Showing posts with label google. Show all posts
Showing posts with label google. Show all posts

Sunday, June 1, 2014

Forget vacuum cleaners, Dyson prototyped a Google Glass-like AR headset

Technobiru :

21 years ago and 5,127 prototypes later, James Dyson launched one of the world’s first mass-produced cyclonic vacuum cleaners. And within 18 months, it became Britain’s biggest-seller.


The road to launch for the bagless miracle had been fraught with obstacles. Having failed to convince major manufacturers to take on his invention, with some concerns around its impact on the lucrative replacement dust bag market, Dyson ended up establishing his own company in Wiltshire, England, in 1993.


Since then, the Dyson brand has become synonymous with innovation. The company has produced the Airblade hand-dryer, and the so-called bladeless fan. Today, Dyson holds more than 4,000 patent applications, covering 500 inventions, and the company says its engineers are working with around 20 of Britain’s universities to “develop a pipeline of technology 25 years long.”


But among all the hullabaloo of fans, dryers and vacuum cleaners, it’s easy to forget that for every blazing success story, there’s probably one or two that failed to make the grade too.


While Dyson has traditionally been petty coy about things it’s working on (or has worked on), it has revealed some of the ‘other’ projects it’s invested time and money in that have, well, “never quite made it to market”. Here’s a quick peek at three of these, and one of them in particular is both surprising and familiar in equal measures.


image002 Forget vacuum cleaners, Dyson prototyped a Google Glass like AR headset Dyson Halo (N066)


Way back in 2001, Dyson started work on an augmented reality (AR) headset that featured a full-color 3D display. The head-mounted wearable could be carried in a user’s pocket, and it also worked as a communication device and PC. It used audio prompts and visual cues to overlay relevant data on your surroundings.


The Dyson Halo (project name N066) was an interesting one for sure, given it’s divergence from the kind of technology Dyson is typically known for. It also perhaps resonates most, given Google’s recent flirtation with wearables via Google Glass.


Though it never moved beyond prototype stage, Dyson has revealed quite a lot of detail about it:



“Two plane mirrors reflected the display of two tiny monitors, mounted by your temples, onto a prism. This created an illusion of a projected, translucent, 10-inch display one meter in front of you. The screen showed a series of applications similar to the smartphones of today.”



A user could see various applications, such as a virtual assistant that could read out emails, and interpret voice commands. Just think about it – “OK Dyson” may have become a ‘thing’, had it worked out a little differently.


Dyson expands:



“The prototype incorporated a solid state gyro. This allowed virtual objects to be pinned to reality when moving one’s head up/down or left/right. This enabled a keyboard to be projected in front of the user so that one could type and write emails on any surface.


The headset could be used in audio-only mode, using voice commands and text-to-speech technology. The purpose of this was so users could drive while using the computer, or use it on the go without the display, giving the effect of having a personal assistant whispering in your ear.”



Interestingly, the headset could actually be detached from the computer, and the device could be plugged into a monitor to be used like an actual desktop PC. There was also a controller which could be worn on the wrist, allowing a user to move a cursor across the display.


But alas, Dyson moved away from the Halo after three years of research and development. Why? So its engineers could focus on its existing core products, and push out into the US.


However, facets of the technology are being kept alive in other research projects, so you never know what may emerge from Dyson labs in the future.


image001 Forget vacuum cleaners, Dyson prototyped a Google Glass like AR headsetDiesel Trap (X007)


In 1997, Dyson began looking at whether the same cyclones that are used into its vacuum cleaners, technology that can filter particles down to 0.5 microns, could be applied to diesel engines. Why? To help combat air pollution, of course.


Dyson explains:



“Initial prototypes focused on cyclones but the required energy consumption was too high. Condensing oil onto the small particles to increase their radius came next.


But the particle size was inconsistent, allowing inaccurate results, so the focus turned to the use of electrostatics and the final system used an electrical discharge to ionize and collect these particles, which were then burned off in an oxygen rich environment.”



With vacuum cleaners, Dyson had become its own manufacturer to circumvent resistance to its technology. But it had no plans to start making cars, so when automobile manufacturers resisted, Dyson pulled the plug. “Diesel engines now use particulate filters which clog, and as a result, drop in performance – the clogging particles are regularly burned off to improve efficiency,” says Dyson.


The Dyson Fuel Cell


For three years, 10 Dyson engineers pooled their expertise to adapt a Dyson digital motor to be used in a fuel cell.


Now, hydrogen fuel cells are used to convert chemical energy from into electrical energy, and they require a significant, constant source of hydrogen and oxygen to run. Electricity is produced so long as these elements are supplied.


With the Dyson Fuel Cell, the aim was to increase performance while reducing size. “The results were impressive,” says Dyson. “The compact, lightweight and highly efficient digital motor V4HF resulted in a 20 percent increase in power density and improved efficiency. The startup time became almost 3 times faster.”


Beyond that, Dyson isn’t entirely clear about what may become of this. However, it has proven its potential, and says it is “exploring other possibilities for the Dyson digital motor.”


So how about that, folks? AR headsets, diesel filters, and fuel cells. Ambitious for sure, and Dyson’s planned $420 million R&D facility expansion could well come up with some pretty exciting stuff, far beyond cleaning your carpets and drying your hands.


Dyson




Friday, May 30, 2014

Google Stars extension for Chrome leaks: Hands on

Technobiru :

We’ve known for a while now that Google is testing a new favoriting service called Google Stars, aimed at helping users save, share, and organize Web content. This is largely due to multiple leaks, detailing features as well as showing off the interface in a video and screenshots. Today, Google+ user Florian Kiersch, who has done the majority of the digging behind the service, has leaked the Google Stars extension for Google Chrome.


google stars ext Google Stars extension for Chrome leaks: Hands on


It appears Kiersch managed to get the Chrome Web Store to show him the extension, which he downloaded and shared with the German site Caschys. That blog in turn uploaded the 369KB file to CloudUp, and by now it can probably be grabbed from all over the Web.


Since it’s not yet available on the Chrome Web Store for most users (Google employees have been dogfooding the Google Stars service for months), it has to be installed manually. Windows users may need to use the Chrome Canary or Chrome Dev channel, but generally the process is a simple as dragging and dropping the file onto the extensions page, which will show this prompt:


google stars install Google Stars extension for Chrome leaks: Hands on


The first thing you’ll notice after installation is that the extension changes the default white star icon (left side) for favorites to one encompassed by a grey box (right side):


google stars icon change Google Stars extension for Chrome leaks: Hands on


Basic functionality remains the same as the current favoriting system in Chrome. Clicking the icon will immediately favorite the page you’re on, and you can click the trash bin icon (as opposed to the current Remove button) to remove it. Instead of “Bookmark added!” however, you’re told that the item has been “Starred.”


google stars new tab Google Stars extension for Chrome leaks: Hands on


When you favorite an actual web page, however, the extension pre-fills the image for that item, its title, note, and URL.


google stars tnw Google Stars extension for Chrome leaks: Hands on


Adding the item to a folder is as simple as clicking “Add to Folder” and then picking one or typing in a new name and hitting “Create.” The trash bin icon turns into an undo icon, but clicking it will only remove it from the folder: the item is still starred unless you click undo a second time.


google stars folder test Google Stars extension for Chrome leaks: Hands on


The folder isn’t the only thing you can change: hovering over the image presents selection arrows that allow you to pick another one, and you can also hover over the item’s name, its note, and URL. If you change the URL, the item will be saved accordingly, but the favorite icon will go back to being white, since you didn’t favorite the page you’re still on.


