POPULARITY
Rich talked about going to Seattle for two Microsoft events. One focused on their new CoPilot+ PCs and the other was the Microsoft Build developer conference.Rich talked about the new Recall feature on Windows computers that remembers everything on your screen.Bill in Julian wants a printer that he can print with from his phone but has no WiFi. Rich suggests looking for a printer with WiFi Direct capabilities. Bill mentioned he has a car with a record player!Rick in Pasadena isn't happy about the T-Mobile price hike, especially since he's on a plan with a price lock guarantee.Ben Bajarin, CEO and Principal Analyst at Creative Strategies, to talk about Microsoft CoPilot+ PCs and the Microsoft Build conference.Michelle in Long Beach is getting an error on her iPhone even when she tries to buy a free app.Want a Samsung SmartTag2 Bluetooth tracker for $1 instead of the $30 it usually costs? Matt Swider of The Shortcut has the deal.Google is having issues with its new AI Overviews feature.Tim in San Francisco is looking for guidance on developing his mobile app idea.Rich is super impressed with Google Photo's Unblur feature, which is available on Pixel 7 and up and rolling out to other devices now.John in San Clemente wants to know how to take a photo of a menu in Europe and have his phone translate it. Rich recommends Apple's Translate app, Google Translate and even ChatGPT!Don't fall for Scareware! Here's what to do if you see a pop-up that says your smartphone is infected with viruses.Tim Stevens, freelance automotive journalist, to talk about his recent article about EV Myths.Debbie in Fallbrook, CA can't get clear images texted to her phone anymore.Southwest Airlines prices are now displayed on Google Flights.Hal in Florida asks how to learn to use AI like ChatGPT.Sharon in Lake Stevens, Washington, doesn't want to pay for cloud storage. Rich recommends Amazon Photos if you have Prime and Sandisk USB drives.Gina in Riverside wants to share thoughts on the wild wild west of the Internet.Scarlett Johansson says OpenAI's “Sky” voice sounded too much like her.Nomi AI CEO Alex Cardinell will talk about AI companions and the growth of AI chatbots as friends (and lovers)Microsoft is teaming up with Khan Academy to give teachers a helpful free AI tool called Khanmigo. Get full access to Rich on Tech at richontech.tv/subscribe
Calling All Platforms Tech - Tech news for fans of Apple, Google and Microsoft
PSA from Wes: 1:03 - Always check expiration dates on food Science from Caleb: 2:06 Apple: 3:46 - M4 release lineup - Apple's iOS 18 AI features Google: 24:39 - Google's Find My network is now launched - Google Photo's “Pixel Exclusive” features coming to more users - Google One VPN going away General Tech: 40:20 - DuckDuckGo Privacy Pro subscription - Humane AI pin Gaming: 1:01:09 - Emulators now on iOS - Microsoft creating “Game Preservation” team - Xbox app updates - Fallout is taking over entertainment One More Thing: 1:16:57 - Apple Watch Ultra = handheld game console https://www.patreon.com/callingallplatforms T-Shirts! Contact: podcast@callingallplatforms.com Social: Facebook Twitter YouTube Apple Podcasts Spotify Android
** Episodio 80** - "Le nostre foto nel cloud Open Source (online o self-hosted)" Foto, foto, foto, tantissime foto nei nostri device... ma dove le salviamo se non vogliamo darle in pastro al solito Google Photo o compagnia cantante? In questo episodio io -Stefano - con Antonino (siamo tornati ai vecchi tempi in cui eravamo solo in 2 su questo podcast) abbiamo valutato qualche alternativa da poter utilizzare in casa propria o online, il tutto criptato ed in conformità al GDPR europeo. Ti auguriamo quindi un buon ascolto e ti ricordiamo che puoi sostenerci su: https://en.tipeee.com/produttividigitali Se anche tu vuoi dire la tua su quello che condividiamo, puoi scriverci qui: telegram.me/librepodcast #librepodcast:matrix.org email: librepodcastinfo@gmail.com Firma la petizione per la tua privacy su: https://stopscanningme.eu/en/index.html --***-- Per ascoltare la puntata e per altri link vai qui su: https://librepodcast.carrd.co/ --***-- Vi ricordiamo che potete ascoltarci anche su Radio Tomoko ( https://www.radiotomoko.com/librepodcast ) che ringraziamo sempre tantissimo per ritrasmetterci e anche su Telegram nel canale https://t.me/UnitooWebRadio_Podcast gestito da Radio Unitoo ( https://www.unitoo.it/progetti/radio/ ) che ringraziamo ulteriormente per il supporto Intro & background music Chronos - Alexander Nakarada FreePD.com - 100% Free Music Free for Commercial Use, Free Of Royalties, Free Of Attribution, Creative Commons 0 Outro: Uberpunch by Alexander Nakarada | https://www.serpentsoundstudios.com Music promoted by https://www.free-stock-music.com Creative Commons / Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
We've gone deep to find our perfect Google Photos replacement. This week we'll share our setup that we think works great, is easy to use, and is fully backed up.
