Author: Serkadis

  • Powerball Jackpot Up To $50 Million

    The Powerball jackpot is currently at $50 million, as nobody won the $40 million jackpot on Saturday. Prior to that, a ticket in Virginia won the $217 prize a week ago. That ticket was sold in Richmond, and represented the biggest single prize won since the record $588 million prize in Novmeber, which was split between two tickets.

    The winning numbers for Saturday’s drawing were: 5, 6, 16, 36, 58, Powerball: 3.

    There were no winners of the Match 5 Power Play $2 million prize, but there were winners in Florida, Maryland and New York for the $1 million Match 5 prize.

    On Saturday, there were 448,280 winners winning non-jackpot prizes totaling $6,252,616.

    Odds of winning the jackpot, according to the Multi-State Lottery Association, are 1 in 175,223,510.

    The next drawing is Wednesday night.

    Here’s what people are saying on Twitter:

  • HP planning a new Android tablet? Good luck with that

    Having burned through two prior mobile platforms, HP is said to be looking at a third and will use Google Android for an upcoming tablet and possibly a future phone. Taylor Wimberly of ReadWrite reported the development with information from two sources familiar with the matter. The new Android tablet could be announced from HP within a few weeks; potentially at this month’s Mobile World Congress Event in Barcelona.

    touchpad-1Wimberly’s sources indicate an HP tablet has been in the works since Thanksgiving and is likely to run on Nvidia’s Tegra 4 chip. Nvidia officially announced Tegra 4 at last month’s Consumer Electronics Show but had no mobile partners on stage to announce new products or designs with the chip. Instead, Nvidia showed off its own hardware, a handheld gaming console called Project Shield.

    I’m not too skeptical of HP actually re-entering the tablet market. After all, the PC business is giving way to fast-growing sales of tablets and smartphones. Plus, HP was already in the tablet market once before: It bought Palm and its webOS platform for $1.2 billion in 2010 and built the HP TouchPad tablet around webOS. Unfortunately, the device was a sales flop and HP quickly killed the tablet as well as its whole investment in Palm and ended up giving much of the platform to the open source community.

    HP’s mobile history goes back even further, however. More than a decade ago, I carried an HP iPaq handheld running on Microsoft’s Windows Mobile software. HP eventually got out of that market too, prior to smartphone adoption really taking off. So it makes sense to me that HP could be making another mobile play here, even though HP CEO Meg Whitman has gone on record to say no new smartphones will be coming from HP this year.

    galaxy-tab-7-plusI’m more skeptical that HP can be successful in this market. The problem as I see it is that HP has no other choice but to use Android at this point. And assuming it does, it’s now competing against Samsung, the top seller of smartphones and the only company that’s figured out how to make a profit by using Android. Then there’s Amazon, which uses Android for its Kindle Fire line of tablets. It makes money by selling content to the devices; something that HP doesn’t have to offer.

    For HP to be successful in the already established Android market it needs to offer something significantly different and innovative. Those aren’t qualities that I equate with HP these days, but perhaps as they say, ”third time’s a charm.”

    This story was corrected at 1:47pm with the correct source site of ReadWrite.

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  • YouTube Hits 12,000 Harlem Shake Videos

    According to YouTube, “Harlem Shake” is the biggest video trend of the month. As of Tuesday, YouTube had seen 12,000 Harlem Shake videos with 44 million views.

    As YouTube’s Kevin Allocca points out, the meme first started gaining traction last week, thanks to a video from Filthy Frank, but it was SunnyCoastSkate, who established the form most are familiar with.

    “From there, the spin-offs spread very quickly,” he says. “As of the 11th, around 12,000 ‘Harlem Shake’ videos had been posted since the start of the month and they’d already been watched upwards of 44 million times. As you can see in the chart below, over 4,000 of these videos are being uploaded per day and that number is still likely on the rise.”

    Harlem Shake videos

    YouTube has created a playlist with some of the most popular versions. Prepare to feel dumber.

  • Groupon CEO Andrew Mason Is Pissed Off About Mayo

    Groupon CEO Andrew Mason is not very happy with the state of sandwich shops. More specifically, he’s not very happy about their mayonaise policies.

