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  • If the Web is your textbook, Scrible offers new ways to mark it up

    When web annotation startup Scrible launched two years ago, it knew the education market could be a big opportunity but cast its net to a wider consumer audience. Through its browser-based bookmarklet, users can highlight content on any web page, add notes and tags and then save the research online – and that kind of tool could be help anyone from consumers researching their next car to professionals digging up information about new clients or rivals.

    But Scrible co-founder and CEO Victor Karkar said his company soon noticed that while 9 percent of average users engaged with the site on a monthly basis, a quarter of its education users displayed that level of engagement.  So the company put more of its efforts toward an education audience and on Tuesday launched the first of what could be several versions targeting students and teachers.

    The new student edition includes all the highlighting and annotation tools in its original product as well as several features that help with academic research. For example, it auto-extracts the information needed for citations and quickly creates bibliographies; it saves and organizes all the research into searchable and filterable “Libraries”; and it enables students to export highlighted text and notes into shareable summaries.

    “The ways that people have been working with information has changed dramatically … At school, people doing research still tend to go to the web, Google and then print or copy and paste content. It’s a mishmash of web clippings,” said Karkar. “The information people need is on the Web so why not give them tools to annotate in the browser and in the cloud.”

    For students and professors at traditional schools, it can provide a way to organize and save web research and encourage group learning. But there could also be interesting applications and integrations with online education providers. As more educational content and experiences go digital, platforms like Scrible could boost collaborative learning and individual engagement around online documents. The startup said it’s been approached by more than a handful of education technology companies, with one deal already in place. Scrible has also been selected as a finalist in an upcoming ed tech startup competition at the SXSWedu conference in Austin.

    Other companies, including Diigo and Markup.io, also help people annotate the Web, but Scrible offers richer options and now has more specific features for education users. The startup, backed by $600,000 from the National Science Foundation, said its basic service is free but that it will soon roll out premium plans that provide more storage and functionality for educators.

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  • Andy Samberg Engaged To Musician

    Andy Samberg, who quickly rose to fame on “Saturday Night Live” with his spot-on impressions (Mark Wahlberg) and hilarious digital shorts (“Dick In A Box” with Justin Timberlake was especially memorable), is engaged to musician Joanna Newsom.

    The couple have been together for five years, and after Newsom was spotted at the Film Independent Spirit Awards this weekend with a lovely diamond on her finger, rumors began to fly. A rep for Samberg confirmed the news yesterday.

    Samberg was reportedly enamored of Newsom right after they first met; a source told Us Weekly that he went to as many shows of hers as he could.

    “He had the biggest crush on her,” the source said.

    No word yet on when the nuptials will be; Samberg currently has four professional projects in the works, including voicing a character in “Cloudy With A Chance Of Meatballs 2″ and “Grown-Ups 2″.

    andy samberg engaged

    Image: Jeff Kravitz/Film Magic

  • Zuckerberg, Gates, Dorsey, and More Advocate for More Programmers

    A new campaign looks to teach people about a “superpower” that is only being taught in about 10% of U.S. schools.

    We’re talking about programming, and an array of high-profile tech figures and celebrities are throwing their support behind the new initiative.

    Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg, will.i.am, Chris Bosh, Jack Dorsey, and Gabe Newell are some of the big names that participated in a new ad called “What Most Schools Don’t Teach.”

    In the video, they discuss how they all got started in coding and why they think it’s important that more people learn the process.

    Check it out:

    The push come from Code.org, a non-profit foundation dedicated to increasing the amount of computer programming education available to everyone.

    “Our vision is that every student in every school has the opportunity to learn how to code. We believe computer science and computer programming should be part of the core curriculum in education, alongside other science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) courses, such as biology, physics, chemistry and algebra,” they say.

    Code.org was founded by entrepreneurs Hadi and Ali Partovi, who between them have been early investors in Facebook, Dropbox, airbnb, Zappos, and Indiegogo.

  • LEGO Batman 2: DC Super Heroes Coming to Wii U

    With the release of LEGO City Undercover just weeks away, Warner Bros. today announced that LEGO Batman 2: DC Super Heroes will be coming to the Wii U console.

    LEGO Batman 2 builds on the classic LEGO Batman by allowing players to take on the role of other D.C. Comics super heroes, such as Green Lantern, Wonder Woman, and Superman. It was also the first LEGO game to feature voice acting for the characters, instead of using mime routines and movie references to get the story across.

    The Wii U port of LEGO Batman 2 will be using the Wii U GamePad to display an interactive map of Gotham City, and players will also be able to select characters on the GamePad. Players can also play the entire game on the tablet controller alone, or with another player that can have the TV to themselves. That’s a nice feature for everyone who knows one of the most frustrating things about LEGO video games is sharing same screen with a partner.

