CNBC:
According to multiple sources, a trader entered a “b” for billion instead of an “m” for million in a trade possibly involving Procter & Gamble …, a component in the Dow.
Wow.
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CNBC: According to multiple sources, a trader entered a “b” for billion instead of an “m” for million in a trade possibly involving Procter & Gamble …, a component in the Dow. Wow.
CNBC:
According to multiple sources, a trader entered a “b” for billion instead of an “m” for million in a trade possibly involving Procter & Gamble …, a component in the Dow.
Wow.
Tarmo Virki: “We support management in this,” Jorma Ollila said in a speech to shareholders on Thursday. Nokia has started to build a new business by offering Internet services ranging from music downloads to e-mail, but these have gained little traction so far. Wait so the #1 cellphone company is moving from making cellphones to…
Tarmo Virki:
“We support management in this,” Jorma Ollila said in a speech to shareholders on Thursday.
Nokia has started to build a new business by offering Internet services ranging from music downloads to e-mail, but these have gained little traction so far.
Wait so the #1 cellphone company is moving from making cellphones to offering Internet, Music and Email. So let me rephrase this.
Nokia is struggling to compete with Apple on the smartphone market, instead they will start selling music downloads. This will put them in competition with Apple. Wait.
Nokia is struggling to sell phones, so they will now try to sell Internet. Do they even have an infrastructure to do this?
Nokia is struggling to sell cellphones, especially now the Google and Apple are competing with them. Instead they will try selling email services, putting them in competition with Googles little known email service: Gmail.
Idiots.
Joe Sharkey: Still, in recent years, most hotels have heeded the message that business travelers require Wi-Fi access — no excuses accepted. While many convention and luxury hotels still impose a daily charge for access, most midlevel hotels and even many budget-price hotels now provide it free. And corporate travel managers are pushing hard for…
Joe Sharkey:
Still, in recent years, most hotels have heeded the message that business travelers require Wi-Fi access — no excuses accepted. While many convention and luxury hotels still impose a daily charge for access, most midlevel hotels and even many budget-price hotels now provide it free. And corporate travel managers are pushing hard for all hotels to provide free access, pointing out that customers, especially younger ones, live in a world where free Wi-Fi is expected.
It is surprising how well the hotel industry is modeling the coffee shop industry when it comes to WiFi. For a long time the “premium” coffee shops such as Starbucks charged for internet access (they still kind of do) while the local one off coffee shops gave it away for free. For the most part everyone started to realize that at the very least they needed someway of getting their customers online, for free, if even on for two hours (damn you Starbucks).
Not too long ago you really had to double check that there was WiFi at a hotel you may be traveling to, now days it is expected (and usually there). I have paid $10 a day for access (though it always pisses me off) and I have gotten free access. The one thing I have never gotten, whether paid or free, was fast and reliable. The last hotel I stayed at had a wireless router built into the landline phone, this was a terrible speed connection with about a 10ft range.
Hotels are improving their WiFi rapidly, but if you want to go somewhere reliable to get it be sure to check out my post from Monday.
Tamar Lewin: Formspring is one of many question-and-answer Internet sites that are widely used to find, say, the calorie count of avocados. But Formspring spread like wildfire among young people, who used it to for more intimate topics — or flat-out cyberbullying. Many schools say they have seen students crushed by criticism of their breasts,…
Tamar Lewin:
Formspring is one of many question-and-answer Internet sites that are widely used to find, say, the calorie count of avocados. But Formspring spread like wildfire among young people, who used it to for more intimate topics — or flat-out cyberbullying.
Many schools say they have seen students crushed by criticism of their breasts, their body odor or their behavior at the last party.
I guess I was clueless that kids were using it for this. I have an account and so far no one has even asked me a thing (guess you have to be somewhat famous or a teenager).
Paul McDougall: Many faculty “expressed concerns that our campus’s commitment to protecting the privacy of their communications is not demonstrated by Google and that the appropriate safeguards are neither in place at this time nor planned for in the near future,” the letter said. Google officials, for their part, insisted that their privacy controls are…
Paul McDougall:
Many faculty “expressed concerns that our campus’s commitment to protecting the privacy of their communications is not demonstrated by Google and that the appropriate safeguards are neither in place at this time nor planned for in the near future,” the letter said.