google stars starred changes Google Stars extension for Chrome leaks: Hands on


Clicking on the blue “View All Star Items” button brings up a familiar dogfooding splash page we’ve seen before (nothing has changed since)


google stars splash1 Google Stars extension for Chrome leaks: Hands on


Clicking through takes you to the new bookmarks page, which is locally hosted at “chrome://bookmarks/#p=/me.” There’s quite a few things on the page worth pointing out:


google stars main Google Stars extension for Chrome leaks: Hands on


From here, you can create folders and organize your saved items however you see fit. Clicking on any of the favorites will take you to the item in question, unless you click in the top-right corner where a checkmark appears:


google stars selected Google Stars extension for Chrome leaks: Hands on


The only options are to move or delete the items in bulk. Editing can be done directly as when you first create a favorite, but you have to hit the Edit button in the top-right corner first or select an item (you can select any item to get into the editing mode, not necessarily the one you want to edit):


google stars editing Google Stars extension for Chrome leaks: Hands on


By default, you’re put into the “All items” section, but you can also navigate to “Folders.” We added the first two bookmarks to our test folder and here is the result:


google stars folders Google Stars extension for Chrome leaks: Hands on


Inside, everything works as expected, though it’s worth adding that folders can get their own descriptions as well. Furthermore, you can set the folder to public and then share the accompanying link with your friends (the URL I was provided with in this case leads to an error, naturally, since the service still isn’t live):


google stars share folder Google Stars extension for Chrome leaks: Hands on


Unless you’re signed into Chrome, you’ll be prompted to do so in order to get personalized filters.


google stars filters Google Stars extension for Chrome leaks: Hands on


You can dismiss this message, but the button will naturally remain. Even if you don’t, though, you can still sort by type (all, images, webpages, videos).


google stars sort Google Stars extension for Chrome leaks: Hands on


Signing in will get you a “No filters at this time” message, though I assume these will show up based on the items you add. More annoying is the fact that once you sign in, there is no sign out button – you’ll have to go to the new tab page to do that.


Lastly, the gear menu gives you an option to see the introductory splash page, send feedback to Google, or export your bookmarks as you can already do in Chrome. It’s also worth noting that the search function is currently broken (it couldn’t find anything I had just added), and some of the leaked features we’ve discussed in our previous posts weren’t available.


Today’s leak adds to the credence that Google Stars will be launching at Google I/O next month. As we’ve noted before, we believe the Chrome functionality will be only the beginning.


See also – Google is testing a feature that lets Chrome users save, share and organize their favorite Web content and Leaked Google Stars video and screenshots show built-in search, filter, folder, security, and sharing features


Top Image Credit: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images




Wednesday, May 14, 2014

Foursquare reveals Swarm will launch on Thursday with plans, neighborhood sharing, and check-in search

Technobiru :

Foursquare is planning to launch its new Swarm app on Thursday. Yet the company is having a bit of trouble keeping its pants on, so to speak, and has been revealing features all of Wednesday (today), including planning, neighborhood sharing, and check-in search.


When Foursquare first revealed Swarm at the start of the month, it said the new app would launch in the “coming weeks.” On Friday, that timeframe changed to “next week,” and now it has changed once again to tomorrow:


Now for the new features. First up, there is plans, which are visible to all your friends in your city. Unlike most event systems, Swarm doesn’t offer you an invite list, and the company says you can leave your suggestion “as open-ended as you want.”


tumblr inline n5kl4bv0Pv1qzxhga Foursquare reveals Swarm will launch on Thursday with plans, neighborhood sharing, and check in search


Foursquare offered some examples that worked with its early group of testers:



  • “Beer?”

  • “Who’s up for drinks after work?”

  • “Anyone want to see Godzilla this weekend?”

  • “Got two extra CHVRCHES tickets for tonight. Anybody want them?”

  • “Weekend recommendations? My parents are in town…”

  • “Birthday drinks Saturday, 9pm, @Ace Bar. Come join!”


Next is neighborhood sharing. Instead of texting all of your friends to see who’s around, this Swarm feature shows friends in your city whether you’re in the neighborhood, and vice versa.


tumblr inline n5kooiAZ821qzxhga Foursquare reveals Swarm will launch on Thursday with plans, neighborhood sharing, and check in search


You can turn the feature on or off by swiping right at the top of any screen. It reminds us of Facebook’s recently launch Nearby Friends feature.


tumblr inline n5kzk1Oirp1qzxhga Foursquare reveals Swarm will launch on Thursday with plans, neighborhood sharing, and check in search


Lastly, Swarm includes what Foursquare says is one of the most requested features “of all time”: history search. Using the feature is simple: just tap over to your profile, search for anything (a city, a person, or a type of place), and you’ll get back a list of all your old check-ins.


Swarm will naturally include other features as well – this is just a taste in advance of the big reveal tomorrow. We’ll keep you posted as soon as the app is out.


See also – Foursquare is splitting its service into two apps: Swarm for check-ins and Foursquare for discovery and Ahead of Swarm’s release next week, Foursquare freezes mayors ‘for the time being’ and drops ousting feature




Tuesday, May 13, 2014

Research project Cider brings iOS apps to Android devices

Technobiru :

Six PhD students at Columbia University‘s Department of Computer Science have developed Cider, an OS compatibility architecture capable of running iOS apps on Android. Rather than using a strict virtual machine, they achieved the feat by running domestic and foreign binaries on the same device.


They leverage binary compatibility techniques such as compile-time code adaptation and diplomatic functions. This means Cider can copy the libraries and frameworks it needs and convince an app’s code that it is running on Apple’s XNU kernel rather than Android’s Linux kernel.


A video of the Cider proof-of-concept shows off their work – a Nexus 7 (2012) with Cider can run iOS apps such as Yelp and Apple iBooks:


The performance is less than stellar, but this is to be expected given the extra cost of diplomatic function calls and a currently incomplete OpenGL ES implementation. Nevertheless, using an OS compatibility layer for native execution of iOS apps on Android is an impressive feat.


cider graphs Research project Cider brings iOS apps to Android devices


Here’s the paper’s abstract:



We present Cider, an operating system compatibility architecture that can run applications built for different mobile ecosystems, iOS or Android, together on the same smartphone or tablet. Cider enhances the domestic operating system, Android, of a device with kernel-managed, per-thread personas to mimic the application binary interface of a foreign operating system, iOS, enabling it to run unmodified foreign binaries.


This is accomplished using a novel combination of binary compatibility techniques including two new mechanisms: compile-time code adaptation, and diplomatic functions. Compile-time code adaptation enables existing unmodified foreign source code to be reused in the domestic kernel, reducing implementation effort required to support multiple binary interfaces for executing domestic and foreign applications.


Diplomatic functions leverage per-thread personas, and allow foreign applications to use domestic libraries to access proprietary software and hardware interfaces. We have built a Cider prototype, and demonstrate that it imposes modest performance overhead and runs unmodified iOS and Android applications together on a Google Nexus tablet running the latest version of Android.



The last part is particularly important: Android apps still function on the device even with the OS abstraction layer. The team says it did not encounter any fundamental limitations regarding its approach that would result in compatibility problems between the two operating systems.