    The quirky executive took to Twitter today to rant about the issue (hat tip to Forbes).

    One can only help but wonder if any of Groupon’s restaurant customers are guilty.

  • Google Adds Search Funnel Columns In AdWords Tabs

    Google announced the launch of new Search Funnels columns in AdWords so advertisers can add them to their campaigns, ad groups, keywords and ad tabs.

    “Search Funnels show you how users search for products before converting, allowing you to make better informed decisions in AdWords. Now, we’re making it easier than ever to incorporate Search Funnels data into your everyday optimizations,” Google AdWords product manager Dan Friedman says.

    “If you’ve enabled conversion tracking, you’ll be able to see a new section within the column customizer for Search Funnels,” he explains. “This section will allow you to add columns for many common Search Funnels metrics, such as assist clicks, click assisted conversions, and assist impressions.”

    The feature is rolling out over the course of the next couple days.

  • Google Analytics Adds Support For Multi-Currency Ecommerce

    Google announced today that it is launching a new Google Analytics feature to support multi-currency ecommerce. Apparently this has been a highly requested feature, and Google says it has heard the requests loud and clear.

    The feature allows users to track transaction metrics like total revenue, tax, and shipping & handling in multiple local currencies within a single web property. Google Analytics will convert the currencies into the one based on your profile setting.

    “This provides key benefits for e-commerce brands looking to conduct analysis across an international customer base and helps make some previously complex reporting easier,” says Wayne Xu from the Google Analytics team.

    Multi-channel ecommerce

    The feature is supported by the ga.js and analytics.js snippets. The currency code is a global setting, and can be set via tracker ‘_set()’. More info here.

    The feature will be rolling out to all users over the coming weeks.

  • Autodesk Releases 123D Creature, A Tool To Design, Paint, And Print Your Own 3D Monsters

    photo

    As a fan of monsters and 3D printing, in that order, I was intrigued by Autodesk’s new iOS app, 123D Creature. Aimed at beginning 3D modelers, the app allows you to build cute (or scary) monsters right on your screen by pinching, grabbing, and rotating a lump of virtual clay hanging on a skeleton.

    The $7.99 app ($1.99 for a limited time) is the latest in Autodesk’s line of free 3D apps. The company sells much more expensive and complex 3D solutions like Maya and 3ds max but these 123D apps are designed to allow users with little experience to build objects, paint them virtually, and output mesh files that can be used on 3D printers. You can even order 3D prints of your creations right from the app.

    Given the perceived difficulty of 3D modeling, these are an interesting way for Autodesk to sneak their tools into the hands of younger designers who could go on to use the company’s more lucrative tools.

    How does it work? Fairly well, to be honest.

    I tried the app briefly today and was able to design a pointy-headed little man and print him on my home Makerbot. Sadly his arms didn’t quite make it through the print process but his tiny legs and pin head look just fine. I’m no 3D artist, to be sure, so it was fun to be able to make a cute little being and then pump him out of my extruder in a few minutes. Not only does this give 3D novices the chance to experiment with 3D design, it makes folks with 3D printers happy because of the seamless system for making and outputting mesh files for quick prints.







  • HBO exec: Don’t expect a la carte programming any time soon

    HBO A La Carte Programming
    HBO excited subscribers on Tuesday when it announced during the D: Dive Into Media conference that its HBO GO and MAX GO iOS apps were updated with AirPlay support. The news meant iPhone, iPad and iPod touch users could finally stream content from their devices to Apple TV boxes connected to a television set. Following the announcement, AllThingsD pressed further to determine if the news meant that we might soon see true Apple TV support, or even an a la carte programming option.

    Continue reading…

  • Battery university to open its doors this summer

    CalCharge — a sort-of Y Combinator for battery startups — and San Jose State University are creating a “Battery University” program for the next-generation of earnest battery entrepreneurs and researchers. The university will offer classes on its Santa Clara, Calif. campus starting this summer on battery technology, business and innovation.

