android 1.5 software. It wasn’t fully baked yet so we did a preview on the device and didn’t assign a rating to it. From Mike’s preview:

Google’s developer device is loaded up with Android version 1.5. This build is much improved over the G1’s software. Configuring things like ringtones, wallpapers, alarms and behaviors is a breeze, and direct access to the Android Marketplace makes installing apps a no-brainer. The notification system — a bar you pull down from the top of the screen — makes it easy to switch between active applications without having to go back to the main screen.

You can read the rest of our take on the Google Ion right here.

Photo by Jim Merithew for Wired.com



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The LED Alarm Clock with Electronic Bird

Tuesday, May 5th, 2009

6a00d83451cbb069e20115706f978d970b-800wi

This isn’t the first alarm clock I’ve seen with a bird sitting on top.  It is however, the first one that could possibly be defined as chic and stylish.  The pretty bright white makes it so that although the bird sitting on top is a little whimsical, it would still fit within a home that conforms to most adult standards.  Not only that but you’d have the joy of waking up every morning to the sound of a chirping bird instead of that obnoxious beep.

Of course, I think I’d just stuff a pillow over my head thinking it was coming from outside, on mornings that I was more tired than usual.  If you’re not that hard to wake up though, it shouldn’t be difficult to comprehend that it’s an electronic bird that is chirping on your nightstand.  There aren’t a lot of details on the clock, but it does of course utilize LED lights for the clock part.  Then they also mention that the bird does move, but no word on how it does that.  You can pick up the bird for £20.00 or about $30 from Habitat.

Source: SwitchedonSet


Tech Cult – We cover the latest tech news, but always with a funny twist.
[ The LED Alarm Clock with Electronic Bird copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]




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Recently on Coolest Gadgets

Tuesday, May 5th, 2009
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Introducing Foolish Gadgets because not all gadgets are cool :)
[ Recently on Coolest Gadgets copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]




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IPhone App Keeps You Upright, Everything is Alright

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

Upright
I just wasted €1.59 in the App Store, but at least my back is straight. I’d like to attribute my upright posture to the application in question, called “Upright”, but sadly it’s my awesome office chair that does that. Upright is quite, quite useless.

The app uses the iPhone’s accelerometer to measure when you move. Tap the screen once to calibrate and from then on, any deviation will cause an alarm and/or a vibrating alert. This part of the plan works just fine.

The problem comes with the iPhone itself. You need to either put it in a shirt pocket (where you cannot, of course, actually touch the screen to start to application) or hang it from a lanyard (yes, they actually exist
), which is clearly a bad idea.

The “Slouch Sensing” can be adjusted between high, medium and low, and you can also set a “grace period” so you can, say, reach down and grab a dropped paperclip without setting of the alarm. For instructions on adjusting these or any other settings, see here.

The worst part? I would have just looked at the screenshots and come to the exact same conclusions had the PR e-mail not contained a promo code for the application. I downloaded it, and then typed the code into iTunes. This was the exact point at which I discovered that promo codes, like drug-mules, cannot cross borders. The US-only code is as useless as a burst, heroin-filled condom here in Spain. Outtasight.

Product page [iTunes]


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Motion sensor alarm clock

Sunday, April 5th, 2009

Most alarm clocks work in this way – it comes with the all-important snooze function, shows the time and date in addition to getting you out of bed with an extremely shrill noise. This model takes a slightly different route, however, as it also integrates other features such as a calendar, temperature, color and motion-sensing. The motion-sensor works great as it allows you to move among the modes by waving your hand above the clock. You can view the temperature in both °C and °F modes, and have up to 8 sounds to choose from for the snooze function. Homeloo is carrying this for just $8.


Cool Gift Idea: Digital Picture Frames, check out our reviews.
[ Motion sensor alarm clock copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]



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Entrepreneurs Find Gold in Gadget Startups

Thursday, March 26th, 2009

Fitbit_founders

James Park and his partner Eric Friedman stood out like a couple of sore thumbs.

They were in the middle of a crowd of other entrepreneurs at TechCrunch50, a small conference for startups, held in San Francisco last September.

But unlike most of their peers, the duo weren’t touting a web-based mashup, a new advertising platform or a collection of 3-D avatars for customer service. They sought attention for their hardware company, which was building a fitness gadget called Fitbit that would be part pedometer, part wellness tracker.

"We have three full-time employees and everything else is outsourced," says Park. "But we have a great idea and we have a flexible work force, and we want to build the next big thing in the gadgets business."

Consumer electronics startups are the new frontier for enterprising entrepreneurs. Once thought to be an expensive business skewed in favor of large companies with nearly unlimited access to capital, giant manufacturing facilities and armies of engineers, the business is attracting entrepreneurs who think small and move quickly. And they’re changing the consumer electronics landscape: the Chumby, LiveScribe Pulse Pen, Roku media player and Pure Digital’s Flip camcorder all owe their existence to scrappy, independents, not big corporate R&D departments. In some cases, these gadget startups have led to multimillion-dollar paydays for their founders.

