Saturday, October 27, 2012

Reebok-CCM partnering on impact-sensing flexible sports cap, hopes to improve real-time injury analysis

New flexible sports cap could bring better head impact analysis to the game

While the whack of two helmets might be an unavoidable part of some high intensity sports, knowing a little more about what's going on during those impacts can mean the difference between a time out, and time in hospital. Reebok-CCM Hockey and electronics form MC10 have just announced that they are developing a wearable cap that will register the strength and severity of head impacts during games. The project is actually aimed at all sports and age-groups, and uses high-performance electronics reshaped into an ultra-thin, breathable, flexible system that technology partner, MC10, expects to also be much more affordable. The cap will allow quick analysis through the use of different colored readouts, illustrating the strength of impact. The product won't be commercially available until next year however, but we're already thinking of potential worthy collaborations.

Continue reading Reebok-CCM partnering on impact-sensing flexible sports cap, hopes to improve real-time injury analysis

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Reebok-CCM partnering on impact-sensing flexible sports cap, hopes to improve real-time injury analysis originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 27 Oct 2012 04:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/10/27/reebok-ccm-partnering-on-impact-sensing-flexible-sports-cap/

SEAGATE TECHNOLOGY SCIENTIFIC GAMES

Windows 8: A Bridge Too Far For Enterprises?

Windows 8 may end up marking the moment when people stopped caring about PC operating systems.

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Source: http://feeds.informationweek.com/click.phdo?i=fce982bcfca81eb2ed68fe8d29c212fa

MOTOROLA MOODYS

How Square Keeps Its Culture Cool And Connected: It’s An App.

Windows Phone Will Target Smartphone Midmarket

Next up for Windows Phone: attacking the middle range of the market.

"We are dramatically broadening the set of price points in Mango-related phones that we can reach," Andy Lees, president of Microsoft's Windows Phone division, told the audience during the Asia D conference Oct. 19. "That's particularly important because going lower down in price point opens up more addressable market."

Until this point, Microsoft had positioned Windows Phone as more of a competitor to high-end devices such as Apple's iPhone and the Motorola Droid. But Microsoft's traditional aim with any of its products has been to capture as big an audience as possible, so a thrust toward the smartphone midmarket is perhaps inevitable.

For a couple of months, rumors have circulated about a stripped-down Windows Phone OS code-named Tango, aimed at lower-cost hardware and developing markets such as India and China. Back in August, Mary Jo Foley wrote on her All About Microsoft blog about two new Tango releases that could expand Windows Phone into new markets and load onto those cheaper devices.

At the moment, Microsoft is mostly concerned with pushing Mango, a wide-ranging update with some 500 tweaks and features, onto Windows Phone. That's happening in conjunction with a host of new manufacturers, including Nokia and Samsung, prepping a host of new Windows Phone devices. Although outside research firms generally place Windows Phone's share of the smartphone market far behind that of the iPhone and Android, Microsoft hopes that the combination of boosted software and new manufacturing partners can give the platform the momentum it needs to seize a bigger portion for itself.

One of those partners, Nokia, reportedly plans to show off its first Windows Phone devices at Nokia World in London, due to start Oct. 26.

That information also came from Lees, who told the Asia D conference Oct. 19: "Next week it's going to be Nokia World, where they're going to announce their phones and how they're going to make the most out of the Windows Phone opportunity."

It'll be interesting to see what rolls out. By tossing out homegrown mobile operating systems such as Symbian in favor of Windows Phone, Nokia is betting its existence on Microsoft software allowing it to push back against Android and other competitors. I'll bet anything that Nokia's push will eventually involve Windows Phone devices targeted at that midrange. The only question is when Nokia CEO Stephen Elop will try to make that happen.

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Source: http://feeds.ziffdavisenterprise.com/~r/RSS/MicrosoftWatch/~3/7vhWL7pyT6s/windows_phone_will_target_smartphone_midmarket.html

TEXAS INSTRUMENTS TERADATA

Friday, October 26, 2012

Gartner's Top 10 tech trends for 2013

First came the heavy adoption of Apple's mobile platform by consumers whose heavy use of the devices for business tasks forced the IT operations at their companies to support them. Android was the next mobile platform pushed onto IT and now comes Windows 8, Microsoft's latest effort to keep its PC empire intact and gain market share in mobile devices.

