Stalqer mobile social app finds friends in new ways

Stalqer locates even friends who don't use the service.

(Credit: Stalqer)

The developers of the iPhone app GasBag, which helps iPhone users find the cheapest gas for their cars, are working on a new mobile friend locator service, Stalqer. This clever and aptly named service has two technologies that are unique, as far as I know, to help it get around two of the big problems found in other friend locators like Foursquare, Loopt, and Google's Latitude.

Problem 1: On the mobile platform that matters, the iPhone, there's no way to do real-time location reporting without running an app all the time, and the iPhone doesn't allow background processes. And even if it did, it would draw down the battery. The Stalqer solution is to create a dummy e-mail account that pings the Stalqer servers whenever the phone polls for mail, which is, by default, every 15 minutes.

When the phone hits the Stalqer e-mail servers, it sends along Internet gateway data, which can be used to locate the phone. It only works when the phone is connected via Wi-Fi, not GSM. It also doesn't get data from the phone's GPS sensor, but it's a clever hack on the way to the creation of more robust location reporting features.

Competing mobile social apps require the app (Foursquare, Loopt) or site (Latitude) to be open for the user's location to be reported. Or they require a phone that supports background processing, like an Android device.

CEO Mick Johnson told me there is another company that has this idea, but nobody has yet released a product based on it.

Problem 2: Your friends aren't on your friend-location service. The existing friend-finder apps are lonely places. So you can go to a big event, look your buddies in the eye, look down at your phone, and not see them. Stalqer takes data from your friends' Facebook locations in combination with the live data from other Stalqer subscribers to give you a pretty comprehensive map of everyone you know.

You can configure the app to tell you when a friend comes to town.

(Credit: Stalqer)

Unfortunately, Facebook data is often wrong, and Stalqer doesn't yet divine location data from content posted in wall messages or on Twitter. Johnson says it will do that eventually. He says that the data is about 70 percent accurate at the moment but that "I think it will be enough. As long as it's interesting it's all that matters." Accuracy will go up as people join the service.

But the point is to have the app report on locations of people who aren't using it. Creepy, yes, but as Johnson described it, Stalqer doesn't actually break privacy settings or report data that isn't otherwise available to its users.

Stalqer mashes up what you can see with your Facebook login with your phone's contact list to see if you have permission to contact someone. It assumes that if you have the person's e-mail address on your phone they're a bonafide contact of yours and it lets you track and contact them from within Staqler. This is how this app creates a "good viral chain," as Johnson puts it, and how it could spread.

Staqler won't work if it freaks users out, so managing privacy well is clearly a big part of the app. Johnson said clarity and transparency are critical for the app, which is why it's called Stalqer. "We want people to know what it is," he said. "The key to privacy is telling people what you're doing and letting them control it."

Users running the reporting app can turn it on or off, control the granularity of its reports, and report different levels of data to different groups. Close friends might be able to see what street address you're at, for example, but family members only which city. (Johnson said he studied FireEagle). Staqler admits that there will be problems--as I told him, while people will do doubt appreciate the capability to turn off location reporting before they walk into the strip club, chances are they'll already be drunk and will forget. Domestic hilarity will ensue.

Johnson said all social networks will become mobile social networks and that location reporting must be a big part of their feature sets. He said Facebook is perhaps too big to innovate in this area--not too big to be creative, but too big to handle the user firestorm that would erupt if it started to experiment with location reporting. Thus, he thinks, the company is leaving clever location-based mobile apps to small start-ups like his.

Taking a page from Twitter and perhaps Tim Berners-Lee, Johnson dismisses talk of monetizing the service at this early stage. "We want to build an Internet treasure," he says. He has ideas for revenues but wants to focus on growth. He says he's built a successful business based on free apps before, and he can do it again.

When it's available, I'll try this app but mostly only to see where my friends and contacts are and to report where I am when I'm on business trips or at conferences. I think I'm too old to be comfortable having my iPhone tell everyone I know where I am all the time. Johnson, at 29, doesn't feel the way I do. We'll see what real consumers feel. Certainly Stalqer solves some of the most interesting problems in mobile social networking, and I'm eager to see it released.

The killers sent me a postcard :)

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Top 10 Windows 7 Booster Apps [Lifehacker Top 10]

Windows 7 is a big improvement over Vista, and a pretty convenient OS in general—but it's by no means perfect. These 10 downloads improve Windows 7's looks, functions, and make it easier, safer, and more convenient to upgrade to.

