Author: Serkadis

  • Skycam: A simple $99 remote webcam solution that uses Skype

    Looking for a remote webcam solution for monitoring the home or office? There’s no lack of such products, but they often require a monthly fee and have either confusing software or a setup process that’s too complicated for many. A new Indiegogo project kicked off on Monday for Skycam, which solves all of these challenges thanks to Skype.

    SkycamsFor $99, project backers get a Skycam webcam that can record video on a micro SD card. Of course, you can access the camera remotely in real-time from practically any connected PC or Mac, tablet or mobile phone running iOS, Android, Windows Phone 8 or BlackBerry. The secret sauce here is the use of Skype.

    To set up the Skycam, you simply add it to your Skype account where it becomes one of your favorite contacts. Want to pop in and check on the pets? Just call your Skycam through the standard Skype application:

    I’ve actually set up several different remote access webcams in my home over the past few years and I have to say: I think more simplicity is needed for these products. Each camera I’ve used has its own software, which typically isn’t the greatest quality. I often rely on third-party apps to access the cameras, but even these have their quirks. And gaining true remote access to a home-based camera typically requires firewall configuration, static IP addresses and — in some cases — a third-party DNS solution.

    Skype petsThat’s why I think this project is on to something. It alleviates all of the challenges I just outlined and makes a remote webcam more of an easy to use appliance. And it does so with software that’s commonly used already. I also like how this isn’t a standard webcam you’d typically use for video chatting: Skycam can be used to monitor a dark or lowly lit room; a feature I like on my existing webcams.

    With a built-in microphone and speaker, you can even use Skycam to chat with someone nearby the camera. Of course, you’ll see them, but they won’t see you. I do wish the Skycam had tilt and pan capabilities, but that would be tricky to implement with Skype as the underlying transport solution. And it would complicate what looks to be an economical and simple way to monitor a remote area.

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
    Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.

        

  • Do you obsess over your appearance? Your brain might be wired abnormally

    Body dysmorphic disorder is a disabling but often misunderstood psychiatric condition in which people perceive themselves to be disfigured and ugly, even though they look normal to others. New research at UCLA shows that these individuals have abnormalities in the underlying connections in their brains.
     
    Dr. Jamie Feusner, the study’s senior author and a UCLA associate professor of psychiatry, and his colleagues report that individuals with BDD have, in essence, global “bad wiring” in their brains — that is, there are abnormal network-wiring patterns across the brain as a whole.
     
    And in line with earlier UCLA research showing that people with BDD process visual information abnormally, the study discovered abnormal connections between regions of the brain involved in visual and emotional processing.
     
    The findings, published in the May edition of the journal Neuropsychopharmacology, suggest that these patterns in the brain may relate to impaired information processing.
     
    “We found a strong correlation between low efficiency of connections across the whole brain and the severity of BDD,” Feusner said. “The less efficient patients’ brain connections, the worse the symptoms, particularly for compulsive behaviors, such as checking mirrors.”
     
    People suffering from BDD tend to fixate on minute details, such as a single blemish on their face or body, rather than viewing themselves in their entirety. They become so distressed with their appearance that they often can’t lead normal lives, are fearful of leaving their homes and occasionally even commit suicide. Patients frequently have to be hospitalized. BDD affects approximately 2 percent of the population and is more prevalent than schizophrenia or bipolar disorder. Despite its prevalence and severity, scientists know relatively little about the neurobiology of BDD.
     
    In the current study, Feusner and his colleagues performed brain scans of 14 adults diagnosed with BDD and 16 healthy controls. The goal of the study was to map the brain’s connections to examine how the white-matter networks are organized. White matter is made up of nerve cells that carry impulses from one part of the brain to another.
     
    To do this, they used a sensitive form of brain imaging called diffusion tensor imaging, or DTI. DTI is a variant of magnetic resonance imaging that can measure the structural integrity of the brain’s white matter. From these scans, they were able to create whole brain “maps” of reconstructed white-matter tracks. Next, they used a form of advanced analysis called graph theory to characterize the patterns of connections throughout the brains of people with BDD and then compared them with those of healthy controls.
     
