Friday, June 15, 2007
Archos gets set to unveil Gen 5 products
Posted by
Augustine
at
9:45 AM
Labels: archos PMPs
Sigma SD14 reviewed: promising, but not quite there
Augustine: example of great tech that missed the consumer/user boat...
baby monitor swipes NASA shuttle feed
PALATINE, Ill. - An elementary school science teacher in this Chicago suburb doesn't have to turn on the news for an update on NASA's space mission. She just turns on her video baby monitor. black-and-white video from inside the space shuttle Atlantis. The other still lets her keep an eye on her baby.
"Whoever has a baby monitor knows what you'll usually see," Meilinger said. "No one would ever expect this."
Live video of the mission is available on NASA's Web site, so it's possible the monitor is picking up a signal from somewhere.
"It's not coming straight from the shuttle," NASA spokeswoman Brandi Dean said. "People here think this is very interesting and you don't hear of it often — if at all."
Meilinger silenced disbelieving co-workers by bringing in a video of the monitor to show her class on Tuesday, her students' last day of school. At home, 3-month-old Jack and 2-year-old Rachel don't quite understand what their parents are watching.
"I've been addicted to it and keep waiting to see what's next," Meilinger said.
Summer Infant, the monitor's manufacturer, is investigating what could be causing the transmission, communications director Cindy Barlow said. She said she's never heard of anything similar happening.
"Not even close," she said. "Gotta love technology."
Posted by
Augustine
at
9:29 AM
Labels: baby monitor, nasa
iPod blamed for stealing the thunder from contemporary art
Thursday, June 14, 2007
Taxes: Pay your estimated taxes online
The June 15th tax deadline looms, which means freelancers, sole proprietors and other misc income-making individuals and small businesses have an estimated quarterly tax payment to make. Up until now estimated tax payments were one of the last things that I wrote a dead tree paper check for; but it turns out I was living in 2001. The US Department of Treasury offers EFTPS, an online payment system that takes electronic estimated tax payments. The catch is you have to enroll online and wait up to 15 days to get your PIN number via snail mail, so it's already too late for this payment deadline. Also, not sure about other states, but California's Franchise Tax Board also offers online payment, too.
Shoestring opportunity
TV Guide was purchased for more than $3 billion, back when a billion dollars was a lot of money. At one point, it was worth more than ABC or NBC.
CMP, like many other trade magazine publishers, is busy consolidating, laying people off and closing magazines as they try to move to digital.
Put those two facts together and there's an opportunity. In fact, a bunch of them.
Who is curating YouTube? Who's the TV Guide of a world with a million channels?
We don't need someone to point us to goofy edited scary car ads. What we need are tiny, specialized sites that obsess about specific industries. Is there a good video every day about how to do better real estate sales? If there isn't, there soon will be. Or for heart surgeons?
For every segment where there is currently a trade magazine, I believe there's an opportunity to build a blog-like, woot-like, ad supported page that finds the good stuff. Jeff Jarvis, who ironically used to work at TV Guide, is already doing this with politics.
Like most opportunities, this one will be obvious later. And then it'll be too late for most of us to get in.
Posted by
Augustine
at
11:46 AM
Labels: a million channels
Stealing $3 billion from Wal-Mart
Filed under: Wal-Mart (WMT)
Thieves have stolen $3 billion worth of stuff from Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. (NYSE: WMT) in the last year, according to the AP. That's enough to make a pretty good size company but it represents less than 1% of its $348.6 billion worth of sales in the last year.
It turns out that Wal-Mart is not the only one suffering from the problem. Theft cost retailers $41.6 billion in 2006, according to a joint study released Tuesday by the National Retail Federation and the University of Florida. The study found that the theft rate as a percentage of sales rose to 1.61% of sales in 2006 from 1.60% in 2005. So at 0.9%, Wal-Mart is relatively tough to steal from.
Interestingly, it turns out that most retail "slippage" comes from employees. Specifically, employees stole about 47% of the dollars and customers swiped about 32%. Administrative errors accounted for 14%, supplier fraud accounts for 4%, and the remaining 3% is unaccounted for.
Continue reading Stealing $3 billion from Wal-Mart
Posted by
Augustine
at
11:45 AM
Labels: retail theft
Kodak High Sensitivity Image Sensor Tech
Posted by
Augustine
at
11:07 AM
Labels: digital image sensor, kodak
How To: Track your Flickr page views with Statr
Ever wondered how many people are perusing your Flickr photos? Statr is a web-based application that will track the amount of page views your Flickr account receives.
Statr for Flickr allows you to track and plot page views statistics for your Flickr account. Graphs are automatically updated on a daily basis and can be linked from external websites.
Getting started with Statr is a breeze -- all you need to do is grant Statr read access to your images. It takes Statr a day or so to collect data before it will begin displaying your page views. Unfortunately, Statr is a little simplistic and only displays page views. It doesn't give you any information about uniqueness of visitors, visitor frequency, visitor location, etc. If you're proud of your Flickr traffic, Statr also generates some in-line HTML so you can showoff your Flickr traffic graph.
Researchers use magnetic fields to manipulate light
Posted by
Augustine
at
9:56 AM
Labels: light, magnetic fields
River Glow project detects pollution with style
Posted by
Augustine
at
9:55 AM
Labels: pollution detector
Samsung's 70-inch LED-backlit LCD television now on sale
The 3D Real/Virtual World Hybrid: How Far Away?
How long will it be until we can stroll through the streets in a virtual world that is identical to our own? Given the state of a number of technologies, not very long. Over the last couple of years we’ve seen Microsoft Street Side and Virtual Earth as well as similar efforts from Google. But different technologies are now being deployed that are even more interesting that the results achieved from large companies taking and processing massive numbers of photos into now-standard 3D views.
Two standouts are Microsoft’s Photosynth Project and newcomer Everyscape, which Brady Forest wrote about today on O’Reilly Radar.
Posted by
Augustine
at
8:46 AM
Labels: virtual world