Source: http://podcasts.infoworld.com/d/mobile-technology/gartners-top-10-tech-trends-2013-205522?source=rss_mobile_technology

EASTMAN KODAK CO EARTHLINK

Ballmer: Windows Has Great Tablets 'For The First Time'

Windows 8 will make Microsoft and partners serious players in the mobile market, CEO says at launch event.

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Source: http://feeds.informationweek.com/click.phdo?i=defea79b6e1968218d27928352b900e0

VERIFONE HOLDINGS VEECO INSTRUMENTS

Samsung’s Epic Smartphone Quarter: Galaxy SIII, Big Screens Help It To Record 31%+ Share In Q3 (More Than 2X Apple’s Portion)

The Psychology of Liberals and Conservatives

Photo: Dierk Schaefer / Flickr

It’s election season in the U.S., and the campaigning between the Democrats and Republicans is fiercer than ever. Now, here at GeekDad, we prefer to steer clear of partisan politics, so this posting is not going to tap-dance into that minefield; instead, we’re going to take a look at the more interesting subject of the psychology of conservative and liberal viewpoints. And regardless of which way you lean politically, I’m pretty sure that once we’re finished, you’ll concede that both the left and the right have perfectly reasonable world views, and that the human mind is an intriguingly subtle organ.

The main focus of this posting is Jonathan Haidt’s TED Talk, The Moral Roots of Liberals and Conservatives, so settle back and prepare for a little profound insight into human nature:

If you watch the video, you’ll see that Haidt’s thesis is that we humans all have five foundations of morality — five sources of intuitions and emotions that drive everything we do:

  • Harm/Care
  • Fairness/Reciprocity
  • In-Group/Loyalty
  • Authority/Respect
  • Purity/Sanctity

Both conservatives and liberals all agree on the first two points; but the real trouble comes on the final three. As Haidt said in regard to those points, “We can say that liberals have a kind of a two-channel, or two-foundation morality. Conservatives have more of a five-foundation, or five-channel morality.”

Now, that math may make it sound as if liberals are less moral than conservatives, but Haidt is careful to point out that it’s not as simple as that:

Liberals reject three of these foundations. They say “No, let’s celebrate diversity, not common in-group membership.” They say, “Let’s question authority.” And they say, “Keep your laws off my body.”

Liberals have very noble motives for doing this. Traditional authority, traditional morality can be quite repressive, and restrictive to those at the bottom, to women, to people that don’t fit in. So liberals speak for the weak and oppressed. They want change and justice, even at the risk of chaos.

Conservatives, on the other hand, speak for institutions and traditions. They want order, even at some cost to those at the bottom.

So once you see this — once you see that liberals and conservatives both have something to contribute, that they form a balance on change versus stability — then I think the way is open to step outside the moral matrix.

That last part is the most important part of everything Haidt has to say in his talk, by the way. Recognizing the basis for human morality is academically interesting, but the important thing is to put this insight into use in some way. And Haidt has an answer for that, too:

A lot of the problems we have to solve are problems that require us to change other people. And if you want to change other people, a much better way to do it is to first understand who we are — understand our moral psychology, understand that we all think we’re right — and then step out, even if it’s just for a moment, step out of the moral matrix, just try to see it as a struggle playing out, in which everybody does think they’re right, and everybody, at least, has some reasons — even if you disagree with them — everybody has some reasons for what they’re doing. Step out. And if you do that, that’s the essential move to cultivate moral humility, to get yourself out of this self-righteousness, which is the normal human condition.

So, what does all of this have to do with being a GeekDad? Well, given that it is election season, the Geeklings are likely to have questions about the entire process and why there is so much animosity between the two political extremes. As a good parent, your job is to help your kids understand the world better, so that means you’re going to have to explain the underlying motivations of those extremes. And now that you understand the five foundations of morality, you can explain it to your kids, too. If you do a good job of it, and emphasize that both points of view are valid and valuable, then you’ll have made the world just a little bit better. Good luck….

Source: http://www.wired.com/geekdad/2012/10/the-psychology-of-liberals-and-conservatives/

RADISYS RACKABLE SYSTEMS

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Google Reveals Data Center Secrets

Street View imagery and a gallery of photos provide a previously unseen glimpse into Google's closely guarded data centers.

