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elmo - Google News ) I read it on 03/18/10 at 06:36 PM
Posted on 03/18/10 at 08:17 PM
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Wired: Epicenter ) I read it on 02/08/10 at 08:54 PM
Posted on 02/08/10 at 10:46 PM
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Gmail users will soon have more ways to keep up with their friends via a widget that shows quick status updates like Facebook and Twitter do, The Wall Street Journal reports.
The move would further turn Gmail, which revolutionized online e-mail, into a comprehensive communications hub. The intent is to keep people's attention centered on Google, by making Gmail, not Facebook, people's first stop online and their default place to send and receive messages. Gmail users can already chat via Jabber or AIM, make video calls, and send SMS messages from Gmail's web interface.
As the Post reports:
Google has been trying to fashion Gmail into more than an e-mail service for years. The service currently lets users set an away message, which can be a link to a Web page, that their friends see when they instant-message them. Now, it plans to launch a new interface that will aggregate updates from more friends in a stream.
The new stream will also eventually include content that a user's connections share through its YouTube video site and Picasa photo service, according to one person familiar with the matter. But whether those features will also be announced in the coming days remains unclear.
The full extent of the new features remain unclear, but Google is inviting reporters to a launch event Tuesday on its Mountain View, California, campus promising some innovations in two of our most popular products, according to an e-mail sent to reporters.
Yahoo has included similar features in its e-mail service, letting users see what photos their contacts have uploaded to Flickr, for example.
Google could integrate updates from a user's Twitter account, since most of that is public. And it could likely make it easy for Gmail users to post to Twitter as well, due to Twitter's liberal API policy.
Facebook, however, will not likely let its rival re-publish status updates, or allow users to publish to their Facebook pages through Gmail. Facebook, much like AOL and Compuserve back in the early '90s, is a controlled and sanitized version of the larger internet, but it relies on closed protocols.
via Google to Add Social Feature to Gmail - WSJ.com.
See Also:
Tags: gmail google users facebook twitter
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Mashable! ) I read it on 02/01/10 at 09:02 AM
Posted on 02/01/10 at 09:23 AM
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 What a time we're living in. You can't even make fun of your competitors at your own company meeting without your words leaking out to the internet.
Apparently, this has happened to Steve Jobs, who lashed out at Google and Adobe at Apple's Town Hall company meeting held at their One Infinite Loop headquarters. Speaking to Apple employees, Steve Jobs voiced his expression with buggy Flash, lazy Adobe, and Google's fakery in the don't be evil department. Although these words have not been (and will never be) officially confirmed, multiple anonymous people from the audience confirmed their authenticity to Wired. Here's a couple of Steve's (inexact) quotes from the meeting: Adobe is lazy. Apple does not support Flash because it is so buggy. Whenever a Mac crashes more often than not it's because of Flash. No one will be using Flash. The world is moving to HTML5. When it comes to Google, Jobs is mad at them for trying to kill the iPhone. We did not enter the search business, he said. They entered the phone business. Make no mistake: they want to kill the iPhone. We won't let them. Finally, his most interesting quote is about Google's don't be evil mantra. According to Daring Fireball, Jobs simply said: it's a load of crap. Yes, I think we can safely say we were right when we said that a) the iPad and the iPhone aren't getting full Flash support anytime soon, and b) Google is now Apple's greatest enemy. Reviews: GoogleTags: adobe, apple, Flash, Google, steve jobs, trending
Tags: google jobs flash steve apple
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Wired Top Stories ) I read it on 01/28/10 at 08:40 PM
Posted on 01/28/10 at 11:06 PM
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Wired Top Stories ) I read it on 01/26/10 at 08:10 PM
Posted on 01/26/10 at 11:35 PM
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www.npr.org ) I read it on 01/25/10 at 11:44 AM
Posted on 01/25/10 at 04:42 PM
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Shared by Kristopher
After making a silly mistake, it's not uncommon for a person to say, "Oops I was on autopilot." In his new book, The Hidden Brain, science writer Shankar Vedantam explains how there's actually a lot of truth to that.
Our brains have two modes, he tells NPR's Steve Inkseep conscious and unconscious, pilot and autopilot and we are constantly switching back and forth between the two.
"The problem arises when we [switch] without our awareness," Vedantam says, "and the autopilot ends up flying the plane, when we should be flying the plane."
