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  • The Delicate Art of Giving Feedback

    To be an effective manager, you need to be skilled at giving out both praise and criticism. While praise is easy to give, it is far more challenging and unpleasant to criticize your employees. Yet the practice of management requires you to occasionally show employees where they need to improve. Thus, it is vital for managers to learn how and when to give negative feedback.

    The first thing to realize is that people generally respond more strongly to negative events than positive ones. In other words, we are usually more upset about losing $100 than we are happy about winning $100. In fact, in an influential book, John Gottman (now a Professor Emeritus at the University of Washington) suggested that positive interactions must outnumber negative interactions by at least five to one in order for a marriage to succeed.

    This observation is also true in the workplace, as Professor Andrew Miner (then of the University of Minnesota) and colleagues discovered in a study published in 2005. They recorded employees’ moods several times each day and, each time, asked them if any events (such as a positive interaction with a co-worker) had occurred within the past few hours.

    Their results showed that employees reacted to a negative interaction with their boss six times more strongly than they reacted to a positive interaction with their boss. This suggests that negative feedback can have significant adverse effects on an employee’s well-being — and, presumably, their productivity.

    What does this observation mean for managers? Put simply, managers need to be cautious before criticizing employees.

    To start with, you should avoid inadvertently criticizing any of your employees. For instance, if an employee writes a first draft of a written document, some managers might want to suggest some minor revisions even if the draft was generally good. In these situations, managers should clearly communicate that their revisions are merely suggestions coming from a second pair of eyes — and that they aren’t criticizing their employee’s performance.

    More generally, managers need to weigh the tradeoffs involved in making negative feedback. If you criticize your employees, you will likely provide some corrective information, but you will also put your employee in a bad mood. If an error is so inconsequential that the corrective value of criticism is low, it might make sense for you to keep that feedback to yourself.

    Of course, there are situations when a manager must provide negative feedback. On these occasions, don’t lose sight of your purpose for offering that feedback: to improve the employee’s performance going forward. As much as you might want to excoriate your employee for what you believe is a spectacularly awful performance, your business gains nothing from it.

    In fact, shaming your employee is likely to have substantial negative effects on your business. In research reported in HBR, Christine Porath and Christine Pearson found that many employees considered themselves to be on the receiving end of workplace incivility, such as overly harsh criticism from their boss. According to their research, nearly half of these employees decide to intentionally decrease their productivity.

    Instead, in order to obtain the desired corrective effects of negative feedback, you should take steps to soften the emotional blow. You want your employees to focus on the message that you’re trying to convey, rather than any intense negative emotions.

    At a bare minimum, make sure to deliver your criticism in private. There’s nothing more humiliating than being criticized in front of your co-workers. And it is critical to keep your tone collaborative. Make clear that your employee still has your support and your respect.

    One strategy for providing feedback is to start by literally saying, “Let me provide you with some feedback.” That statement lets the employee prepare emotionally for what you’re about to say; in my experience, it also seems to activate the calm, rational part of the employee’s brain rather than the defensive, emotional part.

    Negative feedback is a key tool in the effective manager’s kit. But you must use it wisely and carefully, or else they will do more harm than good. Focus on potential future improvements, instead of dwelling on past errors. And think twice whether an error truly requires negative feedback: criticism can have an unexpectedly large impact on an employee’s happiness and productivity.

    And this approach should be generally reversed when it comes to praise. Unlike criticism, managers should bestow their employees with praise generously, publicly, and at every opportunity — especially at the culmination of projects. While most bosses seem to think that they dole out praise by the dozen, I rarely meet an employee who feels that the boss sufficiently values his or her achievements. So, as often as possible, tell your employees how much you appreciate their commitment and hard work.

  • 500 Startups announces Parker Thompson as partner, has plans for SF office

    A new partner will be joining 500 Startups, the startup accelerator plans to announce Thursday. The group is also announcing its new offices in New York, and that it has one planned for San Francisco in the future.

    Parker Thompson, who was previously the director of business development for Pivotal Labs, will be joining Dave McClure’s startup accelerator and investment firm. 500 Startups wrote in a press release how Thompson’s new role will fit with the group:

    “We’re also pumped to announce Parker Thompson as the latest addition to the our team. He’ll work with our accelerator program while also helping us grow our presence in the San Francisco startup scene. He comes to 500 from Pivotal Labs, where he built dozens of startup products and helped grow the team from 10 to 150 before the company was acquired in 2012 by EMC. Parker also co­founded a location-­based social networking company pre­-smartphone, and worked at Internet Archive on big data problems before the term even existed. Basically, he was working in tech before it was cool.”