That being said, this is still a prototype, and the implementation is incomplete. The group notes that smartphones and tablets have many features that apps expect to be able to use (GPS, cameras, cell phone radio, Bluetooth, and so on). Cider doesn’t support for these, and iOS apps that require them will fail to function unless they provide a fallback code path (Yelp is given as an example of an app that continues to work as if the device’s location services are turned off). The good news is that the six students plan to continue their research and will keep developing Cider.


You can read the full research project for yourself here: Cider: Native Execution of iOS Apps on Android (PDF). It is authored by Jeremy Andrus, Alexander Van’t Hof, Naser AlDuaij, Christoffer Dall, Nicolas Viennot, and Jason Nieh.


Top Image Credit: Jung Yeon-Je/Getty Images




Sunday, May 11, 2014

The truth about jet lag and how to overcome it

Technobiru :

This article originally appeared on the Crew blog.




In a couple of weeks I’m flying to Europe, so I’ve been thinking about jet lag recently and how to overcome it.


I’ve been overseas a few times before and had a mixture of reactions. Occasionally jet lag knocks me out for a couple of days, whereas other times I barely feel it.


I hoped that by understanding more about why we get jet-lagged and how it affects us, I might find some strategies for adjusting to new time zones more quickly.


What jet lag really is


Essentially, jet lag is a series of symptoms that occur when our internal body clock is disrupted. We all have a built-in body clock. It’s a small group of cells made up of unique ‘body clock’ genes, called the suprachiasmatic nucleus, or SCN. These cells turn on and off and tell other parts of the body what time it is and what to do.



The body clock keeps us in tune with the pattern of day and night. It means we sleep at night, but also affects hunger, mood and blood pressure. 1



One of the main signals that help to regulate our body clocks is light, which helps us to reset our internal clocks each day to match the sun.


Carol Rickard National Institute of General Medical Sciences3 700x433 The truth about jet lag and how to overcome it


According to Dr. Smith L. Johnston, chief of the fatigue management team at NASA, it takes about a day for our bodies to shift just one time zone, so you can imagine why it often takes several days for us to adjust when we travel across several time zones at once.


A research team recently found out how jet lag works in mice, which should translate fairly well to humans, since all mammals run a very similar internal body clock process. Jet lag essentially comes from a process of “brakes” inside the brain that stop the body clock responding to light.


The researchers found a huge number of genes were activated when the mice’s time zone was moved by six hours but a protein called SIK1 then “went round turning them all off again.” This protein acts like a brake—stopping the effects of light on the body clock.


The study found that reducing the function of SIK1 meant the mice could rapidly adjust to the six hour time shift, instead of battling through jet lag.


I didn’t think this made sense initially, but this BBC piece suggests that the brakes may be in place so that our body clocks aren’t affected by artificial light or moonlight, which could easily lead us to have an erratic body clock. Instead, the SIK1 protein aims to preserve the stability of our internal clock, making it a very slow process for us to adjust to a new time zone.


How jet lag affects us


So we know how jet lag works now, but what about the way it affects us? Is it really such a bad thing to deal with jet lag as we slowly adjust to a new time zone?


33474600 e88c263eb3 b 730x547 The truth about jet lag and how to overcome it


Well, if you’re asking that question, you’ve never felt serious jet lag. Common symptoms involve fatigue, confusion and lack of awareness. Imagine those symptoms lasting for days as you grapple with the mental and emotional adjustment to your new surroundings.


As if that’s not bad enough, jet lag has also been shown to seriously disrupt our genes, throwing them off their normal rhythms. It’s also been shown to reduce neuron growth in the brain, decrease learning ability and memory capacity and induce stress.


How to beat jet lag


You probably don’t want to put yourself through the symptoms of jet lag because it’s uncomfortable, if not because it can lead to negative health effects.


There’s really only one way to avoid jet lag symptoms: adjust faster to your new time zone. Here are some of the ways to help your body do this (and some people say a mixture of methods is the best strategy):


Adjust your schedule before you leave


To get started with this, it’s important to understand which way you’re traveling, as most people have a harder time adjusting when they travel east than west. When you travel east-to-west, your body clock needs to be delayed so you wake up and go to bed later. This is a lot easier for us to adjust to than advancing our body clock when we travel west-to-east.


Some studies have shown that attempting to advance or delay your body clock gradually before you travel can make the adjustment faster and easier on your body, reducing the effects of jet lag.


Helen Burgess, director of the biological rhythms research lab at Rush University Medical Center, tried adjusting her schedule prior to a trip from Chicago to Egypt.


For several days before the trip, Burgess went to bed and woke up an hour earlier each day and took a low dose of melatonin in the early afternoons. Each morning she sought out bright light to help her body clock advance, and she said adjusting to the new time zone in Egypt was much easier than it would have been otherwise.


Control your light exposure


Controlling your light exposure seems to be the most in-depth process to avoid jet lag, but it may also be the most effective, according to some researchers. Dr. Smith L. Johnston, for instance, chief of the fatigue management team at NASA who I mentioned earlier, advocates this process as the best way to adjust faster to a new time zone.


Steven W. Lockley, a neuroscientist and consulting member of NASA’s fatigue management team, says that trying to adjust to your new time zone immediately is “exactly the wrong thing” to do. Adjusting to a change of multiple time zones, Lockley says, will only exhaust you if you attempt it right away:



What you need to do is to ease yourself into the new time zone by consciously manipulating your exposure to light.



To help your body clock reset to the new time zone, it’s important to seek out and avoid light at the right times of day. If you’re traveling east, you’ll want to advance your body clock, so seeking morning light and avoiding late afternoon light will help your body clock adjust to your earlier time zone. If you’re traveling west, you’d want to do the opposite.


If it sounds like too much effort to keep track of your light exposure, there’s actually an app for that. Entrain is an iOS app developed by researchers at the University of Michigan to help you track your light exposure. It uses mathematics to recommend light exposure at different times of the day to help you with the process of entrainment—i.e. adjusting to a new time zone.


Take melatonin


I suggest this with a caveat that you should talk to a doctor first. Melatonin is the chemical your brain releases to make you sleepy, and it’s available over the counter, but it’s not regulated by the FDA and isn’t right for everyone.


However, one study found that a dose of 5mg of melatonin in the early evening helped participants to adjust to new time zones faster.


Dr. Lewy, of Oregon Health & Science, recommends taking a small dose at the local bedtime each night until your body clock catches up. If you’re traveling west, he suggests taking melatonin in the second half of the night instead.


Stay on home time


If your trip is short and you’re not traveling over more than three time zones, you could be better off not adjusting at all. Jim Waterhouse, a professor of biological rhythms at Liverpool John Moores University often recommends staying on the same schedule you had at home rather than trying to adjust to local time if you’re not there for long


Three days or less, for instance, is barely enough time to adjust, so it may not be worth the effort. Waterhouse suggests keeping your watch set to the time at home and acting accordingly during your trip.


Lucky for me, I’m traveling from Australia, which means I get to go west and save the tricky west-to-east adjustment for when I travel back home. I also tend to go to bed early so moving my bedtime back a little each night shouldn’t be too much of an ask.


I’m looking forward to experimenting with avoiding and experiencing natural light at the right times to see if I can adjust any faster than usual. If I can beat my first ever jet lag experience of sleeping for 17 hours straight, I think I’ll be happy.




Thursday, May 8, 2014

Facebook launches Audience Insights, a marketing tool offering trends around current and potential customers

Technobiru :

Facebook today launched a new tool for marketers called Facebook Audience Insights, available within Ads Manager for all US marketers today and rolling out globally “in the coming months.” As its name implies, the tool lets advertisers gather customer insights about their target audiences.