The autopilot mode can be useful when we're multitasking, but it can also lead us to make unsupported snap judgments about people in the world around us. Vedantam says that when we interact with people from different backgrounds in high-pressure situations, it's easy to rely unconsciously on heuristics. 'The Hidden Brain' book cover
The Hidden Brain By Shankar Vedantam Hardcover, 288 pages Spiegel & Grau List price: $26 Read An Excerpt
3-Year-Old Bigots?
Racial categorization begins at an extremely early age. Vedantam cites research from a day-care center in Montreal that found that children as young as 3 linked white faces with positive attributes and black faces with negative attributes.
"Now, these were children who are 3 years old," Vedantam says. "It is especially hard to call them bigots, or to suggest that they are explicitly racially biased or have animosity in their hearts."
Vedantam says the mind is hard-wired to "form associations between people and concepts." But he thinks that the links the children made between particular groups and particular concepts were not biologically based those judgments came from culture and upbringing.
"We tend to think of the conscious messages that we give children as being the most powerful education that we can give them," Vedantam says but the unconscious messages are actually far more influential.
He says that for every 50 times a year a teacher talks about tolerance, there are many hundreds of implicit messages of racial bias that children absorb through culture whether it's television, books or the attitudes of the adults and kids around them.
"And it's these hidden associations that essentially determine what happens in the unconscious minds of these children," Vedantam says.
'Take Back The Controls'
In American society, colorblindness is often held up as the ideal. And though it's a worthy aspiration, Vedantam says it's a goal that isn't rooted in psychological reality.
"Our hidden brains will always recognize people's races, and they will do so from a very, very young age," Vedantam says. "The far better approach is to put race on the table, to ask [children] to unpack the associations that they are learning, to help us shape those associations in more effective ways."
Most of us think of ourselves as being conscious, intentional, deliberate creatures. ... I have become, in some ways, much more humble about my views and much less certain about myself.
- Shankar Vedantam
Going back to the autopilot analogy, Vedantam says it's not a problem that the brain has an autopilot mode as long as you are aware of when it is on. His book, The Hidden Brain, is about how to "take back the controls."
So if the human psyche is just a big constellation of conscious and unconscious cognition which thoughts represent the real you?
"Most of us think of ourselves as being conscious, intentional, deliberate creatures," Vedantam says. "I know that I think of myself that way: I know why I like this movie star, or why I voted for this president, or why I prefer this political party to that."
But doing research for this book changed all that, Vedantam says.
"I have become, in some ways, much more humble about my views and much less certain about myself. And it may well be that the hidden brain is much more in charge of what we do than our conscious mind's intentions."
Science writer Shankar Vedantam says we often function on autopilot without even knowing it. His new book, The Hidden Brain, explores how unconscious biases color our decisions even when we think we are acting rationally.
Tags: vedantam hidden autopilot children brain
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TechStartups.com ) I read it on 01/12/10 at 09:16 PM
Posted on 01/12/10 at 11:08 PM
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The world was shown a lot of new electronic products this year at CES.
This is a list of the top 5 products that are actually usable or will be in the near future when they are released.
These are what we wish we could pick up at the store today.
Enjoy the videos as well.
5. Sprint Overdrive
This is MiFi on steroids with 3G and 4G coverage. This beast is ready today. However, it is limited to certain cities and metro areas in the states. See if you're on the list and if you are, drop that cable company or DSL provider like they're hot.
This video was embedded using the YouTuber plugin by Roy Tanck. Adobe Flash Player is required to view the video.
4. MSI Android slate
This was the closest I found to a slate that was responsive and accurate even for a dude with fat fingers. Maybe the others aren't up to production mode yet but they lacked the same experience, until the MSI would freeze.
This video was embedded using the YouTuber plugin by Roy Tanck. Adobe Flash Player is required to view the video.
3. Vizio wifi TV's
This iteration of 3D is a huge fail. Like bad movies this should have seen limited release or straight to DVD, if you know what I mean. What is awesome are the Vizio wifi TV's that will be hitting the shelves. They've embraced almost every type of TV widget that can be made and I would expect to see some brilliant hacks coming our way.
This video was embedded using the YouTuber plugin by Roy Tanck. Adobe Flash Player is required to view the video.
2. Asus T101MT
There isn't a whole lot to say that I haven't said already. This is going to be a great, usable device that I wish was running Mac OS. I used a Toshiba tablet PC back in 2006 for my job and loved it. This size would be incredibly useful and mobile.