Google officials, for their part, insisted that their privacy controls are adequate. “Obviously there’s lots of opinions and voices on campuses,” said Jeff Keltner, a business development manager in the Google Apps for Education group.
I think the most noteworthy thing here is that Google “insisted that their privacy controls are adequate” – really? Adequate is the word you want to use here. That is just not good if even your employees think that your privacy is not that great.
Professor Axel Roesler: During an intensive five week project, five student teams conducted an iterative user-centered design process to explore future applications for the projection of interfaces on any surface suitable for display and interaction in the home of the future. Some pretty neat ideas in here.
Professor Axel Roesler:
During an intensive five week project, five student teams conducted an iterative user-centered design process to explore future applications for the projection of interfaces on any surface suitable for display and interaction in the home of the future.
Some pretty neat ideas in here.
Philip Elmer-DeWitt: What caught my eye, however, was what her proprietary research shows about the impact of the iPad and other tablets on the broader gadget market, starting with netbooks. As her chart (above) shows, sales growth of these low-cost, low-powered computing devices peaked last summer at an astonishing 641% year-over-year growth rate. It fell…
Philip Elmer-DeWitt:
What caught my eye, however, was what her proprietary research shows about the impact of the iPad and other tablets on the broader gadget market, starting with netbooks. As her chart (above) shows, sales growth of these low-cost, low-powered computing devices peaked last summer at an astonishing 641% year-over-year growth rate. It fell off a cliff in January and shrank again in April — collateral damage, according to Huberty, from the January introduction and April launch of the iPad.
Be sure to take a look at the chart he has, I don’t think the drop off is solely due to the iPad. I think we are looking at two things happening simultaneously here. 1) The iPad is about the same price and a lot better. 2) People are realizing that netbooks are junk and that they should either by a full sized laptop or nothing at all.
About a year ago someone mentioned Instapaper on Twitter, curious I decided to check it out. Now a year later I don’t know what I would do without it. For the uninitiated Instapaper is a bookmarking service, kinda. The actual purpose is to give you a place where you can temporarily store links to different…
About a year ago someone mentioned Instapaper on Twitter, curious I decided to check it out. Now a year later I don’t know what I would do without it. For the uninitiated Instapaper is a bookmarking service, kinda. The actual purpose is to give you a place where you can temporarily store links to different articles / blog posts that you want to read later.
Before Instapaper I had a bookmarks folder on my Mac labeled ‘To Read’ and within that folder I saved all the same things that you would keep in Instapaper. The problem with that system is that I was responsible for removing the bookmarks when I was done reading them – a problem that Instapaper solves. You add items to Instapaper by installing a bookmarklet in your web browser (dead simple), invoking this bookmarklet lets you automatically add the page you are on to Instapaper. Clicking to read something in Instapaper automatically archives that link (there is an option to keep this from happening), thus only showing you the unread items. This would be fairly useful on its own, but it adds to its functionality by storing your old links in an archived section.
You can even star items that you like, allowing others to add your starred items to their Instapaper for viewing (try it with me my username is Showngo). All you have to do is click to add a new folder and then click the link at the top that says ‘add another users Starred items.” Done.
One often overlooked feature is the ability to create folders within Instapaper for sorting links, and you can install bookmarklets that add links directly to that folder. Very handy indeed, especially if you keep a folder specifically, for say, posting links to a blog.
For those that have not used the service this all sounds unmoving I am sure, but have you ever tried reading something with an ad blinking off to the side? If so you know how distracting that can be, Instapaper also solves this by allowing you to read a text-only version of the page with a click of the button.
This of course is all leading to Instapaper’s killer feature: the iPad / iPhone / Kindle integration that developer Marco Arment has taken the time to create. The iPhone app has always been a great way to read your Instapaper items, but add in Kindle syncing and iPad apps – well you really have something special.
When you read your Instapaper items on any of these devices they are presented with beautiful typography and no adds blinking and distracting you. This is especially true on the Kindle as there is no color display. The apps still allow the display of images (I forget if this is the case on the Kindle now) that are inline as part of the story. In other words you get everything you need and want, without all the other crap distracting you.
Instapaper in my opinion is a service worth paying for – yet it is free.