    Even if LEGO Batman 2 is nearly one year old, its release on the Wii U is good news for Nintendo, which has had trouble convincing customers to buy its new console with its existing lineup of games.

  • BTI Systems Launches SDN-Enabled Platform

    Canadian networking software and systems company BTI Systems announced Intelligent Cloud Connect, an open software-rich platform that combines network intelligence and application awareness with significantly expanded capacity and scale. It is an inter-data center networking solution developed specifically to meet the stringent performance, scale, economics and agility demands of the cloud.

    Intelligent Cloud Connect combines the intelligence and flexibility of routing with the capacity and scale of optical bolstered by the efficiencies and extensibility of applications integration. It is a SDN-enabled integrated platform that allows content and service providers to rapidly scale new services, while reducing operational complexities and cost. It will replace the need to continue to purchase separate optical transport devices, switches, router ports, and network application appliances to handle and manage inter-data center traffic growth, with more control and flexibility to optimize services.

    “Legacy WAN solutions are not designed to optimize the dramatic gains achieved in today’s highly virtualized data centers,” said BTI Systems President and CEO Steve Waszak. “Intelligent Cloud Connect enables providers to create highly programmable network fabrics for improved applications performance, operational efficiencies as well as service innovation demands. Customers can literally ‘cap and grow,’ retaining existing equipment investments, while decreasing additional cost outlays and efficiently supporting bandwidth and capacity demands. Large content providers are validating that we have effectively addressed their requirements while reducing significant operational headaches and costs.”

    The new solution features a software-rich platform with open APIs, and that integrates a converged fabric with integrated high-performance applications modules and 10G/100G forwarding modules. Open APIs enable content and service providers to integrate rich, high-performance network optimization applications developed by BTI and by third parties. Intelligent Cloud Connect benefits include large scale capacity with low-latency, SDN-enabled management and control, and increased differentiation, control and applications performance.

    “Data centers are becoming major confluence points for high rates of traffic growth: interconnecting data centers, and connecting data centers to access networks or peering points,” said Ovum Vice President and Practice Leader Dana Cooperson. “As data centers are becoming much more critical in support of public and private cloud services, they are becoming both larger and more widely distributed, adding pressure on the connecting networks to scale, deliver higher-performance and differentiated services, and improve economics. BTI’s Intelligent Cloud Connect, with its focus on high-availability, high-capacity, open, application-aware, and even applications-based networking, supports these goals.”

    $10 Million Funding

    Building on unparalleled global demand from content and service providers BTI Systems announced $10 million in new growth capital. The Series C funding was led by Bain Capital Ventures and adds to the more than $33 million total that BTI Systems has raised since 2011. The funding will be used to scale BTI’s operations and accelerate the delivery of Intelligent Cloud Connect.

    “BTI Systems continues to enjoy tremendous growth based on our ability to understand our customers’ networking challenges and opportunities – paired with our ability to consistently deliver solutions that greatly improve the way they run their networks and business models,” said BTI Systems President and CEO Steve Waszak. “We’re excited to be expanding our relationship with our investors and we’re using those funds to bring new and even more powerful innovations to content and service providers worldwide.”

  • Progress Enigma: The speakers in Session 1 of TED2013

    Session1_ProgressEnigmaAs we assembled TED2013′s lineup of speakers from around the world, talked with the TED brain trust, and listened to online conversations, one theme emerged: What is the future of work? Technology and new business practices are, in many ways, putting an end to the classic “good job,” the kind that millions of people once moved to Detroit and cities around the world to get. In this session, we’ll hear from a roboticist, a politician … and two economists who do not agree on where we’re headed. This session, starting at 11am EST, will prove a fascinating look at where we go from here.

    In this session:

    A former two-term governor of Michigan, Jennifer Granholm makes the case for empowering states to create jobs through a Clean Energy Jobs Race to the Top.

    Robert J. Gordon is among the most influential macroeconomists in the world. And the big picture he sees is not altogether rosy.

    Erik Brynjolfsson examines the effects of information technologies on business strategy, productivity and employment.

    Born in Havana, Cuba, Pedrito Martinez spent his youth steeped in rumba and the music of the Santería religion. His music had become an intoxicating blend of Cuban tradition and African-American styles.

    Rodney Brooks builds robots based on biological principles of movement and reasoning. The goal: a robot who can figure things out. Get ready to meet Baxter.

    The founder and CEO of Romotive, Keller Rinaudo creates robots that use smart phones and are designed for interaction.

    Nilofer Merchant thinks deeply about the frameworks, strategies and cultural values of great businesses new and old, large and small.

    Bono, the lead singer of U2, uses his celebrity to fight for social justice worldwide: to end hunger, poverty and disease, especially in Africa. His nonprofit ONE raises awareness via media, policy and calls to action.

