Showing posts with label New York Times. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New York Times. Show all posts

FTC Won't Make Decision in Google Antitrust Case Until Next Year

 Google-building
The Federal Trade Commission will not make a decision in its antitrust investigation into Google this year, according to multiple reports.
Both Bloomberg and The New York Times report hearing from sources that the government agency will push back its decision until sometime in 2013 -- with the Times saying it will happen in early-mid January -- despite having repeatedly stated their intention to complete the investigation by the end of this year.
The FTC has spent the better part of two years investigating whether Google has unfairly used its dominance in search to give preference to some of its other services over those of competitors.
Earlier this week, Google was rumored to be drafting a letter that would include concessions to end the investigation without having to go through a lawsuit or settlement. The delay suggests that the two sides were farther apart on an agreement than previously reported.
The European Union's antitrust investigation into Google, which is looking into similar complaints of unfair preference for Google services in its search engine, will also extend into 2013. The EU's competition commissioner said in a statement that Google will present a "detailed commitment" to resolve the issue in January, which will then need to be tested online before an agreement is finalized.

keep up with the newest technologies and contemplate about how these will be used in the future. On this blog I'll share my thoughts about the future of technology, based on the high Tech Road Show Blog inventions of today. Enhanced by Zemanta
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Google glasses coming to stores this year?








Different anonymous Google specialists are reporting that the association is at this time making Android-controlled glasses that can give a heads-up showcase to the wearer and unite over remote data organizations. The glasses will purportedly work like a wearable version of the Google Goggles application, giving continuous information on a customer's range through GPS and development sensors. Altogether moreover stunning, the same sources are expressing these "Google glasses" could be open to general society before the current year's over. 

The Google glasses have obviously been in progress for a long while at Google's mysterious Wander X lab, where the association layouts its additionally stunning undertakings, for instance, robots, space lifts, et cetera. Unacknowledged specialists have showed that this is totally a test venture from Google, notwithstanding it may inquire about future business applications depending upon how productive the thing is. 

Adjacent to several gets as a reconsideration, the glasses are said to resemble a standard pair of eyeglasses with a blueprint like the Oakley Blasts (displayed underneath). The glasses will offer a low-determination cam on the front for social issue information to exchange to a little screen joined with one side of the lenses. The screen won't be clear, yet will be put to the side of the edge, so as not to obscure a singular's viewpoint yet in the meantime give an extended reality feel. The cam will in like manner have the ability to take pictures, and have an implied blast. 

Using either Wifi or a 3g/4g affiliations, the device will exploit Google's cloud and hand-off information to the customer on their surroundings, including ranges or allies close-by and addresses that they look at. The glasses will moreover fill in as a mobile phone, allowing customers to make calls, use certain applications, and interface with colleagues. 

Truly controlling the glasses will be a bit uncommon, as examining through information on the presentation will oblige a customer to tilt their head to material and click. Sources at Google have noted that this limit is truly an extensive measure easier to use than it sounds, and won't be perceptible to others. 

Unknown specialists told the New York Times that the new Google glasses are obliged to be esteemed much like a current phone (in the Us$250 to $600 region) and are striven for a 2012 release date.
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Apple in Talks to Open Mini Shops Within Sam’s Club Locations

Apple may be working on a deal to open up a series of mini shops inside Sam’s Club locations, according to a new report.

According to a report by 9to5Mac, Apple is in early talks to open a store-within-a-store concept inside select Sam’s Club, a subsidiary of Walmart.

Although Apple already sells various products at the discount wholesale chain such as iPhones and iPads, the move would likely introduce Mac desktops and laptops to locations.

This isn't the first time that rumors have circulated about Apple opening mini shops in discount retail stores. In January, Target confirmed to The New York Times that it will be introducing 25 Apple mini-shops within its stores this year. The news came after Target announced it will be partnering with several specialty stores to attract more shoppers to its locations.

Starting May 6, participating boutiques will come to Target for a six-week trial period and then be replaced by another participating brand. Stores involved in the program — called The Shops at Target — include the Candy Store, Polka Dog Bakery and home goods retailer Privet House. However, Apple is not a part of the program.