    The researchers found people with BDD had a pattern of abnormally high network “clustering” across the entire brain. This suggests that these individuals may have imbalances in how they process “local” or detailed information. The researchers also discovered specific abnormal connections between areas involved in processing visual input and those involved in recognizing emotions.
     
    “How their brain regions are connected in order to communicate about what they see and how they feel is disturbed,” said Feusner, who also directs the Adult Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder Program and the Body Dysmorphic Disorder Research Program at UCLA.
     
    “Their brains seem to be fine-tuned to be very sensitive to process minute details, but this pattern may not allow their brains to be well-synchronized across regions with different functions,” he said. “This could affect how they perceive their physical appearance and may also result in them getting caught up in the details of other thoughts and cognitive processes.”
     
    The study, Feusner noted, advances the understanding of BDD by providing evidence that the “hard wiring” of patients’ brain networks is abnormal.
     
    “These abnormal brain networks could relate to how they perceive, feel and behave,” he said. “This is significant because it could possibly lead to us being able to identify early on if someone is predisposed to developing this problem.”
     
    Other authors on the study included Jesse A Brown, Liang Zhan and Sarit Hovav, all from UCLA, and Donatello Arienzo, Alex Leow and Johnson GadElkarim from the University of Illinois. The authors declare no conflict of interest.
     
    The research was supported by grants from the National Institute of Mental Health (K23 MH079212 and R01MH093535).
     
    The UCLA Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences is the home within the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA for faculty who are experts in the origins and treatment of disorders of complex human behavior. The department is part of the Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior at UCLA, a world-leading interdisciplinary research and education institute devoted to the understanding of complex human behavior and the causes and consequences of neuropsychiatric disorders.
     
    For more news, visit the UCLA Newsroom and follow us on Twitter.

  • IBM has a new protocol (and a box) for the internet of things

    IBM may be in talks to sell off its server division, but it’s not abandoning hardware just yet. Instead, Big Blue is introducing an appliance for the internet of things, as well as a new protocol optimized for delivering messages between sensors.

    IBM considers both efforts part of its Smarter Planet and Mobile First strategies. The box is called the IBM MessageSight, and it combines the ability to process a lot of information in real time — which experts believe the internet of things will need. The logic is that billions of sensors sending trillions of bits will need some type of special equipment to process the incoming information in real-time and send instructions back to a human or a device.

    IBM uses the example of the hundreds of sensors in your car recognizing a problem, turning on your check engine light, and then notifying the dealer so it can do remote diagnostics. As someone who is heading to the dealer tomorrow for a check engine light, this example caught my eye. Yet, I’m not sold on the need for a special box over more intelligence at the sensor, or perhaps a mesh network with nominal “intelligence.”

    The internet of things exaflood is coming!

    floodThe idea is compelling, but it also grossly simplifies the flow of data inside the internet of things. For example, it assumes all sensor data must be processed in “real time.” It also assumes all the data must be processed. Both of these are untrue, especially in the early days of the internet of things. But IBM is looking ahead. From its release on the MessageSight appliance:

    Over the next 15 years, the number of machines and sensors connected to the Internet will explode. According to IMS Research, there will be more than 22 billion web-connected devices by 2020. These new devices will generate more 2.5 quintillion bytes of new data every day, while every hour enough information is consumed by Internet traffic to fill seven million DVDs.

    It’s the same exaflood of data that telephone companies were so fearful of a decade ago. And like the telephone companies, IBM is hoping to cash in on these fears — with its box. IBM’s appliance can totally stand up to this tsunami of information, or so goes the pitch. A release from Big Blue noted that the machine can handle up to 1 million concurrent sensors and can scale to manage up to 13 million messages per second.

    The new protocol for the internet of things?

    Inside this magic data-defying box will be a new protocol called MQTT (Message Queuing Telemetry Transport), which the OASIS standards organization recently proposed. The standard, which is backed by Kaazing, Red Hat, TIBCO, Cisco and IBM, is a lightweight messaging transport system for communication in machine to machine and mobile environments.

    The idea is that such a lightweight protocol will allow sensors to communicate wirelessly without needing massive batteries to support a fully functional wireless radio. I’m unclear on what radio protocol one might use, but have reached out with questions. As for MQTT, it’s already in use for satellite transmissions and in medical and industrial settings where low-bandwidth communications are essential.

