Essential gadgets for travel
By Gadjo Cardenas Sevilla Modern travellers are faced with many challenges. Higher travel costs, less service and perks as well as increasingly more prohibitive rules. Here are gadgets that help make travel better.
By Gadjo Cardenas Sevilla Modern travellers are faced with many challenges. Higher travel costs, less service and perks as well as increasingly more prohibitive rules. Here are gadgets that help make travel better.
By Gadjo Cardenas Sevilla As far as flagship cameraphones go, Nokia’s Lumia 1020 with its 41 megapixel camera is considered the device to beat. It is now coming to Canada on Rogers, Telus and Black’s.
By Ted Kritsonis
Now that two-year contracts have essentially become the norm before the new wireless code of conduct goes into effect in December, the incumbent carriers have released their latest voice and data plans. Are they cheaper than they were under the old three-year terms, or still more expensive than they should be?
Tablets, e-boards and HD connectivity can make a real difference in the learning experience, say Canadian users of in-class technology, helping to bring students closer to the instructor and the content.
by Lee Rickwood
By Gadjo Cardenas Sevilla 7-inch tablets have hit a high point this Summer with a lot of variety in features and price.
A more competitive Canadian information and communications infrastructure could support continued technological innovation, deliver a capable and competitive cell and smartphone ecosystem, and protect its citizens from the machinations of foreign jurisdictions.
by Lee Rickwood
Text and photos by Gadjo Cardenas Sevilla Moto X is an ambitious new mid-tier smartphone from Google created under its Motorola subsidiary. The device is coming to Rogers later this month in black and white for $189.99 with select two-year plans.
A second member of the panel chosen by the Royal Society of Canada to look at human exposure to radiation and required safety levels around wireless devices, cell phones and cell towers has ties to the industry and should resign, says a citizen’s advocacy group based in Canada.
by Lee Rickwood