NEW NET Weekly List for 25 Dec 2012
As mentioned in the previous post, there is no NEW NET meeting this week because 25 December is Christmas.
Below is the final list of technology news and issues for NEW NET (NorthEast Wisconsin Network for Entrepreneurism and Technology) for the week of 25 Dec 2012.
The ‘net
1.
Digital duct tape IFTTT
connects your web silos, early tool for IoT http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/12/20/ifttt-raises-7-million-to-automate-your-life/ “IFTTT, the nifty Web service that offers a
way to automate tasks online, just got…$7 million…of venture capital…the chief
executive and one of the founders of IFTTT, said his first order of business
would be to hire more people…the company’s second order of business is perhaps
its most important: making the service more palatable to a broader audience…IFTTT
(pronounced “lift” but minus the l) has…“recipes,” that appeal to fairly
tech-savvy users. For example, popular recipes can…send notifications each time
a new book is added to Amazon’s list of free e-books…e-commerce alerts, flight
tracking and deal finding…The company is also looking to branch out into the
physical world. IFTTT has already teamed up with Belkin around…WeMo devices,
which let people wirelessly control home electronics from anywhere…More than
2.5 million recipes have been created on IFTTT…700,000 are available for public
examination. Each day, three million to four million tasks set up through IFTTT
are run...” http://www.xconomy.com/national/2012/12/14/give-your-online-life-a-lift-with-ifttt/?single_page=true “…have you come across a new technology…and
said to yourself, “…only a real geek would use that!”, only to find yourself…benefiting
from the same innovation a year or two later?...can you say “the Web” or “text
messaging”…or “Netflix streaming”?…I want to tell you about a geek tool…I’ve
been using…that everyone should know about. It’s called IFTTT…The acronym…stands
for “If This, Then That.”…the service lets you set up prearranged actions
prompted by specific conditions…users can create their own recipes or choose
from a large set of existing ones. All of them involve the communications and
productivity tools most of us use every day, from e-mail to social networking
to cloud storage…you can set up a recipe saying, “If the weather report says
it’s going to rain today, then send me a text message,”…This kind of stuff
doesn’t happen automatically right now because the major cloud applications are
still mostly siloed inside the companies that own and run them…Web and mobile
services are like Lego bricks that can be snapped together to make a range of
fun…useful and…geeky curiosities…”
2.
Facebook Tries Letting
You Pay $1 To Guarantee Message Delivery To Strangers http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-20810341 “Facebook has begun a trial which allows users
to pay $1 to send messages direct to people who are not their friends. The fee
will mean messages go straight to a recipient's inbox rather than the Other
folder which contains all unsolicited correspondence. The trial is only for a
"small number of people"…Users will be able to receive a maximum of
one paid-for message per week, and no more than three each month…On Facebook,
users can already send messages to anyone else on the network. However,
depending on a user's privacy settings, messages from users who are not friends
mostly end up in the Other folder…which is separate from the user's main inbox,
often goes unchecked…”
3.
Wappwolf Launches
iBeam.it For Sharing Content Across Online Services http://techcrunch.com/2012/12/18/wappwolf-home-to-ifttt-like-automation-tools-launches-ibeam-it-for-sharing-content-across-online-services/ “Wappwolf, the startup offering IFTTT-like
automation tools like Dropbox Automator and Google Drive Automator, is now out
with its latest utility called iBeam.it, focused on sharing to multiple service
at once. This includes not only online file storage services like Dropbox,
Evernote, Google Drive, Skydrive and others, but also photo-sharing sites like
Instagram, Flickr, Picasa, Facebook…Multi-posting tools have been a longtime
staple of the web, ever since users have been inundated with multiple options
for sharing their status or hosting files and other media in the cloud…Meanwhile,
newer companies like Dispatch, for example, instead focus on creating online
workspaces where users can collaborate across services like Dropbox and Google
Drive. IFTTT, mentioned above, lets you automate tasks using triggers in order
to take more specific actions, while things like CloudMagic are focused on
search. Photo-specific options, like Pixelpipe’s Pi.ipe, also exist…With
iBeam.it, Wappwolf users now have more of an all-purpose tool for sharing
(“beaming”) content between Dropbox, Facebook, Instagram, Google Drive, Flickr,
Skydrive, Evernote, Picasa, Twitter and more…”
4.
The Struggle to Connect
Strangers http://mashable.com/2012/11/27/highlight-bringing-people-together/ “…how do you create a social network that
helps you meet people?...Whether it's through mutual friends, a common event or
just plain luck, the universe's machinations which bring certain people
together is not only widespread but also difficult to track…Highlight, the
iPhone and Android app that launched in January, took the South by Southwest
conference by storm, and became the poster child for the passive technology
craze that includes Sonar and Loopt, is all about making those random
encounters a little less random…if you could just take a bird's eye view of the
world, and pick up two people, put them together and tell them, 'You two should
meet,' you could just make life better," says Paul Davison, co-founder and
CEO of Highlight. Davison's team…is constantly tinkering with the algorithms to
make Highlight the easiest way to meet folks in person…the people we do things
with are the most important things around us," Davison explains. "But
the system we use to meet these people is so bad."…to bring some order to
the randomness of meeting people who share the same interests, goals and lifestyle…the
app is constantly improving and iterating ways to find common interests among
users and encourage those users to bond over these commonalities…Highlight
utilizes the GPS found in the iPhone or Android…to group users in a similar
area and sift through what each has in common…Highlight offers a few levels of
interaction. Users can opt to chat through commenting on another person's
posts, inbox him or her with a private message…Davison stresses that Highlight
is really what you make of it: Users who fill out their profiles completely and
interact with others frequently on the service are more likely to see returns
on their investment than those who are less enthusiastic…”
5.
Instagram users should
wise up http://www.cnn.com/2012/12/20/opinion/rushkoff-instagram-users/ “…Instagram has risen to the level of a
Twitter as far as the culture around it is concerned. It has spawned a new
visual language, a new etiquette of sharing and an outpouring of creativity in
the form of contests, collaborative art exhibits and personal expression. Instagram
got so popular so fast that Facebook took notice and purchased the company for
a billion dollars -- (yes, $1 billion) -- to bolster its own smart phone presence
shortly before its IPO. The problem with being bought for a billion dollars is
that eventually you have to start showing the kinds of returns expected for a
billion dollar company. That means either charging users for the service or, as
in the case of Instagram, selling the users' data…what did we expect? Did we
think Instagram was just a couple of self-funded slackers trying to make the
world a more photographic place?...There are people working there, coding the
software, designing the interface, and figuring out how anyone gets to look at
anything whenever they want to. They need to eat…If they had charged for the
service from the get-go, Instagram would have likely had many fewer takers.