10. Bring back the "classic" Start menu

Windows 7's Start menu is a powerful thing, offering program and file launching as you type and allowing for smart pinning of whatever you frequently access. If you're really attached to the Windows 2000/XP-style Start system, though, CSMenu restores a "classic" look to Windows 7 by installing a companion Start menu on your taskbar. Want to eliminate that new-fangled Start menu and use only your classic model? Grab StartKiller and wipe away all signs of progress—er, change. We meant change. (Original post)

9. Logon changer customizes password screens

You can customize a lot of your system's look in Windows 7, but the login/password screen remains fairly opaque and unchangeable. Tweaks.com offers a Logon Changer for Windows 7 that simply takes a JPG file (256K or less, so be sure to re-size and compress) and applies it to your logon background. If you don't mind doing a little registry hacking, there's a manual work-around for logon changing, but the Logon Changer is worth the install/uninstall if you know what you want to keep as your logon screen. (Original post)

8. Create recovery discs for pre-installed Windows 7

If you moved up to Windows 7 by way of a new computer purchase, you may have found that getting a full Windows 7 disc, or even a system recovery disc, was an "option" that cost a good bit of extra cash. If you'd like to ensure you can save your system from common boot-up and system errors in the future, NeoSmart offers its own Windows 7 System Recovery Discs that can repair damaged files, restore System Restore points, and even pull in full backups for restoration. If you upgraded to 7 from a student discount package that only delivered a single .exe file, Download Squad explains how to make a DVD upgrade disc from student discount files. (Original post)

7. Pull up incoming Gmail from the taskbar

If Gmail is your primary inbox, Gmail Notifier Plus not only subtly informs of you of new mail by changing its taskbar icon, but provides a subject line preview of new messages when you hover over its icon. You also get shortcuts to compose a new message, pop open your inbox in your browser, or head to any of your messages individually. Neat stuff, especially if you'd rather have a more firm control over when your inbox can have your attention—just close down Gmail Notifier Plus when it's time to get cranking. (Original post)

6. Winfox makes Firefox work with Jump Lists

Support for Windows 7's helpful jump lists won't show up in Firefox until version 3.7. In the meantime, those who want to access their current tabs and most frequently visited sites can do so with Winfox, a helpful little add-on that you pin to your taskbar to access Firefox from. Copy Winfox to your Firefox program directory, install it, and pin the "Winfox" application to your taskbar. Now you can pin favorite pages to your jump list by dragging their tabs down, see the favicons of the sites you've got open, and get a read on how many tabs you're running in the Firefox icon. (Original post)

5. Hulu Desktop Integration adds streaming TV to Windows Media Center

Windows 7's Media Center was impressive enough for Adam to bust out his Buster Poindexter headline, and the only thing you might say it's missing is better access to streaming television. Since Media Center just added CBS streaming, the one big hold-out is Hulu—which would deliver streaming shows from the likes of Fox, ABC, and NBC. Hulu Desktop Integration brings Hulu to Media Center with a clever little app. Launch the Hulu app from Media Center, and Media Center shuts down, opens the full-screen Hulu Desktop app, and then switches back to Media Center when you're done in Hulu. That's a nice thing, since because it uses the official channel to get at Hulu, the chances of it being locked out by Hulu are slim. (Original post)

4. Add stacks to your desktop

Windows 7's taskbar is getting a lot of notice, and some say it's more useful than Mac OS X's Dock—except it's missing the very neat "Stacks" feature. Missing, that is, until you grab StandaloneStack or 7stacks, which both do a great job of creating blow-up menus of folders and apps from single icons on your taskbar. Add a storage folder or custom collection of shortcuts to your taskbar, and you'll never have to hunt down that "Computer" link in the Start menu again just to get to the right file. (Original posts: StandaloneStack, 7Stacks)

3. Tweak hard-to-find settings

It's always a good idea to see what kind of settings you can change from your new OS' Control Panel, but Microsoft only lets you play with so many check boxes and sliders. Apps like Ultimate Windows Tweaker, along with XdN Tweaker, have been digging deep into the guts of Windows since Vista first arrived (and sometimes before XP showed up), and they let you seriously fine-tune your system. Want only certain Aero 3D effects on your desktop? Need to change Windows 7's window-snapping behavior? These apps have you covered. The hardest part is knowing when to say when on a settings-changing binge. (Original post)

