• July 29th, 2008

    New Targus laptop case promises speedy trip through airport security

    → Read More

    July 20th, 2008

    Mobile Edge offers a trio of "Checkpoint Friendly" laptop bags

    In response to the announcement made by the TSA earlier in the year that would allow travelers to keep their laptops in bags while going through security; a couple gear companies have put forth “Checkpoint Friendly” bags and that latest comes from Mobile Edge. The ScanFast collection meets the criteria laid out by the TSA and will be available late summer. No word on pricing. → Read More

    July 18th, 2008

    More info about MobileEdge TSA-friendly laptop cases

    Here are some actual product shots of the TSA-friendly MobileEdge cases that we covered about a week ago. I’m still not 100% convinced that TSA bags, in general, can live up to the promise of substantially increasing airport security lines. It’ll only take one screening agent to throw a fit when someone hasn’t removed their laptop, only to find out that it was in a TSA-approved bag all along. Plus, how long does it take you to remove your laptop for the security line? It takes me under ten seconds. I basically unzip my bag, pull out my notebook, and place it in a tray. Still, perhaps all those ten seconds increments will add up over time. These MobileEdge bags will be available later this summer and I’m guessing they’ll be pretty high-quality, yet not too expensive. Full press release after the jump… → Read More

    July 10th, 2008

    More TSA-friendly laptop bags coming soon

    Just got word last night that Mobile Edge, fine purveyor of notebook-friendly bags and backpacks, has created three new cases that meet all TSA requirements for checkpoint-friendliness. The company is currently testing the bags at the Ontario Airport in California and will make final changes before going into full production soon. We’ve got the three designs here. Actual photos of the products should be coming our way tomorrow. Hit the jump to take a peek at the other two bags. → Read More

    July 9th, 2008

    Photo of new checkpoint friendly bag

    → Read More

    July 2nd, 2008

    Keep your laptop in your luggage

    → Read More

    June 6th, 2008

    Body scanners that can see through clothing to be installed in 10 U.S. airports soon

    Body scanners that can “see” underneath clothing will be installed in 10 of the country’s biggest airports within the next few weeks. Airline passengers in cities like New York, Los Angeles, and Washington, D.C. can look forward to scenes like the kind depicted in this photo here. How they’ll be used: The scanners bounce harmless “millimeter waves” off passengers who are selected to stand inside a portal with arms raised after clearing the metal detector. A TSA screener in a nearby room views the black-and-white image and looks for objects on a screen that are shaded differently from the body. Finding a suspicious object, a screener radios a colleague at the checkpoint to search the passenger. Reminds you a little of City 17, right? Eh, what are you gonna do? I know I feel 100 percent safer with the TSA on my side. You know, the same organization that couldn’t tell the difference between a bomb and a MacBook Air? via Drudge Report → Read More

    May 22nd, 2008

    Skooba, Targus working on TSA-friendly gear bags

    Anyone that’s traveled with their laptop knows what a pain in the ass security is because you’re required to take out your laptop when going through the x-ray machine. I despise it and I travel quite often and it’s slowly becoming the bane of my existence. Maybe I’m being dramatic, but I think we can all agree that it’s an annoying process. Targus and Skooba, among others, have heard our plight and they’re looking to cash-in. Both companies are currently working on prototype “checkpoint-friendly” cases that the TSA is currently testing. No word on when these bags will hit the market, but you can bet your bottom dollar I’ll be waiting for one. → Read More

    May 5th, 2008

    Locking down laptops from the TSACustoms

    → Read More

    March 18th, 2008

    Airlines inching closer to paperless boarding passes

    In another huge victory for paperless enthusiasts everywhere, it appears that using your cell phone as a boarding pass is on the horizon. Since December, Continental has been testing a paperless option for flights out of Houston. The boarding pass “is an image of an encrypted bar code displayed on the phone’s screen, which can be scanned by gate agents and security personnel,” according to the New York Times. Other airlines are waiting for approval from the Transportation Security Administration before launching similar programs. TSA spokesperson Andrea McCauley said, “We definitely see this as the wave of the future,” which is exactly the type of thing you’d expect to hear from a slow-moving, bureaucratic agency that calls the mundane act of scanning an image of a bar code “the wave of the future.” → Read More

    March 13th, 2008

    TSA says MacBook Air is OK to fly

    Bob at the TSA Evolution Blog Team (the kindly gnomish face of the TSA that actually makes me think these morons are listening) responded to the intimation that MacBook Airs are weapons of mass destruction. Screeners are trained to look for certain things in laptops and other devices and when they saw an anomaly, they reacted. Good on them. They’ll also be scanning a MacBook Air to show screeners what to look for when they see SSD drives. Apple MacBook Airs are Cleared for Takeoff [TSA] → Read More

