Category: News

  • Google Street View Takes You to Abandoned Fukushima Town of Namie-machi

    Google is announcing another batch of fresh Street View imagery, this time coming from Japan.

    More specifically, Namie-machi, a small city in Fukushima Prefecture that’s in the Fukushima exclusion zone. That means that although years have passed since the nuclear accident that occurred as a result of the great earthquake of 2011, Namie-machi’s residents are still unable to return to their city.

    And that affects 21,000 people, according to a Google blog post.

    Google’s Street View team combed through the deserted town, and what you have is some more stunning imagery from a natural disaster. Back in December of 2011, Google unveiled Street View imagery of the earthquake and tsunami-torn northeastern coast of Japan.

    Here’s the kind of stuff you’ll see:

    Namie-machi mayor Tamotsu Baba explains the above image:

    This image shows an area located one kilometer inland from the Pacific Ocean. In the distance you can see Ukedo Elementary School. Nearby Ukedo Harbor once proudly boasted 140 fishing boats and 500 buildings, but suffered some of the worst tsunami damage. After being set off-limits, we have not been able to clean up the wreckage on the side of the road, including the many fishing boats that were washed several kilometers inland.

    Baba goes on to heartbreakingly convey that some people just want to see the state of their home.

    “Many of the displaced townspeople have asked to see the current state of their city, and there are surely many people around the world who want a better sense of how the nuclear incident affected surrounding communities.”

    You can start looking around Namie-machi today.

  • Will Google Offer A ‘Brain Interface’ Within The Next Ten Years?

    Google put out a new Webmaster Help video today, though this one doesn’t really do much to help webmasters. It’s simply Matt Cutt responding to the question: Where do you see Google search 10 years down the road?

    An interesting topic, for sure.

    As Cutts notes, that’s a long time. In Internet years that’s a really, really long time. I can’t imagine how even Cutts could possibly know what Google will be like that far into the future. It sounds, however, like a lot of current Google projects like Google Glass and Google Now are involved.

    One interesting (if not scary) concept Cutts mentions is a brain interface.

    “In theory there could be a brain interface so you could be having a dialogue where some of it is audible and some of it is not,” he contemplates.

    I think that hovers somewhere around that “creepy line” that Microsoft likes to keep talking about (and even illustrating). Former Google CEO (and current Executive Chairman) Eric Schmidt said a few years ago that brain implants would cross the creepy line. The part about the creepy line was used as a sound byte in Microsoft’s “Scroogled” campaign about Gmail, even though Schmidt was talking about brain implants.

    I smell a Scroogled resurrection.

  • Amazon Plans To Launch Kindle Phone In Q2 2013 [Rumor]

    We can probably expect a new Kindle tablet or eReader this year, but we can’t be so sure about a Kindle Phone. A few rumors have pointed to the company working on such a device, but there’s been nothing concrete yet. The latest rumors continue that trend with some wild speculation regarding the device.

    Digitimes reports that Amazon is prepping a 4.7-inch Kindle Phone for release in the second quarter of this year. If true, that puts the launch at some point between the beginning of April and the end of June. For a product that we haven’t even see yet, it seems highly unlikely.

    Digitimes’ sources address the unlikelihood of a second quarter release by saying that Amazon is only hoping to launch by then. The company may very well have to push the launch back as production progress has reportedly “not been as smooth as expected.”

    Another potential reason for the delay is that Amazon has recently changed the display size of the device. The Kindle Phone was originally going to sport a 4.3-inch display, but Amazon upped it to a 4.7-inch display after “witnessing increased demand for larger size screens among consumers.”

    It will be interesting to see the reception to a Kindle phone if the rumors are true. People use tablets, and by extension the Kindle Fire, to consume content. Smartphones are a somewhat different beast as the focus is placed instead on communication and sharing. Amazon has an inviting content ecosystem that’s easy to sell in a tablet, but it may be a bit harder to sell that experience to those looking fora smartphone.

    [h/t: Cult of Android]

  • Amazon reportedly increasing Kindle phone screen size in response to ‘phablet’ fever

    Amazon Kindle Smartphone Specs
    Earlier reports have suggested that Amazon (AMZN) is preparing to launch its long-rumored Kindle smartphone later this year. According to Digitimes, the new device will include a 4.7-inch display, slightly bigger than the 4.3-inch display that the company had originally planned. Amazon is said to have increased the screen size in response to the growing demand for larger devices among consumers. The company has also reportedly been working on “enhancing other specifications of the smartphone,” which may relate to recent reports of manufacturing delays. The Kindle smartphone will presumably run a heavily customized version of Android, similar to the Kindle Fire tablet, and could cost between $100 and $249. The device is expected to be released sometime after June.

  • Google Translate for Android speaks your language, even while offline

    ¡Hola! Many of us use Google Translate, some on a daily basis. For instance, I follow a few blogs in Reader (a moment of silence please) that are published in languages that are foreign to me. For the most part it works well, but can also lead to some rather amusing results. Now you can get those same laughs from your Android phone, even when you are offline.