"One of the reasons our guests love shopping at Target is our design partnerships. They create excitement and leave even the most loyal Target shoppers wondering what we'll do next," Brian Robinson, Target's director of fashion and design partnerships, said in a statement. "With The Shops at Target, we're building on that sense of discovery by offering our guests a chance to experience one-of-a-kind specialty stores and boutiques through collections that have been specifically tailored to their wants and needs."

Although Target is already carrying some Apple products, the store-within-a-store concept will be an extension of that and likely feature floor space and signs dedicated to the brand.

Do you think Apple possibly opening up mini shops in discount retail locations is a good idea? Would you consider buying an Apple computer from Sam’s Club? Let us know your thoughts in the comments.

keep up with the newest technologies and contemplate about how these will be used in the future. On this blog I'll share my thoughts about the future of technology, based on the high Tech Road Show Blog inventions of today.
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Collaborative Documentary Weaves Stories of Egyptian Revolution

About 400 people gathered in Tahrir Square Thursday to launch a new kind of documentary about the Egyptian revolution.

Instead of putting together a traditional, continuous film, creators of 18DaysInEgypt are asking individuals to submit media they created while living it. Tags those contributors add about the date, their feelings and their location will eventually help connect individual stories.

Jigar Mehta, a Knight Fellow at Stanford University and former New York Times video journalist, originally started the project hoping to pull content directly from Twitter, Flickr and YouTube. But he and co-creator Yasmin Elayat quickly found difficulties in determining context from social media posts.

“We thought, instead of being ahead of contributors pulling content, let’s push them to contribute,” Mehta says.

The first of the site’s contributions came from about 100 photographers, journalists and bloggers who served as beta testers. Elayat and Mehta also had “ambassadors” collect media from people who weren’t connected to the Internet. Thursday was the public contributions launch.

Using a contribution tool, anyone can compile videos, photos, tweets and Facebook posts into a slideshow module for the 18DaysInEgypt website. They then have options to add aforementioned tags and additional text. So far, people have used the tool in a variety of ways, many of them — like a video slideshow of activist musicians — in ways the team hadn’t anticipated.

A concert at the 18DaysInEgypt launch party at Tahrir Square on Thursday.

“The Egyptian edition of the Daily Star has edited a picture of a Kefaya demonstrator in its 19 December print issue,” wrote one contributor. “[it] carefully blurred the anti-Mubarak writings on the Kefaya demonstrator’s poster.”

“One man had the audacity to grope my arse, not once, but twice, within 30 seconds,” wrote another.

“The latest fighting started when a boy who was part of the cabinet sit-in was brutally beaten by soldiers,” wrote a third.

Eventually viewers will be able to click hyperlinks in each of these modules to see others that took place at the same time, with the same person or at the same location — in other words, how the censorship, beating and arse grabbing were connected. It’s a view of storytelling that has gotten some attention, including a grant from the Tribeca New Media Fund.

Mehta and Elayat are working on making the concept available for telling other stories as well. They plan to launch a storytelling platform based on 18DaysInEgypt, GroupStre.am, within the next few months.

Image courtesy of Flickr, Maggie Osama

keep up with the newest technologies and contemplate about how these will be used in the future. On this blog I'll share my thoughts about the future of technology, based on the high Tech Road Show Blog inventions of today.
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Hipstamatic Introduces “World’s First Social Camera”

iPhone photo app maker Synthetic thinks it has found a way to combine the suspense of analog film with digital convenience through the new Hipstamatic D-Series app for iOS it’s releasing on Thursday.

The D-Series — billed as a “disposable camera for iOS” — allows groups of iPhone-toting friends to share a batch of 24 shots. Friends invite one another through Facebook to shoot to a specific roll. As everyone shoots their own photos — from the same party, same town, or anywhere wirelessly connected — the amount of shots left decreases, just like an old-school roll of analog film.

Also like analog film, no one can see what’s being shot while the D-Series roll is in progress. But once the final shot is used, all the participating friends are delivered the entire batch of 24 photos, arranged chronologically and with labels saying who shot what. Users are then free to share those individual images with whomever they please.

The D-Series will be available free in the Apple App Store and includes one camera, while an in-app purchase option will initially allow users to buy three other 99-cent cameras with different effects.

According to Synthetic CEO and co-founder Lucas Buick, the D-Series app will change “how we come together to capture photographic stories.”

Hipstamatic has enjoyed tremendous success since its launch two years ago. The app now boasts more than 4 million paid users, and gained even more widespread recognition when New York Times photographer Damon Winter used it last year to shoot a series of war images from Afghanistan for the paper’s front page.