Photo services from Yahoo's Flickr to Google's Picasa already existed. So
instead of charging for their service, Instagram decided to get the biggest
base of users it could, use its massive membership as leverage to sell itself,
and then let the buyer (in this case Facebook) figure out how to make money. In
essence, Instagram sold its users to Facebook…So now that Facebook intends to
cash in on its investment, it's a bit disingenuous for those of us using the
free service to cry foul…What irks us…is the sense that…Instagram felt a little
alternative, authentically bottom-up. It's a tiny piece of software, and if
they had figured out a way for us to store our photos locally or to pay a small
charge for server space exceeding some amount (as Flickr does), it could have
stayed a rather noncommercial affair…”
6.
Microsoft killing off
Expression suite of Web and design tools http://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2012/12/microsoft-killing-off-expression-suite-of-web-and-design-tools/ “Microsoft has quietly announced that its
Expression suite of Web and design-oriented tools is being killed off…Vector
graphics drawing tool Expression Design 4 has been end-of-lifed…You can now
download it for free, and it will continue to receive security patches as
necessary until at least 2015…The same has happened to HTML and CSS authoring
tool Expression Web 4. It's no longer for sale and no new versions will be
released, and it's now available as a free download. Instead of developing
Expression Web, Microsoft will continue to extend and improve Visual Studio's
HTML, CSS, and JavaScript capabilities, with the IDE now being the company's
main actively maintained Web development tool…”
7.
Robot Rabbit Could Be
Your Next Digital Media Hub http://mashable.com/2012/03/27/karotz-innovation/ “…With long, antenna-like ears, a
minimalistic face and myriad colors glowing on its belly, the France-launched
Karotz robot is nothing short of "aww"-inducing. But, don't let the
face fool you: The cute little product packs an engaging toolset. The Karotz
Smart Rabbit can be programmed to serve as an alarm clock, an MP3 player, a
social media tool and a host of other features, along with an opportunity for
original coding. "I use the Karotz to wake me up, and it gives me the
weather and traffic information…This is all done in less than one minute from
one application…the development of Karotz is actually a third-generation
product of Nabaztag, a similarly-visaged personal robot that launched in 2005.
Nabaztag, which means "hare" in Armenian, was manufactured by
robotics company Violet. Violet was then acquired by Mindscape and subsequently
the French-based Aldebaran Robotics, which ultimately oversaw final production
of the Karotz model that soft-launched in the online market in January…”
8.
Websites Vary Prices,
Deals Based on Users' Information http://online.wsj.com/article_email/SB10001424127887323777204578189391813881534-lMyQjAxMTAyMDIwMzEyNDMyWj.html “…It was the same Swingline stapler, on the
same Staples.com SPLS -1.65% website. But for Kim Wamble, the price was $15.79,
while the price on Trude Frizzell's screen, just a few miles away, was $14.29. A
key difference: where Staples seemed to think they were located…the Staples
Inc. website displays different prices to people after estimating their
locations. More than that, Staples appeared to consider the person's distance
from a rival brick-and-mortar store…an unbiased, impersonal Internet is fast
giving way to an online world that, in reality, is increasingly tailored and
targeted. Websites are adopting techniques to glean information about visitors
to their sites, in real time, and then deliver different versions of the Web to
different people…Offering different prices to different people is legal, with a
few exceptions for race-based discrimination and other sensitive situations…Many
sites switch prices at lightning speed in response to competitors' offerings
and other factors, a practice known as "dynamic pricing."…Some sites,
for example, gave discounts based on whether or not a person was using a mobile
device. A person searching for hotels from the Web browser of an iPhone or
Android phone on travel sites Orbitz and CheapTickets would see discounts of as
much as 50% off the list price…Many hotels have proven willing to provide
discounts for mobile sites…”
Security,
Privacy & Digital Controls
9.
Congress is quietly
abandoning the 5th Amendment; is the Internet listening? http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2012/12/scandal-alert-congress-is-quietly-abandoning-the-5th-amendment/266498/
“…American politics doesn't work the way
you'd think it would. Most people presume that government officials would never
willfully withhold penicillin from men with syphilis just to see what would
happen if the disease went untreated. It seems unlikely that officers would
coerce enlisted men into exposing themselves to debilitating nerve gas. Few
expected that President Obama would preside over the persecution of an NSA
whistle-blower, or presume the guilt of all military-aged males killed by U.S.
drone strikes. But it all happened…It may seem like a United States senator
would be widely ridiculed for suggesting that American citizens can be
imprisoned indefinitely without chargers or trial, and that if numerous U.S.
senators took that position, the press would treat the issue with at least as
much urgency as "the fiscal cliff"…News junkies likely know that I'm
alluding to a specific law that has passed both the Senate and the House, and
is presently in a conference committee…Lawmakers charged with merging the House
and Senate versions of the National Defense Authorization Act decided on
Tuesday to drop a provision that would have explicitly barred the military from
holding American citizens and permanent residents in indefinite detention
without trial as terrorism suspects…Of the four main negotiators on the defense
bill, only one of the Democrats, Rep. Adam Smith (D-Wash.), opposes domestic
indefinite detention of Americans…Senator Carl Levin (D-Mich.), believes
detaining Americans without charge or trial is constitutional…Howard
"Buck" McKeon (R-Calif) and Senator John McCain (R-Ariz) believe it's
constitutional to lock up American citizens suspected of terrorism without ever
proving they're guilty…Civil liberties groups "aren't shedding any tears
over the demise of the Feinstein-Lee amendment," because they objected to
the fact that it protected only U.S. citizens and permanent residents, rather
than all persons present in the United States…Senators McCain, Levin, and many
other legislators suffer no consequences for failing to protect and defend the
United States Constitution…”
10.
Verizon Is Blocking
Google Wallet Anti-Competitively to Give Isis Development Time http://www.dslreports.com/shownews/Its-Clear-Verizon-Is-Blocking-Google-Wallet-AntiCompetitively-122513 “Verizon has been trying to justify their
blocking of Google Wallet on Verizon phones…because Google Wallet uses the
"secure element" on devices to store a user's Google ID…Verizon
insists the unending blockade has nothing to do with the fact Verizon…is
working on their own competing mobile payment platform named Isis. That's
obviously not true, and more than a few technology websites have noticed that
Verizon's simply acting anti-competively by delaying Google Wallet just long
enough to help their Isis platform catch up…lo and behold Verizon's Isis Mobile
Wallet app arrived this week, and is able to use the secure element with no
problem…phone requirements for the app speak of this “secure element” as a “dedicated
component in your phone” used to store payment cards and everything else needed
to properly run a mobile payment app with NFC. Basically, that’s everything
that they said was bad about Google Wallet…this kind of behavior from Verizon
is nothing new…this kind of behavior is simply in Verizon's (and AT&T's)
nature as duopolist gatekeepers. You have to assume that Verizon will also cave
here as this story gains traction, but by then Verizon's goal of delaying
Google Wallet…to give Isis a leg up will have already gained traction. One
irony of course is that in conjunction with Verizon, Google worked to gut
meaningful network neutrality rules that would have prevented this very thing
from happening…”
11.
