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Submission + - Is Buying an Extended Warranty Ever a Good Idea? (xconomy.com)

waderoush writes: Consumer Reports calls extended warranties 'money down the drain,' and as a tech journalist and owner of myriad gadgets — none of which have ever conked out or cracked up during the original warranty period — that was always my attitude too. But when I met recently with Steve Abernethy, CEO of San Francisco-based warranty provider SquareTrade, I tried to keep an open mind, and I came away thinking that the industry might be changing. In a nutshell, Abernethy says he’s aware of the extended-warranty industry’s dreadful reputation, but he says SquareTrade is working to salvage it through a combination of lower prices, broader coverage, and better service. On top of that, he made some persuasive points – which don’t seem to figure into Consumer Reports’ argument – about the way the 'risk vs. severity' math has changed since the beginning of the smartphone and tablet era. One-third of smartphone owners will lose their devices to drops or spills within the first three years of purchase, the company’s data shows. If you belong to certain categories — like people in big households, or motorcycle owners, or homeowners with hardwood floors — your risk is even higher. So, in the end, the decision about buying an extended warranty boils down to whether you think you can defy the odds, and whether you can afford to buy a new device at full price if you’re one of the unlucky ones.

Submission + - Siri's Creator Challenges Texting-While-Driving Study (xconomy.com)

waderoush writes: A rash of media reports last week, reporting on a study released by the Texas A&M Transportation Institute, implied that using voice-to-text apps like Siri or Vlingo while driving is no safer than manual texting. But Adam Cheyer, the co-inventor of Siri, says journalists took the wrong message from the study, which didn’t test Siri or Vlingo in the recommended hands-free, eyes-free mode. In the study, researchers asked subjects to drive a closed course while they held an iPhone or Android phone in one hand, spoke messages into Siri or Vlingo, proofread the messages visually, and pressed buttons to send the messages. Under these conditions, driver response times were delayed by nearly a factor of two, the researchers found. ‘Of course your driving performance is going to be degraded if you’re reading screens and pushing buttons,’ says Cheyer, who joined Apple in 2010 as part of the Siri acquisition and left the company two years later. To study whether voice-to-text apps are really safer than manual texting, he says, the Texas researchers should have tested Siri and Vlingo in car mode, where a Bluetooth headset or speakers are used to minimize visual and manual interaction. ‘The study seems to have misunderstood how Siri was designed to be used,’ Cheyer says. ‘I don’t think that there is any evidence that shows that if Siri and other systems are used properly in eyes-free mode, they are ‘just as risky as texting.’’

Submission + - From 'Quantified Self' to 'Quantified Car' (xconomy.com)

waderoush writes: A San Francisco startup called Automatic Labs came out of stealth mode in March, offering a Bluetooth gadget that connects to your car's onboard data port and sends engine performance data to an app on your smartphone (iPhone only right now, Android coming this fall). Xconomy went on a test drive with Automatic's chief product officer and captured video of the system in action. The app chirps at you when it notices rough braking, aggressive acceleration, or speeding over 70 mph. It also keeps a record of your fuel economy and gives you a gamified 'driving score' to encourage more efficient driving habits and fuel savings. It's all a sign that that the ethic of ubiquitous mobile/cloud sensing and analytics that 'quantified selfers' are applying to their personal health and fitness is spilling over to neighboring areas of consumer technology, including transportation. The Automatic Link device costs $70 and will begin shipping in May.

Submission + - Dropcam CEO's Beef with Brogramming and Free Dinners (xconomy.com)

waderoush writes: Plenty of technology companies serve free breakfast, lunch, and dinner to their employees, but Dropcam CEO Greg Duffy says that’s a form of mind control designed to get people to to work late. To keep employees happy, Duffy says, it’s better to make them go home to their families for dinner. Some other suggestions from the San Francisco video monitoring startup: don’t fill your engineering department with young, single, childless males (aka brogrammers). Keep your business model simple by making actual stuff that you can sell for a profit. And don’t hire assholes. Why pay attention to Duffy’s advice? Because Dropcam has a 100 percent employee retention rate---no one who has joined the 4-year-old company has ever left.