    Existing 500 Startups employee George Kellerman will also be promoted to partner at 500 Startups, and partner Paul Singh is now founder and CEO at dashboard.io, although he will continue to work as a partner as he did before.

    Dave McClure’s 500 Startups has always had an international focus, and debuted its most recent batch of companies back in February.

    The accelerator is also officially announcing that it has opened a New York office, and has plans for one in San Francisco (the group is currently located down in Mountain View.) The addition of a San Francisco office is interesting in light of the recent trend among some internet companies like Airbnb and Pinterest moving up to the city.

    To continue our east coast takeover and support #500Strong NYC­based startups, we’ve opened an office in Manhattan’s historic Flatiron district. In addition to providing space for our startups (and 500 Venture Partner Shai Goldman), we’ll use the space to host meetups, tech talks, and (of course) parties. To get some hipster cred back on the West Coast, we plan on opening a San Francisco office sometime within the next year. We’ll have more on that when it happens.”

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  • 500 Startups Opens New York Office, Adds Partner

    500 Startups is expanding its investing team and geographic footprint with an office in New York and plans for a San Francisco location. The seed fund and accelerator program run by Dave McClure has hired Parker Thomson as a venture partner and promoted George Kellerman to partner, according to a blog post.

    Paul Singh, meanwhile, will become CEO of dashboard.io, where he is the founder, and remain a venture partner at 500 Startups.

    The New York “co-working” space is located in the Flatiron district and will have room for local startups. 500 Startups expects to open its San Francisco office in a few months.

    Thomson comes to the firm from Pivotal Labs and will guide the San Francisco operations along with helping to run the accelerator. Kellerman heads up fundraising and investor relations and will lead investments in Japan.

    Singh’s dashboard.io recently raised $750,000 from 500 Startups, NextGen Angels, LX Ventures, Voodoo Ventures and others.

    The firm announced the new offices and staff changes in a blog post.

    The post 500 Startups Opens New York Office, Adds Partner appeared first on peHUB.

  • The Rise of Executive Feminism

    In the aftermath of the publication of Sheryl Sandberg’s Lean In, two things are becoming clear. One: we are in the midst of a powerful new feminist movement. And two: the backlash has already begun.

    Led by high-powered women like Sandberg and Princeton professor Anne-Marie Slaughter, a new wave of executive feminism has emerged aimed squarely at the highest levels of the professional world. And it’s becoming increasingly clear that’s sorely needed: Only 21 Fortune 500 CEOs are women. Women make up 15 percent of Fortune 500 executive officers and 15 percent of law firm equity partners. They make up 30 percent of doctors, but comprise barely more than 10 percent of doctors in each of the top five highest-paid medical specialties.

    For a while it looked like this problem would fix itself, but at this point we’ve being waiting for top-level women to emerge from the pipeline for forty years. Waiting isn’t working. Women earn more college degrees than men, make up about 46 percent of the labor force, and hold more than half of managerial and professional positions. But men still run the world. (Literally — women make up 18 percent of the United States Congress, and about 20 world leaders out of 193 United Nations recognized states.)

    Women leak out of the pipeline well before they reach the top. To take one example, women’s law school enrollment peaked in 1993, at 50.4 percent. Twenty years later, when these women should be reaching the peaks of their careers, they make up barely 15 percent of law firm equity partners.

    It’s not your mother’s gender inequality — but it’s no less real. At current rates, it will take nearly three centuries for women to reach parity as CEOs of Fortune 500 companies. Here’s where we stand: Women can get low-paid jobs. They can get middle-management jobs. Very few have jobs at the top.

    This is the new frontier of feminism. Quite suddenly, some of the women who have reached the top are speaking out about just how hard it is for women to get there. Executive feminists like Sandberg and Slaughter have eschewed the long-held wisdom that leading an open discussion on gender bias is a bad career move. They follow Mika Brzezinski, who led the way with an impassioned book about gender bias in pay in 2011.