Незмінні ведучі Павло, Костянтин та Євген у новому випуску Pi Tech Podcast підіймають доволі дискусійну, але цікаву тему: як сучасні технології ускладнюють нам життя з юридичної точки зору. Де проходить межа, коли особисті дані стають не такими вже й особистими та в яких випадках це стає в пригоді. Відповідь у новому епізоді! 00:26 - дайджест випуску01:00 - сніфінг листування та chat control у WhatsApp та Skype05:05 - репутаційні удари через життя поза роботою09:31 - скандал з Google Photo та батьком із США19:17 - як смартгодинник допоміг розкрити злочин
Google's photo recognition technology is causing some problems for people who've done nothing wrong. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Dans la technologie, il est impossible de s'ennuyer ! Entre les mises à jour d'applications, de services ou de matériel, il y a toujours quelque chose de nouveau à découvrir. Alors comme toutes les 4 semaines, nous allons nous pencher sur les évolutions de nos produits préférés. évidemment, dans le CKB show, Google est notre sujet de prédilection de ce fait nous allons mettre un pied chez Android, Chrome, ChromeOS et naturellement Google. Nous y découvrirons les évolutions de ce qui nous entoure quotidiennement. Entre partage à proximité, la fin de YouTube ou encore le travail collaboratif nous n'allons pas nous ennuyer dans cet épisode. Android toujours en évolution Google Message en approche sur iOs Des options offertes sur Google Photo pour les abonnés Google one Le partage à proximité s'améliore enfin Google TV devient un critique de cinéma Les nouveautés du Groupe Alphabet Google rachète Raxium En quoi est-ce une bonne nouvelle ? Le cloud gaming toujours en chantier, mais ça avance ! YouTube go c'est fin Le navigateur Chrome fait son Show Quoi de neuf sur chromeOS Le partage à proximité fonctionne, enfin ! Les épingles de fenêtre flottante Mode selfie sur Chrome OS Google Workspace marche-t-il sur les platebandes de Notion ? Les modèles de tableaux Les réactions dans Google Docs Google Meet dans Google Docs La Google IO en fuite Les fuites du Pixel 6a Pixel Watch oublié dans un café Une version des Pixel Buds plus haut de gamme ? Retrouvez toutes les notes de l'épisode sur Mychroembook.fr
Bert Alcorn, Mark Avery, and Ryan Hinkle recently returned from an amazing trip to Nepal. The main reason for the trip was to celebrate the graduations of 46 pastors and leaders who just finished a 2-year Pastoral Training Certificate Program through Touch Nepal, but it was also a great time for the guys to see some of our local leaders who we partner within Nepal, and to visit some of the significant religious sites for Hindus and Buddhists.For photos that go along with the trip, check out this Google Photo album! https://photos.app.goo.gl/hW84rWZS4ARJr9uy5About Anthem:Anthem Ventura is a church of house churches practicing the way of Jesus together in our city. Together, we are becoming resilient disciples, who are a faithful family in the face of cultural coercion and live a vibrant life in the spirit.We live this out by organizing everything we do around three goals: be with Jesus, become like Jesus, do what Jesus did, leading to the pursuit of the tangible presence and power of God, practicing counter-formation in the way of Jesus, and living on sacrificial mission for the renewal of the city.Listen and Subscribe On:Apple PodcastsSpotifyGoogle PodcastsFollow Anthem Ventura:Web: anthemventura.orgInstagram: @anthemventuraFacebook: /anthemventura
On All About Android, Jason Howell, Florence Ion, Ron Richards, and guest Chris Lacy read an email from a fan who has a solid replacement for Google's once-free photo and video cloud storage. For the full episode, visit twit.tv/aaa/540 Hosts: Jason Howell, Florence Ion, and Ron Richards You can find more about TWiT and subscribe to our podcasts at https://podcasts.twit.tv/
On All About Android, Jason Howell, Florence Ion, Ron Richards, and guest Chris Lacy read an email from a fan who has a solid replacement for Google's once-free photo and video cloud storage. For the full episode, visit twit.tv/aaa/540 Hosts: Jason Howell, Florence Ion, and Ron Richards You can find more about TWiT and subscribe to our podcasts at https://podcasts.twit.tv/
We discuss old and new ways to manage, organize, index, and search your photo collection. It's our favorite Google Photo's alternatives. Plus Chris' hands-on review of System76's customizable Launch keyboard. Special Guests: Alex Kretzschmar and Brent Gervais.
We discuss old and new ways to manage, organize, index, and search your photo collection. It's our favorite Google Photo's alternatives.
Ce mois de juin débute avec un épisode compilé par David et Xavier qui partage avec vous ce qu'ils ont retenu de l'actualité tech et web de la semaine. Il sera question de la nouvelle assistante de Samsung, d'une mise à jour pour la montre connectée FitBit, d'un nouveau NUC signé Intel, de la NASA qui repart pour Venus. Évidemment on parlera également de la fin de la gratuité de Google Photo et des alternatives possibles. Bonne écoute !A comme Apple (00:02:56)Apple TV Plus sur Android. (source)F comme Fail (00:08:38)Des soldats dévoilent des procédures de sécurité nucléaire. (source)F comme Fitbit (00:16:09)Les montres Fitbit vont pouvoir détecter les ronflements. (source)G comme Google (00:22:38)Google Photos : fin du stockage illimité. (source, source)I comme Intel (00:30:40)Nouveau NUC "Beast Canyon". (source)Q comme QUIC (00:36:48)Le protocole QUIC de Google devient un standard. (source, source)V comme Venus (00:43:59)La NASA va lancer 2 nouvelles missions vers Venus. (source)W comme Wéménon (00:52:30)Sam, la nouvelle assistante de Samsung fait le buzz. (source) Voir Acast.com/privacy pour les informations sur la vie privée et l'opt-out.
Ce mois de juin débute avec un épisode compilé par David et Xavier qui partage avec vous ce qu'ils ont retenu de l'actualité tech et web de la semaine. Il sera question de la nouvelle assistante de Samsung, d'une mise à jour pour la montre connectée FitBit, d'un nouveau NUC signé Intel, de la NASA qui repart pour Venus. Évidemment on parlera également de la fin de la gratuité de Google Photo et des alternatives possibles. Bonne écoute !A comme Apple (00:02:56)Apple TV Plus sur Android. (source)F comme Fail (00:08:38)Des soldats dévoilent des procédures de sécurité nucléaire. (source)F comme Fitbit (00:16:09)Les montres Fitbit vont pouvoir détecter les ronflements. (source)G comme Google (00:22:38)Google Photos : fin du stockage illimité. (source, source)I comme Intel (00:30:40)Nouveau NUC "Beast Canyon". (source)Q comme QUIC (00:36:48)Le protocole QUIC de Google devient un standard. (source, source)V comme Venus (00:43:59)La NASA va lancer 2 nouvelles missions vers Venus. (source)W comme Wéménon (00:52:30)Sam, la nouvelle assistante de Samsung fait le buzz. (source) Voir Acast.com/privacy pour les informations sur la vie privée et l'opt-out.