Source: http://feeds.informationweek.com/click.phdo?i=f06021a3b588ce484ce6e648b4dcbd29

SHAW COMMUNICATIONS MCAFEE

40 BYOD Vendors, One Confusing Market

As enterprise IT gears up to battle mobility run amok, vendors are using a mix of acronyms to disguise few comprehensive offerings. Our research shows little distinction between products that are designated as BYOD and those that are MDM, MAM or something else altogether. So now what?

Source: http://feeds.informationweek.com/click.phdo?i=ee2a465a7309bd902a6c277ac8ff03b8

ROGERS COMMUNICATIONS SAIC

Apple's iPod Touch is fast becoming the new cash register

Every other day, it seems, someone has announced a mobile payments app or joined a mobile commerce consortium. We've seen a surge of such announcements in the last year, but I remember writing about a similar mobile payments wave a decade ago. Yet very little has changed in practice in day-to-day payments.

Source: http://www.infoworld.com/d/consumerization-of-it/apples-ipod-touch-fast-becoming-the-new-cash-register-204964?source=rss_mobile_technology

EMC ELECTRONICS FOR IMAGING

Where you at? Sprint Direct Connect Now brings push-to-talk to select Android devices

DNP Sprint Direct Connect Now app brings pushtotalk to Android devices, where you at

Sprint announced on Wednesday the availability of its new Direct Connect Now Android app, which brings push-to-talk capabilities to the Kyocera Rise and LG Optimus Elite with support for other devices "coming soon." Compatible with both Nextel and Sprint Direct Connect devices, this free app features group calls for up to 21 people, touchscreen controls, call alert notifications and contact synchronization. While we appreciate this advancement in push-to-talk communication, we can't help but shed a tear reminiscing about the good old days of Boost Mobile's "where you at?" campaign. Please join us as we pour one out and celebrate faded memories of the chirp.

Continue reading Where you at? Sprint Direct Connect Now brings push-to-talk to select Android devices

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Where you at? Sprint Direct Connect Now brings push-to-talk to select Android devices originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 24 Oct 2012 17:05:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/10/24/sprint-direct-connect-now-android-app/

XILINX WESTERN DIGITAL

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

LulzSec Attacker Pleads Guilty To Sony Pictures Hack

Defendant agrees to pay restitution toward Sony's $600,000 data breach cleanup costs.

Source: http://feeds.informationweek.com/click.phdo?i=27e8a0f2f458c8ca641b5027150b8993

FEI COMPANY FAIRCHILD SEMICONDUCTOR INTERNATIONAL

iPad trade-ins for cash leap 1,000 percent, says swap site

Apple releases a fourth-generation iPad, and the number of trades rockets on trade-in site NextWorth, with more than half those swaps involving the suddenly dated third-gen iPad.


Source: http://news.cnet.com/8301-13579_3-57539298-37/ipad-trade-ins-for-cash-leap-1000-percent-says-swap-site/?part=rss&tag=feed&subj=News-Apple

SYNOPSYS SYNNEX

Oracle Buys Sun

After weeks of rumors that IBM and various other major IT companies would buy the troubled maker of high-end hardware and the ubiquitous Java, Oracle Corp. announced this morning that it will buy Sun Microsystems, according to sources cited by Reuters....

Source: http://feeds.ziffdavisenterprise.com/~r/RSS/publishgraphics/~3/sRtAxctnP94/

HYPERCOM HEWLETT PACKARD CO

Google to use wind energy for Oklahoma data center

The company says that it has inked a deal with the Grand River Dam Authority for 48 MW of wind energy.

Originally posted at News - Cutting Edge

Source: http://news.cnet.com/8301-11386_3-57520644-76/google-to-use-wind-energy-for-oklahoma-data-center/?part=rss&tag=feed&subj=

PRICELINECOM QIMONDA

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Tool vendors chase mobile development bandwagon

Given the ongoing mobile craze, it's no surprise that the number of software development tools and services for building smartphone and tablet apps keeps growing.

