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LCARS, LCARS Launcher, Star Trek, Star Trek Communicator, apps, cell phone, communicator

Quick App Daily Double: LCARS Launcher and Star Trek Communicator

November 10th 2010 | Posted by Derek Kessler

Communicator PreFeeling like Trekking up your phone? We’ve got some options for you, in the form of a Star Trek themed launcher and soundboard. First up is the LCARS Launcher, a simple and straight-forward app launcher. While you can’t even customize the choices, LCARS Launcher does give you links to pretty much every built-in webOS app, though with a Star Trek-naming twist. For example, Text Comm and Library Images launch Messaging and Photos, respectively. The whole kit is wrapped in a Next Generation-era LCARS (Library Computer Access/Retrieval System).

We’ve seen LCARS applied to all sorts of computer interfaces before, but it never worked effectively with a keyboard and browser interface. But, as it was always used on Picard’s Enterprise (along with the Defiant, Voyager, and every single 24th century PADD), LCARS seems particularly well suited to touch interaction. As always, the designers of Star Trek were well ahead of their time – in this case, some twenty-three years ahead of the curve.

In fact, it’s an established fact that Dr. Martin Cooper, inventor of the cell phone, was inspired by Captain Kirk’s subspace communicator of old. While we may not be able to use our smartphones to hail Scotty and the gang, they’re notably more capable than the old (and bulky) communicators envisioned in 1966. But if you’re longing for the day of bleeps and bloops, along with a hankering for the voices of Spock, Scotty, McCoy, and all the rest of the crew of the U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701, then look no further than the Star Trek Communicator app.

A combination simulator and soundboard, Star Trek Communicator is built for the Pre. In fact, you have to launch it with the phone closed, and then slide it open (holding in the gesture area) to open it up to the familiar communicator chirp. The moiré grill starts spinning and all you have to do is select one of the colored buttons and then hit the two on the bottom two hear the voices of Uhura and Chekov, Scotty and Sulu, and Spock and McCoy.

There are plenty more Star Trek apps out there, including soundboards of Star Trek effects and a Klingon-themed soundboard, plus a few Star Trek themes, but we couldn’t help but have our Trek fan (we’re not going to get into the Trekkie vs. Trekker debate here) bone tickled by these two.

Thanks Josh!


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New York Times, Palm Pre, Palm Sighting, Screen Test, Star Trek, news, pre, ringtone, william shatner

Palm Sighting: Shatner on NYT’s Screen Test [video]

September 3rd 2010 | Posted by Derek Kessler

William Shatner swipes up to answer

Actor, thespian, and all-around coolest man on the planet William Shatner has been a Pre user for a while now, and like the coolest man on the planet that he is he’s not afraid to show it off. He did so while taping an informal segment for The New York Times’ online Screen Test series, answering a call from his daughter Melanie. We have to say, we’re both fascinated and disappointed that The Shat uses the stock webOS ringtone, though we can understand that he wouldn’t want to use something so obvious as the Star Trek theme or a communicator chirp. Check out the video after the break.

Source: New York Times; Via: Eitan Konigsburg on Twitter

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Biz Stone, Evan Williams, Fast Company, Geeks of the Year, Google Wave, J.J. Abrams, Jens Rasmussen, Jon Rubinstein, Lars Rasmussen, Palm, Palm Pre, Star Trek, news, pre, twitter, webOS

Fast Company names Jon Rubinstein a “Geek of the Year”

January 2nd 2010 | Posted by Derek Kessler

Jon Rubinstein

Entrepreneurial magazine Fast Company recently revealed their list of who they are calling the “Geeks of the Year”, (the year being 2009). And on that list is one Jon Rubinstein, who we know around here as the CEO of Palm, Inc. Fast Company’s reasoning behind bestowing such an, uh, honor on Rubinstein? Well, he was more or less responsible for ushering the Palm Pre and webOS to the masses and catapulting Palm back into the public eye. Rubinstein shares the Fast Company Geek of the Year list with the likes of Jens and Lars Rasmussen (the brains behind Google Wave), Star Trek director/producer/reimaginer J.J. Abrams, and Twitter cofounders Evan Williams and Biz Stone.

[via: The MX Web]

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