On All About Android, Jason Howell, Ron Richards, and Florence Ion talk about the final day of Google Photos free storage, alternative options, and whether its still a good deal to pay for the service. Subscribe and watch the full All About Android podcast: https://twit.tv/aaa527 Hosts: Jason Howell, Ron Richards, and Florence Ion You can find more about TWiT and subscribe to our podcasts at https://podcasts.twit.tv/
On All About Android, Jason Howell, Ron Richards, and Florence Ion talk about the final day of Google Photos free storage, alternative options, and whether its still a good deal to pay for the service. Subscribe and watch the full All About Android podcast: https://twit.tv/aaa527 Hosts: Jason Howell, Ron Richards, and Florence Ion You can find more about TWiT and subscribe to our podcasts at https://podcasts.twit.tv/
Tisdagens avsnitt bjuder på hög spänning - från Xiaomi då. Dessutom har Google Photo börjat kosta pengar idag, YouTube om barnen själv får välja och vi får se den första smarta kameran som kan läsa av handgester. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Tisdagens avsnitt bjuder på hög spänning - från Xiaomi då. Dessutom har Google Photo börjat kosta pengar idag, YouTube om barnen själv får välja och vi får se den första smarta kameran som kan läsa av handgester. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
durée : 00:02:08 - Le guichet des services de France Bleu La Rochelle
New Electric car subsidies up to over $12K!, Tesla turned on driver facing cameras in cars, Microsoft warns of hackers attacking US based companies, Google Photo unlimited free Ends June 1, New system for new student, Win 7 system adobe flash disabled, Amazon Vishing scheme. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
มา Update ข่าวคราววงการ Tech กันครับ ขอบคุณที่ติดตามกันนะคร้าบ คอมเม้นต์ และแชร์เป็นกำลังใจกันได้จ้า
Cette semaine nous avons préparé un petit épisode d'actu d'une heure tout rond ! Parfait pour continuer sa semaine en beauté ! On évoquera en news flash la polémique sur le soft porn chez Twitch, les dernières news du côté de Cupertino avec l'annonce de la date de la Keynote WWDC et les derniers leaks sur les machines M1X. On parlera également du nouveau système d'exploitation de Google déployé pour la première fois sur un appareil grand public. La semaine passée a également été le théâtre d'un nouveau crash de la bulle cryptomonnaie, on reviendra sur les causes et l'avenir de cette économie parallèle. En sujet principal, John nous parlera de la fin de l'abonnement Google Photo qui permettait de stocker en illimité gratuitement toutes ses photos. On cherchera des alternatives payantes ou non, auprès d'autres prestataires ou chez soi. En recommandation, on parlera Jeux Vidéos avec SH qui a testé deux jeux en coop ainsi que film avec John qui recommande la dernière création Netflix par le réalisateur de "Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse" ou encore "Tempette de boulettes géantes". Chapitres : 00:00:00 - Intro 00:02:40 - C'est chaud sur Twitch avec les "Hot Tubs" 00:07:40 - News Apple: iMac, WWDC: Mac mini M1X, MacBook Pro M1X, MacBook Air Coloré ? 00:16:00 - Google lance Fuchsia sur le Nest Hub 00:23:50 - Crypto crash 00:32:00 - La fin de l'illimité gratuit chez Google Photo 00:47:40 - Recommandation - It Takes Two et Unravel 2 00:52:47 - Recommandation - Les Mitchells contre les machines 00:57:00 - Conclusion Vous pouvez une nouvelle fois nous écouter sur Anchor : https://anchor.fm/cpls ! L’enregistrement s’est fait via discord, donc si vous souhaitez participer n’hésitez pas : http://discord.techcast.fr N'hésitez pas à nous faire vos retours grâce au hashtag #CPLS et nous retrouver sur twitter : Johnathan MEUNIER : @J7N__ Charles-Henri DUMALIN : @CallMeSH. Merci également pour tous les partages et les abonnements. Matériels : Micro & pied : https://amzn.to/2Lweire Table de mixage : https://amzn.to/2Al0idg Enregistreur : https://amzn.to/2Lzoori iPad : https://amzn.to/2CTjyzT Bird UM1 : https://amzn.to/2vVAgyV Code Shadow : John : JOHHJWQB SH : CHANEOJH
มา Update ข่าวคราววงการ Tech กันครับ ขอบคุณที่ติดตามกันนะคร้าบ คอมเม้นต์เป็นกำลังใจกันได้จ้า
En el episodio de hoy de JRVstudio hablaremos sobre los Airtag; Google Photo; LG; Facebook y Starlink. Aquí les dejo las notas del show de hoy: Airtags en Australia: https://apple.news/A622o4DxnT3WLe6y47k6L6w LG fuera del mercado de los Smartphones: https://www.pcworld.com/article/3613951/android-loses-a-huge-innovator-as-lg-quits-making-phones.html Google photo y su nueva tecnología del OCR: https://www.pcworld.com/article/3614950/google-photos-lets-pc-users-copy-text-from-an-image.html Have I been pwned: https://www.pcworld.com/article/3614770/another-day-another-data-breach-heres-how-to-see-if-youve-been-exposed.html https://haveibeenpwned.com Starlink: https://apple.news/AyZpSnWC7TrmcTKdDrU0Zjw Recuerda escribirnos a jrvstudiopr@me.com Los episodios también los encuentras disponibles en YouTube en: JRVstudio Nos puedes escuchar en Apple Podcast en el siguiente RSS Feed: https://feed.podbean.com/raphaelvalenzuela/feed.xml Nuestro RSS Feed en Podbean es el siguiente: https://feed.podbean.com/raphaelvalenzuela/feed.xml Nuestra página en Podbean es la siguiente: https://raphaelvalenzuela.podbean.com Gracias!
Dal 1 giugno 2021 Google Photo non sarà più completamente gratuito. Tutte le foto saranno conteggiate nei 15 Gb gratuiti, che una volta esauriti potranno essere incrementati tramite diverse soluzioni di abbonamento. Ho riflettuto molto su questa cosa, e se Facebook, Instagram e tutti gli altri adottassero una politica del genere? Avrebbero incassi da capogiro e meno profili falsi. Ripeto, solo una mia riflessione. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/silpodcast/message
Google photo จะยกเลิกให้บริการ ulmitited พร้อมเก็บตังค์แล้ว ทำไง? มาดูทางเลือกกัน อ่านต่อได้ที่ http://www.happytechblog.com/2020/11/google-photo-ulmitited.html กดติดตาม และฟัง podcast ได้ที่ https://bit.ly/spotify-happytechblog --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/happytechblog/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/happytechblog/support
One more thing from Apple for 2020. This week, the technology giant announced a new lineup of computers, the first with its own chip. The hosts discuss the silicon chip, the MacBook Air, MacBook Pro, and Mac Mini. We also talk about a big change coming to Google Photo and how it might affect you. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
गूगल फोटो सर्विस अब मुफ्त नहीं रही. यदि आपको अपने फोटो और वीडियोज़ सेव करने हैं तो जेब ढीली करनी पड़ेगी लेकिन क्या वजह है कि गूगल को ये फैसला करना पड़ा और गूगल के अलावा आपके पास क्या ऑप्शंस हैं. जानिए पॉडख़ास में टेक एक्सपर्ट अभिषेक तैलंग से जिनसे बात कर रहे हैं नितिन ठाकुर.
All the news on Facebook boycotts, Google Photo changes and Microsoft closures. Plus we chat with Dr Ann Devitt at Trinity’s Learnovate Centre to see how post covid classrooms will look in September.
