Category: News

  • Mom/Son Drug Kiss Gets Convict Some Pills

    A “mom/son drug kiss” has gotten the mother of a convict in some serious trouble after she used the pretense of a liplock to deliver pills to her son.

    54-year old Kimberly Margeson allegedly placed two Oxycodones in her mouth before visiting her son, 30-year old William Partridge, in a New York prison. At the end of their visit, authorities say, she slipped him some tongue…and the pills. She pleaded not guilty earlier this week to criminal sale of a controlled substance and promoting prison contraband, and Partridge is being charged with promoting prison contraband, as well. He was serving time on a weapons charge.

  • “Strobe Light” Star Spotted by NASA Telescopes

    NASA this week revealed that astronomers have discovered a mysterious object that acts like a strobe light. The object, named LRLL 54361, releases a flash of light every 25.34 days. Though other objects in the universe have been observed with similar patterns, this one is the most powerful yet seen.

    In a new paper published recently in the journal Nature, astronomers have proposed that the strobe effect is caused by interactions between two very young stars (protostars) that orbit each other (binary star). As material is dumped into the growing binary star, they believe that the flashes are caused by a blast of radiation unleashed when the stars closely approach each other in their orbits. Such an event, known as a pulsed accretion, has been observed before, but never with such regularity or in a system so young. The binary star is estimated to be no more than a few hundred thousand years old.

    “This protostar has such large brightness variations with a precise period that it is very difficult to explain,” said James Muzerolle, co-author of the paper and a researcher at the Space Telescope Science Institute.

    LRLL 54361 is located 950 light-years from Earth in a star-forming region named IC 348. The discovery of its strobe-like property was made using NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope, and astronomers used NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope to confirm the observations and reveal the structure of the system.

    Though the gas and dust surrounding the system prevents it from being observed directly, the Hubble was able to detect two “cavaties” in the material on opposite sides of a central dust disc. Astronomers believe the cavities were created by an outflow from near the binary star.

    (Image courtesy NASA/ESA/JPL-Caltech/STScI/NOAO/University of Arizona/ Max Planck Institute for Astronomy/University of Massachusetts, Amherst)

  • Freshly Funded ChaCha Thinks It Has Q&A Right This Time

    Last week, Q&A vet ChaCha closed a new $14 million round of funding showing that there are still believers in the Q&A space. We had the opportunity to speak with founder and CEO Scott Jones about what ChaCha has in store, and what it intends to do with that money.

    Q&A is, in some ways, very similar to search. It’s all about seeking answers, and this is something Google and the rest of its search peers continue to try to improve upon. Yet some of the biggest names on the Internet, including Google have only stumbled when trying to take on Q&A. Jones thinks it has to go beyond the algorithm and include a human touch. He says that for Q&A, ChaCha is doing a much better job than Apple’s Siri, which he says will “basically punt,” and search the web (though he acknowledges that the product is good for device-internal purposes).

    Google, as you may recall, bought Aardvark a few years ago to get pretty much into ChaCha’s space. It didn’t work, and Google shut it down. Facebook has tried the Q&A space to no avail. LinkedIn just killed its answers service as recently as last week. These other companies just “aren’t built for realtime Q&A,” says Jones. “They try to bolt something on, and it just doesn’t work that way.”

    ChaCha certainly isn’t the last man standing (Ask, for example, is still grinding it out, and has even been doing some TV advertising lately). Quora has been getting a lot of attention, but Jones says he doesn’t really view it as a competitor, in that it’s more about long form answers (a point validated by Quora’s recent launch of a blogging feature) as opposed to ChaCha’s realtime quick answer style.

    But ChaCha thinks it has the Q&A formula down, or at least closer than anyone else. According to Jones, while you may not have seen that from ChaCha yet, you will soon.

    The new funding is all about growth, and a significant part of that is a new upcoming mobile experience, which will inevitably take over ChaCha’s web presence. They’ve been cooking up a new mobile app, which is codenamed “Go Big,” but is essentially a complete overhaul of the ChaCha apps that are out there today. It will first come to iPhone, then Android and others. It is a much more social media-oriented experience, and utilizes the Social Reactor feature the company unveiled not long ago. More on that here.