    Research shows that women who succeed in jobs dominated by men, not surprisingly, often do so by distancing themselves from other women. What’s impressive is that Sandberg, Slaughter, and Brzezinski aren’t following that conventional wisdom. They are embracing change with the argument that maybe executive feminism is just what we need to jump-start the stalled gender revolution. More women in power might well lead to greater success in other arenas: note that every female GOP senator voted for the recent reauthorization of the Violence Again Women Act. The people in power are the people who shape policy, whether in business or in politics or in the neighborhood garden club. It’s as simple as that.

    The conversation these women have started is easy to dismiss. One line of attack is implicit in the gleeful (and exaggerated) coverage of Sandberg and Slaughter’s differences: Typical women, whining and catfighting. The other criticism is that executive feminists are out of touch with regular people — they all have nannies; what do they know about an average woman’s struggles? The backlash against executive feminism gets at the heart of what’s really holding women back: the kind of subtle bias that has stalled women’s progress.

    The first major theme, the catfight narrative, has persisted despite the lack of evidence to support it. To hear many people tell it, Slaughter and Sandberg are at each other’s throats; Jodi Kantor in The New York Times claims that they have “quietly developed perhaps the most notable feminist row since Ms. Friedan refused to shake Gloria Steinem’s hand decades ago.” Her evidence? Unnamed sources, and a statement by Slaughter that Sandberg’s book “has made a real contribution, but it’s only half the story.” Since when is “real contribution” an insult?

    Meanwhile, Slaughter has been tweeting compliments, and wrote a positive review of Sandberg’s book for the New York Times Book Review. The day Kantor’s story was published, Slaughter enthusiastically recommended Sandberg’s book to a roomful of young women at Yale Law School, where Rachel is a student. It’s deeply important to watch these patterns play out at such a visible level. Women from all walks of life have watched as a disagreement they’ve had with another woman gets twisted out of proportion and recast as a petty blood feud. Having smart and savvy role models hash these biases out in the spotlight helps women far beyond the boardroom.

    The backlash’s second theme highlights society’s lingering discomfort with powerful women. No one would ever think of scoffing at Warren Buffet for failing to consider his janitor’s perspective in telling his life story. But that’s the criticism that was leveled at Sandberg in an op-ed in the Washington Post. Over at the New York Times, Maureen Dowd made a baffling leap from the fact that Sandberg is an extremely talented businesswoman to the inference that Lean In is a cynical marketing move. A blogger for The Wall Street Journal compared Sandberg to Marie Antoinette. The message: wealth is unseemly in a woman.

    What do Slaughter and Sandberg know about an average woman’s struggles? Not much. Between the two of them, they have more wealth and political power than most small towns. That’s what we can learn from them.

    Scolding wealthy and powerful women for their ambition, for themselves and others, reflects the 19th century notion that the only suitable public role for women is an extension of their role as the “Angel in the House,” selflessly dedicating themselves to the welfare of others. We don’t think care work should be devalued — but an important step in changing that norm is to get women who understand the problem in positions of power. Then you get voices that can critique the low value given family work on a national scale, which is exactly what Slaughter did.

    Women will never reach, or thrive in, positions of power as long as their wealth is shameful or their opinions belittled. Executive feminism recognizes that even wealthy and powerful women run into gender bias — and the resulting clog in the pipeline affects all of us. If our automatic reaction is to criticize these women for being too powerful and too successful, that doesn’t mean she’s doing anything wrong. It means we are.

  • The Chilling World of Goosebumps and Frisson [VIDEO]

    We know why we get goosebumps – scientifically speaking. But there are a lot of different external causes for our internal response. Everyone has experienced goosebumps from being cold, for instance. And most of us have experienced another oddly-enjoyable sensation associated with the response:

    Frisson. Or, those chills you get when you’re listening to a music. Is it because the music is so beautiful? Is it because you recognize it from childhood? AsapSCIENCE looks at another theory that has to do with fear. Fear, you say? Yes.

    [AsapSCIENCE]

  • Microsoft may merge Windows RT into Windows Blue

    Windows Blue Details Windows RT
    Microsoft (MSFT) and its manufacturing partners have aggressively pushed the ARM-based Windows RT platform to consumers, however sales have remained flat. According to a report from Digitimes, the company may no longer offer devices under the Windows RT line and will instead merge the operating system into the next version of Windows, code-named Windows Blue. Although Windows RT devices include the same Metro interface as Windows 8, the operating system does not support legacy Windows applications, and also suffers from compatibility issues and a poor selection of apps. These features, or lack thereof, have resulted in confusion among new computer buyers. The latest rumors suggest that Microsoft will announce Windows Blue at its Build developers conference on June 26th in San Francisco.

