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Showing posts with label smartphones. Show all posts
Showing posts with label smartphones. Show all posts

Monday, March 23, 2015

App links anglers to regulations and more

A fisherman at Puerto de Chuburná in Yucatán
A fisherman at Puerto de Chuburná in Yucatán.conapesca
News

 

Mexico News Daily | Saturday, March 21, 2015
mexiconewsdaily.com
 
   
Many visitors to Mexico are attracted by the lure of angling for marlin, sailfish, tuna and other big-game species of fish.

With a new mobile application, the Mexican government hopes to make it simpler for visitors to engage in the sport.


 

Yesterday, at simultaneous events in Mexico City and San Diego, California, officials launched an application called Sportfishing México to connect fishermen and boaters to the website of Conapesca, the National Aquaculture and Fishing Commission.

Intended primarily for United States visitors heading south to fish, the application provides a connection to the Conapesca website, www.sportfishinginmexico.com. There, anglers will find vessel requirements, information regarding fishing permits and immigration documents, bag limits and other details, in both Spanish and English.

The site also specifies requirements for those wishing to fish within 19 kilometers of shore or within 18 and 80 kilometers or beyond.

A sportfishing manual, Visit Mexico brochure, a directory of marinas and a quick guide to sportfishing in Mexico are also documents that can be downloaded from the app.

Currently available only for Android devices, with an iOS version on the way, the app can be downloaded here.

A 2011 study estimated the value of sportfishing to Los Cabos, Baja California Sur, was about US $72 million annually, based on municipal estimates of 40,000 sportfishing visitors a year.

Source: U-T San Diego (en)
 

- See more at: http://mexiconewsdaily.com/news/app-links-anglers-regulations/#sthash.mp9yJRJs.dpuf
Posted by Solutions Mazatlan at 9:00 PM No comments:
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Labels: activities, apps, Current Events, fishing, information, law, Mexico, news, regulations, smartphones, technology

Monday, January 12, 2015

Tips for Using Public Wi-Fi Networks

consumer.ftc.gov

Wi-Fi hotspots in coffee shops, libraries, airports, hotels, universities, and other public places are convenient, but often they’re not secure. If you connect to a Wi-Fi network, and send information through websites or mobile apps, it might be accessed by someone else.
To protect your information when using wireless hotspots, send information only to sites that are fully encrypted, and avoid using mobile apps that require personal or financial information.

How Encryption Works

Encryption is the key to keeping your personal information secure online. Encryption scrambles the information you send over the internet into a code so it’s not accessible to others. When you’re using wireless networks, it’s best to send personal information only if it’s encrypted — either by an encrypted website or a secure Wi-Fi network. An encrypted website protects only the information you send to and from that site. A secure wireless network encrypts all the information you send using that network.

How to Tell If a Website is Encrypted

If you send email, share digital photos and videos, use social networks, or bank online, you’re sending personal information over the internet. The information you share is stored on a server — a powerful computer that collects and delivers content. Many websites, like banking sites, use encryption to protect your information as it travels from your computer to their server.

To determine if a website is encrypted, look for https at the start of the web address (the “s” is for secure). Some websites use encryption only on the sign-in page, but if any part of your session isn’t encrypted, your entire account could be vulnerable. Look for https on every page you visit, not just when you sign in.

What About Mobile Apps?

Unlike websites, mobile apps don’t have a visible indicator like https. Researchers have found that many mobile apps don’t encrypt information properly, so it’s a bad idea to use certain types of mobile apps on unsecured Wi-Fi. If you plan to use a mobile app to conduct sensitive transactions — like filing your taxes, shopping with a credit card, or accessing your bank account ­— use a secure wireless network or your phone’s data network (often referred to as 3G or 4G).

If you must use an unsecured wireless network for transactions, use the company’s mobile website — where you can check for the https at the start of the web address — rather than the company’s mobile app.

Don’t Assume a Wi-Fi Hotspot is Secure

Most Wi-Fi hotspots don’t encrypt the information you send over the internet and aren’t secure. In fact, if a network doesn’t require a WPA or WPA2 password, it’s probably not secure.