    IBM said “sensors can use MQTT to send messages wirelessly using 10 times less battery power and 93 times faster than before, making it possible for a sensor to send real time updates that can be acted upon immediately.” IBM is positioning MQTT as the same enabler for the internet of things, as HTTP was for the web. I’m not sure I’d go that far, but it’s worth watching to see how the standard evolves.

    As for IBM’s appliance, I’m pretty sure people can build connected homes, buildings and possible cities without it, but IBM’s marketing will snag customers, especially as part of an overarching integrated smarter cities deployment.

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
    Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.

        

  • Apple’s iPad is still America’s favorite tablet

    iPad Customer Satisfaction Survey
    Despite increased competition from Samsung, Amazon and other rivals, Apple’s iPad is still America’s favorite tablet according to J.D. Power and Associates’ most recent survey. The organization released Volume 1 of its 2013 U.S. Tablet Satisfaction Study on Monday and found that the iPad still ranks highest in customer satisfaction among all tablets, albeit by a narrowing margin. J.D.Powers’ latest survey polled 1,857 consumers in the U.S. and found that Apple’s iPad scored 836 out of a possible 1,000 points. Amazon’s Kindle Fire tablet line scored 829 and Samsung’s tablets retained their No. 3 position with 822 points. A graph that illustrating the results of the survey follows below.

    Continue reading…

  • Data Center People: New CEO for Extreme Networks

    Extreme Networks announces a new CEO, and Violin Memory expands its engineering team.

    New Extreme Networks CEO.  Extreme Networks announced that it has appointed Charles W. Berger as its President and Chief Executive Officer, as well as elected him to the Board of Directors, effective immediately.  Mr. Berger will be replacing Oscar Rodriguez who has resigned, effective today, from his position and has resigned from the Board of Directors of Extreme Networks.  Previously Mr. Berger was at ParAccel, and has over 30 years of experience in the technology sector. Prior to ParAccel, Berger served as the CEO of DVDPlay, Nuance Communications, Vicinity Corporation, AdForce, and Radius. ”I am honored and delighted to join Extreme Networks, a premier technology company,” said Berger. “I look forward to working with our dedicated employees to continue to introduce innovative products, change the dynamics of the switching market with our SDN capabilities and serve our customers globally.  There is a lot to do and I am excited to get started.”

    Violin Memory adds executives from Intel and GridIron.  Violin Memory announced Stephen Dalton as vice president of software and Herb Schneider as vice president of hardware. Dalton joins Violin from Intel, where he served as GM of Intel’s Datacenter flash (NVM) Software organization. Schneider was the co-founder of GridIron, which was recently acquired by Violin Memory. Dalton and Schneider will be responsible for driving the next wave of innovation based on the Violin 6000 flash Memory Array. “Our vision is to make in-memory computing possible for all enterprises,” said Don Basile, CEO of Violin Memory. “Dalton and Schneider both bring significant storage experience from the hardware and software side to help deliver on this promise and aggressively add to our current technology portfolio and talent pool.”

  • Eight-core Nexus 11 and Galaxy Tab 8.0 with high-def AMOLED display detailed in leak

    Nexus 11 Galaxy Tab 8.0 Specs
    To compensate for the boring tablet Samsung unveiled on Monday morning, details surrounding a handful of more exciting Samsung slates have emerged in a new leak. SamMobile has a solid track record when reporting news of upcoming Samsung devices, and the blog reports on Monday that four new tablets are coming this year from the South Korea-based electronics giant. Among them are the Galaxy Tab 8.0, the Galaxy Tab 11 and the co-branded Nexus 11, which will seemingly be Google’s flagship tablet for 2013.

    Continue reading…

  • Lumia 920 Windows Phone commercial is the best tech ad in YEARS

    Honestly, gadget marketing doesn’t get much better than this. Brilliant isn’t strong enough to describe how fabulous and memorable is the new spot for Nokia Lumia 920. I showed the commercial to my wife, twice, and she laughed to tears both times — and giggled for half an hour later.