The idea is to give marketers trends about their current or potential customers across Facebook, allowing them to tailor their marketing messages based on what the tool surfaces. The tool gives insights about users in the following categories:



  • Demographics: Age and gender, lifestyle, education, relationship status, job role and household size.

  • Page Likes: The top Pages people like in different categories, like women’s apparel or sports.

  • Location and Language: Where people live and the languages they speak.

  • Facebook Usage: How frequently people in the target audience log in to Facebook and using which devices.

  • Purchase Activity: Past purchase behavior and methods (i.e. in-store, online).


This information can be viewed for three different segments of people: the general Facebook audience, people connected to a particular Page or event, and a marketer’s current customers (created using Custom Audiences). Facebook promises these insights are surfaced in a way that ensures that private information about people is secure.


This might sound to some like Page Insights, but Facebook explains Audience Insights is different as it looks at trends across the social network. Page Insights looks at interactions on a given Page (likes, comments, shares, and so on).


10173508 1391502087741222 754726790 n 520x381 Facebook launches Audience Insights, a marketing tool offering trends around current and potential customers


Facebook offers an example of how the tool can be used: a women’s luxury fashion brand wants to raise awareness for the products it sells in-store. A marketer can use Audience Insights to find how many people on Facebook live near these stores, as well as their interests, their past purchase behavior, and how they tend to shop (online vs. offline).


The tool can provide all this in an aggregate and anonymous manner. Here is how the company explains its system:



We built Audience Insights with privacy in mind. It surfaces aggregated information people already express on Facebook, along with information from trusted third-party partners — like Axciom — through our partner categories targeting. Like Page Insights, Audience Insights shows information about groups of people without the need to share which individual people are in those groups.



That should excite advertisers, but it may worry some users who believe Facebook may slip up and reveal their personal information.


See also – Facebook announces tools to let advertisers target people who visited their site or used their mobile app and Facebook redesigns its ad buying and reporting tools to help businesses meet ‘objectives’


Top Image Credit: Manjunath Kiran/Getty Images




Canalys: PC shipments up 5% in Q1 2014, Apple still first as tablets account for 41% and laptops take 38%

Technobiru :

In Q1 2014, the worldwide PC market experienced just 5 percent growth year-over-year to 123.7 million units, if you take into consideration desktops, laptops, and tablets. Tablet shipments grew a notably smaller 21 percent year-over-year to 50.8 million units, but still accounted for 41 percent of the market, while laptops had 38 percent. Meanwhile, the worldwide decline in laptops slowed to 7 percent and desktops remained flat.


The latest estimates come from Canalys, an independent analyst firm which noted commercial shipments worldwide were lifted by the end of support for Windows XP, giving both laptops and desktops a much-needed boost. OEMs that sell Windows devices aside, however, Apple still remained its lead:


canalys q1 2014 pcs 520x478 Canalys: PC shipments up 5% in Q1 2014, Apple still first as tablets account for 41% and laptops take 38%


Apple managed to maintain its lead despite iPad shipments in Q1 2014 (80 percent of its total PC shipments) falling 16 percent year-over-year to 16.4 million units. Apple’s iPad shipments dropped by 40 percent in the US, offset somewhat by 20 percent growth in China, the company’s second largest market. Nevertheless, the company’s share of the overall market fell both sequentially and year-over-year from 20 percent to 17 percent.


“The fall in iPad shipments in Q1 was the sharpest ever,’ Canalys Senior Analyst Tim Coulling said in a statement. “Apple took action during the quarter to run down its iPad inventory, a smart move as tablet stock in the channel rose due to strong seasonal shipments in the previous quarter. Longer term, we do not believe Apple’s Q1 performance points to a decline in the tablet category, despite growing pressure from larger-screen smart phones. Consumers, and increasingly businesses, are continuing to adapt, with tablets acting as disruptors and finding their place as desktop and notebook replacements.”


Lenovo fared better, increasing its PC market share from 10 percent to 12 percent with 15.0 million units shipped. The Chinese company saw solid annual growth in all PC categories, managing to grab first, second, and third in the laptop, desktop, and tablet markets, respectively.


“Lenovo was quick to move with new form factors and its Yoga line now dominates the global convertible notebook market,” Canalys Analyst James Wang said in a statement. “In addition, it has diversified its tablet portfolio and has product SKUs in all key market segments. Unlike Apple, with its ‘one size fits all’ tablet strategy, Lenovo and others are free to tailor tablets to specific market segments. The tablet form factor is well liked by both young and old consumers; product customization can be beneficial in both cases.”


Meanwhile, Samsung’s PC shipments suffered and it fell to fourth place. This allowed HP to regain third place, with shipments of 12.9 million units, giving it an 11 percent share of the PC market.


Top Image Credit: Thinkstock




Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Twitter CEO Dick Costolo: A ‘whisper mode’ would encourage friends to privately discuss public conversations

Technobiru :

Twitter is looking to encourage more private discussions on its service. CEO Dick Costolo would like to have a “whisper mode” that allows users to take public conversations and discuss them solely with friends, according to a video interview with Bloomberg.


While the social network is public-first, meaning content is shared with everyone by default (unlike Facebook, where friends are the default), it does have a direct message (DM) feature for one-on-one chats. This potential new feature isn’t likely to replace that, but rather allow users to pick a tweet or set of tweets and use them as a jumping-off point to start a DM conversation with one of their followers.


Interviewer Emily Chang got the CEO talking by asking about messaging apps, and noting that Costolo has previous discussed enhancing the ability to move between public and private conversations. He then explained his vision as follows (at 8:28):



So when I talk about direct messaging within the Twitter application and the work we’ll do improve it, what I’m talking about is there are frequently public conversations on Twitter, and Twitter is entirely public conversation. It’s real time, what’s happening right now, public and conversational.


There are frequently public conversations that you would like to grab hold of and take into whisper mode with a friend and say, hey, this thing has happened. Look what these people are talking about. What do you think about this, with a friend or more than one friend. So being able to move fluidly between that public conversation and the private conversation is something we’ll make simpler.



What’s also interesting is that Costolo says “more than one friend.” While DMs have long supported one-to-one conversations, there has been much speculation that Twitter will soon enable group chats.


Chang also asked how much product experimentation Twitter is doing on a daily basis? Here’s Costolo’s answer (at 4:50):



In our latest iOS or Android apps, for example, there are well over 100 experiments running in each of those apps. So hundreds.


And the beauty of that framework that we’ve worked on over the past 18, 24 months now is the speed with which it allows to run more and more experiments and quickly get data from those experiments that we can compare to a control group and understand whether the experiment’s working or not. So the faster that we can move on those kinds of things, the faster we can execute change in the products in service to user growth



Depending on how far along in development this “whisper mode” is, some Twitter users may already be seeing it in their app. Again, it probably won’t be called that, but we wouldn’t be surprised if such a feature shows up on mobile first, and only to a select number of users.


See also – TwitsApp: The case for a standalone Twitter Direct Message app and This is why Twitter is worried about Line and other messaging apps stealing its ad money


Top Image Credit: Andrew Burton / Getty Images




Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Google denies alleged leak claiming AdSense is stealing money from publishers, calls it ‘complete fiction’

Technobiru :

Earlier today, a huge allegation was made regarding AdSense and Google’s practices surrounding the program: “a former Google employee” claimed the company was and still is stealing money from publishers. Google has denied the whole posting, which has resulted in a heated discussion on Hacker News.