    Today Google’s product manager Minqi Jiang announces that the search giant and mobile operating system developer is “launching offline language packages for Google Translate on Android (2.3 and above) with support for 50 languages, from French and Spanish to Chinese and Arabic”.

    Obviously you need the Translate app installed. From there, the new update provides an “Offline Languages” option where you can download the packages available. A word of caution though — Jiang points out that “While the offline models are less comprehensive than their online equivalents, they are perfect for translating in a pinch when you are traveling abroad with poor reception or without mobile data access”.

    To enable the offline translation between any two languages you will need to select them within that offline languages menu. Once the packages are downloaded then you can head off to Paris for that vacation you have been dreaming of.

    Photo Credit: Igor Petrov/Shutterstock

  • Quietly, Opera is working on becoming a Smart TV powerhouse

    Quick: What’s the first thing that pops in your head when you think of Opera? If you’re anything like me, it’s probably the company’s desktop browser. But there’s more to Opera: The company has been hugely successful in mobile, bringing in more than $400 million in ad revenue in 2012 alone, and it’s now getting ready to repeat that success story on the TV.

    Opera has been active in TV for some time. The company’s browser software-development kit has been powering TVs and connected devices from Panasonic, Toshiba, Sharp and Philips as well as the new Boxee TV, just to name a few. Frode Hernes, VP of products and connected devices at Opera told me during a phone conversation last week that consumers already use an estimated 30 to 50 million TVs and connected devices that are powered by Opera.

    But Opera’s role on your TV may get a lot bigger soon. Last year, it launched the Opera TV Store, a HTML-based app store that is now shipping with Sony’s Bravia TVs and coming to other vendors soon. And Hernes told me that it plans to launch advertising for TV apps before the end of the year.

    These ads will include offers to try and install certain apps within other apps, much in the same way advertising is working on mobile phones. “We have done the technical integration,” Hernes told me, but the inventory just isn’t there yet. “It’s a little bit early,” he said. “We hope to have significant income next year” from TV ads, he added.

    The company has also been adding additional features to its app store, including the capability to display apps side-by-side next to live TV and other content, and it is getting ready to switch its rendering engine from Opera’s own browser engine to Chromium to keep up with the latest in HTML5 development.

    However, some of these changes might not find their way onto TV sets until 2014, simply because consumer electronics manufacturers take their time with integrating new software. “This is not like the mobile market,” Hernes said.

    Consumers have often been on the flip side of those long release cycles, getting products that are already outdated as soon as they’re getting on the shelves of retailers, often with no chances for any product updates.

    However, this could change once ads add additional monetization opportunities to smart TVs: Instead of operating on razor-thin margins and simply moving from one generation to the next, companies could actually be incentivized to add features and services to existing devices already in consumer’s homes, Hernes predicted. “This is one way of keeping the device relevant after it is sold,” he said.

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  • Featured Android Game Review: Aces Gin Rummy [Cards & Casino]

    Aces_Gin_Rummy_Splash_Banner

    Normally I wouldn’t review a card game app because there are so many out there, but since Concrete Software is one of our favorite developers, I wanted to check it out. Now the closest thing I have played to Gin Rummy was Rummykub, which was many many moons ago. So forgetting the app itself, I had to learn how to play the game. Thankfully Concrete Software included a really nice tutorial with all the rules. At first it seemed complicated, but after one match, I wasn’t a pro, but I was well on my way to understanding how to play.

    I won’t get into the rules itself, but what’s cool about Gin Rummy is the games are fairly quick. A match may consist of many games, but the games only last a few minutes. The app automatically sorts your cards and creates your melds, which makes it move really quick. Best of all is that if you need to stop playing for whatever reason, you can simply pick up where you left off.

    Upon opening the game for the first time, you should go into the settings and set your avatar as well as your player name. Then it’s a matter of setting the difficulty to easy, medium, or hard. Lastly, you can set how many points will win the match (100,200,300,400). Now it’s time to start a game. Just tap on New or Resume if you already have a game going. The cards will be dealt and any melds that you have will automatically be created. It’s just a matter of tapping on which card you want and swiping the card that you will return. Your total deadwood will always be shown at the bottom right along with the minimum number you need to knock. Once you’re in a position to knock or go for Gin, the respective option will appear at the bottom right. Once either your opponent or yourself either knocks or goes for Gin, everything will be totaled automatically.

    Aces Gin Rummy looks pleasing and the sound effects are spot on. It’s a card game so you aren’t going to get any explosive effects, but it looks great as all Concrete games do. So if you are into cards game or if you’re looking for something new to play, then try Aces Gin Rummy. I am thoroughly enjoying it on my Nexus 7, but it will work on just about any device with Android 2.2 or higher. It’s absolutely free!! Check out my hands on video below as well as their trailer, and hit one of my download links to get started. Let me know what you think.