This video was embedded using the YouTuber plugin by Roy Tanck. Adobe Flash Player is required to view the video.
1. Intel Infoscape
Only exists for trade show purposes but will soon be finding its way into other displays. Look out hotels, shopping malls and people with money to burn.
This video was embedded using the YouTuber plugin by Roy Tanck. Adobe Flash Player is required to view the video.
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Our CES 2010 Top Picks is a post from: TechStartups.com
Tags: asus T101MT , asus tablet netbook , infoscape , intel infoscape , msi andoird tablet , msi android slate , msi tablet , Slate , sprint 4g , sprint overdrive , tablet , vizio internet apps , vizio wifi tv 
Tags: video tablet ces roy plugin
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TechStartups.com ) I read it on 12/29/09 at 08:42 PM
Posted on 12/18/09 at 01:15 AM
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By Senior Editor Kris Smith (@croncast)
In my search for information about the world, what matters to me and what is good, I go no farther than an application that I wrote called Filome. I've talk about it quite a bit here at Tech Startups.
It's an app that is about 85% of the way there and is relegated being updated when I have spare time. Which in the last 8 months hasn't been very often. One of the things it is brilliant at though is helping me find what is relevant to me and what I want to write about.
About 30 minutes ago it was tablet computers. But instead of writing about them and adding to the noise, I thought that I would share my filter a tablet computer group from Filome.
First there is the feed for those that want to get right to it - http://www.filome.com/group/ksmith/1/tablet%20computers.rss
Below are the latest 25 posts regarding tablet computing. All linking to the original posts. Find one and follow it down the rabbit hole. Enjoy! (Remember: If you want to stay updated subscribe to the feed link above)
- You Can Take It With You: Future Trends in Media
- Who needs tablet computers anyway?
- Can Android Tablets Find a Market?
- Why I Hate Ereaders, And Doubt They'll Ever Hit the Mainstream [Ebooks]
- Why Google Should Make a Tablet [Opinion]
- Apple to Launch iTunes on the Web
- Analyst noise: Apple tablet in March for $1k, publishers on-board, Verizon iPhone coming too
- Apple Tablet Release Date Gets Narrowed Down, Prices Get Estimated
- Which Companies Will Win The Battle For The E-Book Consumer?
- A New, Now Netbook You Can Actually Buy: PsiXpda
- Analysts Predict 1 Billion+ Mobile Web Users by 2010
- Time Inc. shows off magazine tablet demo, plans future anger about 70/30 profit split
- Apple tablet rumored to be 'shockingly' inexpensive
- Apple Registers TabletMac Trademark After Dueling Axiotron MacBook Modders [AppleTablet]
- Using the Apple LP and Extras format for learning?
- NVIDIA Tegra tablet prototype hands-on
- What If Steve Jobs Hadn't Returned To Apple In 1997?
- Hearst, Time, Conde iTunes For Magazines Only A Few Weeks Away
- DigiTimes Claims Apple Tablet Delayed for OLED Upgrade [Rumor]
- Apple tablet(s) in 2H 2010 with OLED screen and tailored content in tow?
- Cond Nast Gets Wired Ready For Apple Tablet (In Case There Is One)
- Adobe Air hits 2.0 this is powerful stuff
- The death of the URL
- Apple tablet speculation: high-end graphics, several models
- Bookmark Away: Instapaper Comes Up With A New Way To Work With The Kindle
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Tablets, tablets, tablets The Next Devices is a post from: TechStartups.com
Tags: Apple tablet , filome , microsoft courier , tablet computers , tablet computing 
Tags: tablet apple tablets computers filome
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TechStartups.com ) I read it on 12/13/09 at 06:42 PM
Posted on 12/08/09 at 11:08 PM
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By Senior Editor Kris Smith (@croncast)
I was fortunate enough to get my hands on a Nokia N900 today for a little while. After the Wired Store NYC debacle I thought I owed it to you to at least do something techy cool.
So I cut my trip home short and went over to the Nokia New York Flagship store on E. 57th Street in search of a the elusive N900.
Turns out in a Nokia store, it isn't so elusive.
Once inside the store it is the first phone that is on display. Right behind the N900 was the previous big dog, the N97 and the puppy, the N85.