Michael Wolff: The Washington Post announced yesterday that it was putting Newsweek, in recent memory one of the most important news outlets in the country—which the Post has owned for almost a half-century—up for sale. Sad, I was always a big reader of Newsweek and it was the first news publication that I ever got…
Michael Wolff:
The Washington Post announced yesterday that it was putting Newsweek, in recent memory one of the most important news outlets in the country—which the Post has owned for almost a half-century—up for sale.
Sad, I was always a big reader of Newsweek and it was the first news publication that I ever got a subscription to.
Om Malik: The market has read the tea leaves as well, thus explaining the stock performance of Microsoft. Same goes for Intel. Despite its efforts to launch new chips or dabble in likely-to-fail OS efforts such as its joint venture with Nokia, the Mobilin, Intel resembles an elephant on top of quicksand. As I said…
Om Malik:
The market has read the tea leaves as well, thus explaining the stock performance of Microsoft. Same goes for Intel. Despite its efforts to launch new chips or dabble in likely-to-fail OS efforts such as its joint venture with Nokia, the Mobilin, Intel resembles an elephant on top of quicksand.
As I said yesterday:
Competition is almost always a good thing for consumers. My fear would be that Intel tries to monopolize the market much like they did with the PC industry. It would seem to me that if Android or WebOS ran on any mobile chip, that it would take one step closer to being the Windows of the mobile market.
That still stands. A lot of people predicted that Microsoft was too late to get into the video game arena with the introduction of the Xbox. What nobody accounted for was Microsoft’s determination, and money. Intel is seemingly in the same boat.
Edward Wyatt: On Thursday, Mr. Genachowski is expected to assert that the agency, under its powers to regulate phone service, is permitted to require broadband service providers to follow certain transmission guidelines, including safeguarding privacy, not discriminating against certain types of content providers, offering service to rural customers at the same rate as urban customers…
Edward Wyatt:
On Thursday, Mr. Genachowski is expected to assert that the agency, under its powers to regulate phone service, is permitted to require broadband service providers to follow certain transmission guidelines, including safeguarding privacy, not discriminating against certain types of content providers, offering service to rural customers at the same rate as urban customers and providing access to people with disabilities.
This is good.
Nate Anderson: And, if you were an AT&T DSL subscriber, but the company’s records show that nothing improper was done to your line, you can still get money. The proposed settlement says that those who “believe that your DSL Service has not performed at satisfactory speeds” may still be eligible for a “one-time payment of…
Nate Anderson:
And, if you were an AT&T DSL subscriber, but the company’s records show that nothing improper was done to your line, you can still get money. The proposed settlement says that those who “believe that your DSL Service has not performed at satisfactory speeds” may still be eligible for a “one-time payment of $2.00.” Yes—$2.00.
As expected AT&T settled with the Ohio class-action suit over limiting its DSL speed. But hey, it is better than nothing.
Christina Warren: At this point, 75% of teens have cellphones, up from 45% back in 2004. Thirty-three percent of teens send more than 100 texts per day. Teenage boys send an average of 30 text messages per day and girls send an average of 80. Be sure to click through and check out the infographic.…
Christina Warren:
At this point, 75% of teens have cellphones, up from 45% back in 2004. Thirty-three percent of teens send more than 100 texts per day. Teenage boys send an average of 30 text messages per day and girls send an average of 80.
Be sure to click through and check out the infographic. If I were a mobile tech CEO, this is the kind of data I would use to shape my company for the future. Today’s teens make us look like luddites.
Marco Arment: If you currently block ads, is there anything the ads themselves can improve that would make you change your mind? (I’m guessing there isn’t.) Even the best ads are still ads, and still aren’t always appropriate or wanted. I don’t think smarter ads are the solution to this problem. I don’t think ads…
Marco Arment:
If you currently block ads, is there anything the ads themselves can improve that would make you change your mind? (I’m guessing there isn’t.)
Even the best ads are still ads, and still aren’t always appropriate or wanted. I don’t think smarter ads are the solution to this problem. I don’t think ads are the solution to this problem. What if more ad-supported sites and services offered paid no-ads subscriptions?