    The biggest change ChaCha users will see is that the Q&A experience is moving from a faceless/nameless experience to a social one, so you know who’s answering the question.

    “None of us are good enough for consumers,” Jones says of Q&A services, in reference to delivering useful answers consistently. He says people need these answers to come at least nine out of ten times, and the new app gets ChaCha “darn close”. He’s been using an early beta version.

    Look for the new app to hit the iPhone in March, then Android and the web later. Jones says he isn’t all that proud of the current ChaCha web experience, going so far as to call it “kind of crappy”. But the experience that comes with the new app will hopefully change all of that once it hits the web.

    It’s going to be interesting to see if ChaCha can make a bigger mark. The service is already getting two to three million questions on an average day.

  • The Ubuntu Smartphone Launches In October

    2013 is the year of the truly open smartphone. Android kind of fits the bill, but some OEMs lock down their devices. Instead, this year will see the launch of two truly open mobile platforms – Firefox OS and Ubuntu.

    While we don’t know when Firefox OS will launch, but the Wall Street Journal reports that Canonical will launch the Ubuntu smartphone in October. Canonical says that it will launch the new smartphone in two geographic areas at that time. It’s unknown at this point if the U.S. is one of those launch markets so hardcore Linux fans may not want to get their hopes up.

    Leading up to the October launch, Canonical has to make sure developers are on board building apps for the new mobile Ubuntu platform. To that end, the OS will be going out to developers in late February. The WSJ report says that the current developer OS is optimized for the Galaxy Nexus hardware.

    There may be concern among developers, however, that building applications for an untested platform would not be a wise decision. That’s where the real magic of Ubuntu mobile comes in. Canonical says that any application built for Ubuntu will work across both desktop and mobile. Even if Ubuntu smartphones don’t immediately take off, developers still might earn a following on desktop.

    Of course, it doesn’t look like Ubuntu will have any trouble finding acceptance among carriers at least. Canonical CEO Mark Shuttleworth told the WSJ that carriers are liking what they’re seeing from Ubuntu smartphones.

    All of this leads up to a potential growth spurt for Linux adoption. Desktop Linux is getting more and more support everyday from major players like Valve and maybe even Microsoft. The addition of a mobile ecosystem that shares applications between itself and its desktop counterpart is all kinds of genius. It may just be what Ubuntu, and Linux, needs to become a mainstream player in personal computing.

  • If You Get an Unsolicited Email from the FBI, It’s Not the FBI

    The FBI does not send unsolicited email.

    That’s the simple message behind a press release just issued by the government agency. They were forced to put out this release because many residents in the state of Mississippi have received a scam email which claims to be from the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

    The FBI says that they don’t send out these types of emails and that clicking on any embedded link could result malware, phishing, or any number of headaches.

    Here’s what the email in question looks like:

    From: FBI ALERT

    Date: February 2, 2013, 5:47:06 p.m. CST

    To: undisclosed-recipients:;

    Reply-To: FBI ALERT

    We have an information for you regarding the person you are transacting with online. You need to see this yourself. Contact us immediately for this is very important to you. Keep it to yourself and contact us, get back to us immediately. There is something you need to know about this person or you might end up loosing everything you ever worked for. Stop e-mailing until you hear from us. Contact FBI secret service with the e-mail below [email protected] FBI secret service.

    Other than the fact that it sounds like total horsecrap, you should be tipped off by the ibgen.com.br address. And what the hell is the FBI secret service?

    Anyway, the advice here is the same as with any scam email. Don’t reply with any personal information and don’t click anything. That’s the surest way to maintain your safety.

    And in the future, know that the FBI will never send you unsolicited emails. It’s that simple.

    [FBI via Forbes]

  • Microsoft sends Live Mesh execution-date reminders

    Perhaps it is just me, but Microsoft’s decision to take Live Mesh off of life-support has hit especially hard. We knew this was coming of course, but still, I like having my files synced between multiple computers and, while I love SkyDrive, I do not need the cloud as an intermediary within my own home — that is ridiculous overkill and would cost me money as well.