  • Fay Kanin Dies; Screenwriter Was 95

    Famed Hollywood screenwriter and producer Fay Kanin has died. She was 95.

    Kanin gained fame along with her husband, Michael Kanin, in the 1940s and 1950s while writing screenplays for classic movies such as Sunday Punch, My Pal Gus, and The Opposite Sex. She and her husband were nominated for a best original screenplay Academy Award for the 1958 movie Teacher’s Pet, which starred Clark Gable and Doris Day.

    Kanin went on to produce movies and stage productions, including a 1959 adaptation of Akira Kurasawa’s Rashomon. In 1979 she became the president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, a title she held until 1983.

    Though the details of her death have not been released, the Academy has released a statement regarding Kanin’s death:

    The Academy is deeply saddened by the passing of our beloved former president and Oscar-nominated screenwriter Fay Kanin.

    She was committed to the Academy’s preservation work and instrumental in expanding our public programming. A tireless mentor and inspiration to countless filmmakers, Fay’s passion for film continues to inspire us daily.

    Our prayers and condolences go out to her loved ones.

    (Image courtesy the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences)

  • Google Pledges Not To Sue Open Source Distributors Over Patents

    Google announced the ‘Open Patent Non-Assertion’ Pledge today, saying that it pledges not to sue any user, distributor or developer of open-source software on specified patents, unless first attacked.

    “We’ve begun by identifying 10 patents relating to MapReduce, a computing model for processing large data sets first developed at Google—open-source versions of which are now widely used,” says Senior Patent Counsel Duane Valz (pictured). “Over time, we intend to expand the set of Google’s patents covered by the pledge to other technologies.”

    On the pledge site, Google maintains a list of pledged patents, which include: System and method for analyzing data records, Large-scale data processing in a distributed and parallel processing environment, System and method for efficient large-scale data processing, System and method for analyzing data records, Joining tables in a MapReduce procedure, Processing data in a MapReduce framework, System and method for analyzing data records (another one), System and method for large-scale data processing using an application-independent framework, Joining tables in a MapReduce procedure (another one), and Processing data in a MapReduce environment.

    Google says it hopes the pledge will serve as a model for the industry. We’ll see.

    As far as Google is concerned, the benefits of the pledge are: transparency, breadth, defensive protection and durability.

    “Our pledge builds on past efforts by companies like IBM and Red Hat and the work of the Open Invention Network (of which Google is a member),” says Valz. “It also complements our efforts on cooperative licensing, where we’re working with like-minded companies to develop patent agreements that would cut down on lawsuits.”

    Google notes that it will also continue to support patent reforms to improve patent quality and reduce “excessive” litigation.

  • An In-Depth Guide for Data Center Transformation

    The modern data center consists of numerous various vital components all working together to facilitate the delivery of information. Now, more than ever before, the data center has truly become the heart of any organization. Big or small – the current growing reliance on data center environments is evident. During this growth, many administrators began to adopt technologies which directly revolved around efficiency. In some cases it was better cooling systems and power capabilities – in other cases is efficiency revolved around high-density computing platforms.

    Now, many data centers are being tasked with new types of technological requirements. This can range from hosting a virtual desktop infrastructure to running a cloud platform. Many organizations are now adopting some type of cloud model. Whether it’s public, private, hybrid or community – businesses are seeing benefits in a cloud computing platform. The bottom line is this: To truly transform your data center you will need a holistic framework.

    cisco2

    In Cisco’s comprehensive guide, we are able to see the roadmap for a successful transition so that your organization can identify and achieve business goals. The conversation revolves around Cisco Domain Ten. Domain Ten can be applied to a diverse range of data center projects — from cloud and desktop virtualization to application migration and is equally applicable whether your data center is in enterprise businesses, public sector organizations or service providers.

    Download this guide to better understand the data center transformation process and all of the key steps along the way. Cisco’s comprehensive framework allows the administrator to ensure key aspects are considered and where appropriate, action can be taken as you plan, build and manage your data center project.