Fueling this change is the explosion of the PC and cellphone industries, which have created an ecosystem of boutique industrial designers, contract manufacturing shops and online retailers that support this new generation of guerrilla hardware entrepreneurs.

Neither Park nor Friedman have experience in consumer electronics. Consummate software geeks, they studied computer science in college. Their last company was the photo-sharing startup Windup Labs that was eventually acquired by CNET. But together they’re creating a consumer hardware company on the cheap. Fitbit has raised just $2.5 million in its first round of venture financing, and the company hopes to start shipping its $100 devices this summer.

"Today with a guy or two, a good idea and about $1.5 million you can get a contract manufacturer in Asia to do your gadget," says Gadi Amit, founder of New Deal Design, a San Francisco-based industrial design firm. "About 10 years ago that would have taken 20 engineers and $10 million."

There are caveats. A cellphone can be tricky for new entrants because it requires extremely sophisticated design, specialized chips and custom software. But smaller, simpler products like the Fitbit are easier, say industry watchers.

New Hardware Kids on the Block

Chumby: The Chumby device, which premiered in 2006, is a Wi-Fi enabled radio, digital music player, alarm clock and a digital picture frame with a touchscreen to boot.

Fitbit: Founded in 2007, the company plans to launch a clip-on fitness tracker. Raised $2.5 million in funding so far.

LiveScribe: Founded in 2005, it offers a smartpen that can automatically digitize notes taken on paper.

PlantSense: Founded in 2006, this company’s EasyBloom garden tool measures sunlight, temperature, water drainage and humidity. The USB device can create a detailed log on a computer.

Roku: One of the older independent hardware startups, its $100 streaming media player is a favorite among the Netflix and YouTube crowd. Roku started in 2002.

For engineers to switch between hardware and software companies isn’t new. But Park and Friedman are different, says Amit. "James is kind of the quintessential profile of the internet entrepreneur," he says. "Now he’s doing hardware and that’s a novelty."

So what are two dot-com era survivors doing in the hardware business?


Chasing the Dream

It’s no secret in Silicon Valley that almost every engineer, venture capitalist or dot-com executive loves gadgets. IT geeks rush to Fry’s and Amazon to get their latest cellphone, e-book reader or personal planetarium. Their homes are filled with gadgets, and showing off gadgets is as much a part of networking and social bonding as drinking beer and exchanging business cards. 

Park and Friedman are no exception. About a year and a half ago, the fitness junkies were casually tossing ideas around a gadget that would track not just physical activities (walking, biking) but could also log sleep patterns. In effect, they wanted device that would produce a complete picture of a user’s physical well being.

And just like that, they decided to build one. "We like gadgets and we like building things so we thought why not make a go of this one?" says Park.

But getting Silicon Valley VCs to fund a consumer electronics hardware startup isn’t easy. "Money flows where money knows," says Jason Krikorian, former founder of Sling Media. Krikorian, together with his brother Blake, founded Sling Media in 2004 and last year sold it to EchoStar Communications for $380 million.

"The consumer electronics space is one that a lot of VCs have a bit of an allergic reaction to," says Krikorian. "VCs see the gadget consumer as hard to predict. And when it comes to the product itself, they see a lot of challenges, from cash requirements to distribution and dealing with retail."

Sling Media ultimately raised $57.5 million in funding from DCM and Mobius Capital, among others. It’s a fair chunk of change but many software startups draw as much. Take the Marc Andreesen-backed social networking site Ning, which has raised about $60 million so far.

Park and Friedman knew the odds were stacked against them as they pitched a gadget company. But they were counting on a new kind of strategy. Instead of asking for millions, they would start low. All they needed was a modest first round to kick off operations.

That’s how they found True Ventures. A venture firm focused on early stage companies, True Ventures has funded companies such as tech blog Gigaom, web-based instant messaging platform Meebo, and online gaming company Hive7.

"We offered a pretty conventional business model," says Park. "We build something and sell it to people at a cost that is higher than what it takes to produce. And we don’t want too much money to get started."

Idea to Execution

Fitbit_product
Next step in their plan: finding an industrial designer to take their feature set and turn it into a hardware package.

In the last few years, a number of boutique industrial design shops
have sprung up focusing on consumer electronics. Fuseproject founder Yves Behar created the stylish Jawbone headset. MindTribe has helped engineer Pure Digital’s popular Flip Mino
camera.

Park and Friedman turned to Gadi Amit and his team at New Deal Design.
A former vice-president of design at Frog Design, one of the largest
and most well-known design companies, Amit broke away in 2000 to start
his own firm. Amit and his team of 15 engineers specialize in consumer
electronics startups. New Deal Design’s clients include Dell, Netgear,
Sling Media and electric-car service station company Better Place. 