Buick told Mashable on Tuesday that the D-Series first sprouted as an idea about a year ago, with development ramping up at the end of summer. Future additions to the app could include larger batches of shots and the ability to invite friends using social networks other than Facebook.

For early 2012, Buick said there are already plans to release location-based cameras that can only be used in certain areas as well as project-based public cameras — to be used, for example, at music festivals — with everyone shooting to one roll of unlimited exposures for a specific amount of time.

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Tumblr Lands Major Investor, New Director Of Product

Image representing Tumblr as depicted in Crunc...Image via CrunchBase
Tumblr just landed a major investor in the form of Silicon Valley VC firm Sequoia Capital. The blogging service also confirmed today that it has hired Derek Gottfrid from The New York Times as director of product.

According to Business Insider, the blogging platform — headed up by 24-year-old David Karp — scored a “very big and competitive” round of financing from Sequoia, but there’s still no word on the total amount. Additionally, Sequoia’s Roelof Botha (previously the CFO of PayPal) has reportedly joined Tumblr’s board. We reached out to Karp this morning for comment and have yet to hear back.

Also, according to TechCrunch, Gottfrid, who worked at The New York Times for 12 years, is leaving the publication today to join Karp and Co. Gottfrid apparently toasted the move yesterday, as evidenced by the tweet below:

Tumblr has been gaining its share of attention of late — scoring $5 million from Spark and Union Square Ventures in April, intriguing the old guard of print media and perhaps even serving as inspiration for more established platforms such as WordPress.

The company is based in New York, but according to BI, Karp and Tumblr President John Maloney visited the West Coast last month to look for funding, which apparently came in the form of the Sequoia Capital investment. We’re curious to see what this reported cross-coastal influx of money will have on the startup.

In the meantime, Tumblr has seen pretty steady growth when it comes to traffic. Last week, Karp told us that about the service is seeing 80 million pageviews per month on mobile devices — and that’s just 3% of total traffic. Below, you can see the company’s growth in web traffic over the past year:

HOW TO: Turn Your Expertise Into Dollars Online

Darren Waddell is vice president of marketing at MerchantCircle.com. He can be found on the MerchantCircle blog and on Twitter.

Every time you search for a topic online these days, it seems a few webpages pop up with advice from “experts.” Whether these websites are pages on Yahoo Answers, medical information sites or part of a community of small businesses like Yelp, they've become increasingly important sources of information for web searchers looking for answers to specific questions.

If you are an expert in something, you can offer your advice online — and turn that expertise into dollars. Small business owners are especially good candidates to become online experts, because they know their industries inside and out. Millions of small business owners have turned to blogging, writing articles, sharing tips on Q&A sites, and participating in forums as a way to drive traffic to their websites and build business credibility.


Expertise Pays


Small business owners possess a wealth of knowledge about their industry or sector, and when they share this knowledge with Internet searchers, it lends credibility to their business and attracts new customers. Blogging is a key medium for sharing your expertise. The most recent Merchant Confidence Index, a survey of 10,000 small business owners conducted by my company found that nearly 30% are blogging and 35% plan to blog in the next three months. Those who are blogging have found that creating impactful content that people can find online is one of the best marketing tools available — and it's free. According to data published by Internet marketing firm HubSpot, companies that blogged realized 55% more visitors to their site, 97% more inbound links and 434% more indexed pages.

Michele Gorham, owner of the Andover, Mass.-based Cookie Central bakery, is one small business owner who has turned her expertise into dollars online. She has created hundreds of blog entries about how to build a business, run a bakery, and other helpful topics; and she continuously answers customers' direct questions through various social media platforms, including Facebook, Twitter and Yelp. Because of Gorham's rich content contributions, her listings on various sites are highly trafficked and regularly found by search engines — generating more sales for her business.


Getting Started


So what's the first step if you want to start creating expert content online? The first thing you need to do is think about the topics you want to write about. What advice can you offer that would be useful to your potential customers? What are you knowledgeable about? Make a list of the topics you'd like to write about.