5 Best Practices to
Secure and Protect SSH Server http://www.tecmint.com/5-best-practices-to-secure-and-protect-ssh-server/ “…In this article, I will show you some
simple tools and tricks that will help you to tighten your ssh server security.
Here you will find some useful information on how to secure and prevent ssh
server from brute force and dictionary attacks…1. DenyHosts…2. Fail2Ban…3.
Disable Root Login…4. Display SSH Banner…5. SSH Passwordless Login…”
12.
China listening in on
Skype - Microsoft assumes you approve https://en.greatfire.org/blog/2012/dec/china-listening-skype-microsoft-assumes-you-approve “…If you…are using Skype…you are probably not
aware that all your phone calls and text chats can be monitored by the
censorship authorities in China…chances are that you do not consent to such
surveillence. Microsoft, however, assumes that you do consent…The fact that
Skype is collaborating with Tom Online…for the China market has been known for
years…To comply with the government regulation, TOM Online is obliged to use a
text filter in TOM-Skype. If a message is found to be unsuitable for delivery
because of specific text, the message is simply not transmitted between the users…The
full text chat messages of TOM-Skype users, along with Skype users who have
communicated with TOM-Skype users, are regularly scanned for sensitive
keywords, and if present, the resulting data are uploaded and stored on servers
in China…most Skype users are probably not aware of the differences between Tom
Skype and the regular Skype…even if you are running the regular version of
Skype, if the person you are chatting with or talking to is running the Tom
version, your communication is still monitored and made available to the
Chinese authorities. There is no way to know what software the other person is
using. As we've established above, many are using Tom Skype unknowingly. This
means that whether or not you are in China, whether or not you are using the
regular version of Skype or the Tom version and whether or not you are writing
something you think could be politically controversial in China, your
communication data could all be stored on Chinese servers and shared with
Chinese authorities…If you are in China, however, when you go to www.skype.com,
you are automatically redirected to http://skype.tom.com. Skype does not ask if
you want to be redirected. They also do not inform you of the difference
between the regular Skype and the Tom Online version. The websites look very
similar…By redirecting Chinese users to Tom Skype without notice, Microsoft is
actively misleading users to think that they are downloading the real Skype
client. By blocking Chinese users from downloading the real Skype, Microsoft is
actively making it more difficult for Chinese users to circumvent surveillance…”
13.
Apple lifts block on
combo 30-pin+Lightning charging accessories http://arstechnica.com/apple/2012/12/apple-lifts-block-on-combo-30-pinlightning-charging-accessories/ “……”
[chalk up another consumer win for the Internet; in my limited understanding
of the world, at least, Apple would not have revised it’s policy regarding
devices with Lightning connectors nearly as quickly, if ever, were it not for
the Internet and it’s power to make a large and diverse group of people both
inside and outside organizations related to specific issues aware of the need
to address and resolve those issues in an equitable way; among many others, the
Pentium FDIV bug, the Sony rootkit and now the Apple Lightning connector – ed.]
Mobile
Computing & Communicating
14.
The Future Of The How-To
Is On The Tablet http://techcrunch.com/2012/12/20/snapquide-ipad-tablet/ “I wouldn’t have an iPad if I didn’t have to
do two things: Do interviews and cook. The first I have to do for work but the
second I do for fun. Which is why I think that Snapguide’s bold and stylish move to the tablet is not
only inevitable, but means that the service has finally landed in its true home…Snapguide…is
basically How-To guides for Generation Mobile, founded by former Yahoo Pipes PM
Daniel Raffel and former Google Chrome engineer Steve Krulewitz…the app, which
is No. 2 in Apple’s Best Apps of 2012 in the ”Discover with Friends” category,
is in Apple’s acquisition crosshairs…The Snapguide iPad app, like Pinterest or
Flipboard for How-Tos, purposefully feels like a magazine — with big colorful
photos of step-by-step guides…Just like on any user-generated content platform,
many will also spend hours creating guides…What the company does differently
than older competitors Instructables or WikiHow is its fervent focus on
simplicity and mobile design. “It became obvious that limiting the number of
characters per step and only supporting short videos would become features and
would allow us to design for predictable scenarios and keep the product easy to
use…”
15.
Larger phones and smaller
tablets give birth to 'phablets' http://www.contracostatimes.com/business/ci_22195437/larger-phones-and-smaller-tablets-give-birth-phablets “…smartphones have gradually gotten bigger
and tablet computers have gotten smaller…devices in between are starting to
emerge…informally known as phablets…they can be used for phone calls…The larger
screens -- measuring 5 inches or more diagonally -- make the devices slightly
better for watching movies, reading books and consuming other media…HTC Corp.'s
new 5-inch Droid DNA…looks about the same size as my 4.8-inch Samsung Galaxy S
III…HTC succeeds by making the DNA taller rather than wider, which is important
because the width is what spans your palm when you're holding it…watching a
movie on a DNA beats doing it on the older iPhone's 3.5-inch screen or even the
4 inches on the new iPhone 5…In most apps, I don't actually get more content
with the bigger screen. Text and graphics in Gmail messages simply get slightly
bigger on the DNA. Google's maps are larger, but that doesn't mean you see more
surrounding area, just bigger parks and road names…in my tests, everything just
gets bigger on the Note compared with the S III. I'm seeing the same number of
emails, the same coverage area for maps and the same amount of text for e-books…”
16.
Huawei Ascend Mate 6.1”
phablet “…Huawei's…about to introduce a 6.1-inch
1080p Android phone…According to earlier rumors, the Ascend Mate will feature a
1.8GHz HiSilicon K3V3 quad-core chip, along with a massive 4,000mAh battery,
9.9mm thickness and a price tag of…about $480…the 361ppi display is of LTPS
(low temperature polysilicon)…”
17.
First Decent $100 Tablet
Probably Won’t Be In The US Soon http://gizmodo.com/5970992/you-wont-be-able-to-buy-the-first-decent-100-tablet “…Acer…is planning to sell a $99 Android
tablet, the Iconia B1…The company plans to target consumers in emerging
markets…the Iconia B1 will come with a 1.2 gigahertz processor and pack a
7-inch display with 1024 by 600 resolution…”
Apps
18.
My Pain Diary HD for iPad http://news.yahoo.com/pain-diary-hd-ipad-end-sale-170337358.html “…The…iPad version of…My Pain Diary: Chronic
Pain Management…was received with 5-star reviews. Used by sufferers of chronic
pain and chronic illness, My Pain Diary HD makes it easy to record important
information about pain and symptoms. The Doctor’s Report feature outputs a
professional PDF for communicating that information to healthcare
professionals. The app boasts…pain tracking features, such as automatic weather
tracking to help users determine exactly how weather affects their pain and
symptoms. Multiple conditions can be tracked and compared visually using the
interactive graphs. Photos can be attached to entries to track swelling, rashes…My
Pain Diary…is an…iPhone and iPad app developed to eliminate some of the
overhead in keeping a pain diary and communicating the information to
healthcare professionals…”
19.