    Much of the battery innovation that has occurred over the years has happened in Japan and Korea (via giants like Panasonic) and much of the battery manufacturing happens in China. But California now has some 40+ battery companies, spurred by the Silicon Valley venture and startup ecosystem, through strong university research and through federal funds from the Department of Energy. Of the 13 battery startups I recently profiled, almost half of them are based in California.

    CalCharge, which is a partnership between Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and CalCEF, was itself created with a $120 million grant from the DOE. The CalCharge accelerator launched last spring, and provides battery companies and entrepreneurs with a space to collaborate, share resources, find and recruit talent and coordinate on solving problems.

    A battery entrepreneur that has utilized CalCharge told me earlier this year that one of the great things about the accelerator program is that companies can share battery lab equipment, which can cut down dramatically on their startup costs.

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
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  • Google Shares Stats About Its Spam Messages

    Google has released a new Webmaster Help video. This time, Matt Cutts shares some statistics about the messages it sends webmasters. The video is a response to this user-submitted question:

    You’ve been sending us various kinds of messages via WMT to improve transparency. It’s a good move. How many types of messages do you send now? And how do you decide what message you send?

    “At this point we do send hundreds of thousands of messages each month,” says Cutts. “That might sound like a lot, but for example, one search engine named blekko estimated that a million spam pages are created every hour. The web is very large, so we shouldn’t be surprised that some percentage of it is spam, and as a result, we do spend a lot of time finding that spam, and since we automatically send messages and notifications when we find it, there are a lot – hundreds of thousands of notifications we send out each month.”

    Cutts notes that there’s a lot of different categories of spam covered in Google’s webmaster guidelines, but that they all lead to about ten different kinds of messages that Google sends. Hidden text, keyword stuffing, etc. would all go into one kind of message.

    He then goes on to share some stats from “earlier this year,” as he says, indicating that they’re from January and February. It’s not entirely clear when this video was made. Since it’s still early in February, we’re not sure if the video was recorded before the New Year or not. Cutts does tend to film a bunch of these videos at a time. Either way, it probably makes little difference if they’re putting the video out now.

    “Out of the hundreds of thousands of messages that we sent over that time period, roughly 90% of those were for what we call ‘black hat’,” says Cutts. “That’s pure egregious spam (clear cut), so anybody sufficiently tech savvy would probably be able to recognize that it’s spam. It’s the stuff that you think of as traditional junk that you just don’t want to show up in your results because it is very clearly spam.”

    “About four percent of the messages were because the content had little or no added value, and so it’s not ranking as highly in our search results,” he continues. “About three percent of the messages that we sent were related to hacking, so hacking is a big attack as far as black hats, and even though it’s illegal, there’s a lot of people that do that, trying to promote their pharmacy pills or whatever…that sort of thing. Something like two percent of the messages that we sent out were related to link buying, and about one percent were related to link selling. So overall, between two and three precent related to links and link spam overall – about buying and selling links.”

    He leaves it at that.

    Earlier this week, Google put out a video of Cutts explaining how to figure out which links to remove if you got an unnatural link warning.

  • Watch The Walking Dead Midseason Premiere For Free On Android, iPhone, iPad And Kindle Fire

    AMC announced this week that it will be streaming the midseason premiere of The Walking Dead online for free until March 10. Today, the network also announced that the episode is now available for a limited time (presumably the same period of time) on the AMC Mobile app for Android, iPhone, iPad and Kindle Fire.

    The app also provides behind-the-scenes video content, and previews.

    The episode has received mixed reviews from fans of the show, but it also set a series record for viewers when it premiered on Sunday.

    Here are a couple of behind-the-scenes videos AMC has posted to accompany the episode. They’ve also posted a preview for the upcoming episode.

    AMC will be showing episodes of The Walking Dead from seasons 1 and 2 in black and white regularly on Thursdays, beginning on February 14th.

    More The Walking Dead fun here.

  • AOptix Lands DoD Contract To Turn Smartphones Into Biometric Data-Gathering Tools

    aoptix

    Smartphones may be invading pockets and purses across the world, but AOptix may soon bring those mobile devices to some far-flung war zones. The Campbell, Calif.-based company announced earlier today that it (along with government-centric IT partner CACI) nabbed a $3 million research contract from the U.S. Department of Defense to bring its “Smart Mobile Identity” concept to fruition.