If you use an unsecured network to log in to an unencrypted site — or a site that uses encryption only on the sign-in page — other users on the network can see what you see and what you send. They could hijack your session and log in as you. New hacking tools — available for free online — make this easy, even for users with limited technical know-how. Your personal information, private documents, contacts, family photos, and even your login credentials could be up for grabs.

An imposter could use your account to impersonate you and scam people in your contact lists. In addition, a hacker could test your username and password to try to gain access to other websites – including sites that store your financial information.

Protect Your Information When Using Public Wi-Fi

Here’s how you can protect your information when using Wi-Fi:
  • When using a hotspot, log in or send personal information only to websites you know are fully encrypted. To be secure, your entire visit to each site should be encrypted – from the time you log in to the site until you log out. If you think you’re logged in to an encrypted site but find yourself on an unencrypted page, log out right away.
  • Don’t stay permanently signed in to accounts. When you’ve finished using an account, log out.
  • Do not use the same password on different websites. It could give someone who gains access to one of your accounts access to many of your accounts.
  • Many web browsers alert users who try to visit fraudulent websites or download malicious programs. Pay attention to these warnings, and keep your browser and security software up-to-date.
  • Consider changing the settings on your mobile device so it doesn’t automatically connect to nearby Wi-Fi. That way, you have more control over when and how your device uses public Wi-Fi.
  • If you regularly access online accounts through Wi-Fi hotspots, use a virtual private network (VPN). VPNs encrypt traffic between your computer and the internet, even on unsecured networks. You can get a personal VPN account from a VPN service provider. In addition, some organizations create VPNs to provide secure, remote access for their employees. What’s more, VPN options are available for mobile devices; they can encrypt information you send through mobile apps.
  • Some Wi-Fi networks use encryption: WEP and WPA are common, but they might not protect you against all hacking programs. WPA2 is the strongest.
  • Installing browser add-ons or plug-ins can help. For example, Force-TLS and HTTPS-Everywhere are free Firefox add-ons that force the browser to use encryption on popular websites that usually aren't encrypted. They don’t protect you on all websites — look for https in the URL to know a site is secure.
  • Take steps to secure your home wireless network.
Posted by Solutions Mazatlan at 9:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: advice, business, computers, information, safety, security, smartphones, technology, tips, travel, travel tips, wifi

Thursday, January 8, 2015

Traveling with a Smartphone: Cut Costs Overseas

independenttraveler.com
smartphone smart phone cellphone cell keys hand fingersOn a recent trip to the U.K., I turned on my smartphone shortly after clearing customs. Almost as soon as the phone booted up, a text popped up on the screen:
International data rate of $19.97/MB applies. Unlimited domestic data rate plan does NOT apply in this location. Details: att.com/global. AT&T Free Msg
Twenty bucks a meg is a pile of money for a trickle of data. If you are not up to speed on data measurements, consider that the average iPhone camera photo is just under two megabytes in size. So if I take a photo and send it over my cell phone, it will cost me nearly forty bucks -- that had better be one good photo. (At least AT&T's notification text message was free...)

Simple phone call costs aren't much better -- if you can figure out the tortured packages offered by most cell phone carriers, you are way ahead of the game already. As for pricing and plan variations from carrier to carrier, it's a bit like the first line from Anna Karenina: "Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way." Every carrier offers a very different but also very reliably muddled and expensive plan.

Editor's Note: In October 2013, T-Mobile announced that it will be eliminating roaming charges in more than 100 countries for its customers traveling abroad.

Muddled and Expensive Is Right

One serious problem facing consumers is that the Web sites of these companies are almost impossible to figure out. Even for a simple calling plan, AT&T's "World Traveler" program appears to any reasonable person to cost $5.99/month at this page. But when you keep clicking, you discover that the $5.99 just lowers the per-minute cost for each call, usually by about 20 - 40 cents per minute. In the end, in addition to the $5.99, you are still usually paying $0.99 or more per minute when you make a call while overseas.

It just gets worse for the international data plans; I spent a couple of hours on the AT&T Web site, with multiple browsers open -- and in the end, I had to call them to fill in the gaps in both the information they posted and my understanding of that information.

