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Amazon just released its second-generation Echo Buds. How do they compare to Apple's AirPods?
I dette 11. program af technokraterne har vi kigget ugens nyheder igennem og fundet det mest interessante til dig. Vi […]
On this episode, Elio sits down with Pat Sweetman, Founder of Voice First to discuss his vision for how to transform Columbus into the voice capital of the world. Voice First helps entrepreneurs, influencers, businesses, and artists to get found on voice-enabled devices like Amazon's Echo and Google Assistant. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/614startups/support
Creating Flash Briefings. Tom is going to lay out the process to get flash briefings up on Amazon's Echo and Dot devices. There's a lot of potential here to reach MILLIONS of people through these in-home devices, so listen up and learn how to take advantage of this emerging technology. Screw The Commute Podcast Show Notes Episode 202 How To Automate Your Business - https://screwthecommute.com/automatefree/ Internet Marketing Training Center - https://imtcva.org/ Higher Education Webinar – https://screwthecommute.com/webinars 02:59 Tom's introduction to Flash Briefings 05:04 Getting your flash briefings on Amazon devices 08:01 How are people using flash briefings 10:21 Setting up your flash briefing 15:18 Sponsor message 17:14 Creating your flash briefing Entrepreneurial Resources Mentioned in This Podcast Higher Education Webinar - https://screwthecommute.com/webinars Screw The Commute - https://screwthecommute.com/ Screw The Commute Podcast App - https://screwthecommute.com/app/ Know a young person for our Youth Episode Series? Send an email to Tom! - orders@antion.com Have a Roku box? Find Tom's Public Speaking Channel there! - https://channelstore.roku.com/details/267358/the-public-speaking-channel How To Automate Your Business - https://screwthecommute.com/automatefree/ Internet Marketing Retreat and Joint Venture Program - https://greatinternetmarketingtraining.com/ Alexa Commands - https://www.cnet.com/how-to/every-alexa-command-you-can-give-your-amazon-echo-smart-speaker/ Listen to Your Flash Briefing - https://www.amazon.com/gp/help/customer/display.html?nodeId=201601880 Sound Up Now - https://soundupnow.com/ Skilexa - https://skilexa.com/ Effct - https://effct.co/ Voiceflow - https://www.voiceflow.com/ Internet Marketing Training Center - https://imtcva.org/ Related Episodes Keyword Research - https://screwthecommute.com/1/ Voice Search - https://screwthecommute.com/130/ Jen Groover - https://screwthecommute.com/201/ Margy Feldhuhn - https://screwthecommute.com/203/ More Entrepreneurial Resources for Home Based Business, Lifestyle Business, Passive Income, Professional Speaking and Online Business I discovered a great new headline / subject line / subheading generator that will actually analyze which headlines and subject lines are best for your market. I negotiated a deal with the developer of this revolutionary and inexpensive software. Oh, and it's good on Mac and PC. Go here: http://jvz1.com/c/41743/183906 The Wordpress Ecourse. Learn how to Make World Class Websites for $20 or less. https://www.GreatInternetMarketing.com/wordpressecourse Join our Private Facebook Group! One week trial for only a buck and then $37 a month, or save a ton with one payment of $297 for a year. Click the image to see all the details and sign up or go to https://www.greatinternetmarketing.com/screwthecommute/ After you sign up, check your email for instructions on getting in the group.
Manton and Daniel review Apple's updated policies on Siri "grading", how they reflect Apple's values, and the extent to which Tim Cook's personal reputation is on the line. They compare the policies to other companies including Amazon and Faceboo. Daniel catches us up on his further impressions of Amazon's Echo and laments the absence in Apple's product lineup of a "just throw it in your bag" sized HomePod-style speaker.
Saying that Amazon's Echo devices are recording what they hear, i.e. what you say, is like saying water is wet. How else are they supposed to be able to do what they do? To have a device that is voice activated that doesn't know what your voice sounds like or actually listen for when it's being addressed is simply absurd. Almost as absurd as the idea of buying said device then suing the manufacturer because it does what it does. Is it as absurd though as buying a ticket to a theme park only to stand in line ALL DAY only to spend three minutes on one ride? You tell us.Headlines:Geek News:Dark Phoenix director talks about film bombing at the box officeNiantic sues Pokémon Go cheatersFans really want to ride the new Harry Potter roller coasterTech News:Amazon gets sued again for recording kids voicesBoost your memory with a chipiOS 13 - Know where apps have been tracking youiOS 13 - Automatically silence unknown callers See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Welcome to a new update! While we’re getting more details about Facebook’s cryptocurrency Libra, many big banks are introducing their own form of cryptocurrency. Amazon launches the lower-priced Echo Show 5 and Apple waves goodbye to iTunes. Enjoy!
The Threatpost team talks about recent data privacy news - including the Facebook's FTC fine potentially reaching $5 billion, facial recognition concerns, and Amazon's Echo auditing team.
Recent reports show that humans listen to voice recordings passed to Amazon's Echo devices (Google and Apple also allow this) but not for nefarious reasons, they listen to help parse, understand and categorize recordings and understand nuance. We should be happy about this, because as we all know bias is a real thing that AI when left untethered may introduce -- in short your assistant may not recommend the proper things or may group what you say inappropriately. Read more here: https://www.theverge.com/2019/4/10/18305378/amazon-alexa-ai-voice-assistant-annotation-listen-private-recordings || Let's continue our discussion! Follow me on Twitter and Instagram at @dexter_johnson and visit http://DexJohnsPC.com to stay on top of my latest blog posts about the world of technology. Share this podcast with a friend!
Doc Sovryn is back for another Sovryn Tech Subscriber Q&A episode, only available to Patreon Sovryn Tech Patrons! We're talking the best new Linux to use, Zcash wallets, what's really going on with Amazon's Echo line and Alexa, Guardians of the Galaxy, and your album of the week! WOO! Feel free to send in more questions for future entries!SHOW NOTES: --"What Zcash Wallet Do You Use?" --"Best Version of Linux To Use After Coming Off of Windows?" --"Should I Worry About Alexa On My Tablet?" --"Guardians of the Galaxy, Vol. 2 Review" --Album of the Week: "Rev Theory - Light It Up" RETROSHARE KEY FOR CONTENT: CQEGAf8AAAJYxsBNBFkIjOgBCADBvtSR234Yb5ODyEik8bJoa09TN+DaOZTr1VvA RFPoBQLVqsk7Q3isc33bcmX3xBmCUXmjX/tDgw3BaxHHY7BKG0To3VE9+HBt90t3 QLM2c+piFRlTYZNlxsbWZkxE00g6QymB77DmHv8S9TchsXuLiG60ilylcUsxgJEr tJkJ7aujla6gTAar/w62WmpMSJdf5CwWHNyEU142rqRe78iimGbaUOX/hTDLx2Ci 9CTpqgCRTTzObeL9yclNrNr/nF31wjD407Mz12VV20EIHZADT4ibckIy5PYfNESL L0MhDD+YvAtMaEQXTr5+c82QZY2wpKcZ2o7KwBbyyMIKxUTBABEBAAHNJEFhcm9u IEUgKEdlbmVyYXRlZCBieSBSZXRyb1NoYXJlKSA8PsLAXwQTAQIAEwUCWQiM6AkQ NuBIOCEKTDQCGQEAAKmeB/9qcD86SNL/wAEJWm8wUlKc0ClsYs8t7ZUv1v1eNX+J 9YeyyrCspSGQqGbqq2m4GzOLBt6ugDUU9fUNsJJlEYY3diQqH79qXXeP0a3KhQ+h tJotDkxRaiHvgBKhrPrzSEpYQ63du18jGwFXu4FPAO+FwbzBqQu/RZFVPXcqyci9 hYAgrPmzweANQVUs+/tJCoC1dAQg7XxW25hNgLMsFOpc7EQFTe5WBqOjjQjze3Dt 88T1D0Hgnc9TOw12pU6jFYslMj+Nom4AB6X6JlO+UBgHY4+gDbiAfAqtmUPKqPAr 3bb1SQFaw4xNoZvk7NdhCFRKix7b1jvpsLZIUjsbvGzbAgZIMDI+BAADBsCoAckE AAQABgZTZXJ2ZXIFEDz57tjPISKR78vcDaLtzOEHA2CavA== APPENDIX: --"Zcash4win" Link: https://zcash4win.com/ --"Zcash4mac" Link: https://zcash4mac.com/ =========================http://www.zog.ninja
This week Benjamin and Zac share a quick review of the Smart Folio cover for the new iPad Pro, talk about Apple Music coming soon to Amazon's Echo speakers, recent iPhone XR discounts and Apple's marketing strategies, the launch of the Apple Clear Case for iPhone XR, the 18W USB-C charger, and lots of software updates and new features including iOS 12.1.1 and FaceTime fixes, HomePod in China, dual SIM in the US, and the new ECG app on Apple Watch Series 4, plus much more. 9to5Mac Happy Hour is available on iTunes and Apple’s Podcasts app, Stitcher, TuneIn, Google Play Music, or through our dedicated RSS feed for Overcast and other podcast players. Sponsored by ZUGU Case: Check out ZUGU’s new Muse case for Apple’s 2018 iPad Pro and enter our 12.9-inch iPad Pro giveaway below. Sponsored by Atlassian’s OpsGenie: Opsgenie empowers Dev & Ops teams to plan for service disruptions and stay in control during incidents. Get a free company account for up to 5 team members, forever. Hosts: Benjamin Mayo Zac Hall Topics: Apple Music coming to Amazon Echo speakers in time for the holidays Report: Apple to lower iPhone XR prices in Japan, restarts some iPhone X production As rumored, iPhone XR price drops by ~$100 at Japanese carrier over two year contract Apple reportedly reassigned some marketing staff to focus on boosting new iPhone sales Apple will release its own clear case for iPhone XR Apple’s official clear case for iPhone XR is now available for $39 Apple begins selling $29 18W USB-C power adapter separately, previously only available with 2018 iPad Pro Apple releases iOS 12.1.1, tvOS 12.1.1, macOS 10.14.2, and HomePod 12.1.1 update AT&T becomes first major US carrier to support eSIM functionality on iPhone XS & XR Verizon memo says Dual SIM and eSIM rollout to start in early December Verizon eSIM support coming December 7, says leaked memo Apple Watch Series 4 getting the ECG app today with watchOS 5.1.2 watchOS 5.1.2 for Apple Watch now available with ECG app, new Infograph complications, more PSA: ECG and irregular heart rate notifications not available for users under 22 Kuo: ‘All-new design’ AirPods in 2020, wireless charging model in first quarter 2019 Feedback? Drop us a line at happyhour@9to5mac.com. You can also rate us in Apple Podcasts or recommend us in Overcast to help more people discover the show! Giveaway:
Proof Windows isn't a service, 4K streaming is picking the Apple TV up and Amazon's Echo with third parties. If you're listening on the go, check out munchtech.tv/mobile to find out more about our mobile applications. Enjoy the show? We'd appreciate if you could leave an iTunes rating or review to let us know!
This episode discusses Apple's iPhone launch event and Amazon's Echo event. It delves into how two giants are taking opposite approaches to products and platforms in very different markets: Smartphones and Internet of Things.
For the second quarter in a row, Google Home has outsold Amazon's Echo speaker. A year ago Amazon had a 88% market share in smart speakers. What happened? Jefferson Graham weighs in on Talking Tech.
In today's podcast, we hear that the FBI's takedown of VPNFilter may have averted a major state-directed campaign. Some discount Android phones come with preloaded adware. Amazon's Echo echoed a little too much. BMW patches some potentially serious vulnerabilities in its connected cars. Cryptocurrency exchanges hit by a double-spending crook. The US Justice Department investigates crypto exchange price manipulation. New charges have been filed in the December Kansas swatting death. And GDPR is now with us. Let the lawsuits begin. Joe Carrigan from JHU ISI, comparing the security of iOS vs. Android. Guest is Mischel Kwon from MKACyber on the evolving role of SOCs.
More smart home devices, Amazon's Echo spot is a fun little device with a screen - we discuss all the smart home assistant and Geoff goes off on a tangent and gets it wrong. Bowen drives the Volvo XC40 and loves it, the boys discuss Unlimited mobile plans and just if they should be called Unlimited. Is the new Commodore a sales dud? Does it matter if the artworks in gallery are fake, Geoff rides a desk at work, He discusses his babymoon and Angus has advice for the new parents..
In der heutigen Sendung erwarten euch unter anderem viele spannende Drohnen, eine Anleitung zum Steuern von Raspberry Pi oder ESP8266 mit Amazons Echo und ein Roboter der nur 2,8 Gramm wiegt.
Who has the best smart speaker?
Who has the best smart speaker?
Episode Nr. 5 – Wie Sie die Sprachsuche (Voice Search) für Ihr Unternehmen nutzen Die Sprachassistenten Googles Voice Search, Home, Apples Siri, Amazons Echo, Tap, Alexa oder Microsofts Cortana verändern unsere Suchgewohnheiten. Anstelle von Keywords suchen wir nach ganzen Sätzen. Unterwegs erwarten wir von den Assistenten, dass sie unseren Standort in die Antwort miteinbeziehen und uns Tipps aus der unmittelbaren Nähe liefern. Das eröffnet neue Möglichkeiten für Unternehmen. Welche? Hören Sie es in diesem Podcast. Der Podcast "Marketing auf dem Arbeitsweg" ist Teil der b-ahead Podcast-Serie. b-ahead, die Schweizer Content Marketing Agentur, berät Marken und Dienstleister in den Bereichen Content Marketing, Storytelling, Video, Podcast und Inbound-Marketing.
All the tech news of the week with Amazon's Echo launching next week and a whole bunch of Aussie companies jumping on board, what is Google up to, how do they stack up and just where is Apple? Plus Vodafone's NBN price cuts, Innovations in banking on your mobile phone and Tim Cook speaks about the Apple Battery woes - all that and some gadget reviews this week on Two Blokes Talking Tech
Licht und Steckdosen mit Amazons Echo schalten zu koennen auf Zuruf ist laengst Alltag bei Vielen geworden. In diesem IrgendWasser steuern wir auch Fernseher, Hifi-Anlage und andere Geraete, die sich ganz normal fernbedienen lassen jetzt ebenfalls per Sprachbefehl.
Join me as OnGuardian founder and I talk about Brazil, his years in Angola, and how an unexpected crisis with his father back home led to the creation of OnGuardian, an advanced solution that empowers family caregivers by streamlining support, collaboration and access to information while providing care recipients with and easy to use voice interface, powered by Amazon Echo and Alexa.
Editor and publisher of voice technology / AI news and commentary website Voicebot.ai Bret Kinsella is the sole guest on this week of This Week In Voice, as he and host Bradley Metrock discuss the growth of smart speaker sales in FY17, Amazon's Echo hardware being sold in Kohl's retail stores, Samsung's Bixby and Alibaba's Tmall Genie, and even a discussion on whether Apple's HomePod can be competitive in the marketplace, and Bret Kinsella's favorite thing Amazon has done in voice technology so far this year. It's a can't-miss episode. This Week In Voice is hosted by Bradley Metrock (CEO, Score Publishing) and is part of the VoiceFirst.FM podcast network.
Brian and Mike back at it for an intense discussion about altruism and how people think about donating money and charity. In the first part of the conversation Brian and Mike initially discuss their favorite product of the week then spend time on Amazon's new announcement about the new Echo with a camera. Brian take a bullish stand on how new Echo will impact the fashion industry which he write more in detail here. We took a deep dive into the effective altruism - which seeks to answer the simple question: "how can we use our resources to help others the most?" Brian's product of the week: Victor Scheinman -16 year old student invents Emvi, a voice recognition system in the 1950s: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sYEhE11gqGw&t=14s Mike product of the week: A curated directory of resources & tools to help you build your Startup: www.Startupstash.com: This week’s special shout outs are: Nathan Kontny CEO Highrise https://m.signalvnoise.com/speed-reading-2ff843053cc6 Chad Grills Founder of the Mission https://medium.com/the-mission/you-wont-win-until-they-start-betting-against-you-a97a3141690e Shaunta Grimes How to know what to write about. https://medium.com/startup-grind/how-to-know-what-to-write-about-bf539223ba32 Show note links: - https://www.samharris.org/podcast/item/being-good-and-doing-good - https://www.effectivealtruism.org/ - http://readmultiplex.com/2017/04/26/the-amazon-look-will-transform-the-closet-and-the-fashion-industry/ - http://www.princeton.edu/~pear/
In dieser Folge besprechen Patrick, Robin und Moritz die Ergebnisse der Oscarverleihungen und Gewinner der jeweiligen Kategorien. Im Anschluss berichtet Moritz von seinen Erlebnissen mit Amazons Echo, welches wir freundlicherweise von Amazon für einen Test zur Verfügung gestellt bekommen haben.
In dieser Folge besprechen Patrick, Robin und Moritz die Ergebnisse der Oscarverleihungen und Gewinner der jeweiligen Kategorien. Im Anschluss berichtet Moritz von seinen Erlebnissen mit Amazons Echo, welches wir freundlicherweise von Amazon für einen Test zur Verfügung gestellt bekommen haben.
In the third episode of GeekOut, we follow the story that our smart devices may be listening to our every word, whether we want it to or not. But could these devices be used against us? Find out about the ongoing murder case in Arkansas where Amazon's Echo may soon be taking to the stand. #RNIBConnect #TechTalkGeekOut
The O’Reilly Radar Podcast: AI on the hype curve, imagining nurturing technology, and gaps in the AI conversation.This week, I sit down with anthropologist, futurist, Intel Fellow, and director of interaction and experience research at Intel, Genevieve Bell. We talk about what she’s learning from current AI research, why the resurgence of AI is different this time, and five things that are missing from the AI conversation.Here are some highlights: AI’s place on the wow-ahh-hmm curve of human existence I think in some ways, for me, the reason of wanting to put AI into a lineage is many of the ways we respond to it as human beings are remarkably familiar. I'm sure you and many of your viewers and listeners know about the Gartner Hype Curve, the notion of, at first you don’t talk about it very much, then the arc of it's everywhere, and then it goes to the valley of it not being so spectacular until it stabilizes. I think most humans respond to technology not dissimilarly. There's this moment where you go, 'Wow. That’s amazing' promptly followed by the 'Uh-oh, is it going to kill us?' promptly followed by the, 'Huh, is that all it does?' It's sort of the wow-ahh-hmm curve of human existence. I think AI is in the middle of that. At the moment, if you read the tech press, the trade presses, and the broader news, AI's simultaneously the answer to everything. It's going to provide us with safer cars, safer roads, better weather predictions. It's going to be a way of managing complex data in simple manners. It's going to beat us at chess. On the one hand, it's all of that goodness. On the other hand, there are being raised both the traditional fears of technology: is it going to kill us? Will it be safe? What does it mean to have autonomous things? What are they going to do to us? Then the reasonable questions about what models are we using to build this technology out. When you look across the ways it's being talked about, there are those three different factors. One of excessive optimism, one of a deep dystopian fear, and then another starting to run a critique of the decisions that are being made around it. I think that’s, in some ways, a very familiar set of positions about a new technology. Looking beyond the app that finds your next cup of coffee I sometimes worry that we imagine that each generation of new technology will somehow mysteriously and magically fix all of our problems. The reality is 10, 20, 30 years from now, we will still be worrying about the safety of our families and our kids, worrying about the integrity of our communities, wanting a good story to keep us company, worrying about how we look and how we sound, and being concerned about the institutions in our existence. Those are human preoccupations that are thousands of years deep. I'm not sure they change this quickly. I do think there are harder questions about what that world will be like and what it means to have the possibility of machinery that is much more embedded in our lives and our world, and about what that feels like. In the fields that I come out of, we've talked a lot since about the same time as AI about human computer interactions, and they really sat inside the paradigm. One about what should we call a command-and-control infrastructure. You give a command to the technology, you get some sort of piece of answer back; whether that’s old command prompt lines or Google search boxes, it is effectively the same thing. We're starting to imagine a generation of technology that is a little more anticipatory and a little more proactive, that’s living with us—you can see the first generation of those, whether that's Amazon's Echo or some of the early voice personal assistants. There's a new class of intelligent agents that are coming, and I wonder sometimes if we move from a world of human-computer interactions to a world of human-computer relationships that we have to start thinking differently. What does it mean to imagine technology that is nurturing or that has a care or that wants you to be happy, not just efficient, or that wants you to be exposed to transformative ideas? It would be very different than the app that finds you your next cup of coffee. There’s a lot of room for good AI conversations What's missing from the AI conversation are the usual things I think are missing from many conversations about technology. One is an awareness of history. I think, like I said, AI doesn’t come out of nowhere. It came out of a very particular set of preoccupations and concerns in the 1950s and a very particular set of conversations. We have, in some ways, erased that history such that we forget how it came to be. For me, I think a sense of history is missing. As a result of that, I think more attention to a robust interdisciplinarity is missing, too. If we're talking about a technology that is as potentially pervasive as this one and as potentially close to us as human beings, I want more philosophers and psychologists and poets and artists and politicians and anthropologists and social scientists and critics of art—I want them all in that conversation because I think they're all part of it. I worry that this just becomes a conversation of technologists to each other about speeds and feeds and their latest instantiation, as opposed to saying, if we really are imagining a form of an object that will be in dialogue with us and supplemental and replacing us in some places, I want more people in that conversation. That's the second thing I think is missing. I also think it's emerging, and I hear in people like Julia Ng and my colleagues Kate Crawford and Meredith Whitacre an emerging critique of it. How do you critique an algorithm? How do you start to unpack a black-boxed algorithm to ask the questions about what pieces of data are they waging against what and why? How do we have the kind of dialogue that says, sure we can talk about the underlying machinery, but we also need to talk about what's going into those algorithms and what does it mean to train objects. For me, there's then the fourth thing, which is: where is theory in all of this? Not game theory. Not theories about machine learning and sequencing and logical decision-making, but theories about human beings, theories about how certain kinds of subjectivities are made. I was really struck in reading many of the histories of AI, but also of the contemporary work, of how much we make of normative examples in machine learning and in training, where you're trying to work out the repetition—what's the normal thing so we should just keep doing it? I realized that sitting inside those are always judgements about what is normal and what isn't. You and I are both women. We know that routinely women are not normal inside those engines. There's something about what would it mean to start asking a set of theoretical questions that come out of feminist theory, out of Marxist theory, out of queer theory, critical race theory about what does it mean to imagine normal here and what is and what isn't. Machine learning people would recognize this as the question of how do you deal with the outliers. I think my theory would be: what if we started with the outliers rather than the center, and where would that get you? I think the fifth thing that’s missing is: what are the other ways into this conversation that might change our thinking? As anthropologists, one of the things we're always really interested in is, can we give you that moment where we de-familiarize something. How do you take a thing you think you know and turn it on it's head so you go, 'I don’t recognize that anymore'? For me, that’s often about how do you give it a history. Increasingly, I realize in this space there's also a question to ask about what other things have we tried to machine learn on—so, what other things have we tried to use natural language processing, reasoning, induction on to make into supplemental humans or into things that do tasks for us? Of course, there's a whole category of animals we've trained that way—carrier pigeons, sheep dogs, bomb sniffing dogs, Coco the monkey who could sign. There's a whole category of those, and I wonder if there's a way of approaching that topic that gets us to think differently about learning because that’s sitting underneath all of this, too. All of those things are missing. When you've got that many things missing, that’s actually good. I means there's a lot of room for good conversations.
Wie gut laesst sich mit Alexa das smarte Haus steuern, Musik, Radio und die taeglichen Nachrichten hoeren und wie nuetzlich ist das alles fuer Einbrecher? Ein Gedankenmix ueber die neuen modernen Smarthome-Systeme auf dem Markt und wie ich Amazons Echo in meinen Alltag einbinde.
Google has announced Google home, a competitor to Amazons Echo home presence. Time will tell if they can match the Echo's usability and personality.
Google home is getting better, how does it compare to Amazon's Echo?
Unemployment drops to its lowest rate since 2007. Starbucks announces a change at the top. Guess reports some unfashionable earnings. And Taco Bell unveils a Cheeto-filled quesadilla. Plus, corporate governance expert and film critic Nell Minow talks Trump, Target, and holiday movies. To check out The Motley Fool's new skill for Amazon's Echo just go to www.fool.com/alexa.
Google's new Home product--a smart speaker looking to take on Amazon's Echo, opened to mixed reviews, causing Jefferson Graham and the #TalkingTech panel to wonder--what went wrong? Why did Google introduce a product that some say wasn't ready for prime-time? Guests: Jamie Siminoff (Ring) David Yeom (Hollar) and Gabby Sloam (Ollie.)
Google takes on Amazon with a smart speaker that can look things up, play music and operate your smart home like Amazon's Echo, but Google Home is a big and rare fail for the Internet giant. Jefferson Graham explains why, in this conversation with Home, on #TalkingTech.
Willkommen in der zweiten Season, die wir gleich mit einem ganz großen Thema starten: dem Internet. Aktuell inspiriert von Oliver Stones ‘Snowden’ kartografieren wir das “Neuland” in Fakt und Fiktion, und haben in der Love/Hate-Rubrik natürlich die passende Serie dazu, der vielgehypte ‘Mr. Robot’. Die Ferengi stellen sich in der abschließenden Erwerbsregel ausnahmsweise mal nicht als Ungustl heraus, und auch sonst gustieren wir in alle möglichen Richtungen: Wieviele Nachrichtendienste braucht Österreich? Wie lebt es sich in postfaktischen Echokammern? Und warum ist Robert Redford so gut im Türeneintreten? Timecodes 2:44 – Wir müssen reden: (Nix Neues zu) Axanar; (Fear) The Walking Dead 7:23 – Hauptthema: Das Internet, Snowden & co 1:11:19 – There is so much love in this hate group: Mr. Robot 1:49:00 – Ferengi Rule of Acquisition: “Good customers are rare as Latinum. Treasure them.” Show notes Bombshells begin in discovery phase of Axanar lawsuit (Part 1) http://fff.trekbloggers.com/2016/10/12/bombshells-begin-in-discovery-phase-of-axanar-lawsuit-part-1/ Bombshells begin in discovery phase of Axanar lawsuit (Part 2) http://fff.trekbloggers.com/2016/10/05/axanar-lawsuit-discovery-phase-heats-up-part-2/ ARGE Daten http://www.argedaten.at Futurezone: So wird das Opt-Out beim Smart Meter unterlaufen https://futurezone.at/netzpolitik/so-wird-das-opt-out-beim-smart-meter-unterlaufen/143.170.396 E-Control: Häufige Fragen und Antworten zu Smart Meter https://www.e-control.at/fragen-und-antworten-smart-meter ELGA OptOut-Formular http://ftp.freenet.at/privacy/muster/elga-optout.pdf Wissenschaft und Frieden: Der cyber-militärische Komplex. Die dunkle Seite des Silicon Valley http://www.wissenschaft-und-frieden.de/seite.php?artikelID=2042 Wissenschaft und Frieden: Militarisierung des Cyberspace. Friedens- und sicherheitspolitische Fragen. http://www.wissenschaft-und-frieden.de/seite.php?artikelID=2043 Oliver Stones ‘Snowden’ Trailer https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QlSAiI3xMh4 Citizenfour (Dokumentation) Trailer https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XiGwAvd5mvM 'State of Surveillance' with Edward Snowden and Shane Smith https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ucRWyGKBVzo Government Surveillance: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XEVlyP4_11M TED Talks: How we take back the Internet (with Edward Snowden) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yVwAodrjZMY Little Brother (Roman) von Cory Doctorow https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Brother_(Roman) Verfassungsschutzbericht 2015 – Bundesamt für Verfassungsschutz und Terrorismusbekämpfung http://www.bmi.gv.at/cms/BMI_Verfassungsschutz/Verfassungsschutzbericht_2015.pdf Cyber Security Challenge Österreich http://www.cybersecuritychallenge.at Aaron Swartz https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aaron_Swartz ‘Alle Bücher müssen gelesen werden’ Podcast u.a. zu The Red-Trilogy von Linda Nagata https://abmgw.com/2016/04/22/abmgw-082-der-ewige-friede-vs-the-red-last-light-joe-haldeman-und-linda-nagata/ Deep Web (Dokumentation) Trailer https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BvC9oDlT8mM Dread Pirate Roberts https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dread_Pirate_Roberts Sneakers (1992) Clip: Defeating the keypad https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oG5vsPJ5Tos TU Berlin Hoax-Info Service http://hoax-info.tubit.tu-berlin.de/hoax/ http://www.mimikama.at http://www.kobuk.at http://www.bildblog.de Europe vs. Facebook http://europe-v-facebook.org/DE/de.html Mr. Robot Official Website (USA Network) http://www.usanetwork.com/mrrobot derStandard.at über Amazons ‘Echo’ http://derstandard.at/2000044333592/Echo-Amazon-bringt-seinen-smarten-Lautsprecher-nach-Europa
Amazon's Echo music subscription, the Internet of Things gets infected with malware, preferred methods of paying for software, and excitement for virtual and augmented reality.
In episode 32, Techworld's Scott Carey looks at Amazon's Echo and finds a dystopian future world in which our household appliances listen to us and talk back. Digital Arts editor Neil Bennett (15:06) explains why Tesla now has to design products for stupid people, and Macworld's David Price explains why mums don't like Apple's iOS 10 (28:00). We also discuss the beauty and lyricism of the German language. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
You can find the links for this episode here: http://wp.me/p7sAvJ-9f Episode 7: In this weeks episode Alex and Kai take a deeper dive into Amazon’s Alexa and how it works. We discuss what it already can do for ecommerce and what is missing. We also cover how to take first steps developing a skill for it. As closing topic we talk about delivery robots that will come to the streets of some major European cities this year.
This week Jon Phillips, Mark Hachman and Melissa Riofrio talk all things Google I/O including: The Goog's knock off of Amazon's Echo, Android Auto, and Allo and Duo.
Stephen Metcalf, Julia Turner, and Dana Stevens are live at the SVA Theater in New York City and discuss Richard Linklater's latest film "Everybody Wants Some!!", Amazon's Echo device, and what four figures they would carve into a cultural Mt. Rushmore. The Slate Culture Gabfest is brought to you by BollandBranch.com, offering luxury bedding at affordable prices. Order right now and they'll give you 20% off, plus free shipping. Get sheets, towels, blankets, duvet covers, and more at BollAndBranch.com and use the promo code CULTURE. And by The Haters, the hilarious road-trip novel about music and friendship, by Jesse Andrews—New York Times bestselling author and screenwriter of the Sundance award–winner Me and Earl and the Dying Girl. Find The Haters at AbramsBooks.com/thehaters. And by Green Chef, a new food delivery service that makes cooking easy—with consciously sourced healthy recipes and organic ingredients. Get four free meals with your first order when you go to GreenChef.com/culture. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Stephen Metcalf, Julia Turner, and Dana Stevens are live at the SVA Theater in New York City and discuss Richard Linklater's latest film "Everybody Wants Some!!", Amazon's Echo device, and what four figures they would carve into a cultural Mt. Rushmore. The Slate Culture Gabfest is brought to you by BollandBranch.com, offering luxury bedding at affordable prices. Order right now and they'll give you 20% off, plus free shipping. Get sheets, towels, blankets, duvet covers, and more at BollAndBranch.com and use the promo code CULTURE. And by The Haters, the hilarious road-trip novel about music and friendship, by Jesse Andrews—New York Times bestselling author and screenwriter of the Sundance award–winner Me and Earl and the Dying Girl. Find The Haters at AbramsBooks.com/thehaters. And by Green Chef, a new food delivery service that makes cooking easy—with consciously sourced healthy recipes and organic ingredients. Get four free meals with your first order when you go to GreenChef.com/culture. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Stephen Metcalf, Julia Turner, and Dana Stevens are live at the SVA Theater in New York City and discuss Richard Linklater's latest film "Everybody Wants Some!!", Amazon's Echo device, and what four figures they would carve into a cultural Mt. Rushmore. The Slate Culture Gabfest is brought to you by BollandBranch.com, offering luxury bedding at affordable prices. Order right now and they'll give you 20% off, plus free shipping. Get sheets, towels, blankets, duvet covers, and more at BollAndBranch.com and use the promo code CULTURE. And by The Haters, the hilarious road-trip novel about music and friendship, by Jesse Andrews—New York Times bestselling author and screenwriter of the Sundance award–winner Me and Earl and the Dying Girl. Find The Haters at AbramsBooks.com/thehaters. And by Green Chef, a new food delivery service that makes cooking easy—with consciously sourced healthy recipes and organic ingredients. Get four free meals with your first order when you go to GreenChef.com/culture.
This week the three amigos Brian, Faisal and Mike are back at it again. Brian discuss Amazon's Echo and the new Echo equivalent that one can build with Raspberry Pi. Mike explains the benefits and the potential of Apple's CareKit and Faisal discusses mobile wallets and small value transfer, why we need to reexamine the whole ecosystem.
The Martian, Powerball, Pop Tarts and fruit cake. CJ and JB step into the future with Amazon's Echo. If you like Chat Fancy's trademark bickering and side-taking, then this is the episode for you. This week's drink is New Belgium's Snow Day Winter Ale.
We talk with Kent Newsome about working in a "locked down" office, we also discuss Amazon's Echo, listener travel tips, two factor authentication apps, Omni Focus workflows, sharing tasks, referenced photo libraries and answer listener questions on a variety of topics
Mark and Andrew talk about augmented reality, Google Goggles, Amazon Firefly, Photoshopping photos, 3D scanning, plastic surgery, Spanx, the idealization of the human body in ancient art, propaganda, Vladimir Putin, Christopher Nolan's Interstellar, our desire to be duped, altering videos, rewriting history, editing the Internet, the Bilderberg Group, NSA cell phone tracking, fact vs. fiction, typewriters, Amazon's Echo device, tricoders, jetpacks, hover boards, Barbie, icons, models, obesity, and media consumption.Photo credit: Zdenek Kratochvil
On this week's episode, we talk about Amazon's Echo, Google’s Ara modular smartphone, Amazon offering unlimited photo storage to Prime members and Matt & Tony's experience with ScanSnap scanners.
DigitalOutbox Episode 228 DigitalOutbox Episode 228 - Microsoft and Dropbox, Amazons Echo, Games Playback Listen via iTunes Listen via M4A Listen via MP3 Shownotes GCHQ's Robert Hannigan says tech firms 'in denial' on extremism Dropbox - We’re partnering with Microsoft Google CEO Larry Page Reorgs Staff, Anoints Sundar Pichai as New Product Czar Google releases redesigned Android Calendar app with contextual autocomplete and more visual content Malicious software campaign targets Apple users in China Samsung works with West Yorkshire Police force to deploy the Galaxy Note 3 Amazon Begins Extending Prime-Member Perks to Other Shopping Sites Amazon introduces Echo, a voice-controlled assistant for your home Jawbone launches 2 new 24/7 activity trackers: the UP Move and UP3, priced at $50 and $180 Games