     

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    Click here to view the embedded video.

    Click here to view the embedded video.

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    Play Store Download Link

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  • Undersea cable cut near Egypt slows down Internet in Africa, Middle East, South Asia

    It is like Groundhog Day! Once again an undersea cable has been cut — the South East Asia-Middle East-Western Europe 4 (aka SEA-ME-WE 4) cable and that is causing an internet (and communications) slowdown in and around Africa, the Middle East and parts of Asia. The cut was said to be near Alexandria in Egypt. SEACOM-map-largeTata Communications – previously Videsh Sanchar Nigam LimitedIndia – administers the network.

    While the cut was on a single cable, it came at an unfortunate time as a few other major cables were in “maintenance mode” and that has resulted in problems for service providers across the region. Our sources in the telecom community confirmed that two other cables — Europe India Gateway (EIG) and India-Middle East-Western Europe (IMEWE) — were in ‘maintenance’ mode when the SWM4 got cut. The result is downstream congestion on networks that are going to India and around the Indian Ocean. UAE’s Etisalat reported that the internet speeds were down by as much as 60 percent in some locations.

    Sunil Tagare, who runs the BuySellBandwidth.com, on his blog wrote

    It’s not good enough to say since you have 10 cables even if going through Egypt, you have route diversity. And as today’s 4 cable cuts have demonstrated, any time the cables are along similar paths, there is a high likelihood that all of them might be cut at the same time.

    It's 2008 -- Do You Know Where Your Internet Cables Are?He was arguing that four major cable — I-Me-We, Sea-Me-We-4, EIG and TE North – were impacted at the same time and thus causing problems in the Middle East and Asia. It is not a smart way to think about the networks, especially since we depend so heavily on many of these optical cables. Tagare’s argument makes sense to me, for we have seen this pattern repeat itself a few times. As I wrote earlier, there are three major cables that connect Europe and Middle East – SeaMeWe-3, SeaMeWe-4 and FLAG Euro-Asia — and they follow the same path underneath the Mediterranean Sea, making them vulnerable to cuts.

    SEA-ME-WE-4-Route In 2010, the SEA-ME-WE-4 experienced a cut causing large scale disruptions, two years after the cable experienced an outage. Things have become more acute now considering that SEA-ME-WE4 is a lifeline for the African internet.

    SEACOM, an African consortium which owns the big African Internet cable, later confirmed the outage on its website and said that it was working towards restoration. SEACOM had already been experiencing problems since March 24 and was in the middle of fixing those before it was hit by the cable cut.

    Mark Simpson, CEO of SEACOM, said in a press note:

    The cause of the outage is a physical cable cut some kilometres north of the coast of Egypt in the Mediterranean Sea. This is not likely to be known until the cable is repaired in the coming week or two and the damaged section is recovered from the seabed and inspected. However we suspect, based on our experience with sub-sea systems and the nature of the sea area where the cut has occurred, that the most likely cause is external aggression to the cable most probably caused by a larger vessel dragging its anchor across the sea bed. Unfortunately this remains a common cause of damage to cable systems globally, despite our continued efforts to protect the cable with armour, burying, notifications to ships of cable location and exclusion zones.

    By the way, SEAMEWE-3 experienced a cut about two months ago (between Singapore and Perth, Australia) and it hasn’t been fixed just yet mostly because the network operator was waiting for Indonesian government permission to fix the cable which is in Indonesian waters.

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  • Remote Control Collection Pro for BlackBerry 10 and the PlayBook Tablet

    PCs have had a big presence in people’s entertainment systems for years. Some control the entire operation with a wireless mouse and keyboard, for BlackBerry Users controlling everything with your BlackBerry or PlayBook is a more clever idea.

    Remote Control Collection Pro by Stephan Schultz separates the control schemes in to a few different task-specific groups.

    Mouse and Keyboard work in an intuitive fashion transforming your touchscreen into a touchpad for your PC. To scroll use the very right side of the touchscreen. The keyboard be it virtual or physical works just fine even for special characters like arrows and currency characters.

    The Media Remote is a simplified tool for controlling a movie or song. This remote supports VLC, Windows Media Player, iTunes, Spotify and more.

    The Slideshow Remote is handy for doing a Powerpoint or taking people through a PDF or document. The Scroll remote is ideal for navigating long list-based websites like facebook, Tumblr and more. There is also a shortcut section that puts critical tasks in the palm of your hand like shutdown and sleep.

    Click here to buy Remote Control Collection for $2.99 for BlackBerry 10 and PlayBook from BlackBerry World.


  • SAP Launches Set Of Of New ERP Rapid-Deployment Solutions

    SAP announced the launch of some new ERP rapid-deployment apps this week. These would be the SAP ERP for Finance and Controlling, SAP ERP for Manufacturing and SAP ERP for Trading solutions.