The truth is, the carriers like it this way. They know they have you by the wallet, and they're not inclined to loosen their squeeze when you go overseas; rather, they see your attachment to your smartphone as a unique profit opportunity. They know no one wants to have a different phone number while overseas, or to spend their trip haunting Carphone Warehouses trying to unlock their phone, buying SIM cards, and losing access to all the contacts, information and apps on their smartphones.

 Focus on the Smartphone

For information on figuring out the basics of making and receiving international mobile phone calls, see our International Cell Phone Guide. From here out I'll focus on smartphones, which folks use for a lot more than phone calls, especially while traveling. Indeed, for many, their smartphone is never so critical than while traveling, as we have replaced paper with data in almost every respect while traveling. Confirmation numbers, flight times and notifications, maps, car service phone numbers, hotel reservations, restaurant searches, coffee shop locations, the length of lines at Disney World -- more of this stuff happens on smartphones than even on computers these days, for many travelers.

But when you go overseas, all of those things that you count on from your smartphone instantly cost $19.95/megabyte as soon as you get off the plane. Assuming that none of us is interested in these predatory prices, here are my suggestions for workarounds and data plans for the smartphone-reliant traveler.

My Recommended Strategy

Before going into all your various options, in hopes of saving you some time and money, I want to share my recommended workaround for all this stuff. One important caveat -- my system depends on occasional to frequent access to Wi-Fi. I almost always travel with my laptop, and need access anyway, so this really works for me.

I will outline this in bullet format, as I think it is simple enough on the face of it. The very short version is: "Get a mobile VOIP phone number, forward everything to that, and then access that number over Wi-Fi."

1. Get a U.S.-based voice over IP (VoIP) phone number of some kind, whether it be Skype, Google Voice, Tango or Line2 (I use Line2 and occasionally Skype; I recommend choosing one that forwards voice mail to e-mail and/or converts to text, merely for another layer of convenience).

2. Forward your "regular" cell phone number to this number; do this while still on your home network, or the system may track you wherever you actually are.

3. Turn off cellular data, 3G and roaming, and even put your cell phone in airplane mode.

4. Investigate Wi-Fi options where you are traveling, whether it be in your hotel room, at an Internet cafe, in a coffee shop, from pay services like Boingo or BT Openzone (I used this in the U.K. last month, as it worked for both my laptop and phone for three pounds/day), or from a MiFi account. Check out JiWire.com for international Wi-Fi spots; searching by your destination makes it really easy to figure out what companies offer Wi-Fi services where you are headed.

5. Consider an international text message package from your carrier if this will be important on your specific trip (although services like Line2 do allow texting over Wi-Fi).

6. Do your calling and texting on your VoIP number over Wi-Fi.

7. Accept that the occasional essential "normal" call will cost some money, but it shouldn't be too much, and will be only about 30 - 40 cents more than if you paid for an international plan.

8. Done.

There can still be some costs involved; for example, if I call a landline in the international country using Line2, the cost is two cents per minute; if I call a cell, it is 38 cents per minute. However, a call to any U.S. number is free so long as I have a Wi-Fi connection, even if that person is physically located outside the U.S. The same applies to text messages; it costs 10 cents per text to international numbers, and no charge for texts to U.S. numbers. Also, there's a monthly fee ($9.95) for Line2, though the company does offer a free trial period that you could use for a short trip.

smartphone laptop smart phone cell hotel bed woman travelAs I suggest above, a very similar approach can be used with Google Voice; a nice feature of Google Voice is transcribed voice mail, which is even easier to deal with on your computer. Google Voice international calls start at a couple of cents per minute, and go up to approximately $0.25/minute.

Skype is free for computer-to-computer voice and video connections, and has a few different pricing options for other types of connections, starting at 1.2 cents/minute.

If you have a special circumstance that requires you to be accessible (your company needs to contact you, your kids are at home with grandparents, your wife is expecting, etc.), turn your phone on, turn all roaming services off, and use caller ID to let you decide which calls to take and which to ignore. This will let you see if an important call is coming in.

I know this scheme balances entirely atop the potentially wobbly point of reliable Internet access, but if you don't need to be always-on during your trip, batching your calls and contacts at times that you have Internet access works extremely well, and saves you heaps of money. Still, if this is still not convenient enough for you and you need an always-on smartphone plan, read on.