The Google Of The App
Search Era Just Might Be Google http://techcrunch.com/2012/12/24/the-google-of-the-app-search-era-just-might-be-google/ “…the mobile application ecosystem has become
an unfathomable jungle of applications – some 700,000-plus in the two top
mobile app stores, Apple’s App Store and Google Play. And yet, we’re still
waiting for the Google of the mobile app era to come in and save us from the
mess that is today’s app market…It’s possible, though, that the Google we’re
still waiting for is actually Google itself. There are independent app search
companies already working on the app discovery challenge…But users aren’t
searching for most of their apps on the web – they’re searching for apps on
mobile. And when they’re searching on mobile, they tend to use the default app
store apps on their device…63% of users find app through app store search…On
mobile, the battle will eventually play out between the two giants – Apple and
Google – for the better app search offering. Google…is already ahead of the game
here…it’s not surprising that Google is ahead in app search. It’s Google. This
is their bag…on iOS…developers may figure out how to use ASO to their
advantage, before Apple figures out how to discount the erroneous signals of
those attempting to throw the game…ASO is app store optimization – the
manipulations that help apps get found the way SEO helps websites improve their
own ranks…Google, and its search engineers steeped with years of experience in
dealing with the SEO crowd, will have the advantage of knowing best how to keep
the quality results at the top…there will be good apps everywhere. And really,
how many “good” apps can a user install…25? 50? 100?…”
20.
20 Best iOS And Android
Apps Of 2012 http://techcrunch.com/2012/12/23/the-20-best-ios-and-android-apps-of-2012/ “…The best mobile apps of 2012…list lacks
medium-defining breakthroughs like Instagram and Shazam…The apps we selected
were either released or significantly updated between January 1 and December 21
of this year…Google Maps (iPhone, iPod touch, iPad, Android free)…Camera
Awesome (iPhone, iPod touch, iPad free)…Slices for Twitter (iPhone, iPod touch
$4.99 Android free)…Flipboard (iPhone, iPod touch, iPad, Android free)…Khan
Academy (iPhone, iPod touch, iPad free)…Songza (iPhone, iPod touch, iPad,
Android free)…Viggle (iPhone, iPod touch, Android free)…Brewster Address Book
(iPhone, iPod touch free)…Next Draft – The Day’s Most Fascinating News (iPhone,
iPod touch, iPad free)…Action Movie FX (iPhone, iPod touch, iPad free)…Atlas by
Collins (iPhone, iPod touch, iPad $6.99)…Crackle – Movies & TV (iPhone,
iPod touch, iPad, Android free)…Vyclone (iPhone, iPod touch, iPad free)…Stitcher
Radio (iPhone, iPod touch, iPad, Android free)…Highlight (iPhone, iPod touch,
iPad, Android free)…Clear (iPhone, iPod touch, iPad $0.99)…Pocket (iPhone, iPod
touch, iPad, Android free)…Showyou (iPhone, iPod touch, iPad free)…Paper by
FiftyThree (iPad free)…Zinio (iPhone, iPod touch, iPad, Android free)…”
SkyNet
21.
Google in 2012 http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/technology/google-in-2012-android-soars-battles-with-regulators-and-a-tricky-new-role/2012/12/24/a761c3e0-4c4f-11e2-b709-667035ff9029_story.html “…Here’s a look at the highlights…at Google
in 2012…Regulation…The company faced
backlash…from European regulators…and…The Federal Trade Commission…Google+…Google’s latest update on the
site revealed that the year-old network has 135 active million users…Hardware…Google…made some notable steps
into the hardware space…launching branded smartphones and tablets…as flagships
for…Android…its Nexus 7 tablet was a popular item on many people’s holiday wish
list…Android…75 percent of all
phones that shipped in the third quarter of 2012 were running Android…”
22.
Google sells Motorola
Home and set-top boxes to Arris for $2.35bn http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2012/dec/20/google-sells-motorola-home-arris “…Google has disappointed the British set-top
box maker Pace by selling its profitable Motorola Home business to Arris Group
in a $2.35bn cash-and-stock deal…The move leaves Google with the loss-making
handset business and the patent portfolio belonging to MMI, with which it had
hoped to fend off lawsuits against its Android mobile software from Apple,
Microsoft, Nokia…For Arris, the acquisition gives it broader capabilities in
consumer video products and services, and will boost its patent portfolio
through a licence to what it called "a wide array of MMI patents". MMI's
Home business generated quarterly revenues of about $880m over the past year,
and about $60m of quarterly profit. It builds set-top boxes for a broad range
of US cable companies…”
23.
Google Wants To Grab 90%
Of Office Users Away From Microsoft http://www.businessinsider.com/google-grabs-office-users-from-microsoft-2012-12 “There's a big, fat growth market staring
Google in the face and it looks like the search-engine giant is finally ready
to grab it: enterprise software. "Our goal is to get to the 90 percent of
users who don’t need to have the most advanced features of Office," Amit
Singh, a Google VP…Google generates about $1 billion from five businesses that
sell products and services to the enterprise. That's almost a rounding error
for Google. 96% of its revenue come from ads, so its enterprise products
account for a mere 4%...Google ramped up its enterprise business…this year. It
launched…Compute Engine, that competes head on with Amazon Web Services and
Microsoft Azure. It introduced Drive…and is now charging companies with 10
employees or less. It launched the next-generation of Chromebooks and
introduced…the Chromebox…Until recently, Google wasn't prepared to take on
really big companies…Before Toyota signed a huge deal for Microsoft's Office
365 cloud, Toyota had asked Google to bid but Google backed out…Now, Singh is
aiming for total domination of the Office software market. "We know the
gaps between our features and theirs. We’re improving them week by week…”
General
Technology
24.
Engineered
Fish Moves a Step Closer to Approval
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/22/business/gene-altered-fish-moves-closer-to-federal-approval.html “Government regulators moved a big step
closer…to allowing the first genetically engineered animal — a fast-growing
salmon — to enter the nation’s food supply. The Food and Drug Administration…concluded
that the salmon would have “no significant impact” on the environment. The
agency also said the salmon was “as safe as food from conventional Atlantic
salmon.”…the agency’s draft environmental assessment will be open to public
comment for 60 days…AquaBounty Technologies…has been trying to win approval for
more than a decade…The AquAdvantage salmon…is an Atlantic salmon that contains
a growth hormone gene from the Chinook salmon and a genetic switch from the
ocean pout, an eel-like creature. The switch keeps the gene on so that the
salmon produces growth hormone year round, rather than only during warm
weather. The fish reach market weight in about 18 months instead of three
years…The main concern addressed was whether the genetically engineered salmon
could escape and establish themselves in the wild…The larger salmon…could conceivably
outcompete wild Atlantic salmon for food or mates. The agency said the chance
this would happen was “extremely remote.”…And reproduction would be unlikely
because the fish would be sterilized, though the sterilization technique is not
foolproof…AquaBounty produces its eggs…in Prince Edward Island, Canada. The
eggs are shipped to…Panama, where the fish are grown to market weight…an
investor…who owned nearly half the company’s stock, sold his holdings…to
Intrexon…which is offering to buy the rest of AquaBounty…Intrexon is working on
synthetic biology…a souped-up form of genetic engineering…”
25.