    The company kept coy about what that actually means in its release, but Wired has the full story — the big goal is o create an accessory of sorts capable of attaching to a commercially-available smartphone that can capture high-quality biometric data— think a subject’s thumb prints, face/eye scans, and voice recordings.

    At first glance, it really doesn’t sound like that tall an order — smartphones are substantially more powerful than they were just a few years ago, and that’s the sort of trend that isn’t going to be bucked anytime soon. That continual improvement in terms of horsepower certainly can’t hurt considering how much data the smartphone+sensor combo is going to have to continually collect and transmit, and the company confirmed to Wired that the end product will feature an “intuitive interface” that should ensure that any soldier who’s owned a modern phone should be able to pick it up very quickly.

    AOptix hasn’t publicly committed to one mobile platform over another just yet, but building a sensor device to interface with an Android device seems to be likely option at this point. After all, the U.S. Department of Defense is no stranger to Google’s mobile OS — it gave Dell’s rather awful Streak 5 tablet the go-ahead for governmental use back in late 2011. More recent reports have shown that the DoD is has also responded favorably to the notion of iPhones being used around the Pentagon, but I suspect that acquiring a fleet of Android devices for use in the field wouldn’t be quite as expensive as buying iDevices en masse. Couple the cost-argument with the highly open nature of Android development (something that could come in handy when crafting the sort of software necessary to power this whole thing).

    If the notion of the DoD moving to embrace consumer tech is a little surprising though, you may just have to get used to it. Deputy CIO Major General Robert Wheeler noted in an address at this year’s CTIA MobileCon that the Defense Department’s mobile strategy involves sourcing innovative, mass-market solutions to existing issues so expect to hear more of these sorts of deals in the months and years to come.

  • Google Adds Enhanced Campaigns Support To DoubleClick Search

    Last week, Google unveiled “Enhanced Campaigns” sending ripples of both worry and elation throughout the marketing world. Google describes it as an evolution of AdWords, but critics are worried about the control they’re forced to give up, among other things.

    Google said on Wednesday that it will begin supporting enhanced campaigns in DoubleClick Search in the coming weeks “to help marketers run effective search campaigns across devices, as well as across channels.”

    As noted, not everyone is a critic of Google’s move toward enhanced campaigns. We spoke with Larry Kim, founder and CTO of Wordstream, whcih was one of three companies outside of Google that worked with the company on the project in the months leading up to its launch.

    “Enhanced Campaigns represent the biggest single change to the basic structure of AdWords campaigns in the past 10 years,” he told us. “The new campaign structure will greatly simplify targeting and bidding for different devices and locations. It’s a win-win for both Google and advertisers.”

    You can read more about Enhanced Campaigns here.

  • Jawbone warns MyTalk hacked

    There are days that cloud computing really sucks. The problem is trust. You trust Sites X, Y and Z to protect your data and log-in credentials, then they don’t. Last week, Twitter rudely informed me that my password had to be reset, which is passive way of admitting that mine was one of the 250,000 pilfered accounts. This morning Jawbone greeted with email about an “isolated attack” that snagged my MyTalk information.

    Funny thing, I don’t even use MyTalk. I opened an account years ago while testing a Jawbone Bluetooth earpiece. Supposedly there was a firmware update and MyTalk registration the only way to get it. Fooled! No update. Now the dormant account is hacked. Interestingly, I see no official statement on Jawbone’s website, but the email absolutely looks authentic.

    I use unique passwords everywhere, and Jawbone had no credit card info on file. But these hacks, in context of recent targeted attacks (from China), are reason enough to make sure your credentials taken one place don’t unlock accounts everywhere else. Be smart!

    Full text of the email:

    Hello Joe Wilcox,

    We are writing to inform you of an important security matter. We recently learned that login information for your Jawbone MyTALK account was compromised by an isolated attack on our system.

    In the course of this attack, limited user information related to your MyTALK account—specifically your name, email address, and an encrypted version of your password (not the actual letters and numbers in your password)—was compromised. We took immediate action to protect your login information. Based on our investigation to date, we do not believe there has been any unauthorized use of login information or unauthorized access to information in your account.