    Today the company dispatched email reminders that began “Dear Mesh customer, Recently we released the latest version of SkyDrive, which you can use to…” Yes, thanks a lot. I know what I can use it for, but syncing between computers in my home is not something I should be compelled to use it for.

    At any rate, regardless of my rant or your complaints, the outcome is clear and Live Mesh is dead on February 13th — a bit less than one week from now. (How ironic if Microsoft then used Valentine’s Day as marketing ploy to fall in love with SkyDrive.) Your emails and my humble post here are not going to change the direction of one of the biggest companies in the world.

    However, there are alternatives. First, if you have less than 7GB of files to sync then you can certainly use SkyDrive — it really does work well. However, if you have more than that, and do not need the cloud as a middle-man, take a look at the free alternatives. SyncBack SE works great, and I recently learned that, ironically enough, SyncToy is still available.

    There are also countless other alternatives. In other words, let us not allow Microsoft to dictate the direction of our computing lives.

    Photo Credit: Dmitry Vinogradov/Shutterstock

  • President Obama Calls for Humility at the National Prayer Breakfast

    President Obama addresses the National Prayer Breakfast (February 7, 2013)

    President Barack Obama addresses the National Prayer Breakfast at the Washington Hilton in Washington, D.C., Feb. 7, 2013. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

    In discussing his faith at the National Prayer Breakfast, President Obama made a call for humility — a trait which, he noted, Washington could embrace more fully.

    "In a democracy as big and as diverse as ours, we will encounter every opinion," he said. "And our task as citizens — whether we are leaders in government or business or spreading the word — is to spend our days with open hearts and open minds; to seek out the truth that exists in an opposing view and to find the common ground that allows for us as a nation, as a people, to take real and meaningful action. And we have to do that humbly, for no one can know the full and encompassing mind of God. And we have to do it every day, not just at a prayer breakfast."

    Presidential attendance at the breakfast is a long-standing tradition, and this is President Obama's fifth appearance.

    Read his full remarks here

  • Airball Three Shots in Less Than a Minute, Then You Can Say You Had a Bad Day at Work

    I know you hate you job, but at least you’re probably doing it better than Mirza Teletović did his on Wednesday night.

    The Bosnian Brooklyn Nets player had a pretty rough 40-or-so seconds in last night’s game against the Detroit Pistons. On three consecutive trips down the floor, Teletović airballed a shot. Check it out:

    Everyone has bad days – even Kobe Bryant. We worked out the calculation and Teletović still made about $500 in that 40-second span of airballs. So, you know, we really are the peanut gallery.

  • Watch Gabe Newell Talk About The Future Of Valve

    Gabe Newell is pretty busy these days. Just last week, he was at the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs talking about the business of video games. Now he’s at the annual D.I.C.E. Summit where he gave two separate talks – one with director J.J. Abrams and one on the future of Valve.

    Unfortunately, the video of his talk with Abrams has not been uploaded just yet. From reports out of the show, it sounds like it was pretty entertaining. As a bonus, the two announced their plans to work together on Portal and Half-Life films.

    Today, Newell delivered the opening keynote on the future of Valve and the industry as a whole. Fortunately, that has been uploaded, and you can watch it all below. There’s some fascinating insights into how Newell views PC gaming as the next big thing, and what Valve is doing to capitalize on it.

    For a company as secretive as Valve, it’s been nice to see Newell speaking so frankly at so many events over the past few months. That being said, I don’t think we’re going to start seeing Half-Life 3 details sprouting up anytime soon. Still, it’s nice to hear industry insight from one of the most ambitious and innovate men in the business.

  • Bing Does Another, Slightly Different Blind Search Test

    As you may have read, Microsoft is attacking Google again. This time, they’ve extended the “Scroogled” campaign to call out Google over ad targeting in Gmail, based on a feature that Google has openly implemented since Gmail came out.

    But that’s not all, Bing is also pushing the “Bing It On” campaign again as well, with some updated testing. Microsoft commissioned another study by Answers Research using 1,000 people 18 and older from across the United States, choosing them from a random survey panel. These people were required to have used a major search engine in the past month, and according to Microsoft, had no idea that Bing and Google were specifically being tested, nor were they told the study had been commissioned by Microsoft.