For those who don’t know, Google AdSense allows publishers in the Google Network of content sites to serve targeted and automatic text, image, video, or interactive media advertisements. These ads are administered, sorted, and maintained by Google, generating revenue on either a per-click or per-impression basis.


Google works with more than 2 million publishers, over a million of which have been using the program for at least five years. The company paid more than $9 billion to its publisher partners last year. The company is investigating the source of this alleged leak and will likely follow up based on what it finds.



I am a former Google employee and I am writing this to leak information to the public of what I

witnessed and took part in while being an employee. My position was to deal with AdSense accounts,

more specifically the accounts of publishers (not advertisers). I was employed at Google for a period of

several years in this capacity.


Having signed many documents such as NDA’s and non-competes, there are many repercussions for me,

especially in the form of legal retribution from Google. I have carefully planned this leak to coincide with

certain factors in Google such as waiting for the appropriate employee turn around so that my identity

could not be discovered.


To sum it up for everyone, I took part in what I (and many others) would consider theft of money from

the publishers by Google, and from direct orders of management. There were many AdSense employees

involved, and it spanned many years, and I hear it still is happening today except on a much wider scale.

No one on the outside knows it, if they did, the FBI and possibly IRS would immediately launch an

investigation, because what they are doing is so inherently illegal and they are flying completely under

the radar.


It began in 2009. Everything was perfectly fine prior to 2009, and in fact it couldn’t be more perfect from

an AdSense employees perspective, but something changed.


Google Bans and Ban Criteria


Before December 2012:


In the first quarter of 2009 there was a “sit-down” from the AdSense division higher ups to talk about

new emerging issues and the role we (the employees in the AdSense division needed to play. It was a

very long meeting, and it was very detailed and intense. What it boiled down to was that Google had

suffered some very serious losses in the financial department several months earlier. They kept saying

how we “needed to tighten the belts” and they didn’t want it to come from Google employees pockets.

So they were going to (in their words) “carry out extreme quality control on AdSense publishers”. When

one of my fellow co-workers asked what they meant by that. Their response was that AdSense itself

hands out too many checks each month to publishers, and that the checks were too large and that

needed to end right away. Many of the employees were not pleased about this (like myself). But they

were successful in scaring the rest into thinking it would be their jobs and their money that would be on

the line if they didn’t participate. The meeting left many confused as to how this was going to happen.

What did they mean by extreme quality control? A few other smaller meetings occur with certain key

people in the AdSense division that furthered the idea and procedure they planned on implementing.

There were lots of rumors and quiet talking amongst the employees, there was lots of speculations,

some came true and some didn’t. But the word was that they were planning to cut off a large portion of

publisher’s payments.


After that point there was a running gag amongst fellow co-workers where we would walk by each other

and whisper “Don’t be evil, pft!” and roll our eyes.


What happened afterwards became much worse. Their “quality control” came into full effect. Managers

pushed for wide scale account bans, and the first big batch of bans happened in March of 2009. The

main reason, the publishers made too much money. But something quite devious happened. We were

told to begin banning accounts that were close to their payout period (which is why account bans never

occur immediately after a payout). The purpose was to get that money owed to publishers back to

Google AdSense, while having already served up the ads to the public.


This way the advertiser’s couldn’t claim we did not do our part in delivering their ads and ask for money

back. So in a sense, we had thousands upon thousands of publishers deliver ads we knew they were

never going to get paid for.


Google reaped both sides of the coin, got money from the advertisers, used the publishers, and didn’t

have to pay them a single penny. We were told to go and look into the publishers accounts, and if any

publisher had accumulated earnings exceeding $5000 and was near a payout or in the process of a

payout, we were to ban the account right away and reverse the earnings back. They kept saying it was

needed for the company, and that most of these publishers were ripping Google off anyways, and that

their gravy train needed to end. Many employees were not happy about this. A few resigned over it.

I did not. I stayed because I had a family to support, and secondly I wanted to see how far they would

go.


From 2009 to 2012 there were many more big batches of bans. The biggest of all the banning sessions

occurred in April of 2012. The AdSense division had enormous pressure from the company to make up

for financial losses, and for Google’s lack of reaching certain internal financial goals for the quarter prior.

So the push was on. The employees felt really uneasy about the whole thing, but we were threatened

with job losses if we didn’t enforce the company’s wishes. Those who voiced concerned or issue were

basically ridiculed with “not having the company’s best interest in mind” and not being “team players”.

Morale in the division was at an all-time low. The mood of the whole place changed quite rapidly. It no

longer was a fun place to work.


The bans of April 2012 came fast and furious. Absolutely none of them were investigated, nor were they

justified in any way. We were told to get rid of as many of the accounts with the largest

checks/payouts/earnings waiting to happen. No reason, just do it, and don’t question it. It was heart

wrenching seeing all that money people had earned all get stolen from them. And that’s what I saw it as,

it was a robbery of the AdSense publishers. Many launched appeals, complaints, but it was futile

because absolutely no one actually took the time to review the appeals or complaints. Most were simply

erased without even being opened, the rest were deposited into the database, never to be touched

again.


Several publishers launched legal actions which were settled, but Google had come up with a new policy

to deal with situations such as that because it was perceived as a serious problem to be avoided.

So they came up with a new policy.


After December 2012: The New Policy


The new policy; “shelter the possible problem makers, and fuck the rest” (those words were actually

said by a Google AdSense exec) when he spoke about the new procedure and policy for “Account

Quality Control”.


The new policy was officially called AdSense Quality Control Color Codes (commonly called AQ3C by

employees). What it basically was a categorization of publisher accounts. Those publisher’s that could

do the most damage by having their account banned were placed in a VIP group that was to be left

alone. The rest of the publishers would be placed into other groupings accordingly.

The new AQ3C also implemented “quality control” quotas for the account auditors, so if you didn’t meet

the “quality control” target (aka account bans) you would be called in for a performance review.

There were four “groups” publishers could fall into if they reached certain milestones.


They were:


Red Group: Urgent Attention Required

Any AdSense account that reaches the $10,000/month mark is immediately flagged (unless they are part

of the Green Group).

- In the beginning there were many in this category, and most were seen as problematic and were seen

as abusing the system by Google. So every effort was taken to bring their numbers down.

- They are placed in what employees termed “The Eagle Eye”, where the “AdSense Eagle Eye Team”

would actively and constantly audit their accounts and look for any absolute reason for a ban. Even if

the reason was far-fetched, or unsubstantiated, and unprovable, the ban would occur. The “Eagle Eye

Team” referred to a group of internal account auditors whose main role was to constantly monitor

publisher’s accounts and sites.

- A reason has to be internally attached to the account ban. The problem was that notifying the

publisher for the reason is not a requirement, even if the publisher asks. The exception: The exact

reason must be provided if a legal representative contacts Google on behalf of the account holder.

- But again, if a ban is to occur, it must occur as close to a payout period as possible with the most

amount of money accrued/earned.


Yellow Group: Serious Attention Required

Any AdSense account that reaches the $5,000/month mark is flagged for review (unless they are part of

the Green Group).

- All of the publisher’s site(s)/account will be placed in queue for an audit.

- Most of the time the queue is quite full so most are delayed their audit in a timely fashion.

- The second highest amount of bans occur at this level.

- A reason has to be internally attached to the account ban. Notifiying the publisher for the reason is not

a requirement, even if the publisher asks. The exception: The exact reason must be provided if a legal

representative contacts Google on behalf of the account holder.