I made my way to the back of the store near the cash wrap, grabbed a blue stool and squared myself up with one of the two N900's available for customer hands on testing. Well, available for a blogger's hands on testing, one could say.
The phone is much lighter than I expected it to be for its size. The phone is thicker than an iPhone but weighs nearly the same. It doesn't feel cheap. I have to say, the Droid, feels kind of cheap compared to the Nokia smart phone.
Something that came as a surprise was how responsive the phone was to switching between applications. It was seamless. Which is a good thing because the phone has two levels of app nagivation one for inside the application you are using and a root level.
Take for instance you are using the web browser and have a couple of sites open. The first click of the menu will display all of your open pages as thumbnails on one screen (take that iPhone weird tri-page display). A second click will take you back to the root menu system.
The root menu system of the Nokia N900 like most devices is prescribed by Nokia's developers as what they deem to be the most important applications. However, you can modify this menu like you would on most other handsets. Say, you wanted to move the feed subscription app to the root because you're an RSS nut you could do that.
Browsing on the phone was a great experience. Pages loaded quickly on T-mobile and scrolling was a breeze. What did take me a second to get a handle on was the zooming in of the content. My first instinct was to put my iPhone knowledge in place and go multi-touch in an attempt to pinch release. That failed. The N900 reacts to the not so multi-touch double tap to zoom.

The QWERTY keyboard experience was better than I expected. I fired up the note taking application and tried my best to write up stuff that made me sound smart so that the next person to pick up the phone in the store would know that a genius had just been there. It's like random phone note graffiti and a keyboard test all in one. Back to reality . . . the keyboard was very responsive and I was able to type reasonably fast. Much quicker than an iPhone or Droid with its off center keypad.
I don't know what the battery life of this phone is like or whether T-mobile outside of the store location is as good as in it. But what I do know is that this phone, unlocked, wants to fill the smart phone void in my life.
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Nokia N900 Hands On is a post from: TechStartups.com
Tags: nokia n85 , Nokia N900 , nokia n97 , nokia new york flagship store , nokia smart phone , nokia store nyc , smart phone , Smartphone , touchscreen nokia 
Tags: nokia n phone store hands
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TechStartups.com ) I read it on 10/27/09 at 11:28 AM
Posted on 10/26/09 at 07:17 PM
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By Senior Editor Kris Smith (@croncast)
Why use the .rss extension?
Why not?
I received the comment below in regards to using a .rss extension for RSS feeds.
Serious question why? What benefit (besides looking cool) do you get from this, when there's no standard extension for feeds (.xml, .rdf, .atom, etc.) and lots of FeedBurner feeds with no extension at all?
My theory for doing this revolves around user acceptance of RSS and that the message we give as publishers (see; nerds) about RSS being so awesome isn't a very coherent one. We need a better message and a shiny new package. To me, .rss explains exactly what I am going to get when I use it. Simple.
Packaging feed formats of all types under the extension is a way for users to know exactly what they are getting syndicated content, a.k.a., your stuff. There is no need for all the baffling mumbo jumbo we throw at site visitors about what RSS is or how it works. I contend they don't care that, RSS (Really Simple Syndication) is an XML-based format for sharing and distributing Web content (via CNN). Blah.
Check this Wired explanation for further mumbojumbo:
Based on the XML data format, RSS is the simplest way to add Wired News headlines to your site.
Even the part of the sentence after the comma from Wired is confusing, add Wired News headlines to your site. What if I just want to read it and not put it into my site? For most people, would they know how to put those headlines in their site? Do they have sites?
What I am trying to say is that we need to get our act together and stop being nerds about syndication formats. The nice orange RSS icon is ubiquitous and is used to link to .xml, .rdf, .atom and the like without the end user needing to know what they are. Our messaging should be as simple as the RSS icon and I think the .rss extension helps to clarify what is being delivered.
Think about how easy it is to describe what a telephone is and how to use it. Did you for a second even think about the technology that makes your phone work? Nope. Pick it up, dial and talk. Simple.
The orange RSS icon is the syndication telephone and .rss is the keypad.
DISCLOSURE OF MATERIAL CONNECTION: http://cmp.ly/0
Why Use the .rss Extension for Feeds? is a post from: TechStartups.com
Tags: FeedBurner , Really Simple Syndication , RSS , RSS feeds , RSS icon , syndication , Wired News , XML feed 
Tags: rss extension feeds site simple
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