First Off, You Need a GSM Phone

It is important to understand that not all phones are capable of connecting to international cell carrier systems. You specifically need a GSM phone, which is the standard for international cellular networks. Of the two biggest U.S. Carriers, AT&T has the edge here, as most of the Verizon network is on the CDMA system, although Verizon does offer GSM/CDMA dual phones.

If you are on Verizon but have a CDMA phone, look into its Global Travel Program; Verizon will provide a GSM-capable phone that will use your same phone number, just for the charge of shipping, and of course any applicable calling and data charges as well.

Things to Do Right Before Leaving

From experience I know it is very easy to leave off changing your phone settings until you are already abroad -- at which point voice mail, texts and other data that is automatically "pushed" to your phone will start downloading as soon as you have signal. These can cost you a lot of money pretty quickly -- I paid more than $20 for a photo of my nephew playing in a plastic swimming pool a couple of weeks ago. To avoid these instant charges, before turning off your phone stateside, you should do the following:
  • Turn off 3G (or 4G)
  • Turn off cellular data
  • Turn off data roaming
  • Reset all your usage statistics
The first three changes will prevent you from running up data charges without even knowing it; the last will allow you to track how many minutes/how much data/how many texts you have used during your trip. You can usually find these in the Settings section of your smartphone.


Dealing with Text Messaging

While traveling so far this summer, I found I did not much miss making regular calls; however, on these particular trips, where a large group of folks had a lot of different and very fun things going on, I did miss texting, as this was the best way to decide on meeting places, find each other in crowds or public spaces, and notify folks of fun activities.

Most companies offer a package that includes a finite number of international texts; AT&T, for example, has a $10/month package that includes sending 50 messages while outside the U.S. That's 20 cents per text; inbound texts are "free," in that they are simply charged against your normal domestic text account. If you text without having purchased a package, each outgoing text is 50 cents, and each incoming text is 20 cents.

On Verizon, the international plan costs 25 cents per text for outgoing messages, and 20 cents for incoming messages.

In most cases, you will need to arrange for these packages to be added to your plan before you leave home; you can provide both a start and end date for your package, but be aware that there may be some billing anomalies that could cost you, as I will explain below.

Big Data Requirements: Web Sites, E-mail, Attachments, Mapping and More
If you want full access to all functions of your smartphone with or without a Wi-Fi connection, you will need an international data plan. On AT&T these typically cost a little more than $1 per gigabyte of data, which is expensive, but still a whole lot less than the $20 per megabyte. Verizon's costs are quite a bit higher, starting at $30 for 25 MB/month.

One challenge is understanding how much data you will actually need. This Data Calculator can help you estimate what you will need based on your typical usage patterns; for a different (and slightly more limited) look, try Verizon's calculator. Even veteran smartphone users will find these to be very handy little applications.

Mapping apps in particular can be essential while traveling, but they are definitely data hogs; you will want to use them sparingly. Some inventive folks are figuring this out; for traveling in major cities, check out Offmaps.com, an offline mapping app that uses a phone's always-on GPS without needing a data connection.



Other Gotchas to Beware

When you make a connection overseas, you are typically not connecting to your own carrier's service, but to a third-party carrier, which then bills your carrier, which bills you. Some of these carriers will not bill your account in an entirely timely manner, such that data connections made in July might show up on your August bill. As such, you will want to make sure the dates for your data package extend long enough after your trip to cover these late-billing companies, and you will want to watch your account to make sure all charges have been applied before turning off your international package.

bill computer older couple laptopHow likely is this to happen? Well, in the U.K. alone, your iPhone is likely to connect to four different carriers at some point: Hutchison 3G, O2, Orange and Vodafone. Each of those will bill your account on its own schedule.

On the same point, your own carrier will often sell packages according to your monthly billing dates, so if you are traveling in overlapping billing periods, you may be required to purchase part of a plan for part of one month and part of the next. Add to that the straggler carriers billing you well after the fact, and let the invoice juggling begin.