    To help protect your account, we have disabled your old MyTALK password and you can no longer use it. Please reset your MyTALK password by following the instructions below. To help ensure that your information remains safe, we recommend that you do not choose the same password that you use to log in anywhere else, and change your password on other sites where your old MyTALK password is used.
    Steps to reset your password:

    1.Copy and paste this URL into your web browser: https://jawbone.com/user/reset
    2.Type in your email address and click the Reset Password button
    3.You will receive an email with instructions to complete the password reset

    We sincerely apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused. The security of your personal information is a top priority for us. We take security very seriously and will continue to take steps to keep your account information safe. ‘
    If you need help resetting your password, please contact Customer Support by emailing [email protected].
    Sincerely,

    Jawbone

    Photo Credit: Bartlomiej K. Kwieciszewski/Shutterstock

  • Bing’s Real-Time Reactions To The State Of The Union Address [Infographic]

    Bing launched a new Politics site with “Bing Pulse” ahead of the State of the Union address, and is now sharing some insights from the endeavor.

    “Last night, millions of Americans tuned into President Obama’s State of the Union address – and Bing stood alone in giving people a rare opportunity to give real-time feedback and access live social data at Bing.com/Politics,” says Mark Penn, Corporate Vice President, Microsoft. “Powered by Bing search technology and its unique social search experience, Bing’s State of the Union experience featured the breakthrough Bing Pulse – what turned out to be the largest live online poll in history.”

    Bing partnered with FOX News on the site, offering what Bing described as a “non-partisan online destination designed to meet” the “growing need for up-to-the-minute political information and second-screen experiences”.

    The Bing Pulse receieved 12.9 million votes, according to Bing, allowing people to join the conversation by “voting” every five seconds on their reactions to President Obama’s speech. Live results from the feature were shown on FOX News.

    The search engine released the following infographic looking at real-time reactions to the speech:

    Bing Looks at State Of The Union Address

    Here’s a look at some findings from Twitter.

  • George Ferris Gets A Google Doodle For Valentine’s Day

    Google has begun showing a doodle on its home page in parts of the world where it’s already February 14th. The doodle honors George Ferris, an American engineer famous for creating the original Ferris Wheel for the 1893 Chicago World’s Columbian Exposition.

    February 14th is, of course, Valentine’s Day, which is celebrated in many countries around the world. And what says love like a ride on the Ferris Wheel?

    The doodle is interactive, as they often are. You can push the heart button over and over again to match up different animals who appear to be going out on different kinds of dates. This video Simon Rüger sent us shows some of the different match-ups, as well as the animation:

    Once you click the search icon in the doodle, you’ll be taken to search results for George Ferris, including Google’s Knowledge Graph panel for him:

    George Ferris Knowledge Panel

    It’s actually a good example of when the Knowledge Graph improves the search experience, beyond offering info about the subject. In this case, we see the option to view results for a different George Ferris – the cricketer.

    The Ferris that’s the subject of the Google Doodle died in 1896.

  • Yahoo Is Not Pleased With Its Microsoft Search Deal

    That big Yahoo Microsoft search deal is not working as well as Yahoo would like. CEO Marissa Mayer made comments at the Goldman Sachs Technology and Internet Conference in San Francisco on Tuesday saying as much. Reuters quotes her:

    “One of the points of the alliance is that we collectively want to grow share rather than just trading share with each other…”

    “We need to see monetization working better because we know that it can and we’ve seen other competitors in the space illustrate how well it can work.”

    Rumors have existed for quite some time, that Yahoo and Microsoft could kill their search deal early, but we’ve heard nothing substantial enough to suggest this is going to happen. However, Yahoo seems to be getting increasingly impatient.

    Yahoo is a different company than it was when it made the deal with Microsoft. Marissa Mayer is the fifth person to hold the CEO position while the deal has been in place (granted, two of them were interim CEOs). It was announced under Carol Bartz, and has gone through leadership from Tim Morse, Scott Thompson, Ross Levinsohn, and finally Mayer.

