So, you just finished watching MTV’s “Pimp Your Ride” and you need to add a little something different to make your car stand out from the crowd. What can you do? How about adding Mobile Internet to your vehicle. It is not as hard or expensive as you might think.
Here is what is needed
Mobile Router:
This is similar to a typical home router with one exception. It uses a Sprint Mobile Broadband Card to provide the internet, allowing you to use it anywhere, even in motion! It converts a Mobile Broadband Card into a Wi-Fi signal that up to 5 laptops can use at the same time. One of the best options for this would be the CradlePoint PHS300 or the CTR500 Mobile Router. Why? These are some of the smallest (about the size of a wallet) mobile routers on the market and are well under $200. The PHS300 is even battry powered so you don’t even need to plug it in! For the other models, just plug an inverter into the cigarette lighter and the unit is now powered up and ready to surf the internet, even while driving down the road at 75 MPH. Of course, that would be for the passengers to enjoy, not the driver!
Mobile Broadband Service:
This is the increasingly popular Mobile Internet service that Sprint, Verizon and others are now selling. For just $59.99 a month, Sprint and Verizon offer high speed internet access anywhere in the USA. These services can be used directly in a laptop for one user, or in this case, directly into the Mobile Router so that multiple users can tap into the same card at the same time.
Laptop:
This one is quite obvious, but there are two ways to connect the laptop to the Mobile Router. One is with an Ethernet cable direct from the router to the computer. The second way would be to just connect through wi-fi. As long as the laptop has built-in wireless, as all newer laptops do, the laptop will find the wi-fi signal the Mobile Router is producing.
Extras:
If extra range is needed on your Mobile Internet set-up, or if the vehicle is often in remote areas there are two products that can greatly increase your performance. The first is an external Antenna. All the current Mobile Broadband Cards have ports to attach these antennas, enabling a more powerful antenna to boost the signal and thus the performance of the card. Amplifiers are even more beneficial. These devices add up to 3 watts of power to the Antenna, which can turn a very weak signal into an average or even strong signal. Not only will these add-ons help your performance, but they will add a bit of the “WOW” factor when people are admiring your unique vehicle.
By: Steve Sasman
Posts Tagged ‘Laptops’
Mobile Internet For Your Vehicle
April 14th, 2010Mobile Data Protection Systems
March 9th, 2010
Many businesses are becoming increasingly concerned that information held on mobile devices such as laptops can be lost or easily accessed. This is why they will often look for a good quality mobile data protection system in order to prevent these issues from occurring.
Several surveys have been carried out in one where 200 companies were spoken to not just in the USA, but also in the UK and Europe, 12 of these companies reported that information on their mobile devices had either been misused or loss. Plus a large percentage of the companies that took part in the survey were worried that the leaking of vital data would increase over the next few years.
This is why you will find that many businesses today have various data protection systems in place both for the PC’s that are within the confines of the business and the mobile ones. They will often include various different access control devices on to their hardware which should hopefully prevent others from being able to gain access to the information held within. The kinds of features that they will include within their protection systems include the following:-
1. Access Control Lists
2. Allowing Access to Permitted Personnel Only through a certain set of definitions they have come up with.
3. Encryption of all data that is essential and of high importance.
4. Firewalls which prevent others from outside being able to gain access through hacking.
But very few forget that most of the access gained to their company’s information is being achieved through electronic access, whether it be accidental or predetermined. So now there are companies which have come up with products which have been designed to help stock data leaks in the businesses network from occurring.
Therefore if you do use any kind of laptop or other mobile device as part of your regular business it is essential that you get a good mobile data protection system installed. Look for those which in the initial stages are able to monitor and then detect if anything untoward has been able to gain access to the device and therefore the data contained within.
This is why you will find that all the major manufacturers of mobile devices such as HP (Hewlett Packard), Sony, Dell and Apple will ensure that they have a good mobile data protection system installed prior to sale. Plus all these companies will constantly test the systems they have installed on their mobile devices to ensure that they work effectively and therefore help to protect the data that you install on them securely. Plus once a mobile device is connected to a network within the business they will often automatically send a back up version of the data held within to a location on the server where it can easily be retrieved.
By: Paul Abbey
4 Tech Must – Haves For Your Mobile Office
October 13th, 2009
Everything changes when you trade in your desktop for a laptop and your office for a hotel room.
Sometimes this is for the better: You’re liberated from your cubicle and free to go where your work takes you.
But sometimes things change for the worse. Productivity suffers when you’re in an unfamiliar place. The way a laptop keyboard cramps your hands is sometimes enough to keep you from getting the job done right.