I can’t believe it, I actually found the secret to happiness; and it’s not what I thought it was going to be. In this episode Russell talks about discovering the secret to happiness in the memories brought about in his family photos. Here are some of the insightful messages you will hear in this episode: Find out why categorizing all his photos made Russell find his happy place. See why Russell believes that happiness is found in the memories brought about by photos rather than in the event taking place in the photos. And see what software Russell is using in order to organize all his photos. So listen here to find out what Russell believes is the secret to happiness, so you can get happy too. ---Transcript--- Hey everybody, this is Russell Brunson. Welcome back to the Marketing Secrets podcast, formerly known as Marketing in Your Car, and because today I’m in my Tesla, we could call it Marketing in Your Tesla, but we can’t because now we changed it to Marketing Secrets, like 2 or 3 years ago. So welcome back to the Marketing Secrets show, today I’m going to teach you guys how to be happy. Alright everybody, so I’ve had a whirlwind last couple of months, I am not going to lie. It’s been fun, it’s been hard in all the things, and now just starting this week, things are starting to get just a little bit lighter. For example, I had for the last 2 months, my kids have had wrestling. So I can’t miss wrestling practice, so every single day I go to work, then I jump off at 3, from 3 til 6 I’m with the kids at wrestling practice, and then I come home and I try to get done the stuff I was supposed done from 3 til 6. So it’s like I’m adding 3 or 4 hours a day to my day, which has been exhausting. Plus we we’re in the middle of a remodel and a bunch of other things, but the remodel is done now, and wrestling ended on Saturday, and then the book final, I have to get the final draft of the last rewrite in next week, so that will be done. Then Funnel Hacking Live is our last big thing, and then that’s done, and then it’s like, I got nothing to do. SO I’m really looking forward to that. But this season has been by far the most insane, busy season of my life. I wish somebody could film it, because I don’t think anybody would actually believe. But it’s been fun. Now what’s interesting, Saturday my boys had their district wrestling tournament, which is the thing they work towards all year long. And it was so awesome. The team, first off, the team took first. I think we’ve won 9 of the last 10 years, and we thumped them this year. I think we set the record for the most points, we got like 500 team points, and the number two team had like 300. So the team did awesome, which is great. And then Dallin won his weight class, which is awesome. He had the returning district champ in the finals, and Dallin wrestled him earlier this year and beat him by one point in a really close match, but obviously as super nerd dad, I went and watched that match a million times, and then worked with Dallin on all the things. And this time Dallin wrestled him and this time Dallin thumped him. Major decision, and beat by 12 to 4, beat him by 8 points which is insane. So that was so much fun. Bowen came in and Bowen did great for himself as well. The very first match he was beating this guy 10 to 1 and then he got thrown and pinned, which was heartbreaking. But then he won his next 3 matches, and he would have gone for 5th and 6th place, but this tournament only placed the top 4. So anyway, he definitely would have made at least the top 6 in the district, and potentially 5th, but he did great and I’m proud of him. It was just fun. And Sunday, the next day was kind of a, you know, the next day where we’re all beat up, the kids are beat up, I’m beat up because I’m on my feet for like 15 hours walking around a gym, you know the stress of everything. So usually the day we’re all kind of just like beat. And Bowen told me, and Bowen is typically my little buddy, he doesn’t like working as hard, he told me afterwards he’s like, “Dad, yesterday was really, really hard, but I want to do it…” What did he say? Something like, “I want to do yesterday again.” I’m like, ‘what do you mean? I thought it was hard?” and he’s like, “It was, but it was so fun.” And I spent my day looking back two years ago and Bowen hated wrestling, and he got pinned every single time, and now he’s like, yesterday was the best day. He wanted to do the whole day again. Just wrestling, hanging out, anyway it was special. So I tell you this because I want to talk about happiness. And one interesting thing, people always say, “Money doesn’t buy happiness. But it does buy a lot of cool stuff.” That’s actually really, really true. But it definitely doesn’t buy happiness. I’ve made more money in my life than ever and there’s a lot of times where I’m not happy. And it’s funny because you think there’s going to be a correlation between those two and there’s not. But in the middle of this chaos I found my happy spot. And it’s not something I would have assumed. Now I want to preface this by saying I am not a scrapbooker, my mom is a hardcore scrapbooker, but I’m not. I’m the most disorganized person I’ve probably ever met. My mom told me that as a kid I was the messiest kid she’s ever had and ever seen. I don’t do good at cleaning things up. If you look at the Disc profile, I have a high D, high I, high S, off the charts on all those things, zero C. No organizational skills whatsoever. So this is like the frame of who I am. And for years I’ve been taking pictures on phones and cameras and just everywhere, and they’re all over the place, and I always had this…one time I tried to upload them all to this service, I can’t remember the name of the service. And I uploaded our entire lives to the service, and the service crashed and we lost every picture for the most part. Devastating. So for years I’ve had just boxes of old phones and flip cameras and negatives and pictures and all sorts of, just all over the place. And never anything to do with it. And recently I found out about this little app on your phone and on your computer called Google photos. And I needed it because my phone got, I hate iCloud, I don’t know why, I think iCloud is the devil. So my phone was completely maxed out. I was like, ‘I gotta figure out something.” And I don’t know how I came up with it or found it or someone told me, I don’t even remember. But I downloaded Google photos, Google Photos took all the pictures and videos off my phone and threw them online and cleared them off my phone, my phone had all this space, and then the Google photos app, they’re all in t here. And then what’s crazy about it, you can go on inside of Google or whatever online, and you can see all the pictures, you can see them on your phone, you can make albums. So I’ve been geeking out making albums. The search is insane. Like, you go and you’ll be like, and it’ll show faces and it’s like, “Do you want to find this person?” And you can name them so that in the future they know this is Collette, and this is Aiden, and this is Bowen and Dallin, you know whatever. And you click on it and it goes and finds every picture in your database that that person is hooked to. Every picture, every video. And it’s insane. The person can be in a picture in the background of a picture, and it still scans the face, finds it, and brings that picture back up. The search thing is insane. Or I’ll type in ‘wrestling’ and it will show up every single picture in a wrestling room, or wresting, or singlets, or headgear. I don’t know how it does it but it is the best searching thing ever. So as soon as I did that on my one phone I was like, “Oh my gosh, this is amazing.” So what I did next, I went and found all my old phones and I went and installed the Google photos app on all of them, and had, because I’ve been saving these phones for years, some of them are like the original iPhones, “There are like 3 pictures on here that I don’t want to lose someday.” So on all the ones I was able to, I went and installed Google photos and sucked all the pictures off all those phones into my thing. And what’s crazy, it sucks them in there and it categorizes them based on date when they were taken. So I did that on Google phones, I went to my old Flip cameras, I had my brother rip all those and put them in a thing. Then I went and found my old pictures from my mission and from high school and from college, and from when Collette and I first got married, I found our old wedding pictures, I started going to photographers in the past that took our pictures and I started paying them off to buy the negatives and buy the original digital pictures. Every scrap of everything in my house I’m getting digitized and throwing it in Google photos. I found every one of my high school wrestling matches, my college wrestling matches, both at BYU and at Boise State. I found every single time my kids wrestled growing up. Everything I’ve ever gotten now is on my Google Photo apps. And then Google Photos sorts them and synchronizes them, figures them out, and then I can make albums. So what I do now is I create an album for wrestling 2000, what year are we, 2019. I threw every picture, every video, everything in this