    Mayer is, of course, a former Googler, and has brought other former Googlers along for the ride. Since Mayer has been at Yahoo, the company seems to be closer with Google than any other time in recent memory. In fact, last week, Yahoo announced a new partnership with Google (non-exclusive) for contextual ads, which will see Yahoo displaying contextual display ads from Google on various Yahoo properties and “certain co-branded sites” using Google’s AdSense for Content and AdMob advertising offerings.

    “By adding Google to our list of world-class contextual ads partners, we’ll be able to expand our network, which means we can serve users with ads that are even more meaningful,” said Yahoo in its announcement. “For our users, there won’t be a noticeable difference in how or where ads appear. More options simply mean greater flexibility. We look forward to working with all of our contextual ads partners to ensure we’re delivering the right ad to the right user at the right time.”

    We asked Microsoft’s Stefan Weitz about Google and Yahoo’s partnership last week, when we spoke with him about Microsoft’s new “Scroogled” campaign. The only comment he offered on the subject, was “I’d say I wonder how Google is using the content [of] your private communications in Gmail to serve ads in other places.”

    Google Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt recently expressed interest in partnering with Yahoo, years after the two companies tried to partner on a similar search deal to what Yahoo has with Microsoft. The partnership never happened thanks to the threat of regulation, so Yahoo settled for Bing, which regulators did not have a problem with.

    Since all of that, Google has cleared some significant regulatory hurdles (though it faces others). Last month, the company settled with the Federal Trade Commission, which found that Google’s search practices did not violate antitrust law.

    A couple weeks ago, Yahoo released its earnings report for Q4 and the full year 2012. The report was better than many analysts had expected, and this was helped significantly by better-than-expected search performance. Mayer made some comments during the company’s earnings call, indicating that search is a major priority at Yahoo. Wired quoted her:

    “Overall in search, it’s a key area of investment for us,” Mayer said. “We need to invest in a lot of interface improvements. All of the innovations in search are going to happen at the user interface level moving forward and we need to invest in those features both on the desktop and on mobile and I think both ultimately will be key plays for us.”

    “We have a big investment we want to make and a big push on search. We have lost some share in recent years and we’d like to regain some of that share and we have some ideas as to how.”

    It was interesting to see this emphasis put on search, but still on the front end, which would seem to imply that Yahoo is happy to continue outsourcing the back end. It makes you wonder what Mayer’s thinking, particularly if she’s not happy with the Microsoft/Yahoo deal performance.

    Last week, reports emerged that Russian search engine Yandex has surpassed Bing in global search queries, though as Danny Sullivan at Search Engine Land notes, Bing is still well head of Yandex in unique searchers.

    Recent research from RKG has indicated that the Yahoo Bing Network continues to take away market share from Google, as Bing recently pointed out to us, noting that Bing Ads have gained paid search spend share from Google four quarters in a row.

    Obviously it’s not benefiting Yahoo to the extent the company would like.

    Microsoft did tell us about some new ad formats that it will be launching this year, such as Google-like product listing ads and click-to-call ads with Skype integration. Both formats have proven popular with Google advertisers, and the Yahoo Bing Network continues to strive to emulate Google’s success.

    David Pann, GM of Microsoft’s Search Network tells us that advertisers come over to the Yahoo Bing Network with the mentality of “It performs well over there [Google], so it will here too.”

    Will Yahoo and Microsoft’s Search Alliance stay in place? How long will Yahoo remain patient?

    This is not the first time we’ve seen Yahoo speak publicly about dissatisfaction with Microsoft in recent memory. Regarding IE 10′s “Do Not Track” default, Yahoo recently slammed Microsoft saying that the company’s move “degrades the experience for the majority of users and makes it hard to deliver our value proposition to them.”

    That was not an off the cuff remark. That was an official blog post.

    Today, Yahoo announced that it has expanded its display advertising partnership with Microsoft and AOL into Canada.