    Like on the Bing It On site, people were shown results without ads, Bing’s social features or Google’s Knowledge graph. Just raw organic search results. Instead of being able to search for whatever they wanted, they had to choose from a list of five queries at a time. The list could be refreshed if they didn’t like any of the options.

    “We wanted queries that matched what people typically searched for, so we finally settled on using terms from Google’s Zeitgeist 2012, because while we could have used our own Top Searches of 2012, we figured the right thing to do was to go with our competitor’s terms,” explains Bing behavioral scientist Matt Wallaert in a blog post. “After all, you’d think Google would be better at their own top queries, right?”

    “Wrong,” he adds. “In a blind test, people preferred Bing to Google for the web’s top searches. And that is just based on pure web results, so no ads, no Bing Snapshot and Social Search, no Google Knowledge Graph. Even taking away some of our most innovative features and with the handicap of using Google’s top search queries, Bing still comes out on top, with 52% of people preferring Bing’s results over Google’s, 36% preferring Google’s, and 12% choosing Bing and Google equally (for those that favor discarding ties, that’s 60% Bing, 40% Google when people had a clear preference). For the especially geeky, all those numbers are +/- 3% at a 95% confidence level.”

    As is the case with Bing’s previous test, and with the concept of the Bing It On site, the test is still hardly representative of the true search experience, given the absence of the key features that were left out (Bing’s social features and Google’s Knowledge Graph). These features have both become important parts of each search engine’s respective user experience. The trend in search is moving away from the “ten blue links”.

  • New Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Video Games Announced

    Activision and Nickelodeon today announced that they have teamed up to create new video games based on the rebooted Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles TV series that began airing last year. The deal encompasses three video games, the first of which will be released sometime this summer.

    “The fans of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles are unique in that they span generations and are very passionate,” said Kurt Niederloh, vice president of Activision Publishing Minneapolis. “We respect this passion and look forward to working with Nickelodeon to create games that embody the spirit of the property.”

    Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles video games have a storied history. The first Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles video game was released for the original Nintendo console in 1989. Though it is considered one of the hardest games of all time, it sold well and is considered a classic. Two arcade games released around the same time, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Arcade Game and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Turtles in Time also went on to become hits and are considered classics of the side-scrolling beat ‘em up genre. Since that time, most Ninja Turtles video games have been plagued by the same quality problems seen in many games created to cash in on licensed TV or Movie properties.

    “We are confident that these upcoming games will take gamers through interactive environments and action-packed adventures that truly capture the essence, tone and exciting elements of the Turtles,” said Sherice Torres, SVP of Nickelodeon Consumer Products.

    Here’s hoping.

  • 666 Stamped W-2 Leads To Employee Quitting His Job

    A man in Clarksville, Tennessee has resigned from his job of two years because he received a W-2 form stamped with “666″, which is known in religious circles as the “mark of the beast”.

    52-year old Walter Slonopas says he and the company have had issues with the number before, and this was his breaking point. On his first day on the job, he was to be given a time-clock number of 668; however, due to a mistake by the human resources department, the number he got was 666. After making a complaint, he was issued a new number. But when the company upgraded their time system, he was given the offending digits again. After that, he says, he quit, but the company rectified the situation and he accepted their offer to come back to work.

    But the mark of the devil just keeps finding him, it seems, as he was recently mailed a W-2 that had the number stamped on it. The company says the number is simply a way for them to keep track of how many were mailed out, but Slonopas doesn’t care. He’s quit for a second time, and says he won’t go back.

    “I am completely at a loss for words,” he said. He added that he can’t file his taxes until the company sends him a new form.

    “If you accept that number, you sell your soul to the devil,” he said.

  • Netflix To Debut Pablo Escobar Drama ‘Narcos’ in 2014 [REPORT]

    Fresh off the instant success of their first big-budget series House of Cards, Netflix may already be lining up another series to expand upon their position as a true content provider and alternative to traditional cable.

    According to Deadline, Netflix is eyeing a new project called Narcos, a series centered around Colombian drug lord Pablo Escobar. Like House of Cards, Narcos’ first season would be 13 episodes. Apparently, Netflix is shooting for a 2014 release.