“Neuristor”:
Memristors used to create a neuron-like behavior http://arstechnica.com/science/2012/12/neuristor-memristors-used-to-create-a-neuron-like-behavior/ “Computing hardware is composed of a series
of binary switches; they're either on or off. The other piece of computational
hardware we're familiar with, the brain, doesn't work anything like that.
Rather than being on or off, individual neurons exhibit brief spikes of
activity, and encode information in the pattern and timing of these spikes. The
differences between the two have made it difficult to model neurons using
computer hardware…But researchers may have figured out a way to create a chip
that spikes…people at HP labs…have figured out a combination of memristors and
capacitors that can create a spiking output pattern. Although these spikes
appear to be more regular than the ones produced by actual neurons, it might be
possible to create versions that are a bit more variable than this one…To get
the sort of spiking behavior seen in a neuron, the authors turned to a
simplified model of neurons based on the proteins that allow them to transmit
electrical signals…In the authors' circuit, there were two units, one
representing the sodium channels, the other the potassium channels. Each unit
consisted of a capacitor (to allow it to build up charge) in parallel to a
memristor (which allowed the charge to be released suddenly. In the proper
arrangement, the combination produces spikes of activity as soon as a given
voltage threshold is exceeded. The authors have termed this device a
"neuristor."…the NbO2 neuristor uses too much power to put in large
numbers on a chip. But there are other types of Mott resistors known, and the
authors think that it should be possible to find one that's both low power and
compatible with current chip-making techniques…”
26.
Programming
for all, part 1: An introduction to writing for computers http://arstechnica.com/science/2012/12/programming-for-all-part-1-an-introduction-to-writing-for-computers/ “Computers are ubiquitous in modern life…Despite
this, very few people know how computers actually do the things that they do…In
this article, we'll take a look at some of the basic concepts of computer programming…Programming
is about problem solving and thinking in a methodical manner…Think of
programming like cooking: you learn the basic rules and then you can let your
creativity run wild…If one is intending to understand computer programming,
they must start their journey by looking at simple integers. In the modern
world, we count using what is known as base 10; that is, there are ten distinct
digits (0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9)…there is no reason that we must count in
base 10, it is simply convenient for us…using base-two numbers would make the
most sense for a computer that can only know on or off…The binary number system
is base two, and the only numbers available for counting are zero (0) and one
(1)…a single 0 or 1 (a single on/off value) is termed a "bit." When
you group eight bits together, you get a byte (four bits is called a nybble,
but you won't see that around much anymore). Therefore, if you have a 1GB
drive, that means you have 1024*1024*1024 bytes of information…In the
beginning, developing a program quite literally involved a programmer sitting
in front of a large board of switches, setting some to up (on/1) and some to
down (off/0) one at a time…hardware manufacturers and software developers came
up with the concept of assembly languages…Assembly languages gave a simple name
to each possible operation that a given piece of hardware could carry out…and…allowed
programmers to create software that was somewhat removed from the absolute
binary nature of the machine and quite a bit easier to understand by reading…”
Leisure &
Entertainment
27.
How a tech entrepreneur
became a best-selling Amazon Kindle author http://venturebeat.com/2012/12/19/how-a-tech-entrepreneur-became-a-best-selling-amazon-kindle-author/ “Matthew Mather…founded…Haptic Technologies
Inc…and has worked on nanotech, genomics, and cybersecurity. He’s also the
author of a chart-topping Amazon book that sold 40,000 copies in its first
eight weeks of publication — and shot to the top spot in Amazon’s science
fiction charts — by following a very strategic publishing and publicity model…an
astonishing 27 of the top 100 books on Kindle are self-published. Here’s how
Mather did it…Using his background in startups and his savvy as an
entrepreneur, he created an 11-step program to market and launch the book…you
need to start with good reviews and get early sales … the system feeds itself…Mather
created the Shakespeare system, an 11-step process to get to number one…Serialize…Hook…Amazon
only…Key networks…Empathy…Select Program on Amazon…Perceived value…Editing…All
free posting sites…Reviews…Engage…You need to prepare beforehand and do it all
at once, at launch day,” he told me. “I started at three AM, sent out three to
four press releases, ran through the whole marketing program in 14 hours, and
by the next day I was number one in science fiction…I talked to a lot of
science fiction readers…A book from a big publisher is $10-15 … so people will pirate them. But if you
price it at $2-3, they won’t…you’re better off in the end…”
28.
The book as we know it is
dead http://pandodaily.com/2012/12/16/the-book-as-we-know-it-is-dead/ “…For five thousand years, since the advent
of writing on clay tablets in Mesopotamia…the book was considered to be…a set
of written sheets of skin or paper or tablets…But…our very concept of a book is
changing. Over the summer, for the first time, American publishers generated
more revenue from ebooks than from hardcover books…startups and established
companies…are experimenting with what exactly constitutes a book…The book is
compact, reasonably durable, long lasting, and stores a lot of information. But…Text
contained within two covers can’t be easily transferred, and readers are not
able to instantly connect and discuss what they are reading. Pages are static
and can’t be updated or corrected until the next print run…if you want to
discuss it with someone you have to do that from outside the confines of its
pages. These limitations spring from a book’s physical form…we have transposed
these hardcover limitations on today’s digital books…copyright law hamstrings
readers’ ability to share text, and new technologies tend to mirror what came
before…My vision for the future of the book is wrapped up in a project I plan to
self-publish…a full-length narrative non-fiction book…In addition to the
adventure story…I’ll offer radio and video interviews with the pilots,
schematics of the planes, maps, newsreel footage of their accomplishments,
photos, movie trailers, and other documentation…I compiled a playlist of
popular tunes and radio commercials from the 1930s and early 1940s and want
readers to customize these song lists. Anyone who downloads the book…would be
able to highlight and share passages they find appealing with friends and other
readers…I’d like to add a wiki so that everyone from historians to hobbyists
could add material – perhaps separate biographies for each of the characters
and discussion of the planes and the technology of the era…every book could
spawn a book club…Authors could insert a storefront in every book by linking
to, say, Amazon…If you publish a book about grilling then you could endorse
your favorite tongs or cookbooks, and get a commission on every sale you refer
to Amazon…”
29.