  • EMC Supercharges Hadoop

    At the RSA conference this week in San Francisco, EMC announced Pivotal HD, a new distribution of Apache Hadoop. Pivotal HD features native integration of EMC’s Greenplum massively parallel processing (MPP) database with Apache Hadoop.

    The new EMC Greenplum-developed HAWQ technology brings ten years of large scale data management research and development to Hadoop and delivers more than 100X performance improvements when compared to existing SQL-like services on top of Hadoop. What makes Pivotal HD different is its ability to offer the full spectrum of the SQL interface and run reports without moving data between systems or using connectors that require users to store the data twice. It removes the complexity of using Hadoop, thus expanding the platform’s potential and productivity, and allowing customers to enjoy the benefits of the most cost-effective and flexible data processing platform ever developed.

    Sam Grocott, vice president of marketing and product management, EMC Isilon, noted, “The introduction of Pivotal HD, combined with EMC Isilon’s native integration of the Hadoop Distributed File System (HDFS) protocol, continues the evolution of the industry’s first and only enterprise-proven Hadoop solution on a scale-out NAS architecture. This powerful combination succeeds in reducing the complexities traditionally associated with Hadoop deployments and allows enterprises to easily extract business value from unstructured data.”

    Using the Greenplum MPP analytical database, Pivotal HD is a true SQL parallel database on top of the Hadoop Distributed File System (HDFS).  HAWQ adds the capabilities of note include Dynamic Pipelining, a world-class query optimizer, horizontal scaling, SQL compliant, interactive query, deep analytics, and support for common Hadoop formats. HAWQ unlocks the potential of Hadoop’s fault-tolerant storage capabilities by bringing to bear the vast pool of “data worker” tools and languages into the Hadoop ecosystems.

    “With Pivotal HD, we can check off many of the items on our Hadoop wish-list—things like plug-in support for the ecosystem of tools, improved data management and greater elasticity in terms of the storage and compute layer,” Steven Hirsch, chief data officer, SVP Global Data Services, NYSE Euronext. ”But above all, it provides true SQL query interfaces for data workers and tools—not a superficial implementation of the kind that’s so common today, but a native implementation that delivers the capability of real and true SQL processing and optimization. Having a single Hadoop infrastructure for Big Data investigation and analysis changes everything. Now add to all of this functionality the fact that the SQL performance is up to 100x faster than other offerings and you have an environment that we at NYSE Euronext are extremely excited about.”

     

  • Argo Home Alone Is the Best Movie Mashup You’ll See This Week

    The only thing better than Ben Affleck’s (no-longer-existent) beard is this incredible mashup of Academy Award winner Argo and perennial classic Home Alone. Trust us.

    [dogfoodfilms]

  • Bad Piggies Hit The Road On Wednesday

    Bad Piggies, Rovio’s fantastic Angry Birds spinoff, hasn’t been getting as much love as its Star Wars inspired cousin recently. That’s all going to change tomorrow, however, as Rovio has a beefy updated planned for the game.

    Rovio announced today that Bad Piggies will be getting an update called Road Hogs tomorrow. The update adds 30 new levels and new time attack modes to the game. Beyond that, it’s still the same wonderful game from last year that proved Rovio is more than just a one-trick pony.

    By the time you complete all the new levels in Road Hogs, the new Angry Birds animated series might be airing. I’m not entirely sure what the cartoon could possibly do with such bizarre characters, but at least there’s a precedent for bizarre video game cartoons.

  • Why Social Mobility Is Crucial to America’s Economy

    Something extraordinary happened to the American economy in the 1780s and ’90s. There were no big technological changes — factories, steamships, and railroads were still largely in the future. Yet a burst of entrepreneurial activity led to a jump in productivity.

    What brought on the improvement? A single great event: the overthrow of colonial rule. But not the economic policies of the empire, since British control in that area had not been so onerous.

    The key change lay elsewhere. After all, the overthrow wasn’t just a war for independence. It was also a revolution — a major change in social as well as political relations. Most colonists had seen themselves within a great hierarchical order where everyone knew their rank in society. The vast majority of people were “the vulgar” expected to show deference to their betters. Largely stuck in their positions, they sought protection in personal ties, and only noblesse oblige kept many from falling into utter poverty. The wealthy classes also sought stability over market-oriented efficiency and growth, not unlike Lord Grantham in the television show “Downton Abbey.”

    After overthrowing that order, Americans realized more than ever before that they could change their station in life. Many farmers took up home manufacturing on the side, hoping to afford the luxuries once deemed appropriate only for gentlemen. Marginal lands fell under the plow, and what had been a trickle of migrants going west became a flood. Literacy shot up as the masses started taking education seriously for their children. The new commercial mindset helped unite the previously fractured colonies into a national economy, with open state borders and a growing network of banks.