thing, and now that I have this album, I’m consciously when I’m with my kids and they’re warming up, I grab my phone and get pictures of them warming up. At warm up matches I get pictures, I get pictures of them hanging out with their friends. I’m like that creepy stalker dad that’s taking pictures of all these things. But as soon as I do, I have them all synced to that album, so every single picture I take at wrestling, it’s all synched to the wrestling 2017 album. And then I found wrestling from 2016, 15, 14 and so I have these albums from all the wrestling, and I have albums for my wife and I, I have albums for my kids, albums for all our family trips, albums for when we went to the sand dunes. And we’re making these albums and organizing stuff, and it’s been so amazing. So now if you go to the Google, there’s like a feed that shows you all your pictures and you can scroll through and everything is categorized by year, so you can scroll all the way back like 15 years now of pictures that are all categorized, have been scanned, you know Google has done their algorithm so you can find anything you want. And it’s all there. And I’m having so much fun every free second going and getting pictures. And I share this with you because I heard someone say this the other day, and I don’t know if it’s true, I don’t know what the percentages are, I’m sure I’m going to mess up the stats, but when they said it, it rang true to me. They said, “Typically happiness in life does not come from the experience. Happiness comes from the memory of the experience.” So a good example of this is after Funnel Hacking Live 2 years ago, we flew the kids out and went to Disney World because we were in Orlando right, took the kids to Disney World. And if I remember right, it was the middle of Spring Break, it was a nightmare. There were a billion people there, the kids were sick. We had kids puking at Disney Land, we had like, it was horrible. But looking back now I have an album that says this is Disney Land 2017 or whatever with my kids, and I look at the pictures and all I remember is getting off the Hogwarts ride and drinking Butter Beer and getting soaked with the kids, and the pictures in the hotel, and we got pictures in the like….all I see is these pictures of the memories, and like, man, that was an amazing trip. But if I remember the actual trip, it was, I don’t know if it was that good. Same thing, we found the Disney Cruise pictures from 2 years ago, the pictures are so stinking cute, and I’m looking at it with Collette, and we looked at this one picture and there’s Norah and she’s in a bath towel and she’s got little pig tails and the biggest smile on her face, and I’m like, ‘This is the cutest picture ever. You remember that, it was so much fun.” And she’s like, “Do you not remember when we took that picture?” I’m like, “No, when?” She’s like, ”It was 3:00 in the morning, it was the 3rd time that night she had puked in our bed and we’d called the stewardesses or whatever they’re called to come and clean up our entire room up. And that was after they’d cleaned it up and we had Norah wrapped up on the bed and she started giggling, and we took a picture of her giggling.” And I was like, “Oh my gosh, I forgot. That was a horrible night.” But the picture brought so much happiness to me. And I think that so many times we’re on this journey, we’re having fun on the journey, we get to the destination, we get the destination and it’s not what we actually think it is. It’s not as good as we want. And then years later we remember back and we’re like, “Oh the good old days, back when I was in high school, back when I was…” we remember the memories of what brings us happiness. And for me now, I have every picture that’s ever been taken of my kids. I literally going to my friends, “Have you ever taken a picture of my kids? Give it to me, I need it right now. Sync it to my phone. Air drop it, let’s go.” I’m just kind of, yes, I’m that dad. But now that on my phone with my kids, it’s funny because Aiden will be down, so I’ll pull my phone out and be like, “Hey, check this out buddy.” And I’ll go and click on the picture of his face, and it goes and it pulls every picture, every video, everything with his face. Even when he was an infant, I don’t know how it syncs it. Here’s pictures of him right out of the womb and today. And they can tell by facial structure that it’s still Aiden. So we’ll sit there and watch videos of him from 10 years ago, and it makes us both happy. And with Dallin and Bowen it’s the same thing. I have these things where I can sit down on my phone and I can pull up the memory and instantly it’s like, just instant happiness happens. So my big secret for being happy is realizing that like a lot of times in the moment, the thing you’re doing sucks, but the memory of that moment is where the actual happiness is, which is fascinating to me. So for me that’s made me, especially now that I have Google photos and its synced to my phone it makes me very, very conscious now of every single situation, taking pictures of it, even if it sucks because I want the memory. In a year from now I want this memory because that memory is going to make me happy. I might not be happy in the moment, because this pain sucks right now, but in a year from now the memory of this moment is going to bring my happiness. So I’m taking pictures of all these things and every night I go into my Google photos, I see the stream and then I go and categorize and throw the things into albums or whatever. And it’s brought me so much joy and happiness.. So I wanted to share with you guys because I think a lot of times we’re running and running and in these moments and we’re tired and we’re, you know, we’re miserable and all these things. But it’s understanding that happiness doesn’t come in the moment, happiness comes in the memory of the moment. So make sure you’re capturing the memories. Pull your phone out, I think the greatest, as much as the negative things about phones and iPhones, I think the greatest gift we have is the fact that we can capture so many memories. You know, back in the day, I used to buy a roll of 24 film, and I got 24 pictures and I’d make those puppies last because after it was done I had to go take them and pay for it to get developed and all these things. And I’d like, “Is this picture really that important?” And you take it and you don’t even know for 3 months until you get it developed that the pictures not good. And now all these things were announced and I can take as many pictures as I want, as many videos as I want. I have all these things and now I have the ability to store those with Google photos and categorize and find them again. It’s just, anyway, it’s my new happy place. So for someone who’s not a scrapbooker, who’s not organized, who has no skill set of organization of anything, organizing all my pictures into Google photos has made me happier than almost anything I can think of. It’s bringing all the memories back to the top, and it’s been my happy place as I get stressed out. I’m like, I’m going to go to Google photos, or I’m going to go find, search my old hard drives and try to find some picture I can add to the hard drive. I literally have, right now I’m waiting, I’m sure driving Melanie, my assistant, crazy because I have all of the, all my high school and mission and first year of marriage photo albums I gave to her, she’s got some local company she found scanning them all. I found Collette’s bridal pictures. When we got married she got bridal pictures done, but she could only afford at the time to get one printed. So it’s printed and it’s on her mom’s wall. And I’d never seen them before other than the one that’s on her mom’s wall, and I don’t have a copy of it. And we went back to the photographer and he went and found the negatives and sold them to me for a couple hundred bucks. So I’m getting all of her bridal, and I’ve never seen most of the pictures. They took 100 pictures, but they only printed one. So we’re getting all these pictures of my wife in her bridal dress, turned into real pictures that I’m going to have on my phone now. How insane is that? I’m sure that was a night mare when she got those pictures done. But the memory of that now is something that I am anxiously looking for. So my poor assistant’s waiting. Everyday I’m like, ‘are the pictures back yet? Are they back yet? What’s going on?” and she’s like, “Don’t you need to be writing your book?” and I’m like, “yes, but that’s not my happy spot. My happy spot is these pictures. I need them on my phone categorized in Google photos in an album so I can be happy.” So there you go, I hope that for some of you guys this brings you to happiness. I would recommend during Christmas vacation or break, spend some time setting up your Google photos account, start syncing all your pictures from your phone, then go back to your old phones and start doing it and you’ll be amazed what you find, you’ll be amazed how you feel, and you’ll be amazed at the happiness that hides inside of these pictures that are sitting around doing nothing. Alright, that’s all I have. Thanks for today, thanks for everything, appreciate you all, and we’ll talk to you soon. Bye everybody.