  • Liberty Global buys minority stake in Dutch ISP Ziggo for $810M

    Liberty Global, which became the largest ISP outside China when it bought Virgin Media in February, has made another investment in Europe, this time by buying a stake in Dutch cable operator Ziggo.

    Ziggo is the largest cable provider in the Netherlands. Liberty announced on Thursday that it had picked up 25.3 million shares in the ISP at a total value of €632.5 million ($810.2 million), giving it a 12.65 percent stake.

    This is not Liberty’s first Dutch investment. Indeed, it is also the owner of UPC — founded in the Netherlands — which provides broadband services across 10 European countries, namely the Netherlands, Austria, Ireland, Belgium, Germany, the Czech Republic, Poland, Slovakia, Switzerland and Romania. In the Netherlands, UPC is the second-largest cable provider. Liberty also holds a majority stake in Belgium’s Telenet and maintains a European content division called Chellomedia.

    According to Thursday’s statement:

    “Liberty Global considers the acquisition of this minority stake in Ziggo as an attractive opportunity to make a strategic investment in a market where it already enjoys a sizeable presence through its UPC Netherlands subsidiary. The Purchase Price is also financially attractive given the stock’s approximate 7.4 percent dividend yield, which is implied by Ziggo’s expectation that it will pay €370 million of dividends during 2013.”

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
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  • Students Speak: The Power of STEM

    Earlier this month, President Obama met with 40 of the nation’s top scientists and engineers—discoverers of new drug candidates to treat common cancers; inventors of tools to help surgeons in the operating room; developers of complex algorithms that can help robots navigate; and more. All of these innovators were finalists in the 2013 Intel Science Talent Search competition, and all of them are still in high school.

    These students are living proof that with the right skills, tools, and opportunities, innovation and discovery can happen at any age. That’s why the Obama Administration is placing a stronger emphasis than ever on equipping the next generation of American innovators in science, technology, engineering, and math—the “STEM” fields.

    read more

  • Google TV PrimeTime adds Amazon Prime, HBO GO and Netflix subscriptions

    I love Amazon Prime. If I had a Kindle I would probably love it even more, if that were possible. Over the past two weeks I have also come to love my new Google TV, which has taken over our living room, with control of the DirecTV DVR and apps thrown in to boot. One of those apps is Amazon and I use it quite often, keeping a string of movies and TV shows in my watch list.

    Now the Google PrimeTime app for Google TV has been updated to version 1.4.3-43-79424. This innocuous little name actually comes with a huge feature update. Not only has Amazon Prime content been rolled into the service, but you can control it and Netflix and HBO GO subscriptions from within the app as well.

    With this update, Google PrimeTime is now a truly one-stop shop for pretty much all of your content. With Netflix, HBO GO, Amazon Prime, YouTube, cable or satellite box shows and a bunch of other services.

    Google also added an update to its Play movies and TV app that mimics Amazon’s X-Ray. Ben Serridge, the Product Manager for Google Play, says “when you’re watching a film on your tablet, simply press pause and cards will pop up with information about actors on screen. You can tap on an actor’s face to learn more about him, like his age, place of birth, his character in the movie, and his recent work, or scroll through the info cards to learn more about the movie or soundtrack. When you resume the movie, the cards will disappear”.

    While that update is currently only for mobile it seems a logical next step is to add it to Google TV as well. Google’s foray into the living room started rather slowly as the Logitech Revue offering fell flat on its face, but remember that Android thing got off to a rather slow start as well.

  • Colt McCoy Rumor Has Him On Trading Block

    The Cleveland Browns have not historically had a lot of luck at the quarterback position. It seems as though finding the right leader for their offense is a never-ending struggle. They just signed Jason Campbell, who is said to be in competition for the starting job with Brandon Weeden. Campbell, who has played with the Raiders and Redskins, seems like a longshot for the franchise QB the team is looking for as far as many fans are concerned. The Browns went 5-11 in 2012 under Weeden.

    Colt McCoy is another quarterback the Browns drafted not all that long ago, and fans are wondering what’s next for him now that the team has Campbell. Rumor has it that McCoy is on the trading block, but it’s hard to say what the market is like for him He had success as a college player, but not so much in the NFL.

    NFL.com reported on Wednesday that McCoy won’t be cut, for now, but a trade is possible. “It sounds like the Browns will exhaust all opportunities to get something in return for McCoy before letting him go,” wrote Gregg Rosenthal.