- But again, if a ban is to occur, it must occur as close to a payout period as possible with the most

amount of money accrued/earned.


Blue Group: Moderate Attention Required

Any AdSense account that reaches the $1,000/month mark is flagged for possible review (unless they

are part of the Green Group).

- Only the main site and account will be place in queue for what is called a quick audit.

- Most bans that occur happen at this level. Main reason is that a reason doesn’t have to be attached to

the ban, so the employees use these bans to fill their monthly quotas. So many are simply a random pick

and click.

- A reason does not have to be internally attached to the account ban. Notifying the publisher for the

reason is not a requirement, even if the publisher asks.

- But again, if a ban is to occur, it must occur as close to a payout period as possible with the most

amount of money accrued.


Green Group: VIP Status (what employees refer to as the “untouchables”)

Any AdSense account associated with an incorporated entity or individual that can inflict serious

damage onto Google by negative media information, rallying large amounts of anti-AdSense support, or

cause mass loss of AdSense publisher support.

- Google employees wanting to use AdSense on their websites were automatically placed in the Green

group. So the database contained many Google insiders and their family members. If you work or

worked for Google and were placed in the category, you stayed in it, even if you left Google. So it

included many former employees. Employees simply had to submit a form with site specific details and

their account info.

- Sites in the Green Group were basically given “carte blanche” to do anything they wanted, even if they

flagrantly went against the AdSense TOS and Policies. That is why you will encounter sites with AdSense,

but yet have and do things completely against AdSense rules.

- Extra care is taken not to interrupt or disrupt these accounts.

- If an employee makes a mistake with a Green Level account they can lose their job. Since it seen as

very grievous mistake.


New Policy 2012 Part 2:


Internal changes to the policy were constant. They wanted to make it more efficient and streamlined.

They saw its current process as having too much human involvement and oversight. They wanted it

more automated and less involved.


So the other part of the new policy change was to incorporate other Google services into assisting the

“quality control” program. What they came up with will anger many users when they find out. It

involved skewing data in Google Analytics. They decided it was a good idea to alter the statistical data

shown for websites. It first began with just altering data reports for Analytics account holders that also

had an AdSense account, but they ran into too many issues and decided it would be simpler just to skew

the report data across the board to remain consistent and implement features globally.

So what this means is that the statistical data for a website using Google Analytics is not even close to

being accurate. The numbers are incredibly deflated. The reasoning behind their decision is that if an

individual links their AdSense account and their Analytics account, the Analytics account can be used to

deflate the earnings automatically without any human intervention. They discovered that if an individual

had an AdSense account then they were also likely to use Google Analytics. So Google used it to their

advantage.


This led to many publishers to actively display ads, without earning any money at all (even to this day).

Even if their actual website traffic was high, and had high click-throughs the data would be automatically

skewed in favor of Google, and at a total loss of publishers. This successfully made it almost impossible

for anyone to earn amounts even remotely close what individuals with similar sites were earning prior

to 2012, and most definitely nowhere near pre-2009 earnings.

Other policy changes also included how to deal with appeals, which still to this day, the large majority

are completely ignored, and why you will rarely get an actual answer as to why your account was

banned and absolutely no way to resolve it.


—-


The BIG Problem (which Google is aware of)

There is an enormous problem that existed for a long time in Google’s AdSense accounts. Many of the

upper management are aware of this problem but do not want to acknowledge or attempt to come up

with a solution to the problem.


It is regarding false clicks on ads. Many accounts get banned for “invalid clicks” on ads. In the past this

was caused by a publisher trying to self inflate click-throughs by clicking on the ads featured on their

website. The servers automatically detect self-clicking with comparison to IP addresses and other such

information, and the persons account would get banned for invalid clicking.


But there was something forming under the surface. A competitor or malicious person would actively go

to their competitor’s website(s) or pick a random website running AdSense and begin multiple-clicking

and overclicking ads, which they would do over and over again. Of course this would trigger an invalid

clicking related ban, mainly because it could not be proven if the publisher was actually behind the

clicking. This was internally referred to as “Click-Bombing”. Many innocent publishers would get caught

up in bans for invalid clicks which they were not involved in and were never told about.


This issue has been in the awareness of Google for a very long time but nothing was done to rectify the

issue and probably never will be. Thus if someone wants to ruin a Google AdSense publishers account,

all you would have to do is go to their website, and start click-bombing their Google Ads over and over

again, it will lead the servers to detect invalid clicks and poof, they get banned. The publisher would be

completely innocent and unaware of the occurrence but be blamed for it anyways.


—-


Their BIG Fear

The biggest fear that Google has about these AdSense procedures and policies is that it will be publicly

discovered by their former publishers who were banned, and that those publishers unite together and

launch an class-action lawsuit.


They also fear those whose primary monthly earnings are from AdSense, because in many countries if a

person claims the monthly amount to their tax agency and they state the monthly amount and that they

are earning money from Google on a monthly basis, in certain nations technically Google can be seen as

an employer. Thus, an employer who withholds payment of earnings, can be heavily fined by

government bodies dealing with labor and employment. And if these government bodies dealing with

labor and employment decide to go after Google, then it would get very ugly, very quickly ….. that is on

top of a class-action lawsuit.



Monday, April 21, 2014

Google Glass update to add SMS for iPhone and Calendar Glassware later this week

Technobiru :

Google today announced the latest update to its Glass project, adding two new features for those who have shelled out $1,500 for the wearable device. The new additions include SMS for iPhone and Calendar Glassware.


The former means iOS users can now finally receive texts from their friends on Glass, just like their Android counterparts have been able to for months. To take advantage, head to your iPhone’s Bluetooth settings and turn on “Show Notifications” for your paired Glass.


When you receive a new text message, it will appear as a notification on Glass. Unfortunately, Google says you won’t be able to reply from Glass “due to some limitations with iOS.”


The latter is meanwhile located on the Glassware tab in MyGlass. Once you turn on Calendar Glassware, it will show your agenda to the left of the home screen. Tapping a calendar card from your timeline will let you change the title, time, location, and RSVP, as well as delete the event or dismiss it from your timeline.


Just last week, Google announced a major update to Glass, upgrading the device to Android 4.4 KitKat. Unfortunately, the update also removed a key feature: video calls.


In today’s announcement, the company explained that updates will now be coming more frequently: “Didn’t expect to see us back so soon, did you? Now that we’ve finished upgrading your Glass software to Android KitKat, we plan to bring you faster updates.”


Google used to update Glass on a monthly basis, but at the start of 2014 the frequency took a hit as the company focused on the KitKat release. Unfortunately, even with the faster schedule, the company wouldn’t say when it plans to bring back video calls.


See also – How Google Glass can evolve as a tool for journalists and Google letting Glass Explorers invite a friend to join the program


Top Image Credit: Kimihiro Hoshino/Getty Images




Friday, April 18, 2014

Facebook’s Paper for iOS updated with birthdays, events, photo comments, group updates, and more

Technobiru :

Facebook today released the first major update to its Paper for iOS app, adding a slew of new features just 10 weeks after the initial launch. You can download the new version now directly from Apple’s App Store.


851588 663819913691947 1233924414 n Facebooks Paper for iOS updated with birthdays, events, photo comments, group updates, and more


First up, Facebook has added notifications for birthdays and events. Just like on Facebook, tap the globe icon to stay posted.


Next, photo comments are exactly what you’d expect: sometimes words just aren’t enough to explain what you want to say. To add a photo comment, tap the camera next to the comments field, snap a picture, and post a photo as your reply.


