Blazingly Fast Internet
Posted: February 12, 2014 Filed under: Uncategorized Leave a commentIBM scientists in Switzerland have come up with a technology that will allow internet speeds of between 200 and 400 Gigabits per second, according to zdnet.com. What does that mean in English? We’re talking about downloading a 2 hour high def movie or 40,000 songs in a few seconds! They plan to have a system in place outside the lab this year.
This sounds pretty gimmicky, but think about it…what a way to demonstrate what your product can do! Thenextweb.com says that Sony has started selling a waterproof Walkman mp3 player in a bottle of water! They have the Bottled Walkman on sale in vending machines in New Zealand.
In what could be a boon to fighting cancer, a Redwood City startup called Guardant Health has announced a genetic screening tool that uses blood samples instead of biopsies. Recode.net reports that one big benefit is the cost…it’s cheap enough that retesting can be done more often, and therapies changed as the cancer mutates, giving more effective protection against cancers.
Your Next Fridge May Be Magnet Powered
Posted: February 11, 2014 Filed under: Uncategorized Leave a commentInstead of 100 year old compressor technology, in a few years, your refrigerator may be cooled by magnetocaloric effect…by magnets. Cnet.com reports that engineers at GE labs have a prototype running now…cooling beer! The magnet fridge is 20-30% more efficient than yours.
As privacy slips off into the night, Samsung is considering letting app developers see a lot more detail about you gleaned from your phone’s apps and sensors. Theverge.com says the samsung service is called Context…and it would also allow targeted ads tailored to you.
It was probably inevitable, but securemac.com has found a new trojan horse that hits Mac OS X, and spies on web traffic to steal Bitcoins. They say not to download an app called StealthBit.
TWO Galaxy S5’s May Be Coming
Posted: February 10, 2014 Filed under: Uncategorized Leave a commentBenchmarks leaked point to two different Galaxy S5 flagship phones from Samsung. Bgr.com notes that there were two versions of the S4, but in those, only the processor was different. The two S5’s will be very different, and are being called the ‘Prime’ and ‘Standard’ models. The Prime one has a better display, faster processor, more RAM, and 32 Gigs of memory, while the Standard one has 16Gb. Look for the rollout the 24th of this month at Mobile World Congress.
Forbes.com reports that a startup claims to have cracked the code for porting iOS apps over to Android. Apportable says their software can cleanly convert the Objective C code from iOS apps to the Java based code used by Android apps. It basically builds a system within the app to fool the iOS app into thinking it’s still running under iOS. This could greatly increase the number of popular apps on both systems.
As the smart home movement continues to roll, a startup called bRight Switch has just hit its Indiegogo crowd funding goal of $115,000 to start producing small Android tablets to replace your light switches. According to techcrunch.com, it would offer features like people detection to automatically turn on lights on when someone walks into a room, and the ability to remotely switch your lights on and off via the Internet. Out by summer, they’ll be $75 each, or a 5 pack for $325.
Thoughts on Facebook’s Paper App
Posted: February 6, 2014 Filed under: Uncategorized Leave a commentClick the link and hit the audio button for my take on the new Paper app Facebook introduced this week.

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