    That new mindset in turn did much to spur the speedy adoption of technologies in later decades. As historians have increasingly appreciated, technology is usually a secondary cause in economic development. It requires a good many people willing to do the hard and risky work of developing early advances into something that truly works in the marketplace. Just look at how long it has taken elite-dominated countries to industrialize even with mature technology and ready funding.

    Britain itself shows the damage that class divisions can wreak on an economy. It may have led the world in the industrial revolution based on steam power, but it fell behind in the second revolution based on electricity and chemistry. A major reason was its failure to develop a deep-seated culture of entrepreneurship and technology. While the United States was building agricultural and technical colleges for the masses in the 1800s, Britain’s industrial leaders encouraged their sons to go to Oxbridge and gain the trappings of gentlemen. Indeed, even as late as the 1920s, the fictional Lord Grantham’s ignorance about business and investing is all too believable — it was no part of the training for his generation and class.

    The Revolution of 1776 turned America into a land of opportunity. Now, however, there are growing signs of movement in the opposite direction. Rates of social mobility have fallen and now lag many of the former monarchies of Western Europe. Income and wealth inequality has risen to heights not seen in a century — a time when most of the poor were immigrants on the way up. With governments struggling with debt, college education increasingly costly, and jobs still scarce, ordinary people are finding it harder to imagine a future of improvement. Many have given up and sought protection outside the marketplace, fueling a surge in disability claims.

    Within companies, rising executive pay and prestige has distanced senior leaders from the rest of the organization. Despite talk of “the age of the knowledge worker,” there are growing references to “HiPPO” — the highest paid person’s opinion, to which everyone else is to show deference.

    The United States is a long, long way from “HiPPO” to “your lordship.” But it needs entrepreneurial energies more than ever now. The economy is entering dangerous times. Information technologies are replacing human workers at an unprecedented rate, and that’s likely to keep unemployment high for a decade or more. We need energetic innovators to turn the magic of artificial intelligence into benefits for a great many people.

    That’s going to be difficult, as innovators will look at strapped governments and consumers and see an uncertain payoff. They’ll be tempted to go after the money, which means serving the wealthy with ever-expanding conveniences and delights. The grandeur of wealth — whether it’s a landed estate or an exclusive hedge fund — has always been seductive. Already we’re seeing the spread of butlers, “Lexus lanes,” special lines at amusement parks and other encroaching marks of economic status.

    Those innovations are fueling a reversal of the progress America saw in the 1790s and Britain saw in the 1920s, where class distinctions are hardening rather than softening. The more it continues, the harder it will be to generate broad-based entrepreneurship — and perhaps prosperity as a whole.

  • Google+ hopes it has found an identity with new app sign-in feature

    Maybe now we’ll find out exactly how many people are really  using Google+.

    On Tuesday, the company plans to announce the launch of the Google+ sign-in for apps and websites, letting developers use Google’s credentials to allow users to log in to their services, just as Facebook Connect and Twitter login have been doing for years. The move is a critical one for Google if it wants to remain competitive with its social peers, as it could allow Google+ to become one of the currencies for user data and apps.

    Google is rolling out the program at first with a few partners, including The Fancy, Flixster, OpenTable, USA Today, and a few others. But it will be available for any developer who wants to build it into an app, whether that app is on Android, iOS, or desktop. The Google+ sign-in looks very much like Facebook Connect — users can choose which info to share publicly private versus public), and will see which of their Google data will be shared with the app. And obviously Google will encourage users to post their information to Google+, clearly a move to increase engagement on the company’s best attempt yet at cracking the social code

    Google+ most recently announced that it had 135 million active users on the platform, although how they calculate that number is still in question, and it comes in behind Twitter’s 200 million monthly active users and Facebook’s more than one billion.

    Google+ sign-in feature example

    Facebook launched Facebook Connect back in 2008, which feels like eons in modern internet years, but has shown just how quickly the company has been able to put its services at the heart of a good number of apps across the web. (In fact, when the service went down recently, it showed consumers just how many sites they actually use with a Facebook login.) So it’s easy to see why Google+ wants to chip away at that lead, and why it could be an attractive option for users of Google servies and developers of apps wary about Facebook and Twitter.

    Users will be able to share select data and activities from particular apps with certain people. For instance, if you wanted to share the music you were listening to with just your friends who were interested in music, you could make the data available for just a particular circle of people (the Google+ version of groups.)

    However, there are always privacy and data concerns when it comes to spreading personal data connected with one company out to several more. In an interview, Seth Sternberg, the product management director for Google+, emphasized the company’s commitment to privacy and trust among users, and explained that they hoped to reflect that in the Google+ sign-in. The company is clearly hoping to draw a contrast to Facebook, which has had issues with privacy in the past.