    If you watch nothing else today, make this video the one and only. I’m a sucker for good marketing, and this commercial works well on so many levels — wedding setting, fanboyism and brilliant physical comedy — I dare not dissect them and ruin the fun.

    Nokia deserves to sell more Lumias for this Microsoft commercial, which deserves lots of airtime. Let’s see if this ditty goes viral on YouTube. Now I need to snuff out which advertising analysts track what commercials DVR users choose not to skip. Because this is one to watch. Over and over.

  • Bing Webmaster Tools Gets Geo-Targeting, New Malware Tool

    Microsoft has launched two new features for Bing Webmaster Tools: a new malware tool and geo-targeting.

    If Bing detects that a site is serving malware (either willingly or unwillingly) it will send a notification to the webmaster in Bing Webmaster Tools, as well as alert users before they actually visit the site.

    “The new Malware tool provides information about the malware we detected on the site,” Bing says in a blog post. “Previously some of this information was encompassed in the Crawl Information tool, but with the new Malware tool you not only get access to more details that help you understand the nature of the issue, it also allows webmasters to submit and track a malware re-evaluation request once they have cleaned their site.”

    When a webmaster submits a request, they can immediately track the status and progress right inside the malware tool.

    With geo-targeting, webmasters can provide Bing with info about the intended audience of their site or of a section of their site.

    “Whereas other Webmaster Tools let you geo-target sites only at the site level, Bing Geo-Targeting provides you with a more flexibility: multinational sites do not need to verify each section they want to geo-target separately,” says Bing. “Instead, Bing allows you to define a country affinity for your entire website or for sections of your website from within a single view and from within a single site account.”

    Geo-targeting can be done at the domain level, the subdomain level, the directory level or the page level. Geo-targeting input will be used as one of many signals Bing uses when determining when and where to show your pages to users.

  • Google research director and AI expert Peter Norvig elected into AAAS

    “Simple models and a lot of data trump more elaborate models based on less data.”

    With that line, the 2009 paper “The Unreasonable Effectiveness of Data” (co-authored by Google co-workers Alon Halevy and Fernando Pereira), Google Director of Research Peter Norvig all but guaranteed his status as one of most-quoted — or at least most-paraphrased — people in the world of big data. Last week, Norvig — as well as Google VP of Energy Arun Majumdar — was bestowed a slightly more-formal honor, as he was inducted into the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

    Norvig, who previously led Google’s search algorithms team and was head of computational sciences at the NASA Ames Research Center, is best known for his work in the realm of artificial intelligence. In fact, the above quote and the paper in which it appears are essentially a testament to the advances Google has been able to make in AI and machine learning thanks to the massive web page and search dataset that Google has amassed. The more examples it has of words and phrases used together in natural language, the better it can perform semantic analysis to determine what’s related to what.

    Norvig and Majumdar are among 198 new inductees into the American Academy of Arts and Sciences’ latest class. According to a blog post from Google, they also join six other Google employees as members: Sergey Brin, Larry Page, Eric Schmidt, Vint Cerf, Alfred Spector, Hal Varian and Ray Kurzweil.

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
    Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.

        

  • Next-gen Xbox reportedly includes touch controllers, may be called ‘Xbox Infinity’

    Xbox 720 Touch Controllers
    Microsoft’s next-generation Xbox video game and home entertainment consoled will be unveiled in less than a month on May 21st, and we should expect a steady flow of rumors and leaks leading up to the official debut. The latest report comes from Forbes, which claims that the next Xbox may launch as the “Xbox Infinity,” though recent rumors suggested the name might simply be “Xbox.” More interestingly, Forbes claims multiple sources at Microsoft have said that the next Xbox’s controllers will feature a clickable touch-sensitive area that will support gestures and other functions. Other recent reports suggest that the upcoming Xbox 360 successor will not require an always-on Internet connection as had previously been rumored, but game publishers will have the option of requiring an Internet connection for individual games if they desire.

  • Google Now invades iOS

    During the 1980s and 90s, Microsoft embarked on what the U.S. Justice Department refers to as an “embrace, extend and extinguish” strategy. Google revises the approach for the new century, but out of necessity. Many of its products or services entered categories where others dominated, such as email, operating systems, productivity suites and web browsers. The company’s business is long about co-opting other platforms, everything from desktop search app for Windows to Google Frame for Internet Explorer, and more.