Amazon May Cull Book
Reviews To Improve Quality of System http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/23/technology/amazon-book-reviews-deleted-in-a-purge-aimed-at-manipulation.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0 “Giving raves to family members is no longer
acceptable. Neither is writers’ reviewing other writers. But showering five
stars on a book you admittedly have not read is fine. After several
well-publicized cases involving writers buying or manipulating their reviews,
Amazon is cracking down. Writers say thousands of reviews have been deleted
from the shopping site in recent months…its sweeping but hazy purge has
generated an uproar about what it means to review in an era when everyone is an
author and everyone is a reviewer…The mystery novelist J. A. Konrath, for example,
does not see anything wrong with an author indulging in chicanery. “Customer
buys book because of fake review = zero harm,” he wrote on his blog…An ad hoc
group of purists has formed on Amazon to track its most prominent reviewer,
Harriet Klausner, who has over 25,000 reviews. They do not see how she can read
so much so fast or why her reviews are overwhelmingly…exaltations…Once a
populist gimmick, the reviews are vital to making sure a new product is not
lost in the digital wilderness…Nowhere are reviews more crucial than with
books, an industry in which Amazon captures nearly a third of every dollar
spent…Several mystery writers…recently confessed to…manipulation under the
general category of “sock puppets,”…In explaining its purge of reviews, Amazon
has told some writers that “we do not allow reviews on behalf of a person or
company with a financial interest in the product or a directly competing
product…The explosion of reviews for “The 4-Hour Chef” by Timothy Ferriss shows
how the system has evolved from something spontaneous to a means of marketing
and promotion. On Nov. 20, publication day, dozens of highly favorable reviews
immediately sprouted…he had sent several hundred review copies to fans and
potential fans…Mr. Ferriss used Twitter and Facebook to ask for a review.
“Rallying my readers,” he called it. Within an hour, 61 had complied. A few of
his early reviews were written by people who admitted they had not read the
book but were giving it five stars anyway because, well, they knew it would be
terrific…Amazon, which published “The 4-Hour Chef,” offered this sole comment
for this article: “We do not require people to have experienced the product in
order to review…”
Economy and
Technology
30.
What The Wirecutter tells
us about the newfound power of affiliate links http://pandodaily.com/2012/12/18/what-the-wirecutter-tells-us-about-the-newfound-power-of-affiliate-links/ “…gadgets recommendations site The
Wirecutter…is run by a handful of people…that publishes only six to 12 posts a
month, and is just over a year old…$600,000 of annual revenue…is far from
inconsequential…the bulk of the revenue comes from Amazon and other affiliates,
who pay The Wirecutter a small commission for referrals to their sites…as
digital ad revenues flatline and publications cultivate more targeted
audiences, they are becoming more important…The first wave of Web publishing
has been dominated by business models that demand high turnover of content in
order to gin up traffic…to attract advertisers…Huffington Post, TechCrunch, and
Gawker Media have done well with such a model. But there are signs of a shift
in which affiliate links will play a significant role…Every time The Next Web
publishes an article containing an affiliate link, it includes a disclaimer at
the bottom, noting, “While we only ever write about products we think deserve
to be on the pages of our site, The Next Web may earn a small commission if you
click through and buy the product in question.” It then directs readers to its
Terms of Service for more details…Affiliate links work best when they’re
matched to a specific audience, particularly if that audience happens to be in
a buying mood…10 and 20 percent of visitors to The Wirecutter click on links…Banner
ads on other sites…see an average click-through rate of just 0.25 percent…At
Gizmodo, he grew tired of churning out blog posts in the name of pageviews.
“There are two ways to have a publication…Highly curated and exhaustive…”
31.
AngelList and
SecondMarket team up for legal, controlled look-alike to crowdfunding http://pandodaily.com/2012/12/19/finally-angellist-and-secondmarket-team-up-for-legal-controlled-look-alike-to-crowdfunding/ “…SecondMarket and AngelList have teamed up
to allow accredited investors to legally invest purely online on AngelList for
the first time. Basically, it’s getting a head start on the JOBS Act while we
wait for it to become law…last week…we wrote about Transcriptic’s wild seed
round — the first company that used the partnership to round out its already
successful, mega seed round. Founder Max Hodak described the experience by
saying, “The Internet was just trying to throw money at us.”…Not every company
will have such a barn-burner of an experience, but SecondMarket and AngelList
are trying to replicate what worked in that case. Like Transcriptic, they are
handpicking only companies that have a strong, well-known lead investor
already, an easy to understand business, and some sort of momentum…”
32.
Longtime Microsoft
Executive Craig Mundie to Retire in 2014 http://allthingsd.com/20121224/longtime-microsoft-executive-craig-mundie-cedes-strategy-post-to-retire-in-2014/ “Microsoft has quietly shifted Craig Mundie —
its former chief research and strategy officer — to a new…role as “Senior
Advisor to the CEO.”…Most of Mundie’s duties, including oversight of Microsoft
Research and other technical strategy responsibilities, will now fall to Eric
Rudder…the company’s chief technical strategy officer…Mundie had held the Chief
Research and Strategy Officer title since Bill Gates announced his plan to
cease working full-time at Microsoft back in 2006. Gates’s duties were split
between Mundie and former Microsoft executive Ray Ozzie, who inherited Gates
role as chief software architect…”
Design / DEMO
33.
Lightbank
launches design fellowship, because “designers are the new hackers” http://pandodaily.com/2012/12/18/lightbank-launches-design-fellowship-because-designers-are-the-new-hackers/ “…Lightbank partners have launched the
Lightbank Design fellowship program. The three-month program is designed to
allow promising young graphic designers — young in terms of either age or experience
— to hone their skills and gain exposure to the world of technology by working
alongside Lightbank’s more than 50 early-stage portfolio startups.
Participants, aka “Fellows,” will be paid for their time and presumably have
the inside track on permanent employment opportunities…The problem, according
to Keywell, is two-fold. First, the midwest startup ecosystem suffers from an
overall lack of technology-focused design talent…much of the top tech and
design talent gravitates toward the two coasts. This program is intended to
address this shortcoming by delivering frontline training to a new crop of
aspiring designers three times a year…Second, the serial entrepreneur and
investor believes there’s an entire population of design talent in other
industries that wants to transition to the technology world but has no concept
of where to begin and or how…”
34.
People People
are Clearly Seeing Music http://www.technologytell.com/gadgets/108072/people-people-are-clearly-seeing-music/ “Stockholm-based industrial design company
People People has got…sound style…the group is currently working towards
production of their transparent speaker box, a design unique to anything we’ve
ever seen — classy, simple and beautiful. A tempered glass enclosure with
aluminum edges seals dual 3-inch full-range drivers, a 6.5-inch subwoofer and
the condensed pre-amp circuits. With only red and white leads connecting the
speakers to the power source, you can literally see the relationship between
each component…Americans relate to this Scandinavian aesthetic as ‘simplistic’
by our standards (think Ikea furniture or H&M fashions) where unnecessary
factors are omitted during the design phase and the engineer promotes
functionality over form…”
35.