It is worth clicking through to read his whole post. The gist of which is that no matter what advertisers do you are not going to click on the ad. And no matter what blogs do you probably are not going to pay to support them. I think perhaps the best model is to look at the Daring Fireball’s monetization model. Charging to support the RSS feed, adding in lovely ads and finishing off with T-Shirt sales. Now not every blogger can do this, but it is a great model for John Gruber.
This is the future, this guy has an amazing setup to make a very small apartment very functional. There was a lot of time, thought, money, and technology put into the development of this place. (Warning this is a YouTube link, so there be Flash)
This is the future, this guy has an amazing setup to make a very small apartment very functional. There was a lot of time, thought, money, and technology put into the development of this place.
(Warning this is a YouTube link, so there be Flash)
Dan Yoder: While social networking is a fun new application category enjoying remarkable growth, Facebook isn’t the only game in town. I don’t like their application nor how they do business and so I’ve made my choice to use other providers. And so can you. I have been toying with the very same idea. I…
Dan Yoder:
While social networking is a fun new application category enjoying remarkable growth, Facebook isn’t the only game in town. I don’t like their application nor how they do business and so I’ve made my choice to use other providers. And so can you.
I have been toying with the very same idea. I get very little out of Facebook and put a lot of data out there for that privilege.
Robert Reich: Why is the Federal Trade Commission threatening Apple with a possible lawsuit for abusing its economic power, but not even raising an eyebrow about the huge and growing economic (and political) muscle of JP Morgan Chase or any of the other four remaining giant banks on Wall Street? Our future well being depends…
Robert Reich:
Why is the Federal Trade Commission threatening Apple with a possible lawsuit for abusing its economic power, but not even raising an eyebrow about the huge and growing economic (and political) muscle of JP Morgan Chase or any of the other four remaining giant banks on Wall Street?
Our future well being depends more on people like Steve Jobs who invent real products that can improve our lives, than it does on people like Jamie Dimon who invent financial products that do little other than threaten our economy.
Could not agree more. Did not know this though:
So why is the FTC nosing around Apple and not around Wall Street? Because the Federal Trade Commission Act allows the agency to stop “unfair methods of competition” almost anywhere in the economy except in the financial sector. Banks are explicitly excluded.
Time to make some changes to those rules I think. Big banks had a chance to prove us wrong and instead they made 10% of Americans unemployed. Ooops indeed.
Stuart Green on the “lost” 4G iPhone: Finally, there’s the misguided idea, long espoused by many in the tech community, that “information wants to be free.” But whether it’s in the form of proprietary trade secrets embodied by Apple’s latest iPhone or intellectual property subject to seemingly endless illegal downloading and file sharing every second…
Stuart Green on the “lost” 4G iPhone:
Finally, there’s the misguided idea, long espoused by many in the tech community, that “information wants to be free.” But whether it’s in the form of proprietary trade secrets embodied by Apple’s latest iPhone or intellectual property subject to seemingly endless illegal downloading and file sharing every second of every day, information is not free.
It takes a lot of time and energy and money to write books, compose music, create movies, and design and market electronic devices like iPhones. Such information deserves legal protection, even when it’s been lost in a bar.
This is probably the most clear headed take on the matter, from a law professor no less.
Katherine Boehret for WSJ: Though Microsoft’s Kin One has some polishing to do on its camera and on its social-networking tools, it’s a uniquely attractive device that’s a pleasure to use. I only wish all mobile devices had worry-free backup websites like the Kin Studio. Compared to Joshua Topolsky for Engadget.com: It’s clear to us…
Though Microsoft’s Kin One has some polishing to do on its camera and on its social-networking tools, it’s a uniquely attractive device that’s a pleasure to use. I only wish all mobile devices had worry-free backup websites like the Kin Studio.
Compared to Joshua Topolsky for Engadget.com:
It’s clear to us from conversations we’ve had with Microsoft that there are people at the company with good ideas about what phones should and shouldn’t do, but we don’t feel the Kin is representative of those ideas. The execution (or lack thereof) on these products makes us legitimately concerned about what the company will do with Windows Phone 7. We can only hope that the similarities between those devices and the Kin handsets don’t stretch much further than the “Windows Phone” label, because in our estimation, Kin is one side of the family that needs to be disowned… quickly.
Well those are polar opposite opinions.