    The company also emphasized that it would never automatically share activity collected through Google+ sign-ins and then publish that data to a feed unless you specifically indicate that it should (in contrast to Facebook’s “frictionless sharing” which has seen criticism.)

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  • Angry Birds Cartoon Series Premieres March 16

    Today Rovio, the creators of the Angry Birds and Bad Piggies games, announced that a new animated cartoon Angry Birds series is coming soon to computers everywhere. From the Rovio announcement:

    What makes Bomb Bird so angry? Why is the King Pig the King Pig? And are those mischievous piggies ever going to get hold of the eggs?

    It’s time to find out!

    The cartoon, which evidently takes place on “Piggy Island” and stars both the pigs and angry birds, will premiere on the Angry Birds Toons website on March 16 and 17. New episodes in the series will be coming weekly.

    A trailer for the series was also released by Rovio today. It shows that, thankfully, neither the pigs nor the birds will be speaking in the cartoon. Also, breakdancing piggies.

  • 5 Galaxy S III Accessories You Need for Your Car

    Smartphones are made for travel, yet when we’re in our cars we are under great restrictions. Many states have hands-free calling laws, meaning you need a headset or other apparatus to talk on the phone. Other states, reasonably, have passed laws forbidding texting while driving. Even in states that have no such law, texting while driving is extremely hazardous and not recommended.

    Many newer cars have smartphone-friendly features already built in. Voice controls and built-in Bluetooth are two of the more useful features. Yet not all new cars have these luxuries. Older cars? Even 2010 models, still very new by car standards, lack many useful smartphone functions.

    Want to upgrade your in-car smartphone experience without upgrading your ride? Here are some great accessories. Some are universal, but the specific ones are geared towards the Samsung Galaxy S III, the most popular Android handset.

    iBolt charging dock

    iBoltDock

    If you use your phone for navigation, a mount is key. How else are you supposed to keep the GPS in front of you at all times. These mounts can also be useful if you play music on your phone. If you’re looking down to change songs, you’re taking your eyes off the road. Worse, you can set yourself up for a texting while driving ticket, if such laws are enforced in your state.

    THe iBolt charging dock combines durability with simplicity. It merely clamps around your Galaxy S III, giving you a clear view of the entire screen. From there it attaches directly to your window. That makes it easy to use your smartphone’s many in-car functions while keeping your eyes on the road.

    You can get the iBolt charging dock for $40.

    Dual USB charger

    What’s better than one in-car USB charger? Two in-car USB chargers, of course. While some cars do come with multiple cigarette lighter adapters, especially nowadays when people use them more for charging gadgets than for lighting cigarettes, most still have only one. The solution is to get a charging adapter that has two USB slots. Griffin brings that with its dual charger.

    In the car with your significant other? Charge both of your phones. Want to charge up a tablet while you’re also keeping your smartphone topped up? It might take a while to charge both devices, but if you’re in the car for a while you can manage it. My wife and I recently got one of these, and it has made our lives considerably easier.

    You can get the Griffing dual USB charger for $6.60.

    Jabra FREEWAY Bluetooth speakerphone

    JabraFREEWAY

    I’ll admit, I’m spoiled. When I turn on my car it automatically connects to my phone via Bluetooth. When calls come in, I hear it through the car speakers — meaning the music cuts out. When I’m done everything picks up where it left off. For those who don’t have that feature, there is the Jabra FREEWAY.

    The unit doesn’t quite integrate with your car stereo, but it does contain a crisp, clear speaker of its own. You can make all of your calls hands free with ease. It even clips to your sun visor, so it’s not at all intrusive.

    You can get the Jabra FREEWAY Bluetooth speakerphone for $113.95.

    Bluetooth FM Transmitter

    Want to take your in-car Bluetooth experience to another level? Then check out the GOgroove FlexSMART in-car Bluetooth FM transmitter. It works in a similar manner to other FM transmitters. That is, it takes the signal from your phone and transmits it over a special FM frequency. Your car is then hooked up to your phone, in a similar way to native Bluetooth systems.

    With this unit you can play your music and make calls right through your car speakers. Like native Bluetooth systems, the sound cuts out when a call is incoming or outgoing. The only downside is the general lack of sound quality from FM transmitters. The Jabra unit has much, much better sound quality, even though it goes through its own speakers. Still, if you’re not an audiophile, this is a great way to play music from your smartphone in your car.

    It’s cheap, too. You can get the FlexSMART in-car Bluetooth FM transmitter for $45.

    Non-stick mat

    Perhaps you’re not using your phone as a GPS. Maybe you’re just playing music on it. In that case, where do you put it? In your pocket? If you’re running a wire, that’s unreasonable. Perhaps the best place for your phone is right on your dash. But won’t it slip around? Not with a non-stick mat.