Next, you'll need to develop a voice for your content. The most successful expert content is straightforward, informative, backed up with examples and research, and helpful to those who've searched for a specific term. Your articles should not be self serving. For example, if you’re a mechanic, don’t write an article that advises that the best way to fix a carburetor is to come into your shop and pay you to fix it. Instead, offer practical, step-by-step advice that can actually help someone with a problem. At the end of your article, you can add a gentle plug for your business and add your URL; don't turn the article into an advertisement.

After you've written your article or blog post, you need to publish it online, and there are lots of options. Your goal should be to get the most exposure possible for your article, to drive traffic to your business website. You can publish your article on a personal, business or community blog, then add links to your article on your LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter accounts. You can answer an open question on Q&A sites, or pose your own and then go back and answer it. Remember, though, that if consumers like your advice but can't find you, your efforts are being wasted. So make sure to create a detailed listing on local business sites, some of which will let you answer customers' questions directly or publish your expertise via a blog or newsletter, and make sure you have your own web site. Also, fully fill out all profile information on any sites you utilize.

Some sites, such as Associated Content or Demand Media, pay experts a small sum to write topical articles, then syndicate that content to online newspapers and other websites. Demand Media pays up to $15 for a 500 word article. Other "citizen journalism sites," like Examiner, pay based on page views. You won't make millions by creating content for these pay-to-write companies, but if you blog regularly, your content will show up more regularly in searches for related topics, and you'll build credibility in your industry — which is much more valuable than a few dollars.

In fact, most places where experts contribute their expertise online — blogs, forums, Q&A sites, and business directories — don't pay contributors. But, as a small business owner, it's still incredibly valuable to share your expert advice online, because your content builds exposure for your business, and that drives more people to your website and increases revenues long-term.


Making Sure your Content is Discovered


Wherever you decide to publish your articles, make sure the site is credible. The site should be populated by experts, such as small business owners or service providers with professional storefronts. Or if it's your own blog, make it informative and professional — a useful site that your target customers will turn to again and again for information. For example, if you are a real estate professional, you could create a blog with inside information about a particular neighborhood, detailing not just houses for sale, but information on local schools, city government initiatives, community events, local businesses, and other things of interest to people living in that area. Such a site not only builds your credibility as a real estate agent, but delivers a valuable service to your potential customers that keeps them coming back for more.

To get your content found, make sure the sites you post it on optimize content for search engines. Embed links in your articles, and link to your articles from other places on the web as much as possible. Add links to the article on your Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and other social networking sites, as well as on your online business directory listings pages.

The bottom line: the quality of the expert content you produce online is critical to how well it works to build your credibility and boost business leads in the real world. If your articles are helpful and informative, they'll be read and passed along, and that will increase the visibility of your content and your business. Offer helpful advice, and you'll see how quickly your expertise is rewarded with new business leads.


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Indian Government Unhappy With RIM’s Solution For Spying On Blackberry Users

The ongoing struggle between RIM and data-hungry government surveillance programs is starting to look more like a soap opera than a political drama. After RIM caved to India and began offering a method to intercept Blackberry Messenger messages within that country, the government has decided that the tools they’ve been given aren’t good enough. “We have manual access to the messenger service. We want automated access and we are hopeful of getting it from January 1,” said G.K. Pillai, India’s home secretary. Apparently, and anyone who reads this site could have told Mr. Pillai this (and RIM did so), the communications they have been enabled to intercept are encrypted with keys RIM cannot provide, because it does not have them. They are attempting to squeeze blood from a stone.

As I noted back in August, it is up to the government (Saudi Arabia in that case, India here) to acquire the decryption keys, since they are the property of their own citizens, and if said keys really are important to national security (it’s not for me to say), then I’m sure they have ways to compel users to surrender them. In fact, they boasted some time ago that they had cracked the encryption, so such measures should be unnecessary — if they were telling the truth.

Meanwhile, as the New York Times reported last week, businesses have taken note of India’s troubling insistence on the ability to intercept confidential communications, and are going to be more unlikely to choose India for certain kinds of business in the future. Storage and analysis of medical records, for example, are highly confidential but would likely be “subject to search” under Indian law. So insurance and medical companies will simply choose a country that respects private communication in which to do business.

It’s certainly India’s prerogative to set security above privacy, as indeed we in the US have to some extent, but as a country so reliant on importing tech business, pursuing this course too far is unwise. They show no signs of reducing the pressure on RIM, however, so we’ll likely be hearing more about this over the three months leading up to the January 1st ultimatum date.

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