    The company says they will deliver speed and simplicity to enterprises considering the adoption of adoption of SAP Business Suite powered by SAP HANA.

    The solutions include preconfigured software, implementation services, best-practices content and “end-user enablement.” Each comes with a fixed price.

    “The promise of SAP Business Suite powered by SAP HANA and SAP 360 Customer is to enable businesses to run faster, simpler and smarter,” said Steven Birdsall, senior vice president and general manager, SAP Rapid Deployment Solutions. “Now, through rapid-deployment, we have wrapped this innovation into an easily accessible package as well. We have helped reduce implementation barriers for a non-disruptive and practical transformation into real-time business. Rapid-deployment solutions are offering customers game-changing innovation with controlled risk.”

    “These new rapid-deployment solutions support IDC’s findings that emerging technology implementations are becoming shorter, and require fewer consulting and integration services,” said Gard Little, research director, at IDC for IT consulting and systems integration research. “Delivered as a complete package with a modular approach, SAP Rapid Deployment solutions allow customers to incrementally address business needs at their own pace in a simple and pre-integrated framework that can help them unlock value quickly.”

    More on SAP Rapid Deployment solutions here.

  • Facebook Trails Only Email and Web Browsing in New Mobile Use Survey

    A new IDC Research report, sponsored by Facebook, looks at the various ways in which people are using their mobile devices during a typical week.

    The study, which looked at the mobile habits of nearly 7,500 18-44-year-olds over the course of one week in March, found that just under half (49.4%) of the U.S. population is using smartphones – about 155.1 million people. And that Facebook is used by 70% of them. That’s #3 overall, just behind web browsing at 73% and email and 78%. Facebook usage beat out games, maps, photos, and video streaming.

    Since the study was paid for by Facebook, there’s plenty of data on how Facebook is used on mobile devices in a typical week. First off, Facebook was found to account for 1 in ever 4 minutes spent on social and communication activities on smartphones. The average survey participant spent 32 minutes and 51 seconds on Facebook every day. Out of the 70% of people that use Facebook on their device, 61% said that they check it every day.

    That roughly 33 minutes spent on Facebook every day breaks down like this: 16 minutes browsing the news feed, nearly 10 messaging, and just over 6 posting statuses and photos.

    These Facebook sessions last, on average, about 2 minutes and 22 seconds and people check Facebook around 14 times a day, on average.

    The study also looks at other aspect of mobile use apart from Facebook, and some fo the findings are interesting:

    • 25% of those surveyed said that they can’t even recall the last time their smartphone wasn’t next to them. Another 24% said that they spend less that 30 minutes throughout the day without their device within ear shot.
    • 34% said they feel “excited” when they post a photo on Instagram, and 27% feel excited while posting LinkedIn updates.
    • Half of those surveyed said they tell Facebook when they go to the movies. 13% tweet about it.
    • 79% of people reach for their smartphones within 15 minutes of waking up. 62% do so immediately after waking up. Those numbers only increase when you narrow it down to 18-24-year-olds.
    • People are only using 16% of their communication time on their phones to make calls. All the other time is spent texting, emailing, and social networking.

    For the complete study, head here. It’s a pretty interesting look at the current state of mobile connections in the U.S., if you can deal with a little bit of obvious bias toward making Facebook look like the all-consuming timelord. Come to think about it, who’s really going to argue with that notion?

  • Bill O’Reilly: Gay Marriage Supporters Have a “Compelling Argument”

    For the second day in a row, the U.S. Supreme Court is hearing arguments in a case involving gay marriage.

    While the issue has predictably come to the fore on social media, it has also become a big topic of conversation on cable news.

    Last night, Fox News star Bill O’Reilly shocked many of his viewers by admitting he finds the case for gay marriage “more compelling” than the opposition’s case. In a conversation about the court cases with Fox News anchor Megyn Kelly on The O’Reilly Factor, he stated that U.S. policy shouldn’t be based on the Christian Bible.

    Though O’Reilly prefaces his statement with “I hate to say this,” he goes on to say:

    “The compelling argument is on the side of homosexuals. That’s where the compelling argument is. ‘We’re Americans, we just want to be treated like everybody else.’ That’s a compelling argument, and to deny that, you gotta have a very strong argument on the other side, and the other side hasn’t been able to do anything but thump the Bible.”

    O’Reilly made it clear that he has always supported civil unions, but that he doesn’t feel strongly one way or the other about gay marriage, seeing it as an issue for states to decide. “I want all Americans to be happy,” said O’Reilly.

    O’Reilly also used the conversation to attack politicians for changing their views on the issue of gay marriage now that public opinion in the U.S. has shifted. He calls former President Bill Clinton a “phony” and called politicians who shift their views to match popular opinion “sleazy.”

    O’Reilly may have a point that politicians who took a principled stand for gay rights before that stance became popular might be remembered more fondly by history. However, another way to look at it could be that the politicians changing their minds are simply representing the majority opinion of their constituents in a representative democracy. Considering his experience, O’Reilly seems inordinately surprised that politicians are playing politics.