Adobe
acquires Behance, sets sights on community-driven Creative Cloud http://www.engadget.com/2012/12/20/adobe-acquires-behance/ “…Adobe…has just announced its acquisition of
Behance, the online portfolio community for creatives in a number of
disciplines…Touting over 1 million active users and 90 million project views in
the past month, Behance is an online repository for portfolios, feedback,
inspiration and the hiring of creative pros. Adobe is planning to fully
integrate the design community's wares into it's Creative Cloud arsenal
"allowing members to seamlessly create content, seek feedback, showcase
their work and distribute it across devices." For now, there won't be any
changes for free and paid members of the Behance offerings, but Adobe is
evaluating how to integrate the paid portions into Creative Cloud memberships
with the free option from the community remaining as such…”
DHMN Technology
36.
Raspberry Pi
Used To Replace A 30-Foot GSM Base Station And Create A Working Mobile Network http://techcrunch.com/2012/12/21/raspberry-pi-used-to-replace-a-30-foot-gsm-base-station-and-create-a-working-mobile-network/ “A Cambridge, U.K.-based consulting firm has
managed to use the open source Raspberry Pi computer to replicate the functions
normally performed by a 30-foot GSM cellular basestation to create a fully
functional mobile network. Using two open source software programs, and a bit
of off-the-shelf hardware kit DIY enthusiasts can get their hands on fairly
easily, PA Consulting rolled their own mobile phone service. The system works
by routing calls similar to the way they’d be handled by Skype, thanks to an
open source program called FreeSWITCH, which also enables SMS communication and
phones on the network to connect to the Internet…”
37.
3D Printing Technology
& Healthcare http://openhealthnews.com/hotnews/open-source-3d-printing-technology-healthcare “…Over the past year, there has been a
dramatic increase in the study and use of 3D printing technology by
biotechnology firms and academia for possible use in tissue engineering
applications. Building organs and body parts using 3D printing techniques,
layers of living cells are deposited onto a gel medium or sugar matrix and
slowly built up to form three dimensional structures. This field of biotech
research has been variously referred to as organ printing, bio-printing, body
part printing and computer-aided tissue engineering…Some of the most recent
news clips or articles…about 3D printing in healthcare include the following…Cartilage
Made Easy With Novel Hybrid Printer…Bioengineers use open source 3-D printer to
create human organs…Surgeon Uses 3D Printer To Make Models Of Bone…3D-printed
sugar network to help grow artificial liver…Read about other examples of 3D
Printing in Medicine at 3DPrinter.net…”
38.
Turning a
Raspberry Pi into a tiny Linux notebook
http://liliputing.com/2012/12/turning-a-raspberry-pi-into-a-tiny-linux-notebook.html “…hacker Nathan Morgan decided to use the
Raspberry Pi as the guts of a tiny laptop computer with a 3.5 inch display, a
thumb-keyboard, solid state disk, and rechargeable batteries. He calls it the
Pi-To-Go, and it’s a fully functional computer running Raspbian Linux. It gets
up to 10 hours of battery life thanks to the low-power ARM-based processor and
a reasonably large battery pack. The end product includes more than $400 in
parts… so if you’re really just looking for a cheap Linux laptop, you’re
probably better off buying an old netbook and installing Ubuntu on it…But
there’s something incredibly cool about Morgan’s little computer, which
features a 64GB solid state disk, a mini keyboard with an integrated touch
area, a powered 7-port USB hub, and a 3D printed case. Morgan’s design also
includes an LED which illuminates a Raspberry Pi logo on the back of the case…”
Open Source
Hardware
39.
Open source and low cost
RoBo 3D Printer http://www.3ders.org/articles/20121219-open-source-and-low-cost-robo-3d-printer.html “Another open source 3D printer is now on
Kickstarter: the RoBo 3D Printer…has a cute Robot looking. It features a large
print area 10 x 12 x 9 inch / 254 x 305 x 229 mm and claimed to be an
easy-to-use and easy-to-assemble 3D printer…A RoBo 3D printer kit is priced at
$475, including all the parts you need for building the machine. For $520 you
can get a fully assembled and calibrated RoBo 3D printer…”
40.
Facebook’s first-ever
hardware hackathon http://venturebeat.com/2012/12/05/hardware-hackathon/
“…The hackathon’s goal is to create a
set of open-source computer hardware building blocks — kind of like Lego for
computing. These blocks would eventually be applied to real-world use cases in
large data centers in ways that would boost energy efficiency, make repairs
simpler, and reduce overall data center costs…The hackathon is a joint project
between the OCP and Upverter, a DEMO-launched open-source hardware startup…Upverter
founder Zac Homuth told VentureBeat via email that hackers in the upcoming
event will be using Upverter’s software tools for the hackathon…The Open
Compute Summit will take place at the Santa Clara Convention Center on January
16 and 17, 2012…”
41.
Open source attachment
turns iPhone into a thermal imaging camera http://www.techhive.com/article/2022395/this-open-source-attachment-turns-your-iphone-into-a-thermal-imaging-camera.html “…Andy Rawson…put his IR-Blue device on
Kickstarter so you can visually gauge temperatures at home…The IR-Blue is a
Bluetooth-enabled thermal imaging device that comes equipped with a 64-zone
non-contact infrared sensor array. You can use the device to quickly read the
temperature of whatever you point it at, whether it be your hand, a computer
heat sink, or a frying pan on the stove—and of course take a picture of it. The
IR-Blue attaches to the back of your phone and it's compatible with iOS as well
as Android. It’s also an open source project: The iPhone source code, firmware
and Eagle design files for the Bluetooth 4 version are all available on GitHub.
Andy says that the Android files are still being finalized and will be
available soon…”
Open Source
42.
Detroit has become an
open-source wireless technology guinea pig http://www.mlive.com/business/detroit/index.ssf/2012/12/detroit_has_become_an_open-sou.html “…Cass Corridor neighborhood of Detroit is
becoming one big wireless communication access point, as part of the first
phase of a new open source wireless networking technology being tested in the
city. The network and its technology, called Commotion, is being built by the
New America Foundation’s Open Technology Institute. The OTI plans to publicly
release the open-source wireless technology in early 2013, after sufficiently
testing it in Detroit. "The partners OTI works with in Detroit are not
only self-provisioning connectivity for local residents, they're proofing out
technologies that support free, safe, ubiquitous communications around the
globe." Commotion creates decentralized wireless networks called “mesh
networks,” by using a series of devices such as laptops and mobile phones. “The
prototype network can potentially distribute Internet access to local
residents, but even without a connection to the global Internet, Commotion
allows neighbors to communicate with each other…”
43.