2. Make Alt+Tab switching more intuitive

The familiar Alt+Tab keyboard shortcut gained a little visual overhaul in Windows 7, but it still offers just basic window switching. VistaSwitcher, a more powerful app and window switcher, improves on it in just the right ways. Besides an intriguingly different look, the app supports keyboard shortcuts that let you minimize or tile windows from your Alt+Tab screen, close down programs or file windows in bulk, and, with a Ctrl+Alt+Tab press, switch only between the open windows of the particular program you're using, like a browser or image editor. Despite the name, VistaSwitcher works perfectly well on Windows 7. (Original post)

1. Install all your necessary apps at once

The first few times you re-installed an operating system, it probably felt like an adventure, something fun, a test of your tech prowess. At this point, though, you might just want to skip the part where you spend an hour grabbing Firefox, Picasa, an anti-virus app, WinAmp, uTorrent, and other must-have apps from the net. Ninite is your ticket out of redundant installations. Head to the web site, check off the apps you need from a huge range of good, free software, and download the resulting customized installer app. Double-click, hit start, and do something constructive while Ninite installs everything you asked for in the background, with very few, if any, questions or prompts. (Original post)

What app or utility has made Windows 7 feel a bit more like a desktop home on your system? Which apps from previous versions of Windows do you miss most? Share the wealth, and the links, in the comments.


Send an email to Kevin Purdy, the author of this post, at kevin@lifehacker.com.

// AP: NEWS - Morrissey released from hospital after passing out onstage

news

Morrissey released from hospital after passing out onstage

Tim Karan on 10/25/09 @ 2:18 PM

Crooner Morrissey has reportedly been released from a U.K. hospital after he collapsed onstage last night at a show in the U.K. Morrissey--former vocalist for the Smiths--fell to the stage with difficulty breathing during the opening song, "This Charming Man." Two members of his band carried him off the stage and after nearly a half hour, a member of the crew took the stage to announce Morrissey had been taken to the hospital. The vocalist was admitted at Great Western Hospital around 9 p.m. A spokesperson for the hospital said last night, "He is being reviewed by the medical staff and his condition is stable." His show on Monday at Bournemouth Academy has been canceled.

Hope he feels better

Found Footage: iPhone costumes are either genius or deeply misguided

Microsoft's First Retail Store Opens (Like Apple Store With More Colors) - Microsoft store - Gizmodo

Windows 7 on Mac.

(download)

I must say. The update was hugely improve from previous Windows.

Upgrade Windows 7 Beta or RC to Windows RTM

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good tip. may be useful when i install windows 7 tonight.

Beware the Cybermen on my cell phone

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Ihnatko says Apple tablet could play hero to comic books

Filed under: Rumors, Apple

Ihnatko says Apple tablet could play hero to comic books

by Ken Ray (RSS feed) on Oct 21st 2009 at 8:30PM

Speculation based on rumor can be frustrating. But when the rumor is of Apple's fabled tablet, and the speculation is of a new golden age for comics, the 13-year-old kid in me comes alive.

Writing for the Chicago Sun-Times, Andy Ihnatko says there are hints that Apple is getting into the digital comic book market, a statement he likens to saying "Apple is helping to create the digital comic book market." Digital comics today, he argues, are where digital music was in 2002. Legitimate businesses are so fractured, clumsy, and behind the times that pirated comics (online illegally one day after hitting store shelves) provide the best user experience.

Enter LongBox, a company that has made the rounds at comic book conventions this year pitching an iTunes-like store for buying and selling digital comic books. Ihnatko talked with LongBox CEO Rantz Hoseley, peppering him with questions and looking for reasons that LongBox was doomed to failure. What he found instead was a company that respects the comic book as a medium, that has made publishing to the LongBox format (.LBX) as simple as adding a plug-in to the software publishers already use, and that has plans for outfits as big as Marvel or DC all the way down to the lone artists publishing on their own.


On what will people read these digital comics? Next month's expected roll-out will start on the desktop, though plans for all sorts of devices are in the works.

But comics need a screen bigger than the iPhone's or the Palm Pre's. They need a tablet like the one Apple is thought by most people on the planet to be making. After an hour with Hoseley, Ihnatko thinks LongBox has a deal to be on Apple's tablet. The CEO doesn't mention Apple by name, though he does tell Ihnatko of an agreement "with a seriously large company operating in the media space." He also told last weekend's Long Beach Comic-Con that LongBox was working with a company that "all of a sudden leaves (LongBox) with a multinational launch with literally millions of installed users."

Ihnatko follows Apple and loves comics. He likely gets talked-up by companies all year and he's not an idiot. The appearance of smoke doesn't always mean fire. He thinks the idea of attaching a digital comic book store to the iTunes Store has merit, and LongBox may be in on it.

[via Chicago Sun-Times]

bring forth the almighty tablet!