    But there’s nothing quite like Google’s recent invasion of iOS, where many of the apps are even better than Apple’s. Today, a new search app brings one of Android’s best features, Google Now, to iPad and iPhone. There’s irony here, too. On Android, the feature is only available on Jelly Bean, which makes up about 25 percent of the install base. The majority of Apple mobile device users are on iOS 6, and the app supports version 5, too. In short order then, depending on installations, a greater percentage of iPads and iPhones than Androids may have Google Now.

    The feature is phenomenal and in some ways frightening. Surely you at least suspect Google watches you online. Saturday, I searched YouTube for Journey song “Don’t Stop Believin’”, from Google TV. Yesterday morning, on my laptop, Google Music presented album “Escape”, which contains the track, to buy — just $6.99. That can’t be coincidence. Google watches you. Now. Google Now is tacit admission of this behavior and brings all that monitoring together into a useful utility.

    The search giant refers to the feature as a mobile personal assistant. There’s something to that. Google Now presents information, proactively, in cards. Rather than search, relevant information comes to you, like drive-time to work or home, nearby events, flight status, package delivery, real estate listings (close to where you are now), movie showtimes, nearby attractions and much, much more.

    Apple also calls Siri a personal assistant, which in my testing can’t compete with Google Now coupled with voice search, which is a killer app combination. If using iOS, see for yourself by asking Siri and Google Search questions.

    As for Google Now on iOS, I don’t have iPad or iPhone in house right now. So I asked colleague Wayne Williams to do some quick testing. Functionality of Google Now, combined with voice search, seems comparable to Android, but I can’t confirm full capabilities, such as using Notifications, for example.

    Now joins Google Maps and Google+, among others, as exemplary iOS apps, sometimes getting new capabilities ahead of their Android counterparts. The search giant embraces iOS, extends utility with its own services and extinguishes competing ones, or tries to. Like Microsoft, Google leverages a monopoly product (search rather than Windows).

    But there’s a difference: Google tries to do better and doesn’t appear to be trying to extinguish rival platforms so much as competing services on them. That’s a departure from Microsoft’s triple-E strategy during the height of monopoly influence.

    If you use iOS, try out Google Now and offer reaction here in comments. I am especially interested in how you think Siri compares with Google Now and voice search.

    Photo Credit: rudall30/Shutterstock

  • Get ready for Google I/O: reported Nexus 11 tablet specs leak

    Attendees of the annual Google I/O developer event are looking forward to the conference, which takes place in two weeks. Sure, they’ll get to hear details of Google’s latest Chrome, Chrome OS and Android efforts, but that’s only part of the story. Often, Google introduces a new Nexus device to showcase its software. Last year the Nexus 7 tablet arrived and this year, it could be a larger Nexus 11 tablet if leaked specifications pan out.

    The SamMobile blog, which has a better than average track record for such leaks, reported on Monday that the Nexus 11 appears on Samsung’s 2013 tablet roadmap. Samsung currently makes the Nexus 10 tablet and it also built the Galaxy Nexus and Nexus S smartphones. As the biggest seller of Android hardware, Samsung is Google’s key partner of late. Then again, the two have a complicated relationship as Samsung’s Galaxy line is becoming synonymous with the Android brand to many.

    exynos-5-powerSo what does the leaked roadmap say about a new Nexus tablet? Not much but enough to give prospective Nexus 10 buyers a reason to pause: The rumored tablet is expected to be the first octa-core tablet to market, running on Samsung’s 8-core Exynos 5410 chip. Don’t get too hung up on the eight cores though; they’re not all high performing processors. Instead, four are cutting edge Cortex-A15 cores for heavy duty activities while the other quartet are Cortex-A7 cores to offload lighter tasks and save on power consumption.

    The 11-inch display is expected to be a Super PLS TFT screen and I’d expect it to be at least 1920 x 1080 resolution, if not the same 2560 x 1600 resolution used on the current Nexus 10. A pair of cameras should grace the slate — 8 megapixels on the back and 2 megapixels on the front — while a feature unique to Nexus devices may finally appear as well: micro SD expansion.