Submission + - The Brain Map Deserves Far More than $100 Million Per Year (xconomy.com)

waderoush writes: At a time of sequesters and shrinking R&D spending, critics are attacking President Obama’s proposed Brain Research Through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies (BRAIN) initiative, which would have a $100 million budget starting in 2014. But in fact, the project ‘runs the risk of becoming a casualty of small-bore thinking in science business, and politics,’ argues Xconomy national life sciences editor Luke Timmerman. The goal of the BRAIN initiative is to develop technologies for exploring the trillions of synapses between neurons in the human brain. If the $3 billion Human Genome Project and its even more productive sequel, the $300-million-per-year Advanced Sequencing Technologies program, are any guide, the initiatve could lead to huge advances in our understanding of Alzheimer’s disease, epilepsy, and consciousness itself. Only government can afford to think this big, argues Timmerman. ‘Even though $100 million a year is small change by federal government standards,’ Timmerman writes, ‘it is enough to create a small market the gives for-profit companies assurance that if they build such tools, someone will buy them We ought to be talking about how we can free up more money to achieve our neuroscience goals faster, rather than talking about whether we can afford this puny appropriation at all.’
Microsoft

Submission + - Miguel de Icaza's Quest to Help C# Developers Go iOS (xconomy.com)

waderoush writes: "Miguel de Icaza started the GNOME project in the 1990s to bring a Windows-like desktop environment to Linux, then co-founded Ximian, which eventually became part of Novell. Now he thinks it’s time to give programmers stuck building ‘soul-sucking’ Windows desktop software a way to join the mobile era. His new startup Xamarin, co-founded with his Ximian co-founder Nat Friedman, helps developers who are versed in C# and the .NET framework build apps for the iOS and Android mobile operating systems. De Icaza admits that he long lived in an ‘anti-Apple bubble’ and says he ‘dismissed’ the iPhone when it first came out in 2007. But now he calls Microsoft ‘the third horse in a two-horse race.’ The upside for Windows developers, says de Icaza: C# and .NET offer a responsive, error-resistant architecture for mobile apps, and using Xamarin they can write and debug iOS and Android apps in Visual Studio."

Submission + - Ex-Googlers Build an Algorithm to Predict the Success of 20-Somethings (xconomy.com)

waderoush writes: "Say you're in your early 20s, you're finishing college or graduate school, and you're smart but poor — and you've got some big student loans hanging over you. You're pretty sure that within 10 years you'll be selling your first startup or earning a high-six-figure salary. But you need some money *now* so that you can actually start the company, and avoid taking a corporate job. Shouldn't there be a way to calculate how much you'll be worth, and borrow against that promise of future success? Upstart, a new Palo Alto investing operation founded by a group of ex-Google employees, thinks the answer is yes. In a new spin on the crowdfunding model, the organization gathers data from recent graduates such as schools attended, academic transcripts, job offers, and credit scores. Its 'pricing engine,' based partly on techniques developed to assess job applicants at Google, determines how much each aspiring 'upstart' should be allowed to raise from investors per each percentage point of their future income. Upstart has already helped 35 young people raise amounts varying from $10,000 to $170,000; the upstarts, who must pay the money back over a 10-year period, say they're using the funds mainly to retire student debt or bootstrap startups. 'We can look at a 25-year-old and very quickly assess whether he or she would be successful at Google,' says Upstart founder Dave Girouard, formerly the head of Googles $1 billion enterprise apps division. 'My whole thesis was, if you could use the same algorithms to predict whether he or she would be successful beyond that, in the business world, that would be pretty useful.'"

Comment Microwave mea culpa (Score 3, Informative) 278

Author of TFA here. So many people have mentioned the microwave that I had to respond. Yes, I still have a microwave! It's built into the kitchen and it belongs to my landlord, so I wasn't about to rip it out for the "after" photo. I should have made that clear in the original text, which has now been updated.

Thanks, (almost) everyone, for engaging seriously with the premise of the article. Of course it's anecdotal, of course I was writing about my own experiences. This is a given when you're writing a personal essay. But my guess -- and it seems to be correct, from a lot of the comments -- was that a lot of other people have also noticed that they're able to get along with fewer gadgets, especially since the new wave of touchscreen mobile gadgets are basically the Swiss army knives of electronics. Others haven't had this experience, and that's fine. My real point was that it's possible to get the same stuff done today with fewer tools.

Sorry if my preference for Apple products put off a bunch of readers, but the theme would hold up even if I were an Android or Windows customer.