    March 10th, 2008

    MacBook Air: Weapon of TSA distraction

    Care of the Onion Here, friends, is the danger of depending too much on X-ray searches — there is a valley between the dangerous and the benign and most items fit in it but if you make something dangerous that looks utterly benign or make something benign that looks, to the trained TSA agent, dangerous, you’re in trouble. Long story short, Michael Nygard was held up at the airport because TSA agents couldn’t figure out his MacBook Air. I’m standing, watching my laptop on the table, listening to security clucking just behind me. “There’s no drive,” one says. “And no ports on the back. It has a couple of lines where the drive should be,” she continues. A younger agent, joins the crew. I must now be occupying ten, perhaps twenty, percent of the security force. At this checkpoint anyway. There are three score more at the other five checkpoints. The new arrival looks at the printouts from x-ray, looks at my laptop sitting small and alone. He tells the others that it is a real laptop, not a “device”. That it has a solid-state drive instead of a hard disc. They don’t know what he means. He tries again, “Instead of a spinning disc, it keeps everything in flash memory.” Still no good. “Like the memory card in a digital camera.” He points to the x-ray, “Here. That’s what it uses instead of a hard drive.” Security is all well and good and the theatre of security makes us feel great when we roll through the airport. However, the whole mess crashes down when someone tweaks the rules on either side — by removing an instantly recognized hard drive or threatening to blow up planes with liquids. That, sadly, is when things fall into absurdity. Just wait until the MacBook Quantum comes out. It probably won’t even show up on X-rays, replaced instead by a cat. Steve Jobs Made Me Miss My Flight [MichaelNygard] → Read More

    January 2nd, 2008

    Final Word: You can carry batteries on flights

    So it seems that you can carry batteries, extra batteries, spare batteries, and other, presumably, Leyden jars on flights. The TSA warnings only mention banning “large, palletized shipments” of lithium-ion batteries on flights whereas other batteries are fine. They recommend covering the battery terminals, however. On the other hand, the Department of Transportation says you are limited to bringing only two extended life batteries, which, according to the image associated with the press release, apparently only fit old Inspirons running Windows 95. The best way to avoid getting picked up for battery thoughtcrime, however, is to pack your batteries in plastic bags so they can’t accidentally brush up against that massive piece of metal in your carry-on luggage and short out. Welcome to 2008! PHMSA via NY Times → Read More

    Upcoming Events

    E3 2012

    Los Angeles, CA

    Disrupt SF 2012

    San Francisco, CA

    Real-Time
    Crunchbase

    Ace Metrix — Received $8M in Series C funding from WPP, Hummer Winblad Venture Partners, Leapfrog Ventures, and Palomar Ventures
    5.29.2012
    Institute for Defense and Disarmament Studies — Company added to CrunchBase
    5.29.2012
    Leapfrog Ventures — Invested in Ace Metrix.
    5.29.2012
    Compliance11 — Acquired by Compliance11, Inc..
    11.15.2012
    Facebook — Went public with stock symbol NASDAQ:FB.
    5.18.2012
    Compliance11 — Acquired by Compliance11, Inc..
    11.15.2012
    Bolt | Peters — Acquired by Facebook for $50M.
    6.21.2012
    5.29.2012
    ServerOrigin — Acquired by Black Lotus.
    5.29.2012
    FounderMatchup — Acquired by CoFoundersLab.
    5.22.2012
    Ace Metrix — Received $8M in Series C funding from WPP, Hummer Winblad Venture Partners, Leapfrog Ventures, and Palomar Ventures
    5.29.2012
    GreenBytes — Received $12M in Series B funding from Generation Investment Management and Battery Ventures
    5.29.2012
    Funky Moves — Received £332k in Unattributed funding
    5.29.2012
    Sensee — Received €17.5M in Unattributed funding from Partech International, Orkos Capital, and IDInvest Partners
    5.29.2012
    Rosslyn Analytics — Received Unattributed funding from IQ Capital Partners
    5.29.2012
    Leapfrog Ventures — Invested in Ace Metrix.
    5.29.2012
    Palomar Ventures — Invested in Ace Metrix.
    5.29.2012
    WPP — Invested in Ace Metrix.
    5.29.2012
    5.29.2012
    Battery Ventures — Invested in GreenBytes.
    5.29.2012
    Facebook — Went public with stock symbol NASDAQ:FB.
    5.18.2012
    Institute for Defense and Disarmament Studies — Company added to CrunchBase
    5.29.2012
    Software Blueprints — Company added to CrunchBase
    5.29.2012
    Banfield Pet Hospital — Company added to CrunchBase
    5.29.2012
    Friesen Consulting — Company added to CrunchBase
    5.29.2012
    Webridge — Company added to CrunchBase
    5.29.2012
    PocketHound — Product added to CrunchBase
    5.28.2012
    http://www.pingola.co.il/ — Product added to CrunchBase
    5.28.2012
    http://www.pingola.ru/ — Product added to CrunchBase
    5.28.2012
    AnB — Product added to CrunchBase
    5.28.2012
    CrunchBase