Here are four technology “must-haves” for the mobile office, plus some tools that can boost your productivity while you’re away.
The Right Small Business SoftwareIt isn’t just downloading the necessary applications onto your laptop or PDA, it’s also knowing whether the programs are suited to a mobile office. Is your email program built for the road or adapted from a bigger application meant for a corporate network? Do the programs work together on your laptop or do they freeze when your processor gets busy?
These considerations can become big issues when you’re travelling. That’s something Tab Stone, a doctor from Los Angeles, knows all too well. He installed a new email program on his laptop before leaving on a recent trip, but it wasn’t suited for mobile use. He had to uninstall it shortly before takeoff, but that disabled his backup email program. That meant he couldn’t download any messages to his PC. “I could not fix whatever was corrupted with either a fresh download or a copy downloaded from the internet,” Stone recalls.
The latest: Contact-management software programs let you integrate data with your PDA, so you can download and synchronise contacts, calendar appointments and notes to your Palm Pilot or Pocket PC. There’s also a web-based version for travellers who either lose their laptops or prefer to work from a desktop at their destination.
What’s next? Look for more integration between applications for wireless users. Contact managers are already assuming the role of email program, address book and database. The next step is making it more accessible to people who are using cell phones or PDAs.
The Right Hardware I’m not talking about owning the newest laptop computer. I’m talking about hardware that’s created for life on the road. Let’s face it: A lot of the gadgets on which mobile professionals depend aren’t made with travellers in mind. For example, when Joachim Martin’s laptop battery ran out on a recent flight, a helpful flight attendant offered to recharge it in a “secret” outlet in the back of the plane. “The batteries charged,” remembers the software developer. “But when I got home, they were dead.” The power source had to be replaced. Blame the airline, the battery manufacturer or even the unfortunate business traveller for not knowing better, but this kind of thing happens often. Phone plugs don’t always fit; neither do power outlets. And a lot of the gadgets we rely on are traveller-hostile, impractical or both.
The latest: Some hardware manufacturers are meeting the demand for traveller-friendly hardware with add-ons such as the Stowaway XT Keyboard. I’ve also been impressed with Microsoft’s Mini Optical Mouse, which frees you from the restrictions of your laptop’s finger-cramping pointer.
What’s next? As the convergence between cell phones, PCs and PDAs continues, it wouldn’t surprise me to see devices that offer the ergonomic comfort of a desktop with the portability of a PDA. It won’t come a moment too soon for many road warriors.
The Right Connections Connections are everything to the mobile office.
Remember Stone, the doctor without email? He eventually accessed his messages through an unwieldy web connection. Spencer Field, who recently returned from a trip to Melbourne, can also tell you about email trouble. He learned upon arrival that the dial-up numbers to his internet service provider (ISP) didn’t work. “I thought that was probably the end of my online access,” he says. “As a last-ditch effort, I let my fingers do the walking and checked out the Melbourne Yellow Pages for a local ISP.” He found one and signed up for a one-month email account which gave him access to local numbers on his entire itinerary.
It isn’t just internet connections that matter, but also hooking up to other devices such as cell phones, PDAs and laptops. Technologies such as Bluetooth let you communicate with other devices in an office or hotel room without the need for cables.
The latest: According to a recent AT&T study, the top barrier to working from a remote location is access to a high-speed data connection. Fast wireless networks are springing up everywhere – in hotels, airport lounges and coffee shops. And even though Bluetooth got off to a slow start, the concept behind it – which is to lose the wires – is fundamentally sound.
What’s next? It won’t be long before Wi-Fi is as ubiquitous as cellular coverage and a majority of devices are Bluetooth-enabled. That’s good news for those of us who work in a mobile office.
The Right Web Applications Web-based applications are so important to the mobile office that I’ve decided to give them their own category, even though they technically belong in the “software” section. The web is one of the most efficient ways for a mobile worker to gain access to a back-office system, intranet or database.
My ISP offers a rudimentary application that lets me check my email from the web. I can’t remember how often I’ve had to use it because my email program failed to work properly. But I do remember the last time. I was stuck at a meeting out-of-town and my email account had sustained a spam attack – thousands of unsolicited messages – that would have taken hours to download. Instead, I logged on to the web and deleted them all in seconds. Were it not for the web application, I would probably still be downloading the spam.
The latest: One of the most innovative Web applications is GoToMyPC , which lets you access the desktop in your home or office through the web. Another useful application for mobile users is web conferencing services such as Microsoft Office Live Meeting.
What’s next? Expect these applications to become cheaper, more reliable and even more sophisticated.
By: C Elliott