    The series would be created and helmed by Brazilian director Jose Padilha.

    Padilha, who is best known for his 2007 film Elite Squad and the 2010 film Elite Squad: The Enemy Within, will make his break into big-budget American cinema with 2014′s Robocop remake.

    Netflix would be partnering with Gaumont International Television, the American wing of the French studio Gaumont. Launched in 2001, Gaumont International Television has already worked with Netflix on Hemlock Grove, a new original series from horror master Eli Roth which is slated to drop on April 19th.

  • Vikram Kumar Is The New CEO Of Mega

    With all the theatrics surrounding the life of Kim Dotcom and the launch of Mega, it’s easy to forget that the startup is a legitimate file sharing business. As such, the company was in need of a permanent CEO as current CEO Tony Lentino was only in the position on a temporary basis. After some searching, it looks like Mega has found its man.

    Mega announced today that former CEO of InternetNZ, Vikram Kumar, has joined on as the CEO of Mega. The appointment of Kumar to the CEO seat is a good choice as he headed the non-profit InternetNZ, a group dedicated to an “open and uncapturable Internet.” An ideal that Mega founder Kim Dotcom holds dear.

    “Mega is delighted to welcome Vikram Kumar as its new CEO”, said Lentino. “I have assisted Mega since its inception, putting time and energy into finding investors, setting up support staff and general overview of the company in its initial stage. Now Mega runs on a day-to-day routine, and I am pleased to hand the role of CEO to Vikram who is an experienced leader in the Internet industry.”

    In his new role as CEO, Kumar says that he looks forward to building on the “initial success” of Mega and developing it “into a significant company on the international Internet stage.” His profile says that he takes great interest in “the challenges the Internet is facing such as privacy, security and openness.” Once again, another sign that Kumar and Dotcom are a match made in Internet heaven.

    As for former interim CEO Lentino, he’ll still be on Mega’s board of directors while overseeing his own company, Instra Corporation. He said that he’ll be working alongside other Mega executives to make the new startup a “global success.”

  • The IRS Just Sent Me $160,000. Can I Keep It?

    We’ve probably all had the experience where a store cashier accidentally hands over too much in change, and we kindly point out the error and decline the windfall. We’re basically forgoing “free” money, but we feel good about doing the right thing and perhaps saving the cashier from later being personally penalized for the error.

    But what if it were the faceless and evil-ish U.S. Internal Revenue Service that made the mistake? What would our instincts tell us to do then?

    I recently received a letter from the IRS alerting me that it had made changes to my 2011 tax calculation. I’ve received such notices in past years. They usually affirm that, upon further evaluation, the IRS has concluded that I’ve underpaid my taxes by a few hundred dollars, and I obediently write a check for the required amount.

    In this case, however, the change was in my favor. Significantly. A check just arrived from the U.S. Treasury, for $161,392.00.

    Now what?

    I’m almost certain the IRS made a mistake. I say “almost” because I don’t pay nearly as much attention as I should to my payments, deductions, carry-over losses, etc. It’s conceivable that I’m due a refund of this proportion, though an accountant points out that to have had excess FICA withheld of this magnitude, I’d have to have earned more than $3 million that year.

    I’m an editor, with an editor’s salary. So when I say I’m “almost certain” that I’m not entitled to this refund, by that I mean I’m 100% certain.

    Still, friends have offered conflicting advice on what I should do. Some argue that, since I normally pay when the IRS demands more, in this case I should take the windfall. Who knows if those earlier calculations were any more accurate than this one? The IRS giveth; it taketh away. If I’m going to suffer the downside, this argument goes, I should enjoy a rare upside.

    Others say that would be unethical. It’s surely a mistake, and therefore it would be sleazy to try to keep the money. An amount like that could contribute in its own way to (pick your least objectionable option) safety net programs, defense spending, or paying interest on the U.S. debt. Sure, I could probably contribute to economic growth more directly, by buying a better car (if they actually now make a better car than my 2001 Ford Windstar) and a bigger TV. But again, the money’s not really mine to spend.