851551 1408997122700154 1821975676 n Facebooks Paper for iOS updated with birthdays, events, photo comments, group updates, and more


While groups have been in Paper since day one, Facebook has now added unread counts so you can easily see which groups have new posts. To get to your groups, swipe down on any section cover to open the main menu and tap the three-line hamburger icon to the right of the Search field.


In addition to the original 50, Paper has also gained nine new article covers to help spot articles from Bloomberg News, Mashable, FT, kottke, Fox News, Popular Science, The Hollywood Reporter, Vanity Fair, and Hacker News. Looks like we need to get them to add TNW next!


Other updates include basic accessibility support, an arrow indicator that tells you when there are new stories in other sections, and the usual bug fixes to make the app “faster and more reliable.”


Here’s the full Paper version 1.1 for iOS changelog:



  • Birthdays and events: Never miss a chance to celebrate! Just tap the notifications globe and scroll down to see important dates ahead.

  • Photo comments: When words aren’t enough, now you can add photos to comments to show how you feel.

  • Group updates: Don’t miss posts from your favorite groups. Swipe down to open the Main Menu. Tap the More Options icon to the right of the Search box. When you see your groups, check the new unread counts to catch up on the posts you’ve missed.

  • New story buttons: To keep up with the latest stories in a section in fullscreen view, or to catch the newest stories in the next section, tap the new story arrows when they appear.

  • More article covers: 9 new article covers join our collection, making easier to spot your favorite sources on Paper. Keep an eye out for Fox News, Bloomberg News, Mashable, FT, kottke, Popular Science, The Hollywood Reporter, Vanity Fair and Hacker News.

  • Basic accessibility: All of your sections now support basic accessibility features, and we’re working to extend accessibility throughout the app.


Facebook also took the oportunity to share that Paper users explore an average of 80 stories each day across five to six sections. Facebook is the most popular section, followed by Headlines, Tech, Ideas, LOL, and Pop Life. Unfortunately, there’s still no word as to when the app will be available outside of the US, nor when it will launch on Android.


Top Image Credit: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images




Simple is as simple does: The downsides of avoiding complexity

Technobiru :

Evan Hanlon is the Director of Audience Strategy at Xaxis.




There’s a certain type of person I’ve learned not to trust: someone who insists that they can make things simple. I recognize how problematic that is for me, a person whose job it is to in fact make things simple. But I suppose it’s because I dive into what lurks behind the design studio slides and know just how deep the rabbit hole goes.


It’s ironic that almost every eye-roll inducing invocation of the phrase “big data” is accompanied by a sales pitch for a tool that makes it easy. Data is wielded as a magic wand, a cure-all for the new information age, wedged firmly between dotcom bubble one and dotcom bubble two.


It’s then boxed up like so many other solutions, placed on a well-manicured shelf, and then promptly flies off it and into the hands of brand marketers, their agencies, and dozens of third parties in between.


The main flaw in this system, however, is the reductio ad absurdum that something as chaotic, unwieldy, and often times unstructured as large, non-intuitive data can be turned into something easy. It can’t. But that’s not necessarily a bad thing.


There’s no simple solution for winning at chess. However, by embracing the complexity that comes with today’s intricate systems that knit together the programmatic audience buying landscape, we actually arm ourselves with more tools.


Where complex data matter


data flow 520x272 Simple is as simple does: The downsides of avoiding complexity


Take predictive modeling. Instead of targeting just one or two obvious signals (think buying a pre-built segment of ice cream intenders when you’re looking for people who want ice cream) a competent audience buyer looks at hundreds or thousands of non-intuitive, anonymous inputs to create models that are scored against a certain event (in this case, ice cream purchases).


Gym membership status, car ownership, the last time someone searched for flights, level of social media sharing, propensity to buy designer shoes, enthusiasm for team sports; these are all data points that at face value have no relation to ice cream. But with high enough volume, and when considered in the right combination, these things become statistically important.


The face value of purchase and intent signals is only the beginning; it’s the complex qualifications on the rest of the world that provide the power.


Elements of complexity


So complexity, or more specifically, the ability to successfully harness complexity in the service of brand goals, is good. For marketers in the programmatic environment the question then becomes whether there are simple and effective ways to evaluate these complex systems.


As a starting point for evaluating that shiny black box, we’ve assembled a short checklist of elements to consider.


Scale & Speed


Programmatic is based around the law of large numbers. The more information and the more information sources immediately on hand allow for better precision when it comes to identifying the best audiences for any particular marketing message.


Programmatic is a highly probabilistic endeavor. Bumping up the number of datasets you’re able to crunch in context with one another yields exponential improvements and allows ads to be delivered more quickly and with more confidence.


Science & Engineering


Simply throwing a bunch of data into a bucket and stirring, doesn’t automatically equal quality outcomes. Rather, the results will only be as good as the system’s ability to make sense of all the data feeding into it.


The best systems have able teams of data scientists and engineers steering the ship and are constantly self-improving. The more decisions that are made, the more results we have, which, in turn, leads to clearer insight and ever improving decision making going forward.


Open Architecture & Sequential Capabilities


Nothing exists in a vacuum, least of all digital media. As a result, you need to be able to ingest, integrate, and activate against data flows from every available source, and more.


For instance, you know how your mobile ads perform in context to display, online video, etc. That allows brands to create ad sequences to relevant audiences at scale that deliver better performance than single channel ads evaluated independently of the rest of the digital spend.


If you can’t create sequential buys or measure various ad channels in context, you’re getting a blinkered view of total performance and, consequently, are similarly limited in overall campaign effectiveness. And nothing is more important today than the biggest picture possible.


156165 human super computer original1 Simple is as simple does: The downsides of avoiding complexity


The last factor of a truly killer programmatic platform, however, is the human part of the equation. All the processing power in the world means little without a capable human hand steering the ship.


Even though technology extends our capacity to understand complex data sets, we should never forget that people are not data points. The course of history has shown that irrationality is one of our specialties, which means there’s no one better than a human to think like a human.


So the next time you run across someone bearing tidings of simplicity, should you run the other way? Absolutely not – after all it might be me. Instead, go in with a clear understanding that simple simply means the shiny logo capping what should in fact be a complex system.


Big data is inherently intricate. While “making it easy” is, of course, the goal of all the players in the space – when selling to non-players – the better your understanding of what exactly is being made easy, the more confidence you can have that your “simple” solution is amply delivering on its big data promise.




Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Microsoft now lets Outlook.com users import from IMAP-enabled email providers, including Yahoo Mail

Technobiru :

Microsoft today announced Outlook.com users can now import email from IMAP-enabled email providers, including Yahoo Mail. The addition is part of the service’s import wizard, which lets you keep your old email addresses, but manage them all from Outlook.com.


To import your Yahoo Mail into Outlook.com, navigate to Options and then click “Import email accounts.” Microsoft has added a specific option for Yahoo, so select it, enter your Yahoo email address, your password, and then click Import.


Yahoo Blog 1 Microsoft now lets Outlook.com users import from IMAP enabled email providers, including Yahoo Mail


Doing this will set up your Yahoo email address as a “send from” account, meaning you can use Outlook.com to send emails from your Yahoo address. You can also connect your Yahoo account to your Microsoft account so your Yahoo contacts appear in Outlook.com.


Importing from other IMAP-enabled email providers works the same way, except after you navigate to Options and click “Import email accounts,” you have to select “Other email provider.” Unfortunately, Microsoft won’t say which IMAP-enabled email providers are supported, aside from the “most popular” ones.