  • Google Translate gets offline language packs

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    Google Translate has just gotten a little easier for those of us who happen to encounter a foreign language or two when out and about. Android Associate Product Manager Mingi Jiang announced that Google has launched some offline language packs that will be available for all Google Translate users running on Gingerbread+ devices. Users can simply select “Offline Languages” in the app menu to see all the offline language packages available for download. Then, to enable offline translation between any two languages, users just need to select them in the offline languages menu. Once the packages are downloaded, users can take advantage of being able to translate general phrases from up to 50 different languages— especially useful for those of you that travel in places with a poor wireless signal or no internet connection at all.

    As exciting as this is, don’t expect the offline language packs to tell you how to ask that smokin’ hot person you met at a coffee shop out on a date just yet— can’t say Google Translate can help you there.

    source: Android Blog

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  • iOS 6.1.3 update reportedly causing even more battery life problems

    iOS 6.1.3 Battery Life Wi-Fi
    The latest version of iOS is reportedly creating problems for a number of iPhone, iPad and iPod touch users. Apple (AAPL) released iOS version 6.1.3 earlier this month to fix a recent vulnerability that allowed unauthorized users to bypass a device’s lock screen — an issue that is ongoing. To make matters worse, some users are now reporting that the latest update is causing the battery to drain faster than before while also hurting Wi-Fi and Bluetooth connectivity. According to CNET, normal fixes such as restoring the device to its factory settings seem to be unsuccessful in resolving the problem. Battery life issues are not uncommon after iOS updates, as users previously reported similar problems with iOS version 6.1 in February.

  • TA, Updata Bid for Nintex

    TA Associates and Updata Partners said Wednesday they plan to make a “significant” investment in Nintex Group. Financial terms were not announced. Nintex, of Melbourne, Australia, is a software provider. Macquarie Capital is currently a Nintex investor. The Wall Street Journal said the consortium’s offer for Nintex was valued at US$222 million. Spurrier Capital Partners and Macquarie provided advisory services to Nintex.

    PRESS RELEASE

    TA Associates, a leading global growth private equity firm, and Updata Partners, a leading technology-focused growth equity firm, today announced they plan to make a significant investment in the Nintex Group, a global provider of workflow software solutions. TA and Updata will work in partnership with the Nintex management team to accelerate Nintex’s global growth initiatives.

    Nintex is a leading workflow software company, with more than 4,000 customers in 90 countries serviced by a global network of high quality partners and service providers. Nintex Workflow software enables organizations to automate business processes quickly and easily using intuitive but powerful, drag and drop tools. Through its Nintex Live offerings, Nintex enables organizations to utilize cloud services to seamlessly extend workflow functionality outside of the firewall to remote users, customers and suppliers. Nintex products are distributed globally via a network of over 800 value-added partners and service providers. The company also owns and operates OBS, a leading IT services business focused on the design, customization and implementation of Microsoft-based solutions exclusively in Australia. Nintex has global headquarters in Melbourne, Australia, U.S. headquarters in Bellevue, Washington, and offices in Kuala Lumpur and London.

    “TA Associates and Updata Partners will enable Nintex to accelerate its growth, further expand internationally, and offer its customers and partners new and exciting innovative products,” said Brian Cook, co-Founder and Group CEO of the Nintex Group.

    “We chose TA and Updata for their extensive experience and proven track record helping established software companies become standout market leaders,” said Brett Campbell, co-Founder and Global VP of Alliances of the Nintex Group.

    “Nintex is an attractive investment for a number of reasons, including strong organic growth and momentum, a successful global partner distribution network, exceptional customer satisfaction and a deep management team,” said Harry D. Taylor, a Director at TA Associates who will join the company’s Board of Directors.

    “We have been aware of Nintex for several years, watching the company continuously outperform and establish a leadership position in workflow solutions on the Microsoft SharePoint platform,” said John Burton, a General Partner at Updata Partners, who will join the company’s Board of Directors as Lead Director. Jon Seeber, a Principal at Updata Partners, will also join the Nintex Board of Directors.

    This funding round will add to an existing investment in Nintex by Macquarie Capital. “We are pleased TA and Updata will be joining Macquarie Capital as investors in Nintex,” said Glen Butler, a Division Director at Macquarie Capital, which will retain a minority ownership position in Nintex. “As an innovative business providing user-friendly workflow tools, Nintex is well-positioned to continue its impressive growth.”

    “Australia-based Nintex is a perfect example of the type of rapidly growing, well-managed global business TA has been able to identify by leveraging decades of investing experience in software businesses,” said Edward F. Sippel, Managing Principal – Asia Pacific, TA Associates Asia Pacific Ltd., who will join the Nintex Board of Directors. Kurt R. Jaggers, a Managing Director at TA Associates, will also join the company’s Board of Directors.