Géopolitique : Apple reconnaît la Crimée comme russe (en tout cas en Russie) et Intel se tourne vers Taiwan pour la 5G. Nous aborderons aussi la lutte contre l'agence de propagande en ligne de l’État islamique, mais aussi les mesures prises par la Chine à l'encontre des Ouïghours. Nous parlons également de scandales dans le e-commerce, de la semaine difficile pour Amazon, des polémiques autour du Cybertruck de Tesla, et un suivi du Black Friday ! À chaud La COP25 démarre et la COP21 patine, malgré les promesses.Strandhogg : attention aux apps imposteurs sur Android. Tech et géopolitique Apple reconnaît la Crimée comme russe en Russie.5G : Intel se tourne vers Taiwan et charge Qualcomm.Aversion au RISC : le CPU open source déménage en suisse. Terrorisme et mesures préventives Europol attaque l’Amaq.TikTok empêche de dire du mal des Ouïghours en Chine.Minority Deport : les chinois testent les arrestations algorithmiques massives.Inquiète, la Chine interdit les deepfakes dans son “espace cybernétique”.Alisem à tout vent : le scan facial obligatoire à la souscription. Scandales & Shopping Plutôt scandales… ou bien ?Zalando : la sagesse de la Chine millénaire techno dystopique.Oracle fait ce qu’il veut de ses employés et vous ----- à la ----.SIMposible : la eSim encore moins pratique que la SIM ?Les (bientôt space) entrepôts d’Amazon sont un peu trop dangereux.Cybertruck vs Ford F-150, on refait le match ? Dubai et Mexico achètent !Plutôt shopping… à moins que ?Pour sa campagne, Bloomberg achète l’écologie.Google Shopping : abus de position dominante ?Un Black Friday record qui divise...Codemaster rachète Slightly Mad et Facebook rachète Beat. En vrac Étude Médiamétrie YouTubeFacebook perd des abonnés pour la première fois en France.Données portatives : transférez vos photos de Facebook à Google Photo.Twitter remet son ménage de printemps au… printemps ?Le droit à l’oubli : un plus gros problème que vous ne le pensez.Le gouvernement n’a toujours pas d’avis sur les machines à voter…… mais s’est fait un avis sur les machines à débloquer les smartphones. Bonus GPP : Rick et Morty Saison 4, 10 épisodes de bonheur et une looooongue pause.Guillaume : Nextcloud Participants : Guillaume PoggiaspallaPrésenté par Guillaume Vendé Image : BBC
จะดีแค่ไหนที่ภาพที่คุณหวงแหน ถูกเก็บอย่างปลอดภัย พร้อมทั้งถูกเพิ่มมูลค่าด้วยเครื่องมือระดับมือโปรสไตล์ Google ในรูปแบบกึ่ง autometic
In this LIVE (from the MACUL conference in Detroit, MI) we talk about Flipgrid shorts and camera & AR, a tool to copy FOLDERS (!!) in Drive, and a couple of cool Drive tricks. Audience members share Google Photo scan, Autodraw in Book creator, Planbook, Powtoon, and a multiplication table trick.
听众朋友你好,欢迎收听浏览加广中文台的周末网络广播节目。在今天的节目时间里,我们为您选播一个星期以来的几篇报道。 欢迎网友和听友们发表评论和看法。我们的电子信箱是:China@rcinet.ca 我们的新浪微博是:“加拿大国际广播-中文”; 我们的网站是: www.rcinet.ca. 每周五北美东部时间上午9点半,我们会有脸书直播(Facebook Live)。我们的Facebook: 加拿大国际广播 – 加拿大国家中文频道。 您还可以在安卓商店和苹果商店免费下载加广出品的加拿大新闻移动APP。 收听CH_Report_1-20190426-WRC10 本周报道精选 国税局注销某客户1.33亿元税债 (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press) 4月30日是加拿大人填报所得税税表的截止期限,不少加拿大人看到自己已被扣掉的所得税和还要缴纳的所得税感到心痛;而加拿大广播公司在复活节假日发表的一篇报道让这些加拿大人更加感到郁闷。根据这篇报道,加拿大国税局在2018年上半年,大笔一挥注销了一个税务客户应该缴纳的1.33亿加元的税收债务。虽然不知道获得这一注销税收债务优待的是个人还是公司,但被注销的税属于生产商要为其产品支付的消费税。 -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- 工作时间灵活不仅为员工提供方便,也有助于企业发展 (Getty Images / skynesher) 为了留住女性,吸引千禧一代,方便临近退休的员工,一些加拿大经济学家和人力资源专家建议公司企业提供更灵活的工作时间和工作方式。例如半日工,避开拥堵高峰和方便接送孩子的上下班时间,在家工作或短期合同等等。 -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- Google,给我讲个故事!谷歌智能助理现在可以在你的手机上讲故事 Photo by Nong Vang on Unsplash 在过去的一年里,你开始可以让Google Home设备上的Google智能助理给你的孩子读一个故事。今天,正好是美国的国家讲故事日,谷歌也将这项功能引入安卓和iOS手机。它将在美国、英国、加拿大、澳大利亚和印度提供英语版本。 -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- 加拿大病人法庭告医生不易,告赢更难 Jim Wiseman接受手术时医生把一块海绵留在他体内。 ( Craig Chivers /CBC) 加拿大广播公司报道说,如果加拿大医生治病时误诊或者是出了医疗事故,患者把医生告上法庭索赔不但费时费力,而且很难打赢官司。加拿大广播公司对加拿大医疗保护协会过去四十年年报进行的分析显示,虽然加拿大行医医生的数量在增加,但上法庭状告医生的案例数量却在下降,赢得状告医生法庭案例的数量也在下降。 -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- 加拿大新民主党领袖辛格出版回忆录 (CP/Adrian Wyld) 星期二(4月23日),加拿大新民主党领袖辛格的回忆录《爱与勇气》正式发行。辛格在书中坦率讲述了他在青少年时代经历的艰辛,包括年幼时曾被一个跆拳道教练性侵。辛格说,他把这本书的出版看作一个让加拿大人了解他的过去的唯一机会。 一周图片报道 window.jQuery || document.write('
Jeff Rohrs is the CMO of Yext and Author of Audience: Marketing in the age of subscribers, fans and followers, and The Everywhere Brand ebook. He’s also a former VP at Salesforce and ExactTarget. In this episode, Brian Ardinger and Jeff talk about managing content and brands across the web and how hard it is to put perfect information into consumer’s hands everywhere. Yext uses a digital knowledge management (dkm) platform to automate this process. With consumer behavior changing, 73% of a business’s traffic is now taking place off their website. The smallest content is becoming the most important, such as updating store hours and phone numbers. Companies need to update all the customer endpoints that matter, which is different from SEO. Jeff's book, The Everywhere Brand, with co-author Jay Baer (also the author of Talk Triggers), discusses how brands are going to have to be everywhere. The challenge is how they will control their appearance around the web. You can download The Everywhere Brand ebook or watch a YouTube video on The Everywhere Brand with Jay Baer and Jeff Rohrs (31 min) As for future trends, Jeff is watching the use of voice. Voice refers to voice commands or voice as discovery. AI is also growing, such as in visual search with Google Lens and Google Photo. More than 85% of Americans are using AI in services like Uber and Google. Jeff believes you can’t control UI and AI, but you can manage the info it has about your company. Additional knowledge resources include Smart Brief and EMarketer. To find out more about Yext, see yext.com or connect with Jeff on Twitter at @jkrohrs If you liked this podcast, you might also enjoy our interview with Patrick Campbell with ProfitWell on Growth, Pricing and SaaS or Justin Mares, Co-Author of Traction GET THE LATEST RESOURCES Get the latest episodes of the Inside Outside Innovation podcast, in addition to thought leadership in the form of blogs, innovation resources, videos, and invitations to exclusive events. SUBSCRIBE HERE For information regarding your data privacy, visit acast.com/privacy
Jeff Rohrs is the CMO of Yext and Author of Audience: Marketing in the age of subscribers, fans and followers, and The Everywhere Brand ebook. He’s also a former VP at Salesforce and ExactTarget. In this episode, Brian Ardinger and Jeff talk about managing content and brands across the web and how hard it is to put perfect information into consumer’s hands everywhere. Yext uses a digital knowledge management (dkm) platform to automate this process. With consumer behavior changing, 73% of a business’s traffic is now taking place off their website. The smallest content is becoming the most important, such as updating store hours and phone numbers. Companies need to update all the customer endpoints that matter, which is different from SEO. Jeff's book, The Everywhere Brand, with co-author Jay Baer (also the author of Talk Triggers), discusses how brands are going to have to be everywhere. The challenge is how they will control their appearance around the web. You can download The Everywhere Brand ebook or watch a YouTube video on The Everywhere Brand with Jay Baer and Jeff Rohrs (31 min) As for future trends, Jeff is watching the use of voice. Voice refers to voice commands or voice as discovery. AI is also growing, such as in visual search with Google Lens and Google Photo. More than 85% of Americans are using AI in services like Uber and Google. Jeff believes you can’t control UI and AI, but you can manage the info it has about your company. Additional knowledge resources include Smart Brief and EMarketer. To find out more about Yext, see yext.com or connect with Jeff on Twitter at @jkrohrs If you liked this podcast, you might also enjoy our interview with Patrick Campbell with ProfitWell on Growth, Pricing and SaaS or Justin Mares, Co-Author of Traction GET THE LATEST RESOURCES Get the latest episodes of the Inside Outside Innovation podcast, in addition to thought leadership in the form of blogs, innovation resources, videos, and invitations to exclusive events. SUBSCRIBE HERE For information regarding your data privacy, visit acast.com/privacy
Hvordan lager man en algoritme som kan erstatte en redaktør i en avis? Og hvordan kan Google Photo gjenkjenne barnet ditt bedre enn deg selv? I denne episoden av #LØRN møter du journalist i Aftenposten, Per Kristian Bjørkeng.I episode #58 snakker Anne Worsøe med Bjørkeng om hva som er greia med AI, hvordan de har utviklet deres egen redaktør-algoritme og interessante AI-eksempler fra Japan og Kina.Dette lørner du: AIEksempler på bruk av AIBli med og #Lørn du også— abonner på podkasten vår!Følg oss gjerne i sosiale medier
Business center computers (beware of malware), organizing digital photos (Google Photo vs ACDSee Photo Studio), digitizing and saving VHS tapes, Profiles in IT (Eric Fossum, inventor of CMOS image sensor), CMOS and CCD sensors explained, Apple Watch Series 4 (should you upgrade), Word of the Week (Doxing), Idea of the Week (teaching coding like a foreign language), iPhone battery replacement (sale ends this year), and Facebook security breach revealed (worse that we thought). This show originally aired on Saturday, October 6, 2018, at 9:00 AM EST on WFED (1500 AM).
Business center computers (beware of malware), organizing digital photos (Google Photo vs ACDSee Photo Studio), digitizing and saving VHS tapes, Profiles in IT (Eric Fossum, inventor of CMOS image sensor), CMOS and CCD sensors explained, Apple Watch Series 4 (should you upgrade), Word of the Week (Doxing), Idea of the Week (teaching coding like a foreign language), iPhone battery replacement (sale ends this year), and Facebook security breach revealed (worse that we thought). This show originally aired on Saturday, October 6, 2018, at 9:00 AM EST on WFED (1500 AM).