    A lesser version of the tablet is reportedly planned as well: Samsung may create a Galaxy Tab 11 with similar specifications. That device would certainly use Samsung’s TouchWiz software interface and feature set, of course. And if the roadmap is accurate, Samsung will opt for a standard dual-core Exynos 5250 chip; likely to keep costs down.

    chrome-tabletCould the Nexus 11 be legit? I’d say the odds are quite good although I don’t know if we need a larger Android tablet on the market. Then again, might a Chrome OS tablet be a possibility? If so, then an 11- inch slate might be sized just right, especially with a docking keyboard.

    We’ll find out for sure at Google I/O, where we’ll be reporting live.

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
    Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.

        

  • La Salle High School Issues Statement After Shooting

    As previously reported, a student at the all-male La Salle High School in Cincinnati attempted to take his own life today by way of a self-inflicted gunshot wound during the first class of the day.

    According to reports, police have indicated that he did not threaten to harm other students.

    The school has now issued the following statement on its site:

    ALL LA SALLE HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS ARE SAFE AND BEING DISMISSED INTO THE CUSTODY OF THEIR PARENTS DUE TO AN ATTEMPTED SUICIDE INVOLVING ONE STUDENT.

    The student has not been identified, and his condition is unknown, as reporters wait to hear from hospital authorities. He was reportedly taken to the University of Cincinnati Medical Center.

    More here.

  • School Shooting In Cincinnati: Student Shoots Self At La Salle High School

    Update: In a press conference, authorities said that he is “fighting for his life”.

    According to reports, a high school student at La Salle High School in Cincinnati shot himself this morning.

    The story is still developing, but according to Ohio’s 10TV.com, police are on the scene after being called around 9AM:

    Officers were called to the school on North Bend Road around 9 a.m. Monday. Authorities say a student shot himself in the school.

    It reportedly happened during the first class of the day, and multiple students called 911 to report the incident.

    The school is reportedly on lockdown, and the student was taken to the hospital. The Hamilton County sheriff’s office told the AP that there was no apparent threat to other students.

    The student’s condition is unknown at this time. Reporters are waiting to talk to hospital officials.

    The student has not been identified, but is apparently male, as La Salle is a Catholic all-male school. It’s on North Bend Road, and reportedly has about 800 students enrolled.

    Local12 (CBS) has a live feed.

    Update: From Fox19:

    The student was taken to University of Cincinnati Medical Center…The school was placed on lockdown after the shooting, but parents are now being allowed in the school to meet with their sons. Classes have not been cancelled, but parents are permitted to take their student home.

    Update: The school has issued a statement:

    ALL LA SALLE HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS ARE SAFE AND BEING DISMISSED INTO THE CUSTODY OF THEIR PARENTS DUE TO AN ATTEMPTED SUICIDE INVOLVING ONE STUDENT.

  • Google Fiber forces Time Warner’s hand yet again

    Time Warner Free Wi-Fi Austin
    There’s little doubt that Google Fiber is forcing rivals to be more competitive, and another instance of Google’s Internet service forcing rival ISP’s hand has emerged. Now that Time Warner Cable is realizing that criticizing Google’s revolutionary Internet service won’t make it go away, the New York-based ISP admitted in a recent blog post that it is being forced — sorry, “encouraged” — to change its plans in Austin, Texas as a result of the coming competition from Google Fiber.

    Continue reading…

  • Will Google Glass Boost Demand for Cloud Computing?

    What do you get when you combine Google Glass and Robert Scoble taking a shower? A blogospheric buzzstorm, as evidenced this past weekend. But behind the raves and ribbing about Scoble and his enthusiasm for Google Glass lurked an intriguing question: will Glass lead to frictionless sharing that alters the way data is stored, uploaded and distributed?

    Scoble, a technology evangelist and blogger for cloud computing specialist Rackspace Hosting, argues that it will.

    “Google Glass is going to need a new kind of cloud computing and Google won’t be able to satisfy all the demand,” Scoble wrote in a widely-linked Google+ post. ”If Google Glass is as big a deal as I think it will be, humans will generate much more data than they do today. Either because of sensor tracking to do things like play location-based games, or do health tracking, or more. Think about Waze, a traffic app, on Google Glass. The new developers will need new cloud computing. Plus, I see Glass as part of a contextual system, one that uses an Internet of Things, but also brings data from your own businesses in along with big data computation that will find new patterns to display on our glass.”