Source: http://www.infoworld.com/t/mobile-development/tool-vendors-chase-mobile-development-bandwagon-205319

ROCKWELL AUTOMATION RF MICRO DEVICES

IBM refreshes analysis offerings

At IBM's Information On Demand and Business Analytics Forum, being held this week in Las Vegas, the company announced a number of new add-ons and services designed to help organizations analyze their expanding data sets more quickly. The new releases "are all around helping customers progress in their big data challenges," said Nancy Kopp, IBM's chief of big data strategy and marketing. "We want to help customers use all data types."

Source: http://www.infoworld.com/d/business-intelligence/ibm-refreshes-analysis-offerings-205441

MICROS SYSTEMS MICRON TECHNOLOGY

'Texts from Hillary' calls it quits

The hit Tumblr got Hillary Clinton to make a submission. But now the site has become too much, and its creators said today that they're pulling the plug on the project.


Source: http://news.cnet.com/8301-13772_3-57412692-52/texts-from-hillary-calls-it-quits/?part=rss&tag=feed&subj=GeekGestalt

PEROT SYSTEMS PALM

Apple may rev up iTunes 11 at tomorrow's iPad Mini event

Already demoed last month, the latest refresh for iTunes may see the light of day courtesy of Apple's media event on Tuesday.


Source: http://news.cnet.com/8301-13579_3-57537128-37/apple-may-rev-up-itunes-11-at-tomorrows-ipad-mini-event/?part=rss&tag=feed&subj=News-Apple

TERADATA TELETECH HOLDINGS

Monday, October 22, 2012

'Texts from Hillary' calls it quits

The hit Tumblr got Hillary Clinton to make a submission. But now the site has become too much, and its creators said today that they're pulling the plug on the project.


Source: http://news.cnet.com/8301-13772_3-57412692-52/texts-from-hillary-calls-it-quits/?part=rss&tag=feed&subj=GeekGestalt

ACCENTURE ACER

Welcome To The Beta: Windows 8 Will Succeed, Despite All The FUD

Video Conferencing Startup Blue Jeans Network Adds LinkedIn Integration

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Sunday, October 21, 2012

Online Criminals' Best Friends: Malnets

The number of large malnets--server-side infrastructure used to infect PCs and sometimes to control botnets--tracked by security firm Blue Coat has tripled this year.

Source: http://feeds.informationweek.com/click.phdo?i=7cb75b6c5272ecb93051a683196330dd

IBASIS HYPERCOM

Microsoft, Nokia Considered RIM Takeover: Report

Microsoft and Nokia apparently toyed with partnering up for a Research In Motion takeover.

That bit of news comes from The Wall Street Journal, itself quoting the ever-popular "people familiar with the matter." Those sources described the status of the talks as "unclear."

Given its age and prominence in the mobile industry, RIM almost certainly has an immense library of patents, which could prove valuable to any Nokias and Microsofts in search of a little more intellectual-property protection in these litigious times. With RIM's stock performance of late, the Canadian mobile device maker is arguably even more of a bargain than it was six months or two years ago, when similar acquisition rumors also surfaced.

But Microsoft has scored a number of significant legal victories against Android of late, between its campaign of cornering Android manufacturers into licensing agreements, and its minor win against Motorola Mobility with the ITC this week.

Any RIM deal would have come with significant drawbacks for both Microsoft and Nokia. For starters, both the latter companies are firmly bonded to Windows Phone, and Microsoft is planning (along with its manufacturing partners) a series of tablets with the upcoming Windows 8. That sort of ecosystem doesn't exactly merge seamlessly with RIM's, which is in the middle of transitioning from BlackBerry 7 to QNX-based BlackBerry 10.

Nor could Microsoft and Nokia have made a play for RIM in order to secure the latter's hardware, considering a.) Microsoft and manufacturing partners, and Nokia, already have their own hardware portfolios and proprietary design language, thank you very much, and b.) the majority of RIM's portfolio is centered on devices with a physical QWERTY keyboard, which doesn't exactly fit with Windows Phone.

Would Microsoft and Nokia have bought RIM for its corporate business and cloud services? Again, Microsoft is already making its own great strides in the business cloud, and has a significant business audience.

At most, Microsoft and Nokia were just performing their due diligence by sniffing around a little. Buying RIM wouldn't be a good move.

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Source: http://feeds.ziffdavisenterprise.com/~r/RSS/MicrosoftWatch/~3/Wpsl7ZQKiRw/microsoft_nokia_considered_rim_takeover_report.html

NII HOLDINGS NIKON

 

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