    Image: Google Talks Archive (YouTube)

  • New report highlights global governments’ failure to support family-friendly policies

     
    A new report launched today by the UCLA World Policy Analysis Center presents never-before-available comparative data on nearly every country in the world, revealing how millions of children across the globe face conditions that limit their opportunities to thrive and reach their full potential. Dr. Jody Heymann, dean of the UCLA Jonathan and Karin Fielding School of Public Health, co-authored the study.
     
    “Changing Children’s Chances” provides a thorough analysis of the laws and public policies of 191 countries covering the areas of poverty, discrimination, education, health, child labor, child marriage and parental care.
     
    Governments in both developed and developing countries are not taking widely agreed-upon steps in critical areas known to make a difference to children’s opportunities, said Heymann.
     
    This new research, she says, aims to focus global attention on these issues to ensure that existing policies governing child welfare are fully implemented and that new measures are introduced that will enable children’s full and healthy development.
     
    The report includes unique full-color world maps and tables offering insights into global policies on a range of topics, including how long girls are protected from marrying, compared with boys; which countries charge tuition fees for secondary education; which countries guarantee paid leave for new mothers and fathers; and which offer inclusive education to children with disabilities.
     
    Among the findings of the “Changing Children’s Chances” report:
     
    • Child labor and minimum wage
     
    167 countries (out of 189 from which data were available) have established a national minimum wage, yet in 40 of these countries, a family with a working adult with one dependent child may be expected to subsist on $2 or less per person per day.
     
    Six countries have no legislated minimum age for employment. Children may be put to work as young as 12 or 13 years old in five countries, at age 14 in 29 countries, and at age 15 in 63 countries.
     
    •  Maternity and paternity leave
     
    While the vast majority of countries provide maternity pay for new mothers — just eight do not, including the United States — far fewer make similar arrangements for fathers. Only 81 countries provide paid leave that can be taken by men, either through paternity leave (67 countries) or through leave-time available to either parent.
     

    • Education and special needs
     
    While universal free primary education has become a reality for most of the world’s children (in 166 of the 174 countries from which data were available), 61 countries still charge tuition for all or some secondary education.
     
    Despite global recognition that inclusive education helps children with special needs achieve their full potential, only 73 countries place children with disabilities in the same classrooms as non-disabled children; 62 include them in the same schools, but not necessarily the same classes; and 28 educate them separately.
     

    • Child marriage
     
    Girls are particularly vulnerable to early marriage, which can often result in them being taken out of school. In 54 countries, they are permitted to marry between one and three years before boys.
     

    • Children with disabilities
     
    Just 58 countries worldwide provide specific cash benefits or supplements to cover the needs of children with disabilities.
     
    “Progress over the past few decades demonstrates that where there is a will, there is a way to make dramatic changes in children’s lives, from survival to basic education,” Heymann said. “However, our findings show how far nations still have to go to realize a world where all children have a chance to thrive, not just survive. National laws and policies in areas ranging from labor to education to poverty reduction fall far short of what countries have committed to in international agreements. At the same time, there are resource-constrained countries that are ahead of the curve, showing the feasibility of action and giving hope that dramatic change is possible.”
     
    Commenting on the “Changing Children’s Chances” report, Professor Sir Michael Marmot, director of the Institute of Health Equity at University College London, said: “The findings of this new report confirm that children the world over are being denied opportunities to live to their potential. What happens in a child’s early life — regardless of where they are in the world — very much determines their chances to lead healthy and productive lives in their adulthood.
     
    “The inequalities children face in their early years lead to continued inequalities in later life. We simply cannot afford to let this continue to happen, and we have to use the growing body of evidence to address the social determinants of children’s health and the conditions in which they are born, grow, live, work and age.”
     
    Representatives from governments around the world will soon be gathering, as part of a United Nations initiative, to set global goals that the world’s nations should strive for — the so-called “post-2015” agenda. This agenda is currently being formulated, and recommendations from the UN’s High-Level Panel of Eminent Persons will be made to the UN secretary general this May.
     
    “Changing Children’s Chances” calls on world leaders to consider the following recommendations, among others, in shaping the post-2015 agenda:
     
    • Education
     
    Make education free, especially secondary education. Quality secondary education and the employment opportunities it provides are key to lifting young people out of poverty.
     