Stanford neurosurgeon
launches new open-source medical journal built on a crowdsourcing model http://scopeblog.stanford.edu/2012/12/19/stanford-neurosurgeon-launches-new-open-source-medical-journal-built-on-a-crowdsourcing-model/ “Stanford neurosurgeon John Adler, MD, has
launched a new open-source medical journal that leverages crowdsourcing to make
scientific research more readily available to the general public…Curēus
(pronounced “curious”) is an “open source” online medical journal that shares
material, is available and free to anyone, and allows researchers to publish
their findings at no cost within days – rather than the months or even years it
typically takes for research to be made public. It’s built on a “crowdsourcing”
platform that allows readers to rate material based on the article’s quality…”
Civilian
Aerospace
44.
SpaceX's
newest rocket hovers above launch pad in test flight http://www.latimes.com/business/money/la-fi-mo-spacex-grasshopper-reusable-rocket-20121224,0,3823929.story “…it’s a little strange to see a rocket fire
up its engines, blast off, and then hover in the air. But that’s exactly what
Hawthorne rocket maker SpaceX pulled off with its 10-story Grasshopper…In a
29-second flight, the rocket burst into the sky, rose 131 feet, hovered and
landed safely on the pad using thrust vector and throttle control…the
Grasshopper has steel landing legs with hydraulic dampers, and a steel support
structure…the Grasshopper…would be the first-ever fully reusable rocket — the
Holy Grail in rocketry…The closest example of a reusable launch system is the
retired space shuttle fleet, which were only partially reused after a tedious
months-long overhaul…This test was completed Dec. 17 at SpaceX’s rocket
development facility in McGregor, Texas…”
45.
Garvey Space
Flies Suborbital Rocket Again in Mojave
http://www.parabolicarc.com/2012/12/21/garvey-space-flies-suborbital-rocket-again-in-mojave/ “…NASA Launch Services Program (LSP)…has
initiated a new high-altitude launch service for demonstration NanoSatellites.
This service is intended to provide streamlined, introductory launch
opportunities for the growing number of academic, business and research
organizations that are developing CubeSat and NanoSat-class payloads. The first
flight under this program took place on Saturday, Dec.8, and featured the
Prospector 18D…suborbital reusable launch vehicle (sRLV)…previously flown three
times by a team consisting of Garvey Spacecraft Corporation (GSC) and California
State University, Long Beach (CSULB)…Launch took place at the Friends of
Amateur Rocketry (FAR) test site outside of Mojave, Calif…the mission…verified
the feasibility and value of having responsive, dedicated launch services for
the emerging nanosat community…The P-18 is the latest in a series of GSC/CSULB
test vehicles that are establishing the foundation for an operational nanosat
launch vehicle (NLV) capability…”
46.
SpaceShipTwo
practices flying with engines
http://news.discovery.com/space/spaceshiptwo-practices-flying-with-engines-121220.html “SpaceShipTwo, a six-passenger, two-pilot
spaceship owned by Virgin Galactic, completed a key flight test on Wednesday,
gliding over the Californian Mojave Desert with its engine, fuel tank and
thermal shielding on its wings for the first time. At least two more glide
flights are planned before SpaceShipTwo makes its first powered flight…The
flight test program is going to take a while because the very first flight
isn't trying to go all the way up to the edge of space and just hang out there
for 15 minutes and then come back down again. We're going to slowly go up and
up, we'll see what we learn as we go, see how the vehicle responds to it as we
go…”
Supercomputing
& GPUs
47.
IIT Delhi & NVIDIA To
Develop Exaflop Supercomputer http://business-standard.com/india/news/nvidia-iit-delhi-tie-up-to-build-supercomputer/200040/on “NVIDIA today announced that it is
collaborating with the Indian Institute of Technology Delhi…to establish a
research lab to help the country reach its goal of achieving exascale computing
by 2017…The development of exascale computing systems, which would be hundreds
of times faster than most of today’s petascale systems, will enable innovation
and breakthroughs in biology, earth sciences, genomics, life sciences,
medicine, materials science, energy, national security, and many other
scientific domains…IIT Delhi will provide the infrastructure for the Exascale
Research Lab, including software and computing systems, and will maintain an
active research program on exascale development and GPU computing. In addition
to GPU accelerators, NVIDIA will provide access to its supercomputing and
scientific application domain expertise…”
48.
How Intel secured the
Chinese Exaflop Supercomputer Deal http://vr-zone.com/articles/how-intel-secured-the-chinese-supercomputer-deal-feat.-ivy-bridge-ep--xeon-phi-/18457.html “…in the next 18 months, Intel will power the
world's most powerful supercomputer. Consisted out of approximately 100,000 Ivy
Bridge-EP based Xeon E5's and 100,000 Xeon Phi boards (Knights Landing), the
Chinese supercomputer should be the world's most powerful, reaching no less
than 100 PFLOPS of compute power…approximately 10 times faster than the fastest
supercomputer in 2011 and five times faster than the current fastest
supercomputer. This project is heavily backed by the Chinese government and
Ministry of Sciences, viewed as the system needed to aid the China space
exploration…rising the health research to a new degree…start battling the older
population, predict where to build cities, calculate the highway system…as well
as wild projects such as intelligent license plates, real time traffic
calculation to suggest preferred speed to reduce stoppages on the roads…This
project was budgeted with around 100 million dollars for the processing power,
which is a large sum indeed. However, given that Intel is placing almost the
top-end Ivy Bridge-EP processors and top-of-the-line Xeon Phis, the budget
starts to look small…100,000 Xeon E5 should retail for $250 million. Xeon Phi would add additional $250-350
million, bringing a total for just the processing silicon north of half a
billion dollars. This excludes motherboards, memory, storage, enclosure,
cooling and just about anything else…financials aside, the Chinese
supercomputer will be a majestic rig indeed, with over 200,000 pieces of
silicon processing weather simulations, calculating Chinese space projects (manned
missons to the Moon by 2020, Mars by 2025)…”
Trends &
Emerging Tech
49.
Most
anticipated tech products for 2013
http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/digital-crave/most-anticipated-tech-products-2013-011455921.html “…chances are you want to know what cool
things you might be playing with next year. Many of these are based purely on
speculation, but that’s part of the fun…1. Xbox 720…2. PlayStation 4…3. Blackberry
10…4. Microsoft Surface Pro…5. iPad 5…6. Amazon Phone…7. Augmented reality
glasses…8. Fujitsu Lifebook 2013…9. MIT’s folding car – The Hiroko…10.
Smartphones that bend…”
50.
Five big
stories for tech in 2013 http://news.cnet.com/8301-10797_3-57560095-235/five-big-tech-stories-to-watch-for-in-2013/ “…here are some predictions on the big tech
trends we'll be writing about next year:
1. The competition reels in Apple…2. The IPO market heats up again, but
not for consumer tech…3. Things get even more interesting at Microsoft…4.
Facebook will continue to tick us off and we will continue to love it…5.
Patents will still plague us, but solutions will emerge…”
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