    Then there’s a third consideration. Even if I were to try to keep the money, the IRS might eventually figure out its mistake and ask for the money back — plus interest and penalty. A subset of this argument holds that I could tuck the money away in a special escrow account and leave it there untouched. If after, say, three years the IRS doesn’t ask for it back, I could conclude that it’s safe to spend it.

    What would you do?

    The moral aspect is clear. This would be an ill-gotten gain. But I suspect most of us have a greedier inner self that would at least entertain rationalizations for profiting from an opportunity like this.

    As a leader of my organization, however, I feel added pressure not to succumb to such rationalizations. Although this only concerns my personal finances, the fact that I serve as editor in chief of Harvard Business Review means I’ve implicitly accepted not only responsibility for defending the integrity of the institution, but also for having integrity myself. That means erring on the side of doing the right thing, even when the challenges may seem more gray than black or white.

    If I were able to convince myself that I’m entitled to the money but were later accused by the IRS of trying to profit on its mistake, my colleagues would rightly question my values and I’d risk bringing embarrassment to both my employer and myself. This begs an interesting question: Do we act more ethically when we become leaders of companies because of the tacit expectations (and heightened risks)?

    Life is full of ethical dilemmas. Every situation is unique, but one’s values can serve as a constant guide. In the July-August 2010 edition of HBR, Clay Christensen wrote a remarkable article, How Will You Measure Your Life? One message in particular stands out: Don’t cross the line and violate your principles, even if it’s “just this once.” As Christensen put it, “It’s easier to hold to your principles 100% of the time than it is to hold to them 98% of the time.” Once you make an exception, you’re on a slippery slope.

    It’s a message that CEOs, political leaders, and the rest of us should always have in the back of our minds. And it’s the message (damn it!) that means the IRS is getting its $160,000 back.

  • Robin Roberts Will Return to Good Morning America on February 20

    Late last year, Robin Roberts stepped down from her job anchoring Good Morning America to undergo a bone marrow transplant. Roberts had been diagnosed with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS), a blood disease disorder of bone marrow stem cells.

    Since that time, viewers and fans have worried over Roberts’ health and whether she will be able to return to job on the ABC morning news program. Today on the show, Roberts’ colleague and co-worker George Stephanopoulos announced that Roberts will indeed return to her anchor chair on February 20.

    On her ABC News Blog, Roberts herself issued a thank you to friends and family. From the blog post:

    I’m excited to re-join my wonderful ‘GMA’ family. I’m also looking forward to thanking YOU … for your many prayers and well wishes. Your compassion has been an enormous source of comfort to me and my family.

    I’m heading to the beach for the next week to reflect and give thanks for my many blessings.

    Light Love Power Presence…XO

  • Eric Schmidt In 2010: I’m Not Sure You Want To Walk Around With These ‘Odd Glasses’ On

    Since Google first unveiled Google Glass, many have wondered if people will buy into the device, simply from the fashion perspective. In other words, will people be worried about looking ridiculous in order to use these hi-tech smart devices that could potentially enrich the physical world around them?

    Well, that’s probably why Google Glass has already been featured in a fashion show. Good thinking, Google.

    Google Glass Fashion

    I was watching this Eric Schmidt interview from 2010 (to find out how out of context Schimdt’s comments were with regard to their use in a new Microsoft commercial). Schmidt also happened to touch on what would eventually become Google Glass (you can start about 16 minutes in). Remember, this video is from nearly two years before Google unveiled the project.

    It seems as though the fashion obstacle has been one Google has been considering for quite some time.

    “I’m not sure you really want to walk through town with these odd glasses on, you know, looking like an airforce jetfighter or something,” Schmidt says, adding, “But I’m sure people will. I mean, as I was driving by here, I saw people riding their Segways, you know, looking like normal pedestrians.”

    This guy doesn’t seem to mind the look:

    Sergey Brin With Google Glass

    Granted, I wouldn’t say he quite looks like a jetfighter.

    It’s funny, because now that Google Glass is being spotted out in the wild, this is becoming an actual conversation, and an important issue that Google is going to have to deal with if it’s really serious about Project Glass leading to something meaningful for the company.

