Archive for the ‘tech’ Category

Lyft Hopes to Survive Competition from Uber by Making Ride-Sharing Cheap and Convenient Enough to Compete with Car Ownership | MIT Technology Review

Saturday, December 12th, 2015

.@Lyft hopes to survive competition with @Uber — w/ a novel strategy between private rides & public #transportation
http://www.technologyreview.com/featuredstory/541791/lyfts-search-for-a-new-mode-of-transport

QT:{{”
Regular Lyft rides can be two-thirds of a taxi fare or less, but a Lyft Line ride is even cheaper, and the company aims to shrink the price further. Green says this makes Lyft something new: a third category of transportation somewhere between public and private. “}}

Failing To Find Users, Dropbox Will Shut Down Mailbox In February 2016 And Carousel In March | TechCrunch

Tuesday, December 8th, 2015

Failing To Find Users, Dropbox Will Shut Down Mailbox
http://techcrunch.com/2015/12/07/failing-to-find-users-dropbox-will-shut-down-mailbox-in-february-2016-and-carousel-in-march/ Example like gcode of a stoppage disrupting personal workflows

The creed of speed

Monday, December 7th, 2015

Creed for speed http://www.economist.com/news/briefing/21679448-pace-business-really-getting-quicker-creed-speed True for $AAPL? App downloads every ms & >1k iPhones sold in 5′ but much of board serving for >5 yrs

QT:{{"“A CUSTOMER downloads an app from Apple every millisecond. The firm sells 1,000 iPhones, iPads or Macs every couple of minutes. It whips through its inventories in four days and launches a new product every four weeks. Manic trading by computers and speculators means the average Apple share changes hands every five months.”

And what about Apple, with the frantic antics of which this article began? Its directors have served for an average of six years. It has invested heavily in fixed assets, such as data centres, which will last for over a decade. It has pursued truly long-term strategies such as acquiring the capacity to design its own chips. Mr Cook has been in his post for four years and slogged away at the firm for 14 years before that. Apple is 39 years old, and it has issued bonds that mature in the 2040s.
"}}

How New Long-Range Radios Will Change the Internet of Things

Sunday, December 6th, 2015

Long-Range Radios Will Change the #IoT https://medium.com/@dconrad/how-new-long-range-radios-will-change-the-internet-of-things-ed8e6b5e367f "Devices…connected before [opening] box: no passwords…hubs[, recharging]"

QT:{{"
“Even better, these radios have the potential to enable IoT devices that Just Work. Devices that are connected before you even pull them out of the box: no passwords, no hubs, no SIM cards. Devices which never need recharging, because their batteries effectively last forever.”
"}}

App promises good motorists revenge on dangerous drivers

Sunday, December 6th, 2015

App promises…revenge on dangerous #drivers http://www.timesofisrael.com/app-promises-good-motorists-well-deserved-revenge-on-dangerous-drivers Great if pedestrian version could have license-plate recognition & GPS

QT:{{"
“In essence, he said, there were really two apps –- one for pedestrians and one for drivers. In pedestrian mode, the user needs to hold down the shutter button, which will produce a continuous series of photographs until the incident is over. The user chooses one of four offense categories (traffic violation, road bullying, accident, road hazard) and the images are uploaded onto Nirsham’s servers, where they are analyzed for authenticity (to prevent the possibility of an individual uploading a doctored image to “get back” at someone they don’t like, said Goldman). The images are then displayed on the Nirsham site, where other members of the community can analyze them and decide whether or not a traffic offense was committed.”
"}}

Addicted to Distraction

Saturday, December 5th, 2015

Addicted to Distraction http://www.nytimes.com/2015/11/29/opinion/sunday/addicted-to-distraction.html “Committed…[to a] digital-free vacation a year….1 week offline…deeply restorative."

QT:{{"
“Finally, I feel committed now to taking at least one digital-free vacation a year. I have the rare freedom to take several weeks off at a time, but I have learned that even one week offline can be deeply restorative.

Occasionally, I find myself returning to a haunting image from the last day of my vacation. I was sitting in a restaurant with my family when a man in his early 40s came in and sat down with his daughter, perhaps 4 or 5 years old and adorable.

Almost immediately, the man turned his attention to his phone. Meanwhile, his daughter was a whirlwind of energy and restlessness, standing up on her seat, walking around the table, waving and making faces to get her father’s attention.

Except for brief moments, she didn’t succeed and after a while, she glumly gave up. The silence felt deafening.”
"}}

Biometric Tattoos, From Wearables To Digital Health | WT VOX

Sunday, November 29th, 2015

#Biometric Tattoos, From #Wearables To Digital Health https://wtvox.com/cyborgs-and-implantables/biometric-tattoos/ Devices connected by conductive paint, acting as body sensors

QT:{{"
“But now, the “digital tattoo” is another expertise they have. These “biometric tattoos” are in fact conductive paint and components. Together, they assemble into simple devices able to collect data from your body.”
"}}

Are Polls Ruining Democracy?

Sunday, November 29th, 2015

Are Polls Ruining Democracy?
http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/11/16/politics-and-the-new-machine “#Datascience is the child of a rocky marriage between the academy & Silicon Valley”

QT:{{”
“If public-opinion polling is the child of a strained marriage between the press and the academy, data science is the child of a rocky marriage between the academy and Silicon Valley. The term “data science” was coined in 1960, one year after the Democratic National Committee hired Simulmatics Corporation, a company founded by Ithiel de Sola Pool, a political scientist from M.I.T., to provide strategic analysis in advance of the upcoming Presidential election. Pool and his team collected punch cards from pollsters who had archived more than sixty polls from the elections of 1952, 1954, 1956, 1958, and 1960, representing more than a hundred thousand interviews, and fed them into a UNIVAC. They then sorted voters into four hundred and eighty possible types (for example, “Eastern, metropolitan,
lower-income, white, Catholic, female Democrat”) and sorted issues into fifty-two clusters (for example, foreign aid). Simulmatics’ first task, completed just before the Democratic National Convention, was a study of “the Negro vote in the North.” Its report, which is thought to have influenced the civil-rights paragraphs added to the Party’s platform, concluded that between 1954 and 1956 “a small but
significant shift to the Republicans occurred among Northern Negroes, which cost the Democrats about 1 per cent of the total votes in 8 key states.” After the nominating convention, the D.N.C. commissioned Simulmatics to prepare three more reports, including one that involved running simulations about different ways in which Kennedy might discuss his Catholicism.”
“}}

Lego’s Success Leads to Competitors and Spinoffs – The New York Times

Friday, November 27th, 2015

#Lego’s Success Leads to Competitors & Spinoffs [including secondary market rental companies such as Pley]
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/11/21/business/legos-success-leads-to-competitors-and-spinoffs.html

The great chain of being sure about things | The Economist

Sunday, November 22nd, 2015

The great chain of being sure about things
http://www.economist.com/news/briefing/21677228-technology-behind-bitcoin-lets-people-who-do-not-know-or-trust-each-other-build-dependable Overview of re-purposing the #Bitcoin blockchain for distributed records