    And that, Scoble says, is the answer to the question at the heart of his post: “Why does Rackspace fly me around to promote Google?”

    “It’s getting clearer and clearer to me that the future is contextual systems and Rackspace, if it executes well, should be a leader in providing infrastructure to these systems,” he writes. “If not, shame on us, but at least we knew where the goal line was because of the conversations we’ve been having with developers, analysts, and press about Google Glass.”

  • Google Now Hits iPhone And iPad With Less Features

    Google has made Google Now available on iOS in a new update to the Search app for iPhones and iPads.

    Here’s the description for what’s new in version 3.0.0:

    Get just the right information at just the right time with Google Now.

    • weather and traffic conditions before you start your day

    • updates on your favorite sports teams and breaking news stories as they happen

    Find out more about all other ways Google Now can help at http://www.google.com/now

    Google Now on iOS doesn’t support as many features as its Android counterpart. According to The Verge, Google will support the iOS background location feature, but it won’t use the iOS notification system to push Google Now alerts like on Android.

    It also only has 22 of the 29 card types available on Android, leaving out boarding passes, local events, and Fandango, to name a few. Of course, Apple’s own Passbook offers similar features.

    The app is available in the App Store.

    Google Now is expected to come to Google’s Chrome browser, and possibly even the Google homepage in the future.

    Update: Google has now posted about the offering on the official blog, adding:

    In addition to the handy cards in Google Now, the Google Search app still gives you instant answers to all your questions. Try tapping the microphone and speak to your phone—you’ll get quick answers spoken back to you. For example, ask Google, “Do I need an umbrella this weekend?” and you’ll get the forecast. Or ask “Who’s in the cast of ‘Oblivion’?” to decide if you want to see it. Voice Search is particularly handy on the go—try “Show me nearby pizza places” and you’ll see a map of restaurants around you with directions, phone numbers, ratings and hours.

  • Vodafone investors want more money in still-speculative Verizon takeover deal

    Verizon hasn’t put an offer on the table, but that hasn’t stopped some of Vodafone’s biggest investors from saying a $100 billion takeover price is too small. They want $120 billion, gosh darn it!

    According to a Reuters story this weekend, six institutional investors have protested the $100 billion price tag that Reuters floated last Wednesday. Both of these numbers followed a wack-a-doo rumor from early April that AT&T and Verizon would jointly team up to buy out Vodafone’s 45 percent stake in Verzion in a deal valued at $245 billion. That rumor was reported by the Financial Times’ Alphaville blog. And Verizon denied it.

    For those watching at home, it’s possible that you think the media has lost its ever-loving mind, or that somewhere a bored investment banker is sitting back in his ergonomic chair, fingering his Ferragamo tie and cackling with glee. But in general, when these sorts of rumors start hitting the press, it’s part of an aggressive campaign of leaks, where a company (or bank) can float some rumors in hopes of sparking a deal.

    Reuters reporters aren’t getting phone calls from Verizon’s board members (although it has happened!); I think they are getting calls from bankers who want to make a deal happen. And it’s a crazy deal with crazy regulatory and possibly tax burdens, but it’s also the right sort of crazy. Verizon and Vodafone’s shared stake in Verizon Wireless has irked both companies for years.

    Vodafone needs cash for investments in growing markets and Verizon has been stingy with its dividends. But, as the latest Verizon dividend payment shows, if investors can get Verizon to part with the dollars, Vodafone rewards its shareholders with cash. Meanwhile, Verizon would love to own its network outright if Vodafone would just sell back that stake. But so far Vodafone won’t. Thus, the leaks.

    Of course, the two companies have broached the subject of a merger, much like unhappy spouses broach the topic of divorce. But the logistics of the deal — Verizon probably doesn’t want to pay what Vodafone thinks the stake is worth, and each side has shareholders who are, like children, unhappy with a split — have made it too much to think about.