    Gilbert + Tobin and Goodwin Procter LLP are providing legal counsel and KPMG is providing accounting advisory services to TA Associates. Proskauer Rose LLP is serving as legal counsel to Updata Partners. Allens is serving as legal counsel and Spurrier Capital Partners and Macquarie Capital are providing advisory services to Nintex.

    About Nintex Group Pty Ltd.

    Nintex is the leader in workflow solutions, with more than 4,000 customers in 90 countries serviced by a global network of high quality partners and service providers. Nintex delivers innovative software and cloud services that empower organizations to automate business processes quickly and easily. Please visit www.nintex.com for more information.

    About TA Associates

    Founded in 1968, TA Associates is one of the largest and most experienced global middle-market growth private equity firms. The firm has invested in more than 425 companies around the world and has raised $18 billion in capital. With offices in Boston, Menlo Park, London, Mumbai and Hong Kong, TA Associates leads buyouts and minority recapitalizations of profitable growth companies in the technology, financial services, business services, healthcare and consumer industries. More information about TA Associates can be found at www.ta.com.

    About Updata Partners

    Updata Partners is a leading technology-focused growth equity firm with nearly $500 million of capital under management. Updata invests in high-growth software, internet, and technology-enabled services companies with innovative intellectual property and market-leading solutions. Led by an investment team averaging more than 20 years of experience in the technology industry, Updata seeks investments where the combination of the firm’s financial backing and the operating expertise of their partners will accelerate growth. Updata is headquartered in Washington, DC. For more information, please visit www.updatapartners.com.

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  • Velocity Tech Buys velos-IT

    Velocity Technology Solutions, which is backed by Silver Lake Sumeru, has acquired velos-IT. Financial terms were not announced. Glasgow, Scotland-based velos-IT provides hosting, managed services and consulting to medium- and large-scale European companies.

    PRESS RELEASE

    Velocity Technology Solutions, Inc. (Velocity), the leader in cloud application services in North America, today announced that it has completed the acquisition of UK-based velos-IT, Ltd (velos-IT). velos-IT provides hosting, managed services and consulting to medium- and large-scale European enterprises.
    “Velocity and velos-IT share a common set of core values and a reputation for technology innovation and customer service,” said Tom Bruno, CEO of Velocity. “The acquisition of velos-IT furthers our global services footprint and immediately strengthens and expands our Universal Cloud Services offering to include Oracle E-Business Suite. We are excited to serve the European market and enthusiastically welcome the entire velos-IT team into the Velocity family.” Velocity’s Universal Cloud Services suite includes fully-managed application services, platform-as-a-service (PaaS), infrastructure-as-a-service (IaaS), and managed disaster recovery services delivered through a secure and resilient virtual private cloud.
    Founded in 2004, velos-IT is one of the UK’s fastest-growing IT services companies and employs approximately 100 in Glasgow, Scotland. “We are excited by the opportunity to leverage the knowledge and technical expertise of Velocity and velos-IT across the expanse of Universal Cloud Services and extend a compelling offering for our current and future customers. This is fantastic news for both velos-IT customers and employees alike,” said Jim McInnes, founder and Managing Director of velos-IT, who has been named Velocity’s General Manager, Europe. The velos-IT customer base crosses multiple industries and ranges from mid-market through enterprises with revenues exceeding £3 Billion. velos-IT serves organizations with operations in 25 countries. Their services include 24/7 support of business applications and IT infrastructure, systems integration, application deployment, upgrades, and custom software development. Expertise includes Oracle JD Edwards and E-Business Suite, and QlikView business intelligence software.
    “We remain focused on expanding our lead in the cloud services market through development of new channels, service offerings, and strategic acquisitions,” said Steve Shippee, Chief Strategy Officer. “This multi-faceted approach is critical to our customer-focused strategy — providing a robust offering and top-tier service while we continue to expand our capabilities.”

    Velocity and velos-IT are privately held. Financial terms of the transaction were not disclosed.
    About Velocity Technology Solutions
    Velocity Technology Solutions is the leading provider of cloud-based Managed Application Services and Managed Disaster Recovery Services. It is dedicated to lowering operational costs, providing industry-leading service levels and improving software performance while reducing the burden on IT staff and enabling deployment flexibility. Velocity provides virtual private cloud solutions for enterprise applications with high levels of performance. Expertise managing software 24/7, combined with proprietary technology that enhances availability, security, and control, make Velocity the trusted partner for rapidly and securely deploying application investments into a secure and resilient virtual private cloud. Velocity is headquartered in New York with facilities in Minneapolis, Seattle, Denver, Tampa, London (Canada), Glasgow (Scotland). Velocity is a portfolio company of Silver Lake Sumeru, a global leader in private equity investments in growth-oriented technology and technology-enabled companies (for additional information on the firm and its entire portfolio, visit www.silverlake.com). For more information on Velocity: visit www.velocity.cc.