    Last week, The Atlantic ran an article about a bar owner, who said this on Facebook:

    Last night around 9:45 two people walked into the bar. Looked me square in the eye, and acting as if everything was normal they ordered beers.. Oh did I mention they were wearing Google Glasses! In public! In A BAR!

    The point of Google Glass is that it’s supposed to enhance your world by bringing the digital to the physical. That means wearing the device pretty much everywhere you would carry your smartphone. That means bars. That means restaurants (I wonder what the anti-Instagram restaurants will think of that). That means subways.

    Of course, it’s very possible (and perhaps likely) that this whole endeavor will lead to a contact lens version. When that happens (and if people are willing to physically attach these devices to their eyeballs), Google may just have that problem solved.

    If it doesn’t happen, there’s always the smart watch (or maybe the brain implant discussed earlier in the Schmidt video).

    [Sergey Brin image: Noah Zerkin]

  • It’s a Mistake to Make Succession a Horse Race

    Who’s next?

    That is the question that those involved in succession planning focus upon when considering candidates for senior positions. And while the answer produces a candidate, such a question is too narrow.

    A better question would be: who’s best?

    While succession planning needs focus on identifying candidates for senior positions, too often the focus is on the horse race — who’s ahead — rather than the organization — who’s best prepared to lead. In a horse race, the focus is on metrics: what an executive has accomplished. In the organizational perspective, the focus is more broad-based — how the executive has achieved what he or she has accomplished.

    As much as organizations devote to success planning issues, there are shortcomings. According to a 2012 study by the Institute for Executive Development (IED) survey participants noted three major problems:

    • Lack of a coherent strategy for executive development
    • Lack of a formal process for developing successor candidates; and
    • Lack of candidates ready to take the CEO job.

    IED’s suggestions for improvement include clarifying roles and objectives for those involved in succession planning and developing relevant analytics to determine a candidate’s true effectiveness. These two focus on what a candidate has accomplished; a third recommendation — improve the development process — gets to the how the candidate works.

    “It is essential,” they argue, “that potential candidates have exposure to issues and challenge of [senior] roles.” Toward that end, candidates should have real and ongoing contact with senior leaders as well as board members. Furthermore, it suggests that candidates participate as instructors in internal executive development programs.

    From my work with those being considered for promotion, the operative principle in this process is interaction, seeing how the candidate interacts with senior leaders as well as others at all levels. In this way those involved in candidate selection can observe how the candidate contributes suggestions, makes decisions, cooperates with others, and facilitates collaboration.

    Such a process is designed to identify the strengths and weaknesses of high potential prospects. Likely most candidates will likely rate highly when it comes to “making the numbers,” e.g. fulfilling their objectives, but not all will be equally adept when it comes to “playing well with others.”

    A candidate who favors “command and control” over participative decision-making may be tough to get along with. Also, a manager who cultivates his boss’s favor and treats his direct reports with disrespect is not someone worthy of a more senior position. Last year both Apple and Microsoft divested themselves of senior executives who did not get along with others. Apple CEO Tim Cook terminated Scott Forstall, a brilliant software designer. Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer fired Steven Sinofsky, who led the development of Windows 8. Both executives were accomplished but each wore out their welcome with their hard-headed management styles.

    Identifying such shortcomings through a process of continual interaction gives those on the selection committee to recommend development opportunities. Some candidates will be encouraged to work outside their function, or take on an overseas assignment. Others will be advised to work with a mentor or an executive coach.

    In this way the selection process becomes what Marshall Goldsmith, an executive coach who has worked with over 300 CEOs and is the author of Succession: Are You Ready? calls “succession development.” Rather than identifying the next CEO or next person for a senior slot, you look at, what Marshall says, “the next two or three generations who could be CEO.”

    Such development not only prepares the next cadre of senior leaders, it enables the organization to focus on its business rather than who’s next in line. Choosing the next leader is not an easy process. It requires a commitment to a process of development that prepares leaders for greater levels of responsibility and in the process ensures the long-term viability of the enterprise.