Even at a time when mobile phones and smartphones are booming internationally, and mobile costs are dropping on the whole, no one will argue that phone companies are making this easy, oof. However, if you combine a modest data plan with a small battery of Wi-Fi tactics, you should be able to contain costs and hassles alike.
Posted by Solutions Mazatlan at 9:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: advice, business, cellphone, communication, information, smartphones, telecommunications, travel, travel tips

Sunday, November 10, 2013

Why You Can't Always Trust Map Apps

smartphone map appFor travelers with a smartphone, map apps are among the most frequently clicked icons on your screen. In fact, map apps are a huge part of why people use smartphones; according to Pew Research, 74 percent of smartphone owners use their phone for directions and other location-based information, such as searching for nearby stores, restaurants or attractions. These maps are not only helping us get from Point A to Point B, but they are helping us decide where to stop along the way as well.

As we hand off many of the decisions about how and where we travel to our smartphones, now might be a good time to step back and look at where that information comes from, how it might be manipulated, and exactly what we are and aren't being told when we ask our smartphones questions about the world around us.

It's worth noting that these mapping services are still very young and under development; heck, some of the map apps can't even map stuff correctly. It wasn't so long ago that Apple's disastrous launch of iOS 6, which gave the company's own proprietary mapping app status as the default app instead of Google's app, sent people to roads that didn't exist, put rail stations in the water, made roads look like cliffs and more. The Apple app was truly terrible; comments at the time blamed the Apple app even for marital strife as couples bickered over directions. Eventually Apple CEO Tim Cook was forced to issue a public apology and suggest that folks should probably use Google's map app instead, oof.

But as companies work out the kinks of the actual road maps, they are turning their sights on how to monetize them -- and that could be critical to our understanding of how maps affect our lives.

Here There Be Monsters: The Ghetto Tracker Site

Last month, a website called Ghetto Tracker was launched, resulting in a fair amount of blogosphere clamor. Now renamed to Good Part of Town (well, sort of; the GhettoTracker.com URL is still live as well), the site offers "advice" on the safest and least safe neighborhoods, based on user votes and comments.

Ghetto Tracker is largely crowdsourced -- that is, users of the service post which neighborhoods they think other users should avoid. This approach quickly resulted in accusations of providing a platform for racism or classism, as many of the warnings were based largely on the race and economic means of the residents. One blogger called it "the worst site on the Internet" (to which Good Part of Town responded by subheading its link to GhettoTracker.com with "the best website on the Internet").

According to many experts, other companies are starting to use computers to sort through demographic information to do the exact same thing. For example, Microsoft's "Pedestrian Route Production" GPS effort endured very similar criticism last year -- including the mocking nickname "Avoid Ghetto." According to the patent Microsoft was granted, the service would help pedestrians avoid passing through an "unsafe neighborhood" or "an open area that is subject to harsh temperatures." A service of this nature could conceivably steer someone of a certain income level, socioeconomic status or even skin color away from a neighborhood that is very different from them. So where an app like Ghetto Tracker has individuals offering sometimes explicitly racist characterizations of neighborhoods, these data-based apps ultimately may be doing the same thing, but without the inflammatory name.



New Boss, Same as the Old Boss?

How different is this from Let's Go or Lonely Planet creating a rutted road of travelers following their guidebooks? After all, their writers did not send folks to desolate or dangerous areas in most cases, and their recommendations were based on information either from people very similar to them (fellow travelers) or from those who likely gave a somewhat sanitized view of the area (tourist offices, hotel concierges, even locals seeking more tourist trade).

I just took a quick look at the pre-Internet 1987 "Let's Go USA" guide and found the following passage:

The poorest New Yorkers live in Harlem, East Harlem, East Morningside Heights, and Upper Manhattan, communities that produced the Harlem Renaissance of black artists and writers in the 1920s, and the revolutionary Black Power movement of the 1960s. Although the area is torn by crime, Hamilton Terrace and Edgecombe Ave., just north of St. Nicholas Park, between 140th and 150th Streets, are safer and more attractive.
I dunno -- doesn't that read a bit Ghetto Tracker-ish? For what it's worth, the guide does not dis solely the poorer neighborhoods; the passage just prior to the one above addresses the Upper East and West Sides, including Columbus Avenue, with the comment, "Visitors are likely to dismiss the unintelligible snobbery of both and embrace the eccentric spunk of the Columbus Ave. thoroughfare."