    These are simple pieces of rubber that grip both your dash and the phone. Make a sharp turn? Stop short? The mat will hold your phone in place so it doesn’t fly every which way. For simple, everyday use, nothing tops a grip mat.

    You can get two car dash grip mats for $5.

    The post 5 Galaxy S III Accessories You Need for Your Car appeared first on MobileMoo.

  • Meet Buddy, Another Ambitious, Crowdfunded Smart Watch

    20130208065347-05

    Haven’t we all suffered enough abuse at the hands of Big Smart Watch? No? Well now there’s Buddy, a Bluetooth smartwatch that aims to solve the problems associated with all those other watches. Buddy is focused on social networking and notifications so it will ping you when your Facebook or Twitter feed is updated as well as send the standard call/text/calendar notifications you expect from a smart watch.

    The ambitious watch is the product of Vea Digital, a smartwatch company best known for their Sportive work-out watch. The company’s new project, however, is wildly ambitious. It has a capacitive color touchscreen, works with iOS and Android, and contains 8GB of memory in a package 8mm thick. It’s a huge watch, to be sure, and the renders/prototype models show a unique and colorful icon-based UI that might work better than the cramped black and white design of other devices.

    What can it do?

    Show notifications displayed on your smartphone.
    Allow you to control your smartphone (initiate calls, control music…)
    Receive and display data from your smartphone (turn by turn navigation…)
    Display smartphone content (pictures…)Your smartphone and the VEA BUDDY connect with Bluetooth…

    The makers claim a battery life of “10 days or 2 weeks standby” which sounds like crazy talk. They’re asking for $320,000 to build the first run and have raised $42,000 so far. A black watch can be had for a pledge of $150 and they will be delivered in August 2013.

    I’ll believe it when I see it, but if you’re looking to get in on the ground floor of an acceptably cool-looking smart watch, Buddy might be the way to go.

  • Mobile World Congress News from the Hot Mobile Market

    Mobile World Congress kicked off Monday in Barcelona with a number of announcements from the red-hot mobile market. Here is conference news from Intel, IBM and Nokia, and Mellanox and 6WIND. The Twitter conversation for the event can be followed on hashtag #MWC13.

    Intel launches mobile solutions.

    Intel (INTC) announced several new products for the mobile market segments: a new dual-core Atom SoC platform for smartphones and Android tablets. “Today’s announcements build on Intel’s growing device portfolio across a range of mobile market segments,” said Hermann Eul, Intel vice president and co-general manager of the Mobile and Communications Group. “In less than a year’s time, we have worked closely with our customers to bring Intel-based smartphones to market in more than 20 countries around the world, and have also delivered an industry-leading low-power Atom SoC tablet solution running Windows 8, and shipping with leading OEM customers today.”

    Intel announced a new Atom processor platform with 32nm dual core Z2580, Z2560 and Z2520 products, available in speeds up to 2.0GHz, 1.6GHz and 1.2GHz respectively. The platform also features support for Intel Hyper-Threading, and an Intel Graphics Media Accelerator engine. It includes advanced imaging capabilities, including support for two cameras, with a primary camera sensor up to 16 megapixels. The platform is also equipped with Intel Identity Protection Technology (Intel IPT), helping to enable strong, two-factor authentication for protecting cloud services such as remote banking, e-commerce, online gaming and social networking from unauthorized access.

    “Our second-generation product delivers double the compute performance and up to three times the graphics capabilities, all while maintaining competitive low power,” Eul said. “As we transition to 22nm Atom SoCs later this year, we will take full advantage of the broad spectrum of capabilities enabled by our design, architecture, 22nm tri-gate transistor technology, and leading-edge manufacturing to further accelerate our position.”

    An Intel Atom Z2420 was announced for smartphones in emerging markets, and an Atom Z2760, the first quad-core Atom SoC (“Bay Trail”).  Intel also launched a Long-Term Evolution (4G LTE) strategy, for a low-power, global modem solution that works across multiple bands, modes, regions and devices. The Intel XMM 7160 is a solution that supports smartphones, tablets and Ultrabooks, with support for 15 LTE bands simultaneously.

    IBM and Nokia Siemens announce Edge Computing Platform.

    Nokia Siemens Networks and IBM announced a collaboration to deliver a mobile edge computing platform that can run applications directly within a mobile base station. This new platform allows mobile operators to create a truly unique mobile experience, relieve the ever increasing strain on network infrastructure and bring completely new solutions to market. Nokia’s Liquid Applications and IBM’s WebSphere Application Service Platform for Networks (ASPN) together provide an environment for operators to manage the many applications that will be deployed to the mobile edge.