  • Believe it, smartphones and tablets make people use PCs less

    What a difference three years make. In April 2010 I asked “Will iPad cannibalize Mac sales?” and a month later PC sales. Fast-forward 12 months, NPD answered a definitive “No“. I disagreed: “Call me cynical and skeptical, but I’m convinced that changing behavior will cause many smartphone buyers, and many more tablet adopters, to delay PC upgrades”.

    Today, NPD sees things a little differently, based on fresh survey data that puts context behind two years of declining PC sales — that despite Windows 8’s release little more than three months ago. The firm finds that 37 percent of US consumers now access content on smartphones or tablets they used to on PCs. Changing behavior like this affects computer sales, as consumers shift behavior and delay PC upgrades or don’t buy ever.

    NPD finds general Internet access and Facebook to be the primary activities replaced by cloud-connected devices. Twenty-seven percent of tablet owners use their PCs less for the Web, and 20 percent for Facebook. The number is 27 percent for both activities among smartphone users.

    Not surprisingly, Internet and Facebook usage are higher on PCs (75 percent and 63 percent, respectively) than smartphones (61 percent and 55 percent, respectively) and tablets (53 percent and 39 percent, respectively).

    Yesterday, IDC forecast dramatic increases in US consumers printing — or at least wanting to — from smartphones and tablets, which says much about changing computing habits, and how connected devices displace or replace traditional PC behavior.

    “Total U.S. mobile pages are expected to grow at a compound annual rate of 12 percent during the 2012-16 forecast period”, and “non-mobile pages will decline 5 percent”, Angèle Boyd, IDC Group vice president, says. Looked at differently, the number of smartphone and tablet users who don’t or don’t want to print will decline from 50 percent to 25 percent from last year to 2015. Mmmm, that reads to me like 50 percent do print, or at least want to, from these devices.

    Not Content, But Context

    However, NPD’s pro-PC stance is strong as ever. “Despite these shifts in behavior, computers will remain the fundamental content creation device in consumer’s tool box for many years to come”, John Buffone, NPD’s director of devices research, says. He draws a line many other analysts do between consumption (smartphones and tablets) and creation (PCs). I disagree.

    These devices aren’t about creation or consumption but context. NPD’s metrics, like most analyst firms, are wrong. There is no post-PC era, but one of contextual cloud computing. Context defines content or creation, which will change as smartphone and tablet capabilities expand.

    The cloud is all about context. Content follows users everywhere, independent of device. Your music is available anytime, anywhere, on anything. You watch a movie in one context, sitting in a man chair at the mall on a smartphone and resume on the big-screen TV at home. You shoot a photo on the phone, edit and post or Instagram. That is content creation, by the way, as is posting anything to Facebook.

    Regarding content creation, often the definitions are all wrong. People create content every day on smartphones and tablets, just the context is different. For that matter, so is the content, with Facebook being easiest example. Profile posts, photos and pretty much anything else is content.

    During Comic-Con last year, I replaced digital camera and camcorder with Galaxy Nexus smartphone. I shot and edited photos and videos on the phone and then posted them to Google+ and YouTube. How is that not content creation? I produce content on mobile devices every day. Don’t you? At least weekly?

    Does the smartphone or tablet replace PC for content creation, or even consumption? Not today for most people, but the devices displace PC activities and do things personal computers don’t. So where five years ago most people primarily used PCs for content creation and consumption, now they do so with something else. How often must I state the obvious?

    Photo Credit: Poprotskiy Alexey/Shutterstock

  • Marco Rubio Tweets That He Is Not the Savior You’re Looking for

    Is Florida Senator Marco Rubio the savior of the Republican party? That’s debatable. But according to Rubio, he is not the savior of anything.

    That title belongs to Jesus – at least that’s what a recent tweet suggests.

    “There is only one savior, and it is not me. #Jesus,” tweeted Rubio early Thursday morning.

    Rubio is undoubtedly responding to a new TIME magazine cover story that labels the junior Senator “The Republican Savior.”

    The tweet is a bit vague, however. Either Rubio is simply speaking out against the use of the word “savior” in a non-biblical fashion, or he’s implying that Jesus is the savior of the Republican party.

    Damn those hashtags. They can be a bit opaque in their meaning.

    TIME has responded to Rubio: