Wednesday’s Recommended Reads

Some recent saved favorites from Pocket:

Ex-Facebooker Gifts the Social Network’s Data Platform to the World: Many developers dream of working for a high profile company like Google or Facebook. But not Jonathan Gray. The first time Facebook called and offered him a job, he turned them down. But Facebook kept calling. – by Klint Finley – http://www.wired.com/wiredenterprise/2013/10/continuuity/

GPS bullets are latest weapon for American police: It sounds like something out of a James Bond movie – GPS bullets that can track the location of a suspect’s car. The bullet is designed to make high-speed chases safer – enabling the authorities to track suspects without having to risk theirs or others’ lives. – http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-24731080

This company will send your stuffed animal on a vacation: Your teddy bear has always wanted to visit Tokyo in the spring. Fortunately for Mr. Bobo, there’s Unagi Travel, the “Japan Travel Agency for Stuffed Animals.” The travel agency gives tours not to you but to your favorite plush toy. – by Claudine Zap – http://travel.yahoo.com/blogs/compass/company-send-stuffed-animal-vacation-212641385.html

There’s one key difference between kids who excel at math and those who don’t: We hear it all the time. And we’ve had enough. Because we believe that the idea of “math people” is the most self-destructive idea in America today. The truth is, you probably are a math person, and by thinking otherwise, you are possibly hamstringing your own career. – by Search results – http://qz.com/139453/theres-one-key-difference-between-kids-who-excel-at-math-and-those-who-dont/

Payments Giant First Data Acquires Mobile Loyalty Startup Perka For ~$30M To Take On Square And PayPal In SMB Market: In an effort to catch up with Square and Paypal, payment processing giant First Data has been quietly increasing its presence in the mobile payments market. As the largest credit card processing company in the U.S. – by Rip Empson – http://techcrunch.com/2013/10/29/payment-processing-giant-first-data-buys-mobile-loyalty-startup-perka-for-30m-to-help-it-compete-with-square-and-paypal/

This man decides what you read: Can Chartbeat CEO Tony Haile save journalism? Miley Cyrus gave us so much that night. Just trying to count her blessings smacks of ingratitude, like regifting manna. – by Alex Halperin – Tags: Salon.com, Chartbeat, Media, data, Journalism, New Media, Miley Cyrus, BuzzFeed, Mother Jones, Salon, New York Times, CNN, ESPN, news, MTV, Big Data, ComScore, Vox Media – http://www.salon.com/2013/10/27/this_man_decides_what_you_read/

Intel May Turn Over Its Web TV Project to Verizon: Intel’s efforts to break into the TV business may be coming to a close. Sources say the chipmaker is close to a deal to hand over control of Intel Media, the unit that has been trying to build a Web-based subscription TV service, to Verizon, the telco that already operates a pay TV service. – by Peter Kafka and Arik Hesseldahl – Tags: media, news, product news, amazon, apple, beon, erik huggers, featured post, google, intel media, samsung, sony, verizon, web tv – http://allthingsd.com/20131030/intel-may-turn-over-its-web-tv-project-to-verizon/

Google’s Perfect, Future-Proof Marketing Strategy For Google Glass: Sometimes it looks as though the whole of the Google Google Glass project is one big experiment. It’s hardly experimental technology. It’s an experiment in how to use a consumer-grade heads up display. But the experiment goes much deeper than hardware and apps. – by Haydn Shaughnessy – http://www.forbes.com/sites/haydnshaughnessy/2013/10/29/googles-perfect-future-proof-marketing-strategy-for-google-glass/

Why Twitter Just Turned Itself Inside Out: As soon as Twitter changed from a texting service into an internet service, it was taken over by links. Tweets were no longer messages, they were web pointers with comments attached. – by John Herrman – http://www.buzzfeed.com/jwherrman/why-twitter-just-turned-itself-inside-out

Fitness Coach: Q: Can Breathing Incorrectly Cause a Running Injury? Is it true that impact stress in runners is greatest when the foot strikes the ground at the beginning of an exhalation? So if I always breathe out on my left side, I’ll increase my risk of injuring something on that side? I read this in a Run – by Erin Beresini – Tags: Fitness Coach, Outside Magazine Fitness, Outside Fitness – http://www.outsideonline.com/fitness/fitness-coach/Can-Breathing-Incorrectly-Cause-a-Running-Injury.html

Samsung is pulling another Amazon on Android, but this is even bigger — Tech News and Analysis: As much as Google likes and touts that Android is open, that freedom may come with the cost of some control over the platform. Amazon may have started the first truly successful “fork” of Android, but Samsung is going after the whole place setting. – by Kevin C. Tofel – Tags: Android,Google,Samsung,TouchWiz – http://gigaom.com/2013/10/28/samsung-is-pulling-another-amazon-on-android-but-this-is-even-bigger/

Google adds location sharing, animated GIFs to Hangouts, integrates SMS: Today during its “A Morning with Google+” event, Google announced some updates for its Google+ service on top of sharing some improvements to Hangouts. – by Jordan Kahn – http://9to5google.com/2013/10/29/google-adds-location-sharing-animated-gifs-to-hangouts-integrates-sms/

Google smartwatch with Google Now coming sooner than expected, ‘ready within months’: A Google-produced smartwatch is close to entering production, says a report from the Wall Street Journal. The Google watch, which has been rumored multiple times, will run Android with a heavy focus on the company’s Google Now personal assistant. – by Aaron Souppouris – http://www.theverge.com/2013/10/29/5041704/google-smartwatch-could-be-ready-within-months

Tuesday’s Recommended Reads

Some recent saved favorites from Pocket:

How I deal with users who steal: It costs $19.99/yr for musicians to use, or is free if you refer 5 new users. The referral system works well, and is responsible for about 30% of daily new users. Some users fake it though. They “refer” 5 people by making 5 bogus DistroKid accounts using the referral link we give them. – by Philip Kaplan – https://medium.com/product-design/416b0841dbf1

Teenagers Are Driving Less, But Why?: Are teens really done caring about cars and driving, or is data showing fewer teens applying for drivers’ licenses more a reflection of the lousy current job market than a long term cultural trend? – by JOSEPH B. WHITE – http://blogs.wsj.com/corporate-intelligence/2013/10/24/teenagers-are-driving-less-but-why/

The New Economy Is Indentured TaskRabbits: It’s not exactly news that in the absence of a solution to the unemployment crisis, Americans have learned to cobble together various odd jobs to replace the full-time, benefits-included positions they once had. What’s surprising is how permanent the so-called gig economy is turning out to be. – by Kevin Roose – http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2013/10/new-economy-is-indentured-taskrabbits.html

Why Apple’s first retail store in Brazil is actually a really big deal: Apple is about to take its much-awaited leap into Latin America. According to Apple news site 9to5Mac, Apple is aiming to launch its first retail store in Brazil by March 2014. The store, which has been under construction since last year, will be located in Rio de Janeiro.  – by Roberto A. Ferdman – http://qz.com/140467/why-apples-first-retail-store-in-brazil-is-actually-a-really-big-deal/

Motorola reveals ambitious plan to build modular smartphones: Motorola has unveiled Project Ara, an open-source initiative for modular smartphones with the goal to “do for hardware what the Android platform has done for software. – by Sam Byford – http://www.theverge.com/2013/10/29/5041336/motorola-project-ara-modular-smartphones

Can Wearable Computers Revolutionize How We Learn To Code? ? Co.Labs ? code + community: Programming is an abstract and often private pursuit. But wearable computing projects–made with purpose-built microcontrollers like the Adafruit FLORA–have the potential to change all that, catapulting coding into a vastly more mainstream hobby. – http://www.fastcolabs.com/3018374/can-wearable-computers-revolutionize-how-we-learn-to-code

How Google Ventures-backed Play-i plans to use robots to help kids learn to code — Tech News and Analysis: Learning the basics of programming doesn’t have to involve staring at a computer screen, stringing together lines of code. If  Play-i has its way, kids as young as five years old could learn the concepts behind by coding by playing with a simple spherical robot and an iPad. – by Ki Mae Heussner – Tags: internet of things,mobile technology,sensor technology – http://gigaom.com/2013/10/28/how-google-ventures-backed-play-i-plans-to-use-robots-to-inspire-kids-to-code/

Should Your Product Connect To The Internet Of Things?: Thanks to widespread Internet adoption and over 10 billion connected devices around the world, companies today are more excited than ever about the Internet of Things. – http://www.fastcodesign.com/3020678/should-your-product-connect-to-the-internet-of-things

Nielsen’s New SDK Adds Mobile Viewing To Its Traditional TV Ratings, Uses Data From Facebook To Match Demographics: After months of trials, Nielsen today is announcing an SDK that will give it the ability to measure how people view TV on mobile apps and other digital formats. – by Ingrid Lunden – http://techcrunch.com/2013/10/27/nielsen-sdk-mobile-ratings/

Samsung Pursues Developers, Seeking Orbit of Apps: This week, Samsung Electronics Co. 005930.SE -0. – by Jonathan Cheng – http://online.wsj.com/news/article_email/SB10001424052702304470504579160863095029246-lMyQjAxMTAzMDIwNzEyNDcyWj

A clever way to buy Facebook ads based on what your users like (Guest post): My friend Gagan Biyani wrote up a great piece how to analyze what your Facebook audience is interested in, and using that to buy ads. He’s generously shared it, below. Gagan is CEO and co-founder at Sprig, and before that was at Lyft and started up Udemy. – http://andrewchen.co/2013/10/28/a-clever-way-to-buy-facebook-ads-based-on-what-your-users-like-guest-post/

Why is broadband more expensive in the US?: Home broadband in the US costs far more than elsewhere. At high speeds, it costs nearly three times as much as in the UK and France, and more than five times as much as in South Korea. Why? Men’s haircuts, loaves of bread… – by Tom Geoghegan, Kevin Kim, Rory Cellan-Jones, Sarah Virginia White – http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-24528383

Kroger Knows Your Shopping Patterns Better Than You Do: Kroger Kroger, the Cincinnati-based grocery store chain, calls the 11 million pieces of direct mail it sends to customers each quarter “snowflakes” — because if any two are the same, it is a fluke. The redemption rate is over 70 percent within six weeks of the mailing. – by Tom Groenfeldt – http://www.forbes.com/sites/tomgroenfeldt/2013/10/28/kroger-knows-your-shopping-patterns-better-than-you-do/

Monday’s Recommended Reads

Some recent saved favorites from Pocket:

Profitless Prosperity: If a Company is making huge profits this year but will not make any profits in the future, it is worthless in the eyes of an investor. But if it loses money this year and next year and may lose money for a few more years, it can still be very valuable in the eyes of an investor. – http://www.avc.com/a_vc/2013/10/they-dont-make-any-money.html

38% of Children Under 2 Use Mobile Media, Study Says: Nearly two in five children have used a tablet or smartphone before they could speak in full sentences, according to a new report. – by MEG WAGNER – http://mashable.com/2013/10/28/children-under-2-mobile-media-study/

Better view than courtside: Stanford basketball players don Google Glass: You may not be a star basketball player, but now you can experience what its like to be one. Players on the Stanford basketball team wore Google Glass while warming up for their most recent game. Leave it to Stanford to deck their athletes out with tech accessories. – by Rebecca Grant – http://venturebeat.com/2013/10/27/better-view-than-courtside-stanford-basketball-players-don-google-glass/

Amazon and the : [DISCLOSURE: As always when I write about Amazon, I’ll note I worked there from 1997-2004 and that I still own some shares in the company. I still have many friends who work there, though I have no more idea what Amazon is working on now than any of you in the public. – by Eugene Wei – http://www.eugenewei.com/blog/2013/10/25/amazon-and-the-profitless-business-model-narrative

Bicycles are outselling cars in Europe and that might not be just a blip: Bicycle sales outpaced new-car sales last year in all of the 27 member countries of the European Union, except Belgium and Luxembourg, NPR reported on Oct. 24. One reason is that car sales have slumped in the midst of the euro-zone crisis, NPR points out. – by Lily Kuo – http://qz.com/139825/bicycles-are-outselling-cars-in-europe-and-that-might-not-be-just-a-blip/

DOA: The Galaxy Gear reportedly has a 30 percent return rate at Best Buy: If you hesitated to call the Galaxy Gear a flop after all of the negative reviews, consumers have weighed in with their opinion of the device too, and it’s not pretty: nearly a third of Galaxy Gear owners return the device. Geek. – by Ron Amadeo – http://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2013/10/doa-the-galaxy-gear-reportedly-has-a-30-percent-return-rate-at-best-buy/

Lay Back And Clean Your House With Swarming Micro Robot Cleaners: Nobody likes cleaning the house. So why not get a flying robot to do it, right? That’s what 23-year-old Adrian Perez Zapata thought too. Except he’s not happy with one or two–he wants a swarm of them. Zapata’s concept, called Mab, has just won Electrolux’s Design Lab competition. – http://www.fastcoexist.com/3020214/futurist-forum/lay-back-and-clean-your-house-with-swarming-micro-robot-cleaners

Sunday’s Recommended Reads

Some recent saved favorites from Pocket:

Slaves of the Internet, Unite!: NOT long ago, I received, in a single week, three (3) invitations to write an original piece for publication or give a prepared speech in exchange for no ($0.00) money. – by TIM KREIDER – http://mobile.nytimes.com/2013/10/27/opinion/sunday/slaves-of-the-internet-unite.html

LinkedIn Conquered Work — Now It Wants the Rest of Your Life: Modesty is what made LinkedIn famous. Where Facebook encourages users to share every last embarrassing moment of their lives, LinkedIn is the safe-for-work social network, where your resumé does the talking. That’s about to change. LinkedIn is done being modest. – by Ryan Tate – http://www.wired.com/business/2013/10/linkedin-conquest/

AT&T’s Plan Revamp Signals the End of Voice Minutes: The days of worrying about minutes ticking away on your cell phone plan are nearly gone. As of today, AT&T is dropping the availability of its old plans for new smartphone subscribers, and all of the remaining plans include unlimited calling and texting with the exception of one. – by THOMAS GRYTA – Tags: AT&T,phone plans,Softbank,Sprint,t-mobile,Verizon Wireless – http://blogs.wsj.com/digits/2013/10/25/atts-new-phone-plans-signal-the-end-of-voice-minutes/

How Google Uses Data to Build a Better Worker: Not the mantra you’d expect from your typical human resources representative. But every new hire for Google’s People Analytics department, part of the company’s HR function (which it calls People Operations), gets a laptop sticker emblazoned with this slogan. – by Chris DeRose – Tags: The Atlantic, The Atlantic Magazine, TheAtlantic.com, Atlantic, news, opinion, analysis, commentary, Business, Wall Street, Megan McArdle – http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2013/10/how-google-uses-data-to-build-a-better-worker/280347/

How to Deal with the Coming Robot Apocalypse: Yes! Creative types = cartoonists = me! But what Marcus doesn’t realize is how in the ultimate showdown between the computers and humans, our creativity will be the solution to our salvation, allowing mankind not only to endure but to prevail. Here’s a cartoon case in point: – by Robert Mankoff, Bio – Tags: cartoons, humor – http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/cartoonists/2013/10/how-to-deal-with-the-coming-robot-apocalypse.html

I challenged hackers to investigate me and what they found out is chilling: It’s my first class of the semester at New York University. I’m discussing the evils of plagiarism and falsifying sources with 11 graduate journalism students when, without warning, my computer freezes. I fruitlessly tap on the keyboard as my laptop takes on a life of its own and reboots. – by Adam L. Penenberg – http://pandodaily.com/2013/10/26/i-challenged-hackers-to-investigate-me-and-what-they-found-out-is-chilling/

Next on Deck for Snapchat and Pinterest: Some Sales Help?: Earlier this week, AllThingsD broke the news of two major fundings of a pair of hot startups: Scrapbooking service Pinterest and messaging service Snapchat. Pinterest’s round of $225 million at a $3. – by Kara Swisher – Tags: commerce, general, media, mobile, news, social, advertising, allthingsd, atd, cbs, evan spiegel, industry moves, monetization, philippe browning, pinterest, sales, snapchat – http://allthingsd.com/20131026/next-on-deck-for-snapchat-pinterest-some-sales-help/

Consider the e-bike: Can 200 million Chinese be wrong?: Lawmakers, manufacturers and transportation experts have focused much of their attention on electric cars, with still-disappointing results, but consumers in many parts of the world are embracing electric bikes, which in addition to the usual pedals have small battery-powered motors to speed – by Heather Timmons – http://qz.com/137518/consumers-the-world-over-love-electric-bikes-so-why-do-us-lawmakers-hate-them/

Saturday’s Recommended Reads

Some recent saved favorites from Pocket:

Chinese Internet Giant Tencent Goes From Snapchat “Role Model” To Potential Investor: Snapchat is looking to raise up to $200 million at a valuation of $3 to $4 billion and one of the potential investors that founder Evan Spiegel has talked to the most is Chinese Internet giant Tencent Holdings, reports WSJ. – by Catherine Shu – http://techcrunch.com/2013/10/26/chinese-internet-giant-tencent-rumored-to-be-considering-a-stake-in-snapchat/

Y Combinator Startups Now Have A Combined Valuation Of $13.7 Billion, Up $2 Billion Since June: In a conversation at the GMIC mobile conference this week, Y Combinator co-founder Paul Graham gave the most recent stats on the seed stage incubator. Of the 511 companies that had passed through YC prior to its most recent Summer 2013 class, 306 had valuations tied to them. – by Ryan Lawler – http://techcrunch.com/2013/10/25/y-combinator-13-7b-valuation/

Perfect Debuts At TechStars Seattle With A Video Life Blogging Service Built For Google Glass: Perfect presented a video life blogging service for Google Glass today at TechStars Seattle Demo Day, making it the first company launching a service for the wearable computing platform to be part of the well-known startup program. – by Alex Williams – http://techcrunch.com/2013/10/24/perfect-debuts-at-techstars-seattle-with-a-video-life-blogging-service-built-for-google-glass/

Big Data and the Soles of Your Shoes: There has been significant ink killed in the name of Big Data over the last few years. Much of that slaughter is justified; Big Data represents a massive generational shift in the way we think about data and its impact on every aspect of our personal and professional lives. – by Matt Quinn, CTO, TIBCO – Tags: enterprise, voices, big data, fedex, manufacturing, matt quinn, nike, shipping, tibco, ups – http://allthingsd.com/20131015/big-data-and-the-soles-of-your-shoes/

Friday’s Recommended Reads

Some recent saved favorites from Pocket:

Anticipatory Commerce: the Evolution of Intent on the Web: Intent to purchase is the engine of the consumer web. Creating and capturing intent motivates almost every dollar invested into ecommerce and advertising. Intent is also the fuel for the Internet’s most successful business model, Google’s AdWords + Search. – http://tomtunguz.com/evolution-of-intent/

Comcast Plans to Offer the Closest Thing to an HBO Go Subscription: The entire Internet would very much appreciate it if HBO offered an HBO Go subscription without the need to have cable. We want to pay for HBO Go like we pay for Netflix. But that hasn’t happened… yet. But people are trying! Even cable companies. – by Casey Chan – http://gizmodo.com/comcast-plans-to-offer-the-closest-thing-to-an-hbo-go-s-1451859769

iPads, price and self-selection — Benedict Evans: Apple’s iPad event was pretty unsurprising. It was obvious that the large one would be speed-bumped and get lighter. – by Benedict Evans – http://ben-evans.com/benedictevans/2013/10/24/ipads-and-self-selection

A Brief History of Dude: Contemplate this, dude: that when I call you dude, there’s a whole range of things I might mean—you’ll understand me from my intonation and the overall context—but each time, I’m also reinforcing a specific kind of social relationship. – by J.J. Gould – Tags: The Atlantic, The Atlantic Magazine, TheAtlantic.com, Atlantic, news, opinion, breaking news, analysis, commentary, business, politics, culture, international, science, technology, national and life – http://m.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2013/11/dude-transcends/309528/

Do profits matter? The curious case of Amazon.com: Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN) recently announced that it is raising the minimum purchase amount from $25 to $35 to qualify for free shipping. – by Ricardo Bilton – http://venturebeat.com/2013/10/24/do-profits-matter-the-curious-case-of-amazon-com/

This Man Can Tell You If A Kickstarter Campaign Will Succeed After Just 4 Hours: “Miracolo,” a new musical, has an 86% chance of reaching its Kickstarter fundraising goal. “Grandma Sally Zombie Killer,” a movie idea looking for $80,000 on the same site, has only a 1% chance. That’s not me saying so–I quite like zombie flicks. – http://m.fastcoexist.com/3020302/this-man-can-tell-you-if-a-kickstarter-campaign-will-succeed-after-just-4-hours

Thursday’s Recommended Reads

Some recent saved favorites from Pocket:

LinkedIn CEO: By next year, 50% of our traffic will be mobile: SAN FRANCISCO — At a mobile-focused press conference today, LinkedIn CEO Jeff Weiner made some bold claims about his company’s quest to become a more modern, more mobile service. – by Jolie O’Dell – http://venturebeat.com/2013/10/23/linkedin-ceo-by-next-year-50-of-our-traffic-will-be-mobile/

Starbucks Links Coffee Makers to Web Fueling $27B Market: Starbucks Corp. (SBUX), famous for giving away Wi-Fi that links customers to the Internet, now wants to apply Web technology to its own operations by networking coffee makers, refrigerators and other appliances. – by Olga Kharif – Tags: Personal Finance Homepage,U.S.,Retail,Technology,Personal Finance,Saving & Investing,Technology,Web,Living – http://mobile.bloomberg.com/news/2013-10-22/starbucks-links-coffee-makers-to-web-fueling-27b-market.html

Amazon’s giant biodome approved for the streets of Seattle: Amazon has gained initial approval for its plan to build a huge greenhouse in the middle of Seattle. The proposal has three transparent domes intersecting to form a five-story complex that will contain offices, dining areas, and retail stores. – by Aaron Souppouris – http://theverge.com/2013/10/24/5023454/amazon-giant-biodome-design-board-approval

The 23 Most Wonderfully Scottish Things That Have Ever Happened: 1. This note found on the streets of Edinburgh. i.imgur.com 2. This sensible approach to wine. i.imgur.com 3. This Glasgow art critic. i.imgur.com 4. These pearls of Scottish wisdom. i.imgur.com 5. This good news story. 6. The Highlands’ biggest problem. imgur.com 7. This incredible shop-name war. – by Robin Edds – http://www.buzzfeed.com/robinedds/the-most-wonderfully-scottish-things-that-have-ever-happe

Korean patent filing shows Samsung is working on its own version of Google Glass: You can be pretty sure of two technology rumors these days: everyone is working on a smartwatch and everyone is working on a Google Glass-style device. – by Jon Russell – http://thenextweb.com/asia/2013/10/24/korean-patent-filing-shows-samsung-working-version-google-glass/

Wednesday’s Recommended Reads

Some recent saved favorites from Pocket:

Smartphone users struggle connecting to in-car infotainment systems: Computerworld – As Toyota owners know, using Bluetooth to sync an iPhone to the in-car Entune infotainment system to use its bundled Internet apps doesn’t work. There’s been abundant user complaints about Toyota’s fussy Infotainment system in the blogosphere. – by Lucas Mearian – Tags: edpicks, lucas mearian, toyota, entune, car infotainment systems, bluetooth, iphone, smartphone, Internet, Web Apps, Mobile/Wireless – http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9243423/Smartphone_users_struggle_connecting_to_in_car_infotainment_systems

Apple Just Ended the Era of Paid Operating Systems: The desktop operating system is dead as a major profit center, and Apple just delivered the obituary. – by Ryan Tate – http://www.wired.com/business/2013/10/apple-ends-paid-oses/

Microsoft Tests Eyewear Similar to Rival Google Glass: http://online.wsj.com/news/article_email/SB10001424052702304402104579150952302814782-lMyQjAxMTAzMDIwMTEyNDEyWj

Xiaomi: The Apple (… and Netflix) of China: While most of the tech media has congregated outside the Moscone Center in San Francisco waiting for the new Apple tablet, Kara Swisher of All Things D is across the street at the GMIC conference interviewing Lei Jun, the CEO of Xiaomi. Mr. Jun has plenty to talk about. – by Simon Khalaf – Tags: Xiaomi, China – http://blog.flurry.com/bid/101819/xiaomi-the-apple-and-netflix-of-china

Managing Platforms Is a Human Art: In March 2012, I left the suburban enclaves of San Jose and went on safari to Kenya. Early in the trip I toured the Ngorongoro crater, filled with African lions, rhinos, hippos and giraffes. But my favorites were the monkeys. I loved Curious George as a boy. – by Todd Lutwak, With Contributions by Yujin Chung, Partners, Andreessen Horowitz – Tags: enterprise, general, news, voices, amazon, andreessen horowitz, android, ebay, facebook, google, ios, kenya, marc andreessen, platform, todd lutwak, twitter, yujin chung – http://allthingsd.com/20131021/managing-platforms-is-a-human-art/

Security Check Now Starts Long Before You Fly: The Transportation Security Administration is expanding its screening of passengers before they arrive at the airport by searching a wide array of government and private databases that can include records like car registrations and employment information. – by SUSAN STELLIN – http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/22/business/security-check-now-starts-long-before-you-fly.html

Game over: In the “Race to a Billion” there is a graph showing Android reported activations and iOS cumulative unit sales alongside cumulative console sales. The contrast between mobile phone platforms and game consoles is striking, with an order of magnitude difference in consumption. – http://www.asymco.com/2013/09/09/game-over/

Payments Network Dwolla Moves Beyond Cash With Launch Of “Dwolla Credit” In Partnership With ADS: Des Moines-based Dwolla, a company building web-connected infrastructure for managing digital payments, is today taking its first step to move beyond support for cash with the debut of “Dwolla Credit. – by Sarah Perez – http://techcrunch.com/2013/10/22/payments-network-dwolla-moves-beyond-cash-with-launch-of-dwolla-credit-in-partnership-with-ads/

Facebook’s Referrals To Media Sites Up 170% YOY, New “Stories To Share” Tells Pages What To Post: Facebook wants to get more news content in its feed by proving to media sites it’s their premier social ally. Today it announced referral traffic to media sites is up an average of 170% this year. – by Josh Constine – http://techcrunch.com/2013/10/21/facebooks-referrals-to-media-sites-up-170-yoy-new-stories-to-share-tells-pages-what-to-post/

Tuesday’s Recommended Reads

Some recent saved favorites from Pocket:

Review: Qualcomm’s Toq Is a Watch Smart Enough to Keep It Simple: For all the technology companies large and small talking of smart watches as a mass-market inevitability, those that have launched are muddled and disappointing (see “So Far, Smart Watches Are Pretty Dumb”). – by Tom Simonite – http://www.technologyreview.com/news/520526/review-qualcomms-toq-is-a-watch-smart-enough-to-keep-it-simple/

First Children Are Smarter—but Why?: Moms and dads simply go easy on their later-born kids, according to data analyzed by economists V. Joseph Hotz and Juan Pantano, and as a result, first-born children tend to receive both the best parenting and the best grades. – by Derek Thompson – Tags: The Atlantic, The Atlantic Magazine, TheAtlantic.com, Atlantic, news, opinion, analysis, commentary, Business, Wall Street, Megan McArdle – http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2013/10/first-children-are-smarter-but-why/280725/

Google’s iron grip on Android: Controlling open source by any means necessary: Six years ago, in November 2007, the Android Open Source Project (AOSP) was announced. The original iPhone came out just a few months earlier, capturing people’s imaginations and ushering in the modern smartphone era. – by Ron Amadeo – http://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2013/10/googles-iron-grip-on-android-controlling-open-source-by-any-means-necessary/

China’s Mobile Ecosystem Deck: How quickly is the mobile market in China growing, and what are the major opportunities? At BI Intelligence, Business Insider’s paid research service, we surveyed some of the best data available on the Chinese mobile industry, and came up with some answers. – by John Heggestuen – Tags: Mobile, China, Smartphones, Features, BI Intelligence, Tablets, Mobile Commerce, Mobile Advertising, Mobile Payments, John Heggestuen – http://www.businessinsider.com/chinas-mobile-ecosystem-deck-2013-10?p=1

The highly unusual company behind Sriracha, the world’s coolest hot sauce: If David Tran were a more conventional CEO, he would be a fixture at conferences, a darling of magazine profiles, and a subject of case studies in the Harvard Business Review. – by Roberto A. Ferdman – http://qz.com/132738/the-highly-unusual-company-behind-siracha-the-worlds-coolest-hot-sauce/

Monday’s Recommended Reads

Some recent saved favorites from Pocket:

To Catch Up, Walmart Moves to Amazon Turf: SAN BRUNO, Calif. — A plucky Silicon Valley company, forced to compete for talented engineers, is trying it all — recruiting billboards on Highway 101; workplace perks like treadmill workstations and foosball tables; and conference rooms named after celebrities like Rihanna and Justin Bieber. – by STEPHANIE CLIFFORD, CLAIRE CAIN MILLER – http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/20/technology/to-catch-up-walmart-moves-to-amazon-turf.html

The story as gateway to knowledge (and revenue): In digital journalism, the article is no longer an end in itself. Quite the contrary, it’s an entry point to the depths and riches of the web, and a significant contributor to the revenue stream. – by Frédéric Filloux – http://www.mondaynote.com/2013/10/20/the-story-as-gateway-to-knowledge-and-revenue/

Connected TV points the way forward for the internet of things — Tech News and Analysis: Everyone from industrial giants to bootstrapped companies on Kickstarter are talking about the promise of the internet of things to improve our lives. In fact, Cisco recently pegged the potential value of the market at $14.4 trillion. – by Mike Harris – Tags: Boxee,internet of things,Mike Harris,Netflix,Pandora,TV,YouTube,Zonoff – http://gigaom.com/2013/10/19/connected-tv-points-the-way-forward-for-the-internet-of-things/

Silicon Valley Makes Its Next Stop the Kitchen: SAN FRANCISCO — Megan Miller knows that cockroaches are packed with protein and she says they can be made into a surprisingly tasty treat. – by NICK BILTON – http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/10/20/disruptions-silicon-valleys-next-stop-the-kitchen/

Why Android First is a Myth: In mobile, particularly in consumer markets, there has been an ongoing debate about when or if Android will become the first platform that sophisticated startups develop for. – http://stevecheney.com/why-android-first-is-a-myth/

Today’s Recommended Reads

Some recent saved favorites from Pocket:

20 minutes at Rucker Park: Thomas “TJ” Webster Jr. waits impatiently for the ball to be tossed in the air. The only white player on the court, he can sense the eyes of the few dozen spectators lounging around the steel and plastic bleachers. – by Flinder Boyd – http://www.sbnation.com/longform/2013/10/15/4837064/rucker-park-basketball-new-york-city-cross-country-journey

How virtual cable and CableWiFi may have killed the Verizon Wireless: By deciding to shutter their joint innovation lab, Verizon (NYSE: VZ) and cable partners Comcast (Nasdaq: CMCSA), Time Warner Cable (NYSE: TWC) and Bright House signaled they believe it’d be more profitable in the long run to pursue their own multiscreen distribution products than to share their – by Steve Donohue – Tags: Advertising and marketing,Business,Cablevision,CableWiFi,Comcast,Time Warner Cable,Verizon – http://www.fiercecable.com/story/how-virtual-cable-and-cablewifi-may-have-killed-verizon-wireless-comcast-jo/2013-10-18

Confessions of a Windows Phone User: Hello. My name is Ashlee Vance, and I have a Windows phone. To own a Windows smartphone in Silicon Valley is to invite ridicule and pity. Every day I pull out the bright yellow Nokia (NOK) Lumia 920, and every day iPhone and Android types look at me with dismay. – by Ashlee Vance – http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2013-10-14/confessions-of-a-windows-phone-user

Never Shop in October and Other Secrets From a Retail Guru: Mark Ellwood, a journalist and former travel guide author, has a simple shopping mandate: Never pay full price. There’s simply no need, a point Ellwood illustrates at length in his new book, Bargain Fever: How to Shop in a Discounted World. – by Kyle Stock – http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2013-10-16/never-shop-in-october-and-other-secrets-from-a-retail-guru

Eight miles of water: underground with Manhattan’s new aquatic lifeline: New Yorkers will proudly tell you that the city has some of the finest tap water that you can find. But for nearly a century, all of Manhattan has been served by a single water tunnel that hasn’t been shut down for maintenance since it first opened in 1917. That’s no longer the case. – by Dante D’Orazio – http://www.theverge.com/2013/10/19/4853636/underground-with-manhattans-new-water-tunnel-three-photo-essay

The future of gyms: If you thought gyms were a recent phenomenon, tethered to the trend of self-conscious fashionistas and the scourge of obesity, well, you’d be wrong. – by Paul Sawers – http://thenextweb.com/insider/2013/10/19/the-future-of-gyms/

40% Of YouTube Traffic Now Mobile, Up From 25% In 2012, 6% In 2011: It’s hard to get people to concentrate long on anything on their phones and tablets, yet YouTube seems to be the exception. The video service is quickly going mobile, with small screens making up 40% of its traffic now compared to 25% last year, Google said on its earnings call today. – by Josh Constine – http://techcrunch.com/2013/10/17/youtube-goes-mobile/

Google AI Team Lets You Build Quantum Computing Traps in Minecraft: You hack your way through vines into the ziggurat and then follow dark passageways until arriving in a stone-block room. There’s a sign on the wall. “Look up!” it reads. “Totally not a trap.” You look up and then plunge into blackness. This isn’t just a trap. It’s a quantum trap. – by Robert McMillan – http://www.wired.com/wiredenterprise/2013/10/minecraft_quantum/

Today’s Recommended Reads

Some recent saved favorites from Pocket:

The Internet Owes Its Sense of Humor to This Man: There are many forms of fuck at Bob Odenkirk’s disposal: the anguished, slow-motion version he emits while watching bad comedy (“It’s just a fffuckin’ mess!”), the whispered yet still damnably loud variant he uses when remembering one of his own terrible sketches (“The first draft of – by Brian Raftery – http://www.wired.com/underwire/2013/10/bob-odenkirk/

The untold history of Starbucks’ Pumpkin Spice Latte: The pumpkin spice latte, Starbucks’ most iconic and popular seasonal drink, almost didn’t happen. – by Christopher Mims – http://qz.com/136781/psl-untold-history-of-starbucks-pumpkin-spice-latte/;

Jeff Bezos’s League of Shadows
Amazon can be a uniquely challenging place to work, with its question-mark emergencies and the occasionally volcanic outburst from the visionary chief executive. It’s a place where promotions are hard-fought and sometimes painfully public. But there is also a job at Amazon (AMZN)that is highly coveted throughout the company and that nearly anyone in business would kill for.  http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2013-10-17/jeff-bezos-s-league-of-shadows;

Google AI Team Lets You Build Quantum Computing Traps in Minecraft
You hack your way through vines into the ziggurat and then follow dark passageways until arriving in a stone-block room. There’s a sign on the wall. “Look up!” it reads. “Totally not a trap.” You look up and then plunge into blackness.
This isn’t just a trap. It’s a quantum trap. Brought to you by Google. http://www.wired.com/wiredenterprise/2013/10/minecraft_quantum/

Android Co-Founder Rich Miner on How He Is Spending Google’s Money
Rich Miner set out a year ago to make sure that Google Ventures had its hand in more mobile deals.  And it’s fair to say that is happening. Among its recent mobile deals, Google’s venture arm has invested in Appurify, Apportable, Cluster, MessageMe, Osito, Sold and Uber. In that last one, Google Ventures wrote a check for $258 million.  http://allthingsd.com/20131018/android-co-founder-rich-miner-on-how-he-is-spending-googles-money/

Underwater wi-fi given test run to create ‘deep-sea internet’: Researchers have tested an “underwater wi-fi” network in a lake in an attempt to make a “deep-sea internet”. The team, from the University of Buffalo, New York, said the technology could help detect tsunamis, offering more reliable warning systems. – http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-24550015

sharing links

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so a week in and I’ve shared a pretty large number of links as daily reads.  It’s not everything I’m reading daily, but the shares I’d typically just blast out via social.  I’ve got a pretty solid system courtesy of Pocket and a WordPress plugin called WP Stacker.  While I haven’t seen any comments or direct responses per se, I do see some traffic coming in to check out what I’m sharing … plenty more coming.

 

 

Today’s Recommended Reads

Some recent saved favorites from Pocket:

Sleep helps brain stay fit by clearing waste: AFP – Like a janitor sweeping the halls after the lights go out, major changes occur in the brain during sleep to flush out waste and ward off disease, researchers said Thursday. – by REPORTAGES – http://www.france24.com/en/20131017-sleep-helps-brain-stay-fit-clearing-waste; http://venturebeat.com/2013/10/15/wearables-are-about-to-blow-up-industry-sales-to-hit-19-billion-by-2018/

‘Bionic man’ makes debut at Washington’s Air and Space Museum: WASHINGTON (Reuters) – A first-ever walking, talking “bionic man” built entirely out of synthetic body parts made his Washington debut on Thursday. – by Lacey Johnson – Tags: Ukraine, United States, Bertold Meyer, John Daley, Joshua Roberts, Paul Arcand, Robert Warburton, Steve Austin – http://in.reuters.com/article/2013/10/17/usa-bionicman-idINDEE99G0EV20131017

Robotic petting zoo : Storified by CBC News Community Like an elephant’s long trunk, or a jellyfish’s glowing tentacles, the “animals” at this zoo have long, swaying body parts. Except they’re not alive — they’re robotic. – by Jennifer Dunning – Tags: Petting Zoo, FRAC Centre, France, Minimaforms, Theodore Spyropoulos, Stephen Spyropoulos, animals, art – http://www.cbc.ca/newsblogs/yourcommunity/2013/10/robotic-petting-zoo-animals-touch-you-back.html

Nike CEO Hints At Collaborative Future For FuelBand: For the development of the FuelBand, Nike partnered with a slew of outside companies. CEO Mark Parker hints that more partnerships could be in the device’s future. The Nike FuelBand is one of the more promising products in wearable computing. – http://m.fastcompany.com/3019901/nike-ceo-hints-at-collaborative-future-for-fuelband

Amaze project aims to take 3D printing ‘into metal age’: The European Space Agency has unveiled plans to “take 3D printing into the metal age” by building parts for jets, spacecraft and fusion projects. The Amaze project brings together 28 institutions to develop new metal components which are lighter, stronger and cheaper than conventional parts. – by James Morgan – http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-24528306

Automated Bike Fit Measurement App Review: Bike Fast Fit: I want to start off by first noting just how rare it is that I write an entire post specifically about a single app.  I could probably count the number of times I’ve done that in 6 years on one hand. – by Rainmaker – Tags: app reviews,apps,iphone – http://www.dcrainmaker.com/2013/10/automated-measurement-review.html

Nokia’s multi-display smartwatch concept revealed in patent application: Nokia appears to be experimenting with its own smartwatch concepts. In a patent application submitted in August last year, the company details a “multi-segment wearable accessory.” According to the description, and some related diagrams, it’s a plan for a modular watch than can be worn on the wrist. – by Tom Warren – http://www.theverge.com/2013/10/17/4848050/nokia-smartwatch-patent-multiple-displays

Today’s Recommended Reads

Some recent saved favorites from Pocket:

Latest Google Glass Firmware Gives A Tantalizing Glimpse At A Ton Of Future Features: Last weekend, I finally got my own Google Glass unit. Since then I’ve been trying to adapt to using it and all its features, but as always there are a few things no Explorer can do just yet. With the update to XE10, the list of hidden or unimplemented features has changed dramatically. – by Liam Spradlin – http://www.androidpolice.com/2013/10/16/apk-teardown-latest-google-glass-firmware-gives-a-tantalizing-glimpse-at-a-ton-of-future-features/

The Elusive British Artist Banksy Joins the Social Web: If you live in New York City, be sure to smile as you wander the streets during the month of October. There’s a good chance you’re part of an elaborate art installation by the elusive British artist, Banksy. – by NICK BILTON – http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/10/16/elusive-british-artist-banksy-joins-social-web/

Facebook ad profit a staggering 1,790% more on iPhone than Android: A study of more than 200 billion ads on Facebook says that mobile ads on iPhone generate 1,790 percent more return on investment than ads on Android. Even worse, advertising on Android actually costs more than it returns. – by John Koetsier – http://venturebeat.com/2013/10/16/facebook-ad-profit-a-staggering-1790-more-on-iphone-than-android/#YqAck9ZaSlBWhBtC.99

Limits Approved for Genetically Modified Crops in Kauai, Hawaii: Legislators on the island of Kauai in Hawaii have approved a bill that would restrict the use of pesticides by companies developing genetically modified crops there. The 6-to-1 vote by the Kauai County Council came just after 3:30 a.m. – by ANDREW POLLACK – http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/17/business/limits-approved-for-genetically-modified-crops-in-kauai-hawaii.html

They Look Like Toy Cars, But They’re The : This looks like something you’d find in the Hot Wheels aisle at Walmart, but it’s much more than that. It’s a character from Anki Drive, an iOS-powered tech toy coming to Apple Stores and Apple.com on October 23. Its creators call it “the future of consumer electronics.” – by Mike Fahey – http://kotaku.com/they-look-like-toy-cars-but-theyre-the-future-of-con-1446802125/@matthardigree

The Lost Art Of The Group Ride: Every so often, I’ll ride a recreational group ride. I love the camaraderie of cyclists, the talk, the last minute pumps of air, the clicking in, and the easy drifting out as a peloton. “I miss riding in a group,” I’ll think to myself. The magic ends by mile 10. – by Peter Wilborn – http://cyclingtips.com.au/2011/09/the-lost-art-of-the-group-ride-2/

Lance Armstrong, Antihero: The man stashes contraband in designated hiding spots in his home and, on repeated occasions, narrowly avoids getting caught by the authorities. – by Ashley Fetters – Tags: The Atlantic, The Atlantic Magazine, TheAtlantic.com, Atlantic, news, opinion, breaking news, analysis, commentary, business, politics, culture, international, science, technology, national and life – http://m.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2013/10/lance-armstrong-antihero/280556/

Today’s Recommended Reads

Some recent saved favorites from Pocket:

Meet the Man Behind the World’s Best Ad Agency Twitter Feed @RGA’s Chapin Clark explains how not to be boring: Ad agency Twitter feeds are, as a rule, about as interesting as a couple at Home Depot debating which paint chip would best match their duvet. One consistent exception has been R/GA, which serves up fun links and clever insights with a biting wit. – by David Griner – http://www.adweek.com/adfreak/meet-man-behind-worlds-best-ad-agency-twitter-feed-153141

It’s stronger than steel and paper thin but graphene isn’t living up to its promise: If the film classic The Graduate were being made today, it’s likely that, in delivering his iconic line, Walter Brooke would lean into Dustin Hoffman’s ear and offer a new career path: “graphene,” instead of “plastics. – by Search results – http://qz.com/135380/its-stronger-than-steel-and-paper-thin-but-graphene-isnt-living-up-to-its-promise/

Square Cash lets anyone with a debit card send money instantly over email: What if sending money was as simple as sending an email? That’s the premise of Square Cash, launching today for all debit card users in the US, using any email service. – by Ellis Hamburger – http://theverge.com/2013/10/15/4842518/square-cash-send-money-over-email-iphone-android

The Strava Files: No matter what else you might say about Kim Flint, you can’t claim that he was stupid. – by David Darlington – http://m.bicycling.com/news/featured-stories/strava-files

When people use their smartphones and tablets, in charts: You might think people use their smartphones and tablets most when they’re out of the house: in the morning on their commute, or during the day at work. Probably not in the evening, when they’re at home with their TVs and computers. This is exactly wrong. – by Ritchie King – http://qz.com/134810/when-people-use-their-smartphones-and-tablets-in-charts/

Steve Blank explains why accelerators should mimic “Moneyball”: Steve Blank has given a lot of presentations in his day. But he says he’s never experienced anything quite like what happened a few weeks ago in New York, when he presented his ideas around his Lean Launchpad to an audience. – by Erin Griffith – http://pandodaily.com/2013/10/15/steve-blank-explains-why-accelerators-should-mimic-moneyball/

How Qualcomm Is Trying to Make the Leap to Consumer Brand: Ad Age is committed to providing you with industry news and information you need to succeed. That’s why we are pleased to offer our readers 7 free articles and blogs at no charge. You have reached your 8th article. – Tags: Qualcomm – http://adage.com/article/digital/qualcomm-make-leap-consumer-brand/244701/

Strategy, in reverse: Our current strategy process follows an old-school waterfall. We can’t develop ideas until we have a strategy. And we can’t write strategy until we have insights. And we don’t have insights until we immerse ourselves in the landscape. – by matthew_daniels – https://medium.com/p/364b10aa64fb

Today’s Recommended Reads

Some recent saved favorites from Pocket:

Inside 23andMe founder Anne Wojcicki’s $99 DNA Revolution: The $126 million genetic-testing company can tell you how to live smarter, better, and longer. It can also tell you what might kill you–or the ones you love. There’s a lot you can do for your child with 99 dollars. – by Elizabeth Murphy – http://m.fastcompany.com/3018598/for-99-this-ceo-can-tell-you-what-might-kill-you-inside-23andme-founder-anne-wojcickis-dna-r

Forget Big Data: The future is Small Data, and Facebook just bought it: This morning, Onavo, an Israeli start-up, announced it was being acquired by Facebook. Onavo’s flagship product is a data compressor. – by Leo Mirani – http://qz.com/135038/forget-big-data-the-future-is-small-data-and-facebook-just-bought-it/

Soap Opera: Amazon Moves In With P&G: TUNKHANNOCK, Pa.—Atop a hill at the end of a road called P&G Warehouse Way sits a warehouse stocked with Pampers diapers, Bounty paper towels and other items made by Procter & Gamble Co. It also houses an ambitious experiment by Amazon.com Inc. – by Serena Ng – http://m.us.wsj.com/article_email/SB10001424052702304330904579135840230674458-lMyQjAxMTAzMDEwMzExNDMyWj

Google Wallet’s In-Store Payment Feature All But Dead: Google has made a last-ditch attempt to save its floundering mobile wallet by opening it up to more consumers and incentivizing them to use the product, but it is unlikely that even these changes will save the in-store payment component from fading into mobile payments folklore.   – by Michelle Evans – Tags: Payments, Finance, Google Wallet, Iphone, Android, bundle, google, apple, samsung, NFC, – http://blog.euromonitor.com/2013/10/google-wallets-in-store-payment-feature-all-but-dead.html

Product Managers: Who are these ‘mini-CEOs’ and what do they do?: In the world of technology, it’s often the engineers and designers that are among the most celebrated. They are the people who literally build amazing products that we enjoy, such as Instagram, Gmail, Twitter, Android, iOS, and other software, hardware, and services. – by Ken Yeung – http://thenextweb.com/insider/2013/10/12/product-managers-mini-ceos/

The South Korea Report: Device and App Trends in The First Saturated Device Market: In August of this year Flurry Analytics measured 33,527,534 active smartphones and tablets in South Korea. While that was only 2.8% of the entire worldwide connected device installed base Flurry measures, South Korea is an important market for connected devices for several reasons. – by Mary Ellen Gordon – Tags: South Korea, phablet, Samsung,T Store,SK Planet – http://blog.flurry.com//bid/101499/the-south-korea-report-device-and-app-trends-in-the-first-saturated-device-market

Back on the Bright Side: Silicon Valley in Vermont: Why did this company end up on the shores of Lake Champlain, rather than on the San Francisco Bay or Puget Sound? Before I got derailed with the modern nullification follies, my wife and I were describing some of the surprising successes of people, ideas, and organizations in Burlington, Vermont. – by James Fallows – Tags: The Atlantic, The Atlantic Magazine, TheAtlantic.com, Atlantic, news, opinion, analysis, commentary, Society, national affairs, domestic policy, education, religion, race, transportation – http://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2013/10/back-on-the-bright-side-silicon-valley-in-vermont/280313/

The Amount of Questionable Online Traffic Will Blow Your Mind: A few weeks ago, Lindsay Buescher, senior manager, analytics at Carat, read an article on Adweek.com about a company called FreeStreams.com that was pumping up its traffic by enticing Web users into accidentally visiting via hidden links on sites that house pirated content. – by Mike Shields – http://www.adweek.com/news/technology/amount-questionable-online-traffic-will-blow-your-mind-153083

Two-Hit Wonder: Jack Dorsey, the tech entrepreneur, takes the No. 1 bus to work, and he likes to catch the 7:06. It carries him nearly from one side of San Francisco to the other—down California Street almost to Market. – by D. T. Max – Tags: Jack Dorsey, Tech Entrepreneurs, Square, Technology, Twitter, San Francisco, California, Steve Jobs, Buses, iPad Mini, techpages – http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2013/10/21/131021fa_fact_max

Today’s Recommended Reads

From my Pocket to yours …

The Precise Art Of Mobile Push Notifications: Editor’s Note: Semil Shah works on product for Swell, is a TechCrunch columnist, and an investor – as a disclaimer for this post, he is an advisor to one of the companies mentioned here, Refresh. He blogs at Haywire, and you can follow him on Twitter at @semil. – by Semil Shah – Tags: mobile, push notices, habit loops – http://techcrunch.com/2013/10/13/the-precise-art-of-mobile-push-notifications/

Macaw, the Web design tool for programmers, hits Kickstarter. Here’s an overview of why it’s different: Web designing is more than just slapping visually attractive images on a page. To make those elements come to life, meticulous amounts of HTML are needed to add front end functionality. – by Amber Leigh Turner – http://thenextweb.com/dd/2013/10/12/macaw-web-design-tool-programmers-hits-kickstarter/

Four Executives on Succeeding in Business as a Woman: How do you answer the question of whether women lead differently than men? I also think women are better at team dynamics, because they don’t have to be the alpha all the time. – by Adam Bryant – http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2013/10/13/business/women-corner-office.html

7 Bucket List Bike Destinations: Simply put, this region of Italy is bicycling heaven. – http://m.bicycling.com/ride-maps/featured-rides/7-bucket-list-bike-destinations

The Accelerators: DAVID COHEN: There’s a massive gender imbalance in the tech startup community. That imbalance perpetuates the biases we all carry, whether intentional or not. – http://blogs.wsj.com/accelerators/2013/10/10/david-cohen-we-all-need-to-make-female-startup-heroes-visible/

TouchMarks II: Touchscreen Latencies in Flagship Tablets: In our last TouchMarks report, we looked at the touchscreen latencies of the flagship smartphones from different manufacturers. – by Rohan Relan – http://appglimpse.com/blog/touchmarks-ii-touchscreen-latencies-in-flagship-tablets/

Anticipatory Computing: The Next Big Thing Is Enabling Laziness: Control4’s IPO last week and Nest’s massive success mark the beginning of mainstream, useful connected devices. In the decade to come, the most successful will be united by one common characteristic. They will anticipate our needs and make us lazier. Living is hard work. – http://tomtunguz.com/iot-and-laziness

Recommended Reads: Sunday October 13, 2013

Some recent saved favorites from Pocket:

 

The Soaring Cost of a Simple Breath: OAKLAND, Calif. – by ELISABETH ROSENTHAL – http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/13/us/the-soaring-cost-of-a-simple-breath.html

How Twitter’s Leadership Drama Explains its Success: One founder pushed aside in the early days of the company, his name scrubbed from its founding story. Another ousted from the CEO role by a co-founder, former boss, and seed investor. – by Walter Frick, Walter Frick | 1:58 PM October 11, 2013 – Tags: business resources books articles case studies, business management articles resources, communication, finance, accounting, leadership, managing people, international global business strategy, execution, technology, operations, organizational development, innovation, entrepreneurship, HBSP, HBP, HBO, HBR, Harvard Business School Publishing – http://blogs.hbr.org/2013/10/how-twitters-leadership-drama-explains-its-success/

Google CIO Ben Fried on How Google Works: It was the former Google employee’s first day out in the real world. He removed the enterprise security settings from his iPhone, and installed the apps he wasn’t allowed to use at the mothership: Dropbox for storage, Fantastical for his mobile calendar. – by Liz Gannes – Tags: enterprise, general, news, android, ben fried, cio, dropbox, featured post, google, google drive, google+ hangouts, morgan stanley, videoconferencing – http://allthingsd.com/20131010/google-cio-ben-fried-on-how-google-works/

Grand Theft Afghanistan: On Sunday, the German newspaper Welt Am Sonntag reported that West German spies had operated covertly in Afghanistan in the 1980s, buying captured Soviet technology that could be used if the Soviet Union ever attacked NATO. – by Kyle Mizokami – https://medium.com/editors-picks/e94ee6a9cfad

Bilton Book: Twitter’s Dick Costolo Was Fired (And Rehired) in 2010: Twitter’s founding tale keeps getting more and more complicated. Twitter CEO Dick Costolo was briefly fired from the company by an advisor to the board in 2010, according to a new book detailing the early, tumultuous days of the microblogging service. – by Mike Isaac – Tags: general, media, news, social, bill campbell, ceo, dick costolo, hatching twitter, nick bilton, twitter – http://allthingsd.com/20131012/bilton-book-twitters-dick-costolo-was-fired-and-re-hired-in-2010/

Why US government IT fails so hard, so often: The rocky launch of the Department of Health and Human Services’ HealthCare.gov is the most visible evidence at the moment of how hard it is for the federal government to execute major technology projects. – by Sean Gallagher – http://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2013/10/why-us-government-it-fails-so-hard-so-often/

Polemic: how readers will discover books in future: In the future, readers will not go in search of books to read. Feral books will stalk readers, sneak into their ebook libraries, and leap out to ambush them. – by Charlie Stross – http://www.antipope.org/charlie/blog-static/2013/10/polemic-how-readers-will-disco.html

The Firehose Of Certainty: I recently finished a gig which entailed looking at and writing about the well-appointed homes of various New Yorkers, which made me eager to do something to make my own home more well-appointed. – by Rumaan Alam – http://www.theawl.com/2013/10/the-firehose-of-taste

A Twitter Account After One’s Own Tweets: Joe Toscano is programmer who works at TigerText, a company that is best known for providing a secure messaging system for health-care organizations. – by Betsy Morais – Tags: Twitter, elements, techpages – http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/elements/2013/10/tofu-a-twitter-account-after-ones-own-tweets.html

Who Made That Android Logo?: Irina Blok may have drawn one of the most recognized logos in the world, but her association with the green Android has not made her famous. Blok can think of only one incident when she garnered the public’s attention for designing it. – by PAGAN KENNEDY – http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/13/magazine/who-made-that-android-logo.html

Taskmasters: how Israeli intelligence officers helped inspire the look of iOS 7: In October 2009, at an Israeli sports training facility called the Wingate Institute, Eden Shochat walked the floor of GeekCon admiring the projects. Each year at Shochat’s long-running, invite-only creative gathering, attendees are tasked with making things that are both amazing and useless. – by Casey Newton – http://www.theverge.com/2013/10/9/4817146/taskmasters-how-israeli-intelligence-officers-helped-inspire-the-look-of-ios-7

In-Store Tracking Isn’t Going Anywhere: Nomi Close to Landing Around $10 Million Series B Investment: Nomi, a New York City-based startup that tracks shoppers’ mobile phones to help retail shops gather data on customer activity in their stores, is close to landing a Series B investment, sources told AllThingsD. Accel Partners is expected to be a new investor in the round. – by Jason Del Rey – Tags: commerce, general, news, accel partners, euclid, first round capital, forerunner ventures, nomi, retail, retail stores, retailnext, sv angel, tracking, web analytics – http://allthingsd.com/20131011/in-store-tracking-isnt-going-anywhere-nomi-close-to-landing-around-10-million-series-b-investment/

How High Can Fab Climb?: Bradford Shellhammer’s affection for people mirrors his feelings for his vast accumulation of inanimate objects, which include sunglasses, sneakers, and glass birds. “I collect things. People are just another thing I collect,” he says, describing his Warholian approach to life. – by Christian LaBrooy – http://www.fastcodesign.com/3016269/how-high-can-fab-climb

Awesome Photos of NASA Equipment Tests: There’s no hardware as cool as space hardware. And there’s nothing cooler than watching astronauts and scientists testing out equipment to take us off-world — even equipment that was never used. Here are our favorite images of NASA testing its equipment on Earth. – by Vincze Miklós – http://io9.com/awesome-photos-of-nasa-equipment-tests-1443979987

A forced change to my information diet

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I just un-pinned and closed my Google Reader tab in Chrome.  From the day it started in 2005, Reader became my indisputable, reliable source for the rather intensive volume of information I consume daily.

Today there’s a void in my process.  I’ve yet to find a true replacement though I’ve tested what I believe is all of the contenders and really have yet to find anything that’s quite ready to be called the new champion.  For me Google Reader, was all about efficiency.  It was ridiculously quick, worked across all my screens without a sync process (thank you web) and provided an unending stream of information.  Over the years my process evolved from a structured view with folders into a more simple river of news approach.  While I started viewing things by topic I found that simply going to “view all” led to a much richer flow and tended to reveal some rather serendipitous finds.

Today, I’m still bouncing through Digg Reader, AOL, Reader, Feedly, Feedbin, Ridly, FeedRebel, NewsBlur, Feedspot, The Old Reader and while some have some redeeming qualities, I definitely miss Reader.  Over the years I’ve supplemented my Reader usage with some sharp daily email newsletters, Twitter, Facebook and Google+ … These sources remain just that, supplements.  Unfortunately, the main source is still a work in progress.

While Feedly retains perhaps the truest view of how my Reader was structured just feels heavy by comparison with a focus on making things pretty over the core usage.  They’ve made rapid progress since the Reader announcement and we’ll hopefully see some continued progress.  Digg and AOL have made remarkable strides in an even shorter timeframe and I’m hoping Digg develops the right solution.  Digg is clean and works quickly, but still needs some key things like viewing just unread items (seriously), a much quicker feed update, better sort and search.  I also really like the social end, integration with Pocket and am enjoying the Digg revival.  AOL is also pretty clean and quick and does support search … Apparently the API is ready to roll as well.

On mobile which is a primary use case for me given my commute I’m working through a few different things … I don’t like the Feedly mobile client at all so I’m using it’s sync backend with Reader HD on Android, but also dabbling with Age of Mobility’s Ridly app which is basically the same thing with a different backend.  Their web version needs some work, but they could potentially evolve as the fuller solution.

Until there’s a real replacement for my evolving habits I’ve got more work and testing ahead …