    “Pushing applications, processing and storage to the edge of the mobile network allows large complex problems to be distributed into many smaller and more manageable pieces and to be physically located at the source of the information it needs to work on,” said Phil Buckellew, vice president, IBM Mobile Enterprise. “This enables a huge amount of rich data to be processed in real time that would be prohibitively complex and costly to deliver on a traditional centralized cloud.”

    Mellanox and 6WIND partner to help deployments of virtual and non-virtual networks.

    Mellanox (MLNX) and 6WIND, a solution for data plane processing in software defined networks, announced a performance-optimized solution featuring the Mellanox ConnectX-3 Network Interface Controller (NIC) together with the 6WINDGate networking software.  As a solution for Telecom Equipment Manufacturers (TEMs)it is combined with a Mellanox SwitchX 40GbE switch to aid deployments of virtualized and non-virtualized networks and SDN on standard high-volume servers.

    “Because it solves critical network performance challenges for mobile infrastructure, 6WIND’s software has been selected by multiple TEMs who provide equipment deployed in commercial LTE networks worldwide,” said Eric Carmès, CEO of 6WIND. “The addition of Mellanox ConnectX-3 support within 6WIND’s enhanced Intel DPDK library as well as the 6WINDGate software, incorporating features such as SR-IOV and RDMA over Converged Ethernet (RoCE), enables improved CAPEX and OPEX in service provider networks through the virtualization of network functions and more efficient SDN management.”

     

  • Google Anxiety, Samsung’s Long Shadow And The Motorola Hedge

    android-samsung-crush

    Android got a late start compared to Apple’s iOS in the worldwide smartphone battle, but it eventually grew to attain a larger worldwide market share, and it did so largely on the back of a single champion: Samsung. Samsung’s Galaxy line has become to Android what the iPhone is to iOS, despite hardware and software coming from completely distinct companies. But Google very specifically didn’t sign up to be a one horse kind of cowboy, and as such it makes sense for the search giant to be somewhat fearful of Samsung’s growing influence, as the WSJ reports.

    Google’s top brass is concerned that Samsung is getting too big, according to the WSJ’s sources, giving the South Korean company much more weight behind potential negotiations to alter the terms of their licensing arrangement with Google in order to cut into the search giant’s ad business. Samsung has no near peer when it comes to Android device sales, having shipped 215.8 million smartphones during 2012. It accounted for 40.6 percent of Android smartphone sales during Q4 20112, according to IDC, and 27.9 percent of the Android tablet market, both of which are above any of their closest competitors. The next closest handset maker has less than 10 percent share, meaning that though some recent entrants like ZTE and Huawei show signs of considerable growth, Samsung’s dominance in the near future is pretty much guaranteed.

    The WSJ says Google’s Android chief Andy Rubin has discussed Samsung as a potential threat at an event for executives last year, and notes that he talked about Motorola Mobility acting as a kind of “insurance policy” against its power. But Motorola hasn’t helped so far, and in fact has only been shedding market share since being picked up by Google. Motorola nabbed only 1.9 percent of Android smartphone share in Q4 2012, down from 6.2 percent year-over-year.

    Google’s hardware direction could change completely when Motorola’s current pipeline runs down.

    But Motorola may yet be Google’s sleeping giant: Google’s Patrick Pichette said during the company’s recent conference call in January that Motorola is still working through its existing pipeline, which had plans in place for around a year and a half of device releases before it was bought by Google. The company has been aggressively restructuring Motorola and divesting itself of parts of the organization that it doesn’t need, so we’re likely to see Google take its fresh hardware division in an entirely new direction when all the old plans put in motion previously finally get excised. The rumored X Phone could be the first fruit of Motorola’s Google-directed labors, and might present a much more competitive package, if Google’s recent Nexus launches are a good indicator of the direction it will take with its own in-house hardware.

    The reason Google needs to field a strong competitor, either itself or through one of its OEM partners, boils down to advertising revenue. Samsung has received more than 10 percent of the ad revenue generated through Google services driven by its platform devices, the WSJ’s sources said, and looks to be interested in getting a bigger chunk of that pie as its install base drives more of that action.

    Both Google and Samsung need each other: neither would’ve been able to achieve what they have in terms of competing with Apple’s mobile dominance without the other. But as with Apple and Samsung’s supplier relationship, as well as the maps and YouTube services arrangement between Apple and Google, success can breed contempt between massive companies working together when each is primarily interested in its own bottom line. To really win, Google has to field a legitimate competitor to Samsung that can weaken slightly, but not disarm its ally. A few strong players is better than one dominant one in terms of Google’s aims, but if it can’t elevate other OEMs to get that done, it may just have to go it alone.