    Here’s how the conversation is looking on Twitter:

  • AT&T Opens Galaxy S 4 Preorders On April 16, Will Cost $250 Under Contract

    The Samsung Galaxy S 4 is one of the most anticipated smartphone launches of the year, and AT&T wants consumers to know that it will be the first carrier to start offering the device. In fact, consumers can start preordering it next month.

    AT&T announced today that Galaxy S 4 preorders will start on April 16. If you go for a two-year contract, the price will come in at $250. There’s no mention of the off contract price, but expect it to be expensive.

    There’s no word on when the phone will actually launch, but you can probably expect to see it in May. That’s at least what T-Mobile thinks as the company’s CEO said the device would be launching on its network on May 1. If true, we could see a late April launch on AT&T.

    There has been nothing but radio silence from the other carriers in regards to their Galaxy S 4 plans. You can probably expect to see a Verizon launch not soon after the AT&T launch though. The price should remain pretty consistent across all carriers as well.

    If you’re dead set on getting the Galaxy S 4 with AT&T, you can set up shop at the carrier’s landing page. You can also give ‘em your email address so you know exactly when preorders open for the new device.

    [h/t: Engadget]

  • In Texas, A Stampede of Petaflops

    stampede-1-470

    The Stampede supercomputer is housed in nearly 200 cabinets in a new data center at the Texas Advanced Computing center in Austin. (Photo: TACC)

    In its first days of operation, the new Stampede system at the University of Texas at Austin’s Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) debuted as the world’s seventh-fastest supercomputer. But there’s plenty more power in the pipeline.

    For its first outing on the prestigious Top500 list, Stampede harnessed 6,400 nodes with two Intel Xeon E5 processors each, recording a speed of 2.6 petaflops. The pending addition of 6,880 Xeon Phi coprocessors, which currently in user evaluation mode, would add more than seven additional petaflops of performance to Stampede. With a theoretical peak performance of nearly 10 petaflops (10 quadrillion mathematical calculations per second) Stampede would sit comfortably in the top four supercomputers in the world.

    Stampede is a massive Dell/Intel cluster, and is a centerpiece of the National Science Foundation’s investment in an integrated advanced cyberinfrastructure. The system also features NVIDIA GPUs for remote visualization, a Lustre file system, Mellanox InfiniBand networking, 270 terabytes of memory, and 14 petabytes of storage. The data center housing Stampede is 11,000 square feet and consumes an average 3 megawatts of power.

    Coprocessors like Intel’s Xeon Phi supplement the performance of the primary processor, and have become a common feature in the fastest supercomputers.  Phi is the new brand for products using Intel’s Many Integrated Core (MIC) architecture for highly parallel workloads.

    Yesterday Stampede was formally introduced to the public at a dedication ceremony at TACC. The system, which began operating on January 7, has successfully executed more than 450,000 computational jobs to date.

    Powering New Scientific Research

    The supercomputer has enabled research teams to predict where and when earthquakes may strike, how much sea levels could rise, and how fast brain tumors grow. It allows scientists and engineers to interactively share advanced computational resources, data and expertise to further research across scientific disciplines. Some of the early research examples Stampede has completed includes seismic hazard mapping, ice sheet modeling to study climate change, improving the imaging quality of brain tumors, and carbon dioxide capture and conversion.

    “Stampede has been designed to support a large, diverse research community,” said TACC Director Jay Boisseau. “We’re as excited about Stampede’s comprehensive capabilities and its high usability as we are of its tremendous performance. Stampede will lead the way to major advances in all fields of science and engineering. It’s an honor to be at this intersection of advanced computing technologies and world-class science, and we thank NSF, Dell, and Intel for their roles in helping TACC design, deploy, and operate Stampede.”

    NSF Directorate for Computer and Information Science and Engineering Farnam Jahanian helped dedicate Stampede, with help from U.S. House Science, Space, and Technology Committee Chairman Lamar Smith and representatives from Dell, Intel, UT Austin and TACC.