Increasingly, says Amit, more entrepreneurs are looking towards
hardware for their next big idea. "Everyone can’t be the next Michael
Dell or Steve Jobs," he says. "But relatively speaking, there is still
a higher chance of success in consumer hardware than in yet another
social networking app."

Within two weeks Amit and his team drew the high level sketches for
Fitbit. In four months, they had the final renderings. Now it would be
up to the contract manufacturers to create the prototypes.

Building on an Idea

Electronics factories in China and Taiwan have changed manufacturing
in the same way that hundreds of software body shops in Bangalore have
reshaped the software world, by offering cheap, competitive and
high-quality labor.

"Five years ago, contract manufacturers would just be manufacturing
houses, nothing more," says Amit. "They would have major difficulties
with refinement of handheld products, difficulties working with colors,
materials and finishes, problems integrating hardware and software."

Now they are are sophisticated enough to create high-gloss products
on the cheap, he says. As compared to even five years ago, contract
manufacturers now are comfortable enough working with small volume
orders and startups. "The back end of manufacturing is relatively easy,"
says Amit. "But you still need a product manager and a lot of flights
to China."

In the last six months, Park has visited Singapore and Indonesia about
four times to meet with Fitbit’s contract manufacturers. Still, he
says, it has been a fairly smooth ride. "There are still differences,
especially with the nuances of the language — we have to be extremely
detailed in our communication and can’t just assume they understand
some things," he says. "But they seem to be pretty familiar in dealing
with Western companies."

With the first few prototypes in hand, Fibit has started wooing some retail buyers.

The rise of online buying, especially for electronics, has changed
the game for them. Old big-box stores such as CompUSA and Circuit City
have given way to online retail shops such as Amazon and Buy.com. And
the shift has brought with it changed attitudes. Online retailers have
lower joint marketing demands and lower margin requirements, so
products can be priced cheaper.

Products now get distributed from two or three central locations,
which means smaller firms need fewer distribution points. "All this
helps companies get to market with less cash," says Krikorian.

But that’s just half of the story, says Jim Marggraff, CEO of
LiveScribe. To go beyond the enthusiast market, consumer electronics
products still need to get on retail shelves. And that means old-fashioned retailers like Target, Wal-Mart and Best Buy still hold
considerable power. "For something really new, there is a huge
credibility boost associated from being on retail shelves," says
Marggraff.

When the LiveScribe pen first appeared on shelves on Target, it
exploded into consumer consciousness in a way direct retail couldn’t
have accomplished, he says. "We had lots of impulse buys from Target,"
says Marggraff. "Being on their shelves made our product feel real."

Retail sales and distribution still remain the biggest challenges
for consumer electronics startups, says Tim Twerdahl, vice president of
consumer products for Roku. For example, products have much higher
return rates through retail than when selling direct. Manufacturers
also have to pay a big premium to the retailers for shelf space, and
are often held hostage to big box stores’ timelines when it comes to
launching new products. "All this can become quite expensive for a
small company," says Twerdahl.

For Fitbit, that’s something to worry about later. They have
more pressing problems. Fitbit, which was scheduled to launch in
spring, has been delayed to summer. "We have some electrical and
mechanical bugs that we have to resolve," says Park. And that can be a
tricky business. Every bug fix requires a new prototype and it can take
up to two weeks to produce a new unit. The costs can add up quickly,
since every new Fitbit prototype can take $3,000 to $5,000 to create.
"We have to be very aggressive about testing," says Park. "Every time
we need to make a decision about what can wait for later revisions."

Big Exits for Electronics Startups
Pure Digital: Cisco buys the Flip camera maker for $590 million. March 19, 2009.

Sling Media: DISH Network company EchoStar agrees to acquire Sling for $390 million. September, 2008.

Ultimate Ears: Logitech buys Ultimate Ears, a headphones maker, for $34 million. August, 2008.

Danger: Microsoft buys phone maker Danger for $500 million. February, 2008

But if Fitbit’s founders can get their product out to market, they
hope to leverage the worldwide community of gadget blogs and online
forums to carry it forward. Hardware-obsessed gadget heads offer
powerful word-of-mouth marketing and they can turn unknown
products into mainstream hits inexpensively, says Krikorian, pointing
to Sling’s strategy of courting bloggers and online enthusiasts.

If Fitbit can carve a successful niche for itself, there could be a
pot of gold at the end of the rainbow. Last week Cisco acquired Pure
Digital, makers of the Flip video camera, for $590 million.

"An acquisition in consumer electronics is not like winning a
lottery," says Park, ever hopeful. "If you build a good business with
strong cash flows, there are enough big companies out there interested
in you."

Photos: Jon Snyder/Wired.com


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