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  • Facebook’s Mobile App Install Ads Can Now Target Specific Versions Of iOS, Android

    In October of last year, Facebook unveiled mobile app install ads. These ads allowed app makers to go directly after mobile users by directing them to their Google Play or Apple Appstore pages. Now Facebook is giving advertisers and app makers even more options when targeting mobile users.

    The biggest change to mobile app install ads addresses a major problem with mobile devices – platform fragmentation. Previous mobile app install ads would only take into account whether the user was on iOS or Android. Unfortunately, some users, especially those on Android, couldn’t use the apps advertised as they were built with a later version of the mobile OS in mind.

    Now, app makers and advertisers can target users based on which version of the operating system they’re using. For example, an app that can only run on iOS 6 and Android 4.2 can now be advertised only to those using these operating systems.

    Going even further, Facebook says that mobile app install ads can now target people based upon their connection. An example would be an ad targeting those currently on a Wi-Fi connection so as to take advantage of the consumer’s decreased reluctance to download large apps.

    So, now you can target very specific consumers with mobile app install ads, but is Facebook making it any easier to create these ads? Indeed they are, as Facebook also announced that advertisers and app makers can now easily create and launch mobile app install ads using the ad create tool. Previously, mobile app install ads had to be created with the app dashboard, power editor or the Ads API. Now these ads can be made with the same powerful tools that help advertisers create sponsored stories or Page like ads.

    You’ll be able to get your hands on the new ad create tool soon as it rolls out to English speaker first. The tool will then launch to other languages in the near future.

    If you want to know more about mobile app install ads, Facebook will be hosting a live Q&A session with its product team on April 17. You’ll have to register for the event, which you can do so here.

    For more info, check out this talk from last month on how you can drive app installs on mobile:

  • Wal-Mart is arming itself for fierce retail battles with better search, social streams and more

    Wal-Mart develops its digital initiatives and products not in the recesses of a 200,000-square-foot Supercenter or at corporate headquarters in northwest Arkansas. Innovations for the Walmart.com website come out of San Bruno, Calif., and Wal-Mart executives and media people didn’t try to hide a foosball tournament, a pingpong game and a hip-looking workforce during a media tour on Tuesday of the Wal-Mart eCommerce San Bruno facility. It’s proud of those status details and is actively pushing the startup narrative.

    walmart 2Wal-Mart eCommerce is the largest startup in the world, executives said. Employees participate in hack days and work in small teams to launch digital products in months. But with 10,000 stores internationally, Wal-Mart is the largest retailer by revenue in the world — Amazon’s annual net sales is about 13 percent of Wal-Mart’s — and therefore has much to lose. Fierce online retail competition from Amazon, Google and others pose challenges, as customers have no problem buying from a different company if the price and the product are right.

    As same-day shipping and other retail breakthroughs become possible, the Wal-Mart eCommerce crew is taking steps to do as good of a job or better of meeting customers’ retail needs online as it does in store, and it’s also trying out the sorts of projects that could secure repeat business from a more up-market crowd.

    How? Employees in San Bruno are adding features to desktop, tablet and mobile web presentations. They’re letting internal buyers take advantage of real-time social-media activity, sales information and other data. And they’re building out an international development platform that will be common to all the tech stacks under the Wal-Mart Stores umbrella, enabling quicker deployment of more useful searching and browsing tools and other online features.

    What customers see online

    Last year Wal-Mart premiered a fine-tuned search engine called Polaris. The search engine has since increased sales resulting from search engine use by 20 percent, said Joel Anderson, president and CEO of the United States Walmart.com site.

    If customers want to browse instead of search, they will soon have more ways to do so. A new homepage being rolled out lets customers check out hot items in different categories. A more personalized experience showing the top buys in geographical regions could be coming, too. (Amazon, for its part, surfaces new and popular items in categories and makes suggestions based on customers’ product-browsing history and stated preferences.)

    Category-specific pages that came out on Walmart.com last year display the products available through the site that got the most pins on Pinterest. Later this year the model will become more powerful and widely available. Customers will be able to see the top products and colors being pinned on Pinterest, for example.

    Screen shot 2013-03-27 at 10.03.27 AMThe Pinterest method shows site users the sorts of products they might not necessarily think of when they think of buying from Wal-Mart. (A different @Walmart Labs initiative, the Goodies subscription service for delivery of cool gourmet foods, could also appeal to a different demographic of customers than the usual Wal-Mart shoppers, as my colleague Ki Mae Heussner wrote last year.)

    Wal-Mart has been throwing resources behind search-engine optimization, too, to make sure consumers can spot its websites and products in the first place.

    A forthcoming Walmart.com mobile app will let customers speak into their mobile devices or scan barcodes on products at home to start shopping lists. When customers enter stores, the app will display the aisles where desired products sit on shelves. It also will allow customers to summon associates for assistance, apply coupons, scan items for prices and store digital copies of receipts. The existing Scan & Go feature, which entails scanning everything while walking around a store and then using a smartphone to transfer the order to a register, has caught on with customers, and Wal-Mart is tripling the number of stores where it’s possible, to more than 200. @Walmart Labs acquisition of Grabble laid the groundwork for this technology, and now Wal-Mart is building on it.