    Hence the posturing via blogs and wire services. This is a way of testing the shareholders and perhaps regulators to get a feel for what the deal might entail. This may not come from the companies as a serious play, but rather from bankers who see the fees associated with the deal and understand the lay of the land at both companies. If they can warm up the companies via the media, then they might get a chance at a pretty lucrative deal. That is what bankers get paid to do.

    So grab your popcorn, and sit back to enjoy the negotiations between Verizon, Vodafone and whatever financial institution or institutions are selling this sideshow. I suppose it beats wondering how carriers will compensate for the lost of messaging revenue.

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
    Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.

        

  • StumbleUpon Looks To Get Faster

    StumbleUpon is going with a new content delivery network – NetDNA’s MaxCDN. This, according to the two parties involved, will help increase web page download speed on StumbleUpon.com.

    “The social media market is crowded, therefore it is imperative that we provide our users with an experience that is superior to all other discovery engines,” said Anoakie Turner, software architect for StumbleUpon. “MaxCDN allows us to do just that and we are incredibly pleased with the performance we’ve achieved to this point.”

    “With more than 25 million users worldwide, StumbleUpon was in need of a web performance optimization solution that scales worldwide,” said Samir Said, vice president of MaxCDN sales. “It is an honor to be selected by StumbleUpon and we look forward to a successful relationship with the company.”

    Last year, StumbleUpon placed more of an emphasis on its own site as a content destination discovery. Historically, StumbleUpon has been mainly about pointing you to content on other sites, with little need to visit StumbleUpon.com itself.

    To a major extent, it’s still about pointing you other pages on other sites, but with the recent redesign, there is more of a reason to stick around on StumbleUpon’s own site to at least browse thumbnails, channels, and other users’ profiles before selecting the content you want to venture to.

    Despite these changes, the site is still a major traffic driver to sites all over the web.

  • Data Center Links: Cobalt, NYI, Primus

    Here’s our review of some of this week’s noteworthy links for the data center industry:

    Cobalt selected by Zeneva.  Cobalt Data Centers announced that it has been selected by Florida-based Zeneva for its west coast interconnection and operations hub.  “We are excited to access the Cobalt Cheyenne ecosystem,” said Timothy Lee, director of operations of Zeneva. “We’re building our own network, and as an emerging cloud provider having access to Level 3, TW Telecom, Hurricane Electric and numerous other carriers was very important. Cobalt is rapidly becoming known for its connectivity and fast growing ecosystem of content and cloud providers, so it was an obvious fit for a high performance cloud operation like Zeneva. And we intend to offer our full suite of products, including network and colocation, to West Coast users via the Cobalt platform.”

    Clickbank expands at NYI.  NYI announced that Clickbank has increased its infrastructure footprint at NYI, a New York speciality data center solutions provider. After starting with NYI in the Bridgewater, New Jersey data center in 2010 Clickbank has upgraded to a customized colocation solution. ”As one of the first tenants at their New Jersey facility, I am happy to report that all the efficiencies that NYI promised have not only come true, they have helped our business immeasurably,” said Mark Hellbusch, Director of IT Operations for ClickBank. “With the upgrade, we look forward to continued growth for all of our vendors and partners.”

    BLACKIRON sold to Rogers Communications. Primus Telecommunications (PTGI) announced that it has sold BLACKIRON Data, its pure data center operations in Canada, to Rogers Communications for approximately CAD$200 million. BLACKIRON owns and operates eight data centers in five major cities in Canada, with approximately 4,000 customers. “The sale of BLACKIRON Data to Rogers marks a successful monetization of one of our worldwide assets. Looking ahead, the Board will consider various options for deploying the net cash proceeds of this sale,” said Peter D. Aquino, Executive Chariman of Primus.” Having separated our data center assets, rebranded BLACKIRON Data, and through our commitment to investing in fully certified Tier III capacity expansions and a second-generation cloud platform, we created a highly attractive portfolio across Canada,” added Andrew Day, President and CEO of Primus. “We are extremely proud of BLACKIRON’s employee contribution in building this great company,” said AJ Byers, President, BLACKIRON Data. “As part of Rogers Business Solutions going forward, we are confident that BLACKIRON will continue to grow and flourish as a customer-focused and best-in-class data centre and cloud-based services provider”.