Yahoo Blog 2 Microsoft now lets Outlook.com users import from IMAP enabled email providers, including Yahoo Mail


The good news is that all this importing happens in the background, meaning you can continue using Outlook.com or even sign out during the process. Importing your mail will not affect your old account: you can keep using it as before.


Once the import is complete, you’ll get an email letting you know. Microsoft wouldn’t give an import time estimate, as it will naturally vary depending on how many emails you’re moving over.


Microsoft first added the import tool to Outlook.com with support for Gmail back in December 2013. With Yahoo Mail on board now, the company finally has support for its two biggest competitors. Whether users will actually import their email, however, is another story.


See also – Microsoft launches Skype for Outlook.com worldwide, adds Safari for Mac support and HD video calling for PCs and Microsoft apologizes for three-day Outlook.com outage, says caching issue was to blame


Top Image Credit: Robert Scoble




Microsoft rolls out personalized cards on Bing.com to help users track news, weather, flights, and stocks

Technobiru :

Microsoft today launched a new personalized cards feature on Bing.com that are meant to help you “keep track of things that matter to you.” So far, the site offers cards for news, weather, flights, and stocks tailored specifically to you.


Using the feature will naturally require that you sign in to your Microsoft account, and set up your interests to let Bing know what it should track. Then, when it’s appropriate Microsoft says, Bing will display a relevant card, such as when your stock changes or flight is delayed.


Image 2 07F242CC Microsoft rolls out personalized cards on Bing.com to help users track news, weather, flights, and stocks


If this sounds like Google Now on mobile, that’s because it pretty much is. When Microsoft unveiled Windows Phone 8.1 with Cortana two weeks ago, the company emphasized that the personal digital assistant was largely powered by Bing.


In fact, Microsoft notes that “As long as you’re signed in, Bing will remember your interests and notify you, as appropriate, across a range of Bing-powered Microsoft services.” These include Cortana, but also the various Bing-branded apps for Windows and Windows Phone.


The difference with today’s launch is that Microsoft is choosing to bring its version of the personalized cards to a website (Bing.com) rather than a browser (like Internet Explorer). Last month, Google Now arrived in Chrome for Windows and Mac.


This is an interesting strategy. While Google has been moving away from a personalized homepage for many years now, culminating in the death of iGoogle in in November 2013, Microsoft has been pulling the other way with various integrations and partnerships. That’s not a bad move: Microsoft has to make sure it’s offering a significantly unique experience compared to Google so it can stay competitive.


See also – Microsoft launches Bing image match feature more than 30 months after Google adds search by image option and Bing for Android and iOS redesigned with option to set homepage image on lockscreen, sync bookmarks and images


Top Image Credit: AFP/Getty Images




Monday, April 14, 2014

Elgato Thunderbolt Dock review: This sleek station will supercharge your laptop-powered workspace

Technobiru :

As laptops become increasingly powerful, more people are incorporating them into their home or office workspace. With an external monitor, anyone can create a pseudo-desktop environment and enjoy the benefits associated with a larger display.


If you’ve built a setup like this before, you’ll no doubt be aware of its shortcomings. When you need to take your notebook on the road, all of its ports need to be liberated. It’s a time-consuming, clumsy process and often leads to numerous cables falling down the back of your desk.


Elgato’s Thunderbolt Dock acts an intermediary for your MacBoook or Ultrabook, offering a wealth of ports to keep your workspace tidy. All of your cables and external hardware are attached to the dock, while your laptop is connected with a single Thunderbolt cable. When you need to head out, that single lead should be simple to detach, leaving the rest of your setup undisturbed. Sublime in theory, but what about in practise?


Unobtrusive


P1050268 730x547 Elgato Thunderbolt Dock review: This sleek station will supercharge your laptop powered workspace


Elgato’s Thunderbolt Dock is a small, plastic box wrapped in a smooth aluminium shell. The material and finish are almost identical to the casing found on the MacBook Air and Pro; no accident, given these are the most common Thunderbolt-compatible devices available at the moment.


It’s an unassuming piece of hardware, which Elgato has clearly engineered to quietly fade into the background. While its rounded edges and considered design give it a premium feel, the Thunderbolt Dock is unlikely to attract the attention of your colleagues, family or housemates. Once you’ve filled the ports and pushed it to the back of your desk, you’ll probably forget it’s even there.


It’s lightweight too. At 260 grams the Thunderbolt Dock is perfect for quickly stowing in a backpack or satchel, while retaining enough heft to not be pulled around by anything on your desk. The device is 7-inches long and a little over 3-inches wide, which is just small enough to make it feel unobtrusive too.


Jacking in


P1050331 730x547 Elgato Thunderbolt Dock review: This sleek station will supercharge your laptop powered workspace


All of the ports work without a hitch. Elgato gives you a free Thunderbolt cable in the box, so within seconds you can have a MacBook or Ultrabook properly connected. External displays can run through the single HDMI port on the back, with support for up to 2560×1600 resolution.


On the rear, you’ll find a Gigabit Ethernet port, two USB 3.0 ports and another Thunderbolt port which – just like your notebook would normally – means there’s always one free for supported peripherals and displays.


Elgato’s Thunderbolt Dock requires its own power supply and, as a consequence, adds yet another cable to what could be a hive of wires at the back of the desk. Nevertheless, with a few cable ties you can reclaim some order and it’s certainly tidier than having them all connected to your laptop.


Given its independent power source, the USB 3.0 ports can also be used to charge other devices, including smartphones and tablets. If you already have a kickstand or makeshift charging cradle lying around for some of these, Elgato’s Thunderbolt Dock is a handy conduit to have resting on your desk.


The ports on the rear-side are for the fundamentals of your workspace and, as a result, you’ll rarely need to reach around and adjust them. On the front, meanwhile, is an additional USB 3.0 port, a 3.5mm microphone input and 3.5mm audio output. These are well-positioned and built to take some abuse; whether you’re throwing in headphones, a thumb drive, or an external microphone, the Thunderbolt Dock never skips a beat.


Simplicity


Admittedly, this device is a luxury. Even if you’re using a MacBook Air or an older MacBook Pro, it’s simple enough to buy a Mini DisplayPort to HDMI adapter and hook up an external monitor. Repeatedly detaching cables can be tiresome, but it’s still a viable option for anyone with swathes of patience.


What the Thunderbolt Dock offers is simplicity and ease of use. The initial set up might take a little while, but once you’ve finished the long-term benefits are obvious. For instance, with Elgato’s aluminium box my MacBook Air now has a wired network connection for the first time, as well as a dedicated HDMI port. There are extra USB ports to work with and I can easily detach my headphones and external microphone. Bliss.


P1050277 730x547 Elgato Thunderbolt Dock review: This sleek station will supercharge your laptop powered workspace


Of course, the dock’s biggest advantage is that your workstation is left undisturbed when you need to quickly grab your laptop and bolt out the door. In those crucial moments, the time it takes to decouple your MacBook or Ultrabook – just detach the Thunderbolt cable and you’re ready to go – makes such a workspace increasingly attractive and viable.


For $229.95 though, the Thunderbolt Dock is pretty expensive. I suspect its price-tag alone will be enough to deter some people, but if you really care about connectivity this is a well-designed and stress-free solution. If you’re using an external monitor in conjunction with a Thunderbolt-compatible laptop – or thinking about doing so – this is easy to recommend.