    “Stampede is an important part of NSF’s portfolio for advanced computing infrastructure enabling cutting-edge foundational research for computational and data-intensive science and engineering,” said Jahanian. ”Society’s ability to address today’s global challenges depends on advancing cyberinfrastructure.”The base Stampede system has been accepted by NSF, and has successfully executed more than 450,000 computational jobs to date. The supercomputer has enabled research teams to predict where and when earthquakes may strike, how much sea levels could rise, and how fast brain tumors grow. It allows scientists and engineers to interactively share advanced computational resources, data and expertise to further research across scientific disciplines. “

  • BlackBerry subscriber bleed turns into an arterial gush

    BlackBerry Subscriber Loss
    BlackBerry’s (BBRY) fourth-quarter earnings were a bundle of such extreme opposites that they literally stunned Wall Street. Many expected huge price swings, but as of 10:27 a.m. on Thursday, the share price is up 1.8%. Investors are having trouble figuring out whether to giggle with glee over the big Z10 shipment number or shriek with horror over the massive subscriber loss.

    Continue reading…

  • Compelled To Forever Wander, The Nomad Is An Espresso Machine That Gathers No Moss

    8c82e1_cc49b4e77c0767d47a8024266fbdac32.jpg_srz_445_415_75_22_0.50_1.20_0

    It’s not as compact as an Aeropress, but the Nomad looks like a solid way to get an espresso shot from a small device. The tiny machine, which is currently on Kickstarter, boasts the same principles used in full-sized espresso machines. The Nomad is just a lot smaller, more efficient, and doesn’t require any power making it rather portable — hence the name.

    The company is looking for $100,000 on Kickstarter. Pledge $165 to pre-order a Nomad. It’s available in black and green. I’m in for one.

    As the videos show here, the shots seem smooth and proper. By using pressure from dual micro chambers, the Nomad can apparently achieve the same results as a full-size lever espresso machine.

    To me the Nomad doesn’t seem all the portable but rather movable. I doubt I would throw this in a backpack like I do with my Aeropress, but it seems perfect for a roadtrip. If the small Nomad can make a fine shot of espresso, which it seemingly can, it could quickly become a must-have for small kitchens and the like.

    [Darrell “Wordslinger” Etherington contributed to this post]

  • Although 98% Know It’s Dangerous, Adults Are Texting & Driving More Than Teens

    If you think that teens are the most distracted drivers out there on the road, think again. It appears that adults are not only on par with but are actually worse when it comes to one particular high-risk highway activity.

    AT&T has a new survey out as part of its “It Can Wait” anti-texting while driving campaign. This one looked at the text while driving problem with commuters – adults going to and from work.

    And the results may surprise you. The survey, which looked at over 1,000 commuters, showed that 49% admit to texting while driving. That’s more than teens, who are texting and driving at a rate of 43%, according to a previous AT&T study.

    In that study, 77% of teens said that although adults warn them of the dangers, most of them “do it themselves all the time,” so we probably should’ve seen these results coming.

    According to the survey, the texting and driving problem is actually getting worse in adult commuters. 60% said that they never texted while driving three years ago. And a whopping 98% said that they knew it was dangerous to text while driving, but do it anyway. 95% acknowledged that just reading an incoming text while driving was also wrong.

    “Businesses can help keep their employees and others on the road safe by encouraging responsible behavior behind the wheel, including obeying all laws related to the use of electronic devices,” said U.S. Chamber of Commerce President and CEO Thomas J. Donohue. “We also encourage all businesses to consider joining the ‘It Can Wait’ movement to end texting while driving. Together we can help turn the tide on this serious issue.”

    As of today, 39 states ban texting while driving for all drivers, and another 6 ban the practice for novice drivers. Still, these surveys make one thing clear – awareness campaigns are fighting an uphill battle. Nearly everyone (98%!) knows that it’s dangerous to text and drive, but nearly 50% do it anyway. Sure, knowing is half the battle. But people know – and it seems, at least for now, that they don’t care.

  • Social Media App Updates for BlackBerry 10: Facebook and Twitter

    I’ve got some awesome news for those of you who just picked up your new BlackBerry Z10 in the US and for you old pros around the globe. Facebook and Twitter have been updated for BlackBerry 10. What I love, is that with each update, we’ve added some new features that make it easier for you to stay connected and do more with social media on your BlackBerry 10 smartphone. Check out each section below for a summary of new features and improvements and be sure to swing by the BlackBerry World storefront where each of these updates are available as a free download.