  • ‘Goat Edition’ Mashups See a Revival, Could Possibly Supplant the Harlem Shake

    Move over Harlem Shake, there’s a new YouTube fad brewing.

    It’s the “Goat Edition” mashup, and it’s taking the internet by storm.

    People have been making “Goat Editions” of popular songs and throwing them up on YouTube for a while. For instance, this goat-screaming mashup of Jay-Z and Kanye West’s “Niggas in Paris” first hit YouTube back in December of 2011. And you can go even further back in the archives to find the same goat singing alongside Usher back in 2009. But ever since the Taylor Swift “I Know You Were Trouble” Goat Edition blew up over the weekend, YouTube has started to fill up with various Goat Editions of popular songs.

    It seems the internet reignited their love for goats yelling like humans nearly two weeks ago when a two-minute long mashup of various screaming goats went viral.

    Thanks to the revived fascination, we have plenty of new Goat Editions to bring you. Here are some of the best:

  • “Dancing With The Stars” Lineup Announced

    “Dancing With The Stars” has officially announced the lineup of celebrities who’ll be shaking it on the dance floor this season, and, as predicted, “American Idol” star Kellie Pickler is indeed included.

    Among the others are country star Wynonna Judd, Olympic gymnast Aly Raisman, boxer Victor Ortiz, figure skater Dorothy Hamill, comedians D.L. Hughley and Andy Dick, Baltimore Raven Jacoby Jones, “Real Housewives of Beverly Hills” star Lisa Vanderpump, Disney star Zandaya Coleman, and “General Hospital” star Ingo Rademacher. Among the newcomers are some new faces in the pro section, as well, including Gleb Savchenko, Sharna Burgess, and Lindsay Arnold. Veteran pros such as Cheryl Burke and Derek Hough will be returning this year, much to the delight of fans.

  • Twitter Offers Glimpse At Firefox OS App

    Twitter is already talking up its Firefox OS app.

    Mozilla announced at Mobile World Congress this week that its new operating system Firefox OS will make its way to a number of mobile operators around the world. More on that here.

    Twitter says that its app for Firefox OS will be similar to its other mobile apps with a “rich interface, featuring the Home, Connect, Discover and Me tabs, as well as the search and compose Tweet icons, so you can easily find and send Tweets from anywhere in the app.

    Yep. It looks pretty much like the other Twitter apps:

    Twitter for Firefox OS

    But it does have at least one difference.

    “We’ve also implemented support for a feature unique to Firefox OS: Web Activities. This lets you tweet photos directly out of any app that also supports web activities such as the built-in photos app.”

  • Bloody well time, Microsoft releases Internet Explorer 10 for Windows 7

    Microsoft has released the first stable version of Internet Explorer 10 for Windows 7 (32-bit) and Internet Explorer 10 for Windows 7 (64-bit). The latest version of the browser — which comes pre-installed in Windows 8 — promises improved performance, better privacy and supports the latest web standards, plus adds integrated spell-checking and auto-correct tools.

    Internet Explorer 10 in itself isn’t new — it was bundled with Windows 8 on its release on October 26. However, it’s only now that Windows 7 users have been able to install a stable version of the software, although a Release Preview has been available since mid-November. Just as Internet Explorer 9 dropped support for Windows XP, so IE10 drops support for Windows Vista.

    There’s one major new feature to speak of: an integrated spell-checker and AutoCorrect tool, which appears in web forms and other input boxes as the user types. Microsoft claims this feature will aid users in typing faster, more accurate, posts. The user interface remains very similar to IE9, although it has been overhauled slightly, one noticeable improvement being that tabs close more quickly in this version.Privacy has also been enhanced, with the Do Not Track (DNT) signal switched on by default in the new release (it can be switched on in IE9 via the Tools > Internet Options dialog). This instructs compliant websites to stop tracking users’ movements on their own as well as third-party websites.

    The update, which will be pushed to all Windows 7 machines over the coming weeks, also promises better performance, particularly where JavaScript is concerned, with Microsoft’s own benchmarks suggesting IE10 is up to 25 per cent faster than IE9. Other performance improvements centre around hardware-accelerated support for SVG and HTML4 constructs, as well as improved drawing performance, the latter rendering images up to 30 per cent faster than IE9.

    Performance should also be improved by the promise of reduced CPU usage in IE10, a side-effect of which will benefit the battery life of mobile users.

    IE10 also promises better support for modern web standards, with up to 30 new standards supported in this release over IE9, primarily in the fields of CSS3 and HTML5.

    Internet Explorer 10 for Windows 7 (32-bit) and Internet Explorer 10 for Windows 7 (64-bit) are both available now as a free download for PCs running Windows 7 with Service Pack 1 installed.

    Photo Credit:  Ljupco Smokovski/Shutterstock