So the poor neighborhood you visit at your peril, aside for a couple safe havens, but sure, go embrace some snob-watching in the rich districts. It doesn't take a semiotician to figure out what is going on here.

guidebook cafe rome coupleOf course, giving travelers reliable information on the relative safety of neighborhoods is not necessarily a bad thing; I lived for several years in the very center of one of the areas mentioned above, and would not have advised friends and family to wander around pointing expensive cameras at the architecture. Advice and curation based in part on traveler safety certainly has its place -- which is why we might want to be more concerned not with what map apps tell us to avoid, but with what they leave out because they are paid to do so. Read on.



On the Grid or Off the Grid Could Be Decided by Who Pays the Most

While steering folks away from neighborhoods an app guesses they might not like or fit into demographically is one type of concern, the more likely scenario is that these services will steer travelers to places that have paid for preferential listings. Current power users of map apps not only look for the best way to get from one point to another, but also want to find businesses, restaurants, tourist attractions and more, and the concern is that those who pay the most will be displayed the most. This is already a serious issue among search engines; are they showing you what you want to see, or what they (and their advertisers) make the most money from having you see?

This type of paid priority placement is thought to be on the near horizon for map apps, and the likely loser in this game will be the smaller, independently owned establishments that most travelers are seeking out when looking for authentic local experiences.

A case study: Near my current home town, there is a truly killer coffee shop (Small World Coffee) that has become almost a destination in itself for many folks. It serves countless functions: a place for students to cram for exams, for professors to consult with students, for folks to work, for writers and freelancers to escape self-imposed solitude for a spell, for priests and pastors to meet engaged couples -- you name it. Small World brews its own coffee, makes it strong and tasty, plays good music, and doesn't hassle its customers for hanging out. The place is huge, well-lit, and brimming with tables and chairs. It is a local treasure, as they say.

Just barely around the corner is a Starbucks. Admittedly, it is a "good" Starbucks -- it takes care to make its coffee well, the staff is friendly and helpful, etc. -- but it is much smaller and darker than Small World, and as such has limited utility as a community gathering place. A lot of folks think the coffee isn't as good as Small World's either.


smartphone map sponsored linkBut Starbucks is a giant global corporation, with 17,500 stores worldwide as of 2012, while Small World has two stores in one small town, about one mile apart. Starbucks can afford to buy a heap of advertising from Apple or Google in exchange for preferential placement on maps, and honestly would be almost crazy not to. It might not be a targeted effort to beat out a little guy like Small World; it could just be a global ad campaign.

Unfortunately, Small World sure can't afford Starbucks kind of advertising, so it might show up less prominently on the maps. That might not kill Small World -- its local, loyal customers will keep coming -- but it might hurt you when you visit, as you may never find it if it doesn't show up in your map search.



Even now, the main, larger branch of Small World doesn't show up when I do a Google Maps search for "coffee" in the neighborhood; Starbucks does (as does local company Chez Alice, and the much smaller Small World shop a mile away).

The main concern of mapping experts and sociologists is that as our reliance on mapping applications becomes more pervasive, entire communities, neighborhoods and businesses could be almost literally "wiped off the map," depending on who is looking and even more on who is writing the map apps. Whether you are kept from knowing about something because someone finds it unsavory, or more likely because they find it less profitable, this should be a constant concern for anyone relying on a digital mapping application.

That said, the mapping company with the most complete and error-free information is going to win in the end, so there may be some very strong incentive to figure out a way to include truly everything, while still offering a degree of personalization (which is how mapping companies often refer to showing you what they think you want to see), as well as monetizing specific searches. Hopefully that market pressure works well for map users as well as map makers.

For sure mapping applications are among the most intensely contested industries right now; the frenzy of startups, mergers and acquisitions in recent months shows how high are the stakes.

In the end, as technology infiltrates every part of the travel experience (and our lives), it may be enough to be aware of what map makers are up to, as you can't be fooled if you already know the trick.

Posted by Solutions Mazatlan at 11:13 AM No comments:
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Labels: advice, apps, information, map, smartphones, tips, travel, travelers
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