    Facebook version 10.0.1 New Features

    • Friends Nearby – Now, Facebook for BlackBerry 10 allows you to discover if your Facebook friends are nearby. You’ll be able to see when they’ve checked in on Facebook to a location that’s close to where you are.
    • Photo Updates – There are new ways of interacting with your Facebook photos. Now you can now easily add photo tags to a photo you’re uploading within the Facebook application. Plus if you like that photo or funny picture your friend just shared on Facebook, you now have the ability save Facebook photos locally on your BlackBerry 10 smartphone.
    • Events – This improvement is designed to make it even easier to plan and keep track of your events. You can now view and respond to events, invite your friends to attend, create and view posts on the event wall, post photos, and even tag guests.
    • Sharing – Sharing information is at the core of BlackBerry 10 and now it easier than ever to share what matters to you with all of your contacts. Using the BlackBerry 10 share framework, you can now easily share links from your Facebook newsfeed to BBM, email, SMS, Facebook Twitter, and others.

    Twitter version 10.0.2 New Features

    • Your Connect Tab – View all interactions in one place, including new follows, favorites and mentions.
    • Enjoy More Content – Take a look at photos, article summaries and other updates within your Tweets.
    • Added Perspective – See the number of times a Tweet has been favorited.

    Check out these updates now and get tweeting, liking and sharing on your BlackBerry Z10.

    Download Facebook for BlackBerry 10

    Download Twitter for BlackBerry 10

    Please note the app may take up to 24 hours to appear in the BlackBerry World Storefront.

  • Escape the Moore’s-Law Traffic Jam

    When it comes to microchips — the miniature machines that run so much of our lives — innovation has driven us farther than we ever thought possible. The rate of semiconductor innovation is slowing, however, the way traffic on a freeway bottlenecks as lanes diminish.

    When Gordon Moore, the cofounder of Intel, asserted nearly 50 years ago that the number of transistors on integrated circuits would double roughly every two years, he was charting a path for the company that would dominate the industry — and dictate the direction of technology — for decades. Lately, much ado has been made of the coming end of Moore’s Law, although the law was never an inflexible law of physics but more like a rule, a likely way forward.

    Intel’s superior manufacturing prowess in the early years of computing technology allowed the company to move the goal posts for everyone: Every 18 to 24 months, Intel would double something — performance, storage — and the rest of the industry would scramble to keep up, locking in Intel’s dominance. Essentially, Moore created the conditions for his law to hold true — until today, as the laws of physics limit engineers’ ability to keep squeezing more circuits onto a chip.

    There, however, is a possible “off-ramp” to Moore’s Law that offers new hope — not just of continued improvement in semiconductors but of an open, competitive playing field unlike the Intel-dominated landscape of the past half century.

    To understand where the industry is today and where innovation is headed, it’s helpful to think of the microchip as a metropolitan area and its components as buildings.

    Decades of innovation have made the components of a microchip smaller and smaller. Yet chips have grown larger as more and more components are packed onto them to meet increased computing needs — making the interconnections between each minuscule part more spread out.

    That “sprawl” is like the suburbs around a city. The same problems that apply to a sprawling metropolitan area apply to the microchip: getting from point A to point B requires increasing time and energy just like driving a congested freeway from a suburban home to a job downtown does. Information travels across bigger microchips with less efficiency at slower speeds, while consuming more power.

    We can’t increase the surface area of microchips much more without running into those problems, and we’re getting closer every day to the limits of how small we can make components. So what next?

    The trend in urban development today is to build up, bringing people back into city centers and transforming suburbs into functioning city units where jobs, shopping, and homes are as closely connected as possible. That idea applies to microchips in the form of three-dimensional interconnect. It’s the off-ramp to Moore’s Law: In 3D interconnect, engineers stack wafers like the floors of a skyscraper in extreme miniature, with vertical connections (think elevators communicating between floors) in addition to traditional horizontal links.

    What’s especially compelling about this off-ramp, this technological detour, is that it provides an opportunity for companies besides the two usual suspects — Intel and AMD — to compete. Intel has lost its once singular ability to move the goal posts on innovation.

    Although both companies are working towards 3D interconnect, neither has figured out how to volume-manufacture the technology. Two other players to watch closely are Samsung and TSMC. It’s anybody’s race to win.

    There are still technical challenges to resolve, but commercial-scale manufacturing could come as soon as three to five years from now, speeding the pace of innovation again and enabling new ways for the technology industry to be creative.