eWEEK content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More.
2EyeDecrypt
EyeDecrypt enables users to view personal or confidential information—digital or printed—in public places. It also offers simply a more secure way of ensuring that only intended recipients have access to information. The technology uses a mobile device’s camera as an eye through which users can see otherwise scrambled information.
3EyeDecrypt
4SmartMic
David Daudelin, an AT&T senior specialist app developer, and Pamela Kanal invented SmartMic, a feature intended to be integrated into the PlanIt conferencing app. The feature enables a user to digitally raise her hand at a conference; a moderator can then call on her, activating the phone to act as a personal microphone and saving everyone the time of waiting for a shared mic to be passed.
5Dashboard Messenger
6Dashboard Messenger
The device also features GPS, enabling it to be tracked via a Web console. Craig Lee, director AT&T’s Foundry in Plano, Texas, imagines a parent could use the device to communicate with young drivers—a parent could even receive alerts such as if the car exceeds the speed limit—but that it also has potential to help delivery drivers (a manager could be alerted to an issue and make the necessary calls, instead of the driver) or place other kinds of alerts, such as that the garage door was left up.
7RCloud
Based on R, a code-based language used by data analysts, RCloud puts not just documents but analysis in the cloud. Code, saved in notebooks, is available to anyone whose work might benefit from it—data scientists needn’t remake various wheels, as it were, to proceed. RCloud also speeds deployment, since a few paired notebooks can constitute an app.
8Rich Media Care
9Cascade
AT&T will soon allow subscribers to add a car to a shared-data plan as easily as a tablet. As the number of devices attached to each of our identities increases, Cascade suggests one way that voice and messaging services linked to a primary device might be made available to secondary devices. A call to the primary device would reach out to each sub-device as well.
10A Changing AT&T
At AT&T’s Innovation Showcase, Marion Croak talked about the ways AT&T is changing its network as well as how it is changing as a company. “We used to be much more protective. Now, we make APIs available … and give developers tools to use so that reliability and resiliency—things that can take years to develop—are [immediately] available to any innovator,” she said.
11At a Moment of Reinvention
Christopher Rice, vice president of Advanced Technologies and Architecture at AT&T, oversees the taking of “big bets.” When asked what he’s most excited about right now, Rice told eWEEK, “When you look at the historic events in telecom, there’s the move from analog to digital, then from voice to data and then cellular. We’re in one of those exciting moments again now, moving to software.”