    Increase educational-attainment requirements for teachers, accompanied by improved salaries and training to ensure that enough qualified teachers are available.
     

    • Labor and workplace
     
    Protect children and youth from working long hours, which interferes with success at school.
     
    Ensure that minimum wages are high enough to lift families out of poverty without relying on child labor to supplement family income; provide financial assistance to low-income families supporting children.
     
    Ensure that workplace policies are in place that enable working parents to care for their children — especially critical in the context of changing global labor-market conditions.
     

    • Marriage
     
    Establish a minimum age for marriage that is the same for both sexes and that is high enough to allow children and youth to complete secondary education.
     

    • Parental care
     
    Countries that have not yet done so should guarantee paid maternity, paternity and parental leave, as well as leave to care for children’s health needs.
     

    • Fighting discrimination
     
    Ensure that legal and constitutional provisions create a strong foundation against discrimination for all children and adults across the lines of gender, ethnicity, employment, religion and sexuality.
     

    • Children with disabilities
     
    Address the specific needs of children with disabilities, including their access to inclusive education and the provision of supplementary income to meet their special needs. 
     
    Baroness Massey, chair of the United Kingdom’s All-Party Parliamentary Group on Children, welcomed the report’s publication and recommendations.
     
    “This report highlights yet again that supportive policies frame what caring families are able to provide for their children,” she said. “The steps taken by governments do make the difference for children’s chances, whether ensuring access to quality education, protection from child labor and early marriage, good health care, working conditions that enable parents to care for their children, or freedom from discrimination. We must continue to strive to hold countries publicly and visibly accountable for the policies that are central to the lives of all children.”
     
    The World Policy Analysis Center is the largest data center examining social and economic policy globally, covering hundreds of aspects of policy and national outcomes in 193 countries. With an international team and nearly a decade of work carried out at Harvard University, McGill University and UCLA, the center has brought together for the first time quantitatively comparable findings on laws and policies in all 193 UN countries. The “Changing Children’s Chances” report presents these groundbreaking findings for children. 

     
    The UCLA Fielding School of Public Health is dedicated to enhancing the public’s health by conducting innovative research; training future leaders and health professionals; translating research into policy and practice; and serving local, national and international communities.

     

    Additional information for editors:
    • Tweet about “Children’s Chances” using #kidschances.
    • Dr. Jody Heymann will be in London from Feb. 7–14 and will be available for interviews.
     
    VIDEOS on the ‘Changing Children’s Chances’ report:
     
    Dr. Jody Heymann, dean of the UCLA Jonathan and Karin Fielding School of Public Health:
     
    Sir Michael Marmot, director of the Institute of Health Equity at University College London:
     

     
     
    Baroness Doreen Massey, chair of the UK’s All-Party Parliamentary Group on Children:
     

     
     
    Catherine Mbengue, of the African Policy Child Forum and former senior adviser to UNICEF:
     

     
     

  • Google Revenue From Mobile Estimated At $20 Billion In 2016

    Marin Software has released a new report looking at mobile search advertising around the world. The report cites data from Cowen and Company about Google’s estimated mobile revenues, which indicates that Google will make as much as $20 billion in mobile revenue in 2016.

    “According to a research report from Cowen, Google earned $2.5 Billion in mobile rev- enue in 2011,” says the report. “And by 2016, it’s estimated that mobile could drive $20 Billion in revenue for the search giant. The exponential growth in mobile advertising largely tracks consumer adoption trends. Smartphones now have a greater than 50% penetration in the US mobile phone market. And mobile advertising isn’t just limited to phones. In fact, sales of mobile devices (phones and tablets) running Google Android are expected to have eclipsed ‘PC’ sales in 2012. And consumers worldwide have already bought more than a billion iOS and Android devices.”

    “The emerging world of the mobile-enabled consumer is quite different from the pre- smartphone world,” it continues. “In this new reality, the walls between online and offline commerce are crumbling. Case in point: today’s consumers routinely check product reviews and compare prices online while they’re in a brick and mortar store.”

    Google Mobile Revenue

    This is why Google launched the controversial Enhanced Campaigns model for AdWords last week.

    You can find Marin’s full report here.