Technology

Submission + - Where Have All the Gadgets Gone? (xconomy.com)

waderoush writes: "How many electronic gadgets did you own in 2005? How many do you own today? The answer is almost certainly a lot fewer. Counter to the dominant trend in consumer technology since the 1920s — and despite predictions of a coming ‘Internet of things’ — there may actually be *less* electronic stuff in our homes and offices today than ever before. That’s thanks largely to the rise of multipurpose wireless devices like smartphones and tablets, which are now powerful enough to replace many older, dedicated devices like point-and-shoot cameras, music players, digital voice recorders — even whole home entertainment systems. To prove the point, here are before-and-after photos from one San Francisco household (mine) where the herd of digital devices has been thinned from about three dozen, eight years ago, to just 15 today."
Iphone

Submission + - What Makes an App Awesome? Under the Hood with Mokriya Craigslist (xconomy.com)

waderoush writes: "What makes mobile apps like Any.do, Band of the Day, Flipboard, Houzz, Letterpress, Mailbox, Paper, Path, Pinterest, Pocket, or Snapseed so successful? It's their design, obviously. But the principles at work are hard to pin down — as Justice Potter Stewart once said about pornography, you know good design when you see it. This article offers a behind-the-scenes look at the creation of Mokriya Craigslist, a popular new iPhone app from Cupertino, CA-based design studio Mokriya. Co-founder Sunil Kanderi shares some of his team's design secrets, as well as early sketches and wireframes. Kanderi explains the method Mokriya devised for getting users to any sub-category in Craigslist's vast catalog in just two taps; how the app makes discreet use of color and animation; and most importantly, how it achieves beauty through invisibility. 'If you try to be too clever you can get in the way of the user’s experience,' Kanderi says."

Submission + - Opponents of California's Retroactive Startup Tax Win a Reprieve (xconomy.com)

waderoush writes: "Back in January Xconomy detailed the genesis of California's surreal plan to claw back $120 million in taxes from tech startup investors and other small-business backers. Now the California Franchise Tax Board says it won't immediately seek to impose the retroactive tax assessments, leaving time for officials in Sacramento to resolve the roiling dispute over a small-business investing incentive recently ruled unconstitutional by a state appeals court. 'This is certainly not a victory at all for our position, but it takes the time pressure off, and it takes the immediate financial hit that a lot of people were looking at off the table,' says Brian Overstreet, the Healdsburg, CA-based entrepreneur who is leading opposition to the tax plan."
Facebook

Submission + - Ginormous Data: The Story of Facebook's Analytics Back End (xconomy.com)

waderoush writes: "Forget ‘big data’ — Facebook’s data challenges are ‘ginormous,’ to quote Jay Parikh, the company’s vice president of infrastructure engineering. Everybody knows that the social networking site is also the world’s largest photo sharing service, storing some 240 billion photos, with another 350 million uploaded every day (about 7 petabytes per month). But Facebook’s vast and detailed activity logs, which are spread across huge Hadoop clusters of 100 petabytes or more, have received far less attention. This Xconomy article takes an in-depth look at how Parikh’s team manages this back end, and more importantly, how Facebook product engineers use it track the tens of thousands of A/B tests running on the front end on any given day. ‘Our top priority, beyond keeping the site up and running and fast, is enabling our product teams to move at lightning speed,’ Parikh says."
Graphics

Submission + - Light Field Photography Is the New Path to 3-D (xconomy.com)

waderoush writes: "In November, Lytro, the maker of the first light field camera for consumers, upgraded its viewer software to enable a feature called ‘Perspective Shift.’ In addition to refocusing pictures after they’ve been taken, Lytro audiences can now pivot between different virtual points of view, within a narrow baseline. This 3-D capability was baked into Lytro’s technology from the start: ‘The light field itself is inherently multidimensional [and] the 2-D refocusable picture that we launched with was just one way to represent that,’ says Eric Cheng, Lytro’s director of photography. But while Perspective Shift is currently little more than a novelty, the possibilities for future 3-D imaging are startling, especially as Lytro develops future devices with larger sensors — and therefore larger baselines, allowing more dramatic 3-D effects. Cheng says the company is already exploring future versions of its viewer software that would work on 3-D televisions. ‘We are moving the power of photography from optics to computation,’ he says. ‘So when the public really demands 3-D content, we will be ready for it.’"

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