NEW YORK – An odd-looking van sprouts 13 digital cameras that its builder wants to use to photograph 50 million buildings in the country while driving, taking pictures every 15 feet.
The van’s drive-by snaps would be matched against GPS satellite positioning data and aerial photographs in a database. Police, insurance agents and others then could call up overhead and street-level views simply by entering an address.
The setup from Imageos Inc. was one of the security-related exhibits on display at this year’s CeBIT America technology trade show, which opened here Tuesday. Other companies were showing software tools to secure wireless networks, monitor employee Web surfing and protect users from viruses and spyware.
The main market for Imageos’ photographs would be insurance appraisals, but the Boulder, Colo., start-up is also touting the pictures for homeland security applications, law enforcement and emergency services.
Imageos’ Paul Jurasin said that thanks to the aerial photos, the database can show whether a house has a swimming pool or a fence in the back, details that could be of interest both to insurance companies and police.
“It gives them more information than they would get by driving up to a house, before they get there,” Jurasin said.
So far, Imageos has photographed only Orlando, Fla. If it gets funding, it plans to photograph the 25 largest cities in the country over the next five years, using more than a dozen vans.
Elsewhere on the convention floor, Hewlett-Packard Co. showed a laptop computer secured against noncomputing attacks, namely water, dust and physical impact. The nr3600 is HP’s first “rugged” laptop, an entry into a market dominated by Panasonic’s Toughbooks.
Rugged laptops are aimed at workers who need to bring their computers to rough construction sites, deserts and combat. The nr3600, on sale now for $4,099 and up, meets military specifications for shock resistance and sealing against the elements. It is joined by a rugged tablet without a keyboard for $600 less.
The nr3600 has a large carrying handle, but for portability, it can’t beat the OQO, an “ultrapersonal computer” about the size of a paperback book. The small LCD screen slides away to reveal a tiny keyboard intended for thumb typing.
It has most of the functionality of a full computer: The Windows XP machine has a hard drive, built-in wireless networking and a USB port.
The OQO is designed for simpler tasks while on the move. When you sit down for serious work, you attach it to a docking station that connects to a full monitor, mouse and keyboard. The OQO thus aims to replace Palm-style organizers, laptops and desktops.
San Francisco-based OQO Inc. has been promising its gadget for two years. It says it’s now finally shipping this fall for somewhat less than $2,000.
Nifty gadgets aside, the latest year’s upswing in the technology business was in little evidence at the show. Organizers expected 350 to 360 exhibitors, slightly fewer than last year, which was the first time CeBIT held an American show.
“It’s OK. It’s not buzzing with activity, but it’s OK,” said Farhad Keyvan, who was visiting from Bridgewater, N.J., where he runs a small software company.
Mark Dineen, the show’s managing director, acknowledged that some large U.S. companies have “pulled away” from the trade show business.
However, Microsoft Corp. and enterprise software giants PeopleSoft Inc. and Siebel Systems Inc. were added to the roster of exhibitors this year, and a greater number of preregistrations led organizers to expect up to 50 percent more attendees than the 8,500 that showed up last year. The show runs until Thursday.
CeBIT America is an offshoot of the world’s largest technology fair, which is held Hanover, Germany, in March. That show had 6,411 exhibitors this year.
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