    What Wal-Mart’s buyers see

    Walmart socialWal-Mart’s buyers can get a sense of what they should stock online and in stores by checking out pins on Pinterest. Top pins feed in to a new social-media analytics dashboard for buyers. So do reports from Twitter that engineers have carved out from the entire Twitter firehose, allowing for better insight into consumers’ thoughts on products. They can see when the number of tweets on, say, gel nail polish peaked and see which colors were the most popular in which locations.

    On top of that, Wal-Mart’s buyers have access to sales data, which they can overlay on top of Twitter graphs. That way, they can anticipate demand and respond to it with supply.

    The social feeds show buyers the desires of more social media-savvy customers, so buyers can venture beyond traditional top sellers with a bit more assurance of what customers say they want.

    Integrating the back end

    For years, engineers on the back end of Walmart.com, Sam’s Club and other online entities of Wal-Mart Stores subsidiaries have worked with a wide variety of software, and now they are unifying it all on one simple in-house platform called Pangaea.

    Engineers are “trying to set up systems that will connect every product in the world with every customer in the world,” said Jeremy King, senior vice president and chief technology officer of Wal-Mart Global eCommerce. And that means technology needs to be uniform for desktop sites, mobile sites and stores.

    As online and offline orders come in around the globe, Wal-Mart needs to be able to track inventory and move around products on the fly. That ability has been introduced to Sam’s Club and other properties, and it’s now being expanded.

    Different sites have different methods of operating shopping carts, checkout, payment, fraud, tax, personalization and wish lists, often relying on third-party offerings. “All these sort of core capabilities … are being built,” King said. But there needs to be wiggle room. In some countries, customers don’t plunk down the total amount for a big purchase, such as a television; rather, they pay in installments. Sites need to be able to handle a variety of payment structures.

    Pangaea will also enable Wal-Mart subsidiary sites around the world to take advantage more easily of the algorithms and user-experience improvements coming out on Walmart.com.

    The advantages can benefit operations internally, and customers can get better service, too, said Sri Subramaniam, vice president of @Walmart Labs.

    Online work apparently paying off

    At first, the whole startup vibe evident at Wal-Mart eCommerce is jarring, because it’s so different from the conventional Wal-Mart retail experience. But the Wal-Mart annual report released Tuesday suggests that the company is heading in the right direction. The company posted $466.1 billion in net sales in its fiscal year that ended on Jan. 31. The United States portion, comprising 59 percent of net sales, was up almost 4 percent over the previous year, beating the roughly 1.5 percent rise from the fiscal year ending Jan. 31, 2011, to the one ending in 2012. To ensure that Wal-Mart Stores doesn’t lose customers to Amazon and others, the company will have to keep improving its digital front and back ends. Scalability challenges make it interesting to watch on the tech side, and Wal-Mart competitors could pick up some ideas, too. The question is what customers will think of it all.

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
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  • Facebook Seems To Be Having Some Notification Issues

    A lot of people are complaining about issues with Facebook notifications. Specifically, some users of Facebook’s Messenger app are having problems. We’re seeing complaints that people using the app are getting notifications for old messages.

    One user of the iOS app tells WebProNews the app keeps alerting them to previously sent, old messages. This person says that from about ten messages a friend sent today, they’ve gotten about 40 alerts.

    The problems may not be exclusive to the Messenger app or the iOS version. People are also complaining a lot about notification issues on Twitter:

  • Samsung Galaxy S 4 goes through extensive battery testing, shows it can stay on for possibly 3 days

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    Samsung’s Galaxy S 4 has rightfully arrived with much praise and enthusiasm thanks to its awesome internals and custom software, but how will the phone and its awesome features hold up in real-world use? Well friends, it appears the Galaxy S 4′s 2,600mAh battery certainly packs a bigger punch than one could have ever imagined. Thanks to our friends at GSMArena, extensive testing indicate the Galaxy S 4 excels in three testing categories that make up the average smartphone user’s daily activities:

    • Talk time – 13 hours, 53 min
    • Web browsing – 8 hours, 42 min
    • Video playback – 10 hours, 16 min

    While those results clearly place the smartphone in direct competition with other premium smartphones out there— the Galaxy S 4 essentially trumps everything out there on the “endurance ratings“, which are combined measurements showing how long a device could potentially last in real life. Hypothetically speaking, if a Galaxy S 4 owner did one hour of calling, web browsing and video watching every day— the smartphone would last for an astounding 63 hours— 3 days! Pretty impressive, right?

    source: GSMArena

    Come comment on this article: Samsung Galaxy S 4 goes through extensive battery testing, shows it can stay on for possibly 3 days