EU Copyright, Google Photo API & Inbox, PS Core 6.1 and TechSnips on this weeks Bit v. Byte! If you would like to support me via Anchor Listener Support, go to anchor.fm/bit-v-byte. Thank you! Links & Resources - EU Approves Copyright Directive - https://www.theverge.com/2018/9/12/17849868/eu-internet-copyright-reform-article-11-13-approved - Google Photo API - https://developers.google.com/photos/ - Google Inbox Shutting Down - https://www.blog.google/products/gmail/inbox-signing-find-your-favorite-features-new-gmail/ - Paint.Net 4.1 - https://blog.getpaint.net/2018/09/05/paint-net-4-1-is-now-available/ - TOR Browser 8.0 - https://blog.torproject.org/new-release-tor-browser-80 - CloudFlare Workers Cache API Beta - https://blog.cloudflare.com/cache-api-for-cloudflare-workers-is-now-in-beta/ - Powershell Core 6.1 - https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/powershell/2018/09/13/announcing-powershell-core-6-1/ - Complete Guide to CSS Scroll Snap - https://newinweb.com/2018/09/06/css-scroll-snap --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/bit-v-byte/support
Muchos no saben que son los datos EXIF, en este capítulo trato de dar luz sobre este tema además de que apps podemos utilizar para borrarlos, editarlos, etc.SI que borran metadatos:* Facebook, Twitter, VK, Instagram, Ebay, Craigslist y WhatsappNO borran metadatos* Google+, Flickr, Google Photo y Tumblr En la web del podcast tenéis el enlace a las apps que os comento en el capítulo:https://carmelosena.com/controlparental/datos-exif/Si os ha gustado, os animo a que me escribáis valoraciones positivas en Apple Podcast, Ivoox o Spreaker, y que os suscribáis, porque así haréis más visible el podcast y más gente podrá conocerlo.Espero vuestros comentarios en https://carmelosena.com/controlparental/ donde también encontraréis otras formas de contactar conmigo.Si quieres apoyar este podcast puedes usar el link de afiliados de amazon:https://carmelosena.com/amazon/
Got a mole on your arm? Soon, an app will soon be able to screen it for cancer. That salad you ate yesterday may have been screened by a LettuceBot, an AI mounted on tractors that checks whether individual plants need water. And if you live in In Singapore or Pittsburgh, you might already be cruising around in a self-driving cab. Amazing things are happening to the way we live, eat, and get around. Thanks to robots. But robots are programmed by humans. And those people carry implicit biases, as we all do. And those biases get encoded into the AI. Which can get really ugly, really fast. Like when Google Photo tagged Jacky Alciné’s photos of him and his friend as gorillas a few years ago. This week, we look back at what he found, how the company responded, and the bigger problem behind this one landmark incident. Plus, an update on what Jacky's doing now. Manoush and Jacky Alciné take a Note to Self(ie). (Manoush Zomorodi/Note to Self) Support Note to Self by becoming a member today at NotetoSelfRadio.org/donate.
Got a mole on your arm? Soon, an app will soon be able to screen it for cancer. That salad you ate yesterday may have been screened by a LettuceBot, an AI mounted on tractors that checks whether individual plants need water. And if you live in In Singapore or Pittsburgh, you might already be cruising around in a self-driving cab. Amazing things are happening to the way we live, eat, and get around. Thanks to robots. But robots are programmed by humans. And those people carry implicit biases, as we all do. And those biases get encoded into the AI. Which can get really ugly, really fast. Like when Google Photo tagged Jacky Alciné’s photos of him and his friend as gorillas a few years ago. This week, we look back at what he found, how the company responded, and the bigger problem behind this one landmark incident. Plus, an update on what Jacky's doing now. Manoush and Jacky Alciné take a Note to Self(ie). (Manoush Zomorodi/Note to Self) Support Note to Self by becoming a member today at NotetoSelfRadio.org/donate.
Got a mole on your arm? Soon, an app will soon be able to screen it for cancer. That salad you ate yesterday may have been screened by a LettuceBot, an AI mounted on tractors that checks whether individual plants need water. And if you live in In Singapore or Pittsburgh, you might already be cruising around in a self-driving cab. Amazing things are happening to the way we live, eat, and get around. Thanks to robots. But robots are programmed by humans. And those people carry implicit biases, as we all do. And those biases get encoded into the AI. Which can get really ugly, really fast. Like when Google Photo tagged Jacky Alciné’s photos of him and his friend as gorillas a few years ago. This week, we look back at what he found, how the company responded, and the bigger problem behind this one landmark incident. Plus, an update on what Jacky's doing now. Manoush and Jacky Alciné take a Note to Self(ie). (Manoush Zomorodi/Note to Self) Support Note to Self by becoming a member today at NotetoSelfRadio.org/donate.
Got a mole on your arm? Soon, an app will soon be able to screen it for cancer. That salad you ate yesterday may have been screened by a LettuceBot, an AI mounted on tractors that checks whether individual plants need water. And if you live in In Singapore or Pittsburgh, you might already be cruising around in a self-driving cab. Amazing things are happening to the way we live, eat, and get around. Thanks to robots. But robots are programmed by humans. And those people carry implicit biases, as we all do. And those biases get encoded into the AI. Which can get really ugly, really fast. Like when Google Photo tagged Jacky Alciné’s photos of him and his friend as gorillas a few years ago. This week, we look back at what he found, how the company responded, and the bigger problem behind this one landmark incident. Plus, an update on what Jacky's doing now. Manoush and Jacky Alciné take a Note to Self(ie). (Manoush Zomorodi/Note to Self) Support Note to Self by becoming a member today at NotetoSelfRadio.org/donate.
Got a mole on your arm? Soon, an app will soon be able to screen it for cancer. That salad you ate yesterday may have been screened by a LettuceBot, an AI mounted on tractors that checks whether individual plants need water. And if you live in In Singapore or Pittsburgh, you might already be cruising around in a self-driving cab. Amazing things are happening to the way we live, eat, and get around. Thanks to robots. But robots are programmed by humans. And those people carry implicit biases, as we all do. And those biases get encoded into the AI. Which can get really ugly, really fast. Like when Google Photo tagged Jacky Alciné’s photos of him and his friend as gorillas a few years ago. This week, we look back at what he found, how the company responded, and the bigger problem behind this one landmark incident. Plus, an update on what Jacky's doing now. Manoush and Jacky Alciné take a Note to Self(ie). (Manoush Zomorodi/Note to Self) Support Note to Self by becoming a member today at NotetoSelfRadio.org/donate.
Thank you for tuning in to Episode 110 of the Down Cellar Studio Podcast. This week's segments included: Off the Needles On the Needles Brainstorming From the Armchair Knitting in Passing KAL News Events Contest, News & Notes Life in Focus On a Happy Note Quote of the Week Off the Needles Frankensock #4 Yarn: Various Scraps Needles: US 1.5 (2.5 mm) Pattern: OMG Heel by Megan Williams Video Tutorial for Cate's Clasp Weft Join for Knitting available on my YouTube channel. Cate will be releasing a PDF soon. Check back here for a link. Check out Cate's other brilliant works at Infinite Twist This join is meant for non-super wash yarn. It has held up well in super wash socks, maybe because they are knit tightly. You may want to swatch if using a more slippery yarn, especially at a looser gauge. I also started Frankensock #5 Meghan's Birthday Socks Yarn: Bergere de France Goomy 50 in the Imprim Khaki Colorway Needles: US 1 (2.25 mm) Pattern: OMG Heel by Megan Williams Dan’s New Year’s Socks Yarn: KFI Luxury Collection (MCN)- Color 604, browns, light green and a teal Needles: US 2 (2.75mm) Pattern: OMG heel 52 stitches Stanley the Giraffe Pattern: Stanley the Giraffe by Little Muggles ($5 through Craftsy) Yarn: Vanna’s Choice Hook: F 3.75mm Orange Ninja + Brown Ninja Pattern: my own notes Yarn: Cascade 220 super wash Hook: C 2.75 mm Pink Ninja Pattern: my own notes Yarn: Knit Picks Brava Worsted- magenta Hook: D 3.25 mm On the Needles Kris' 2017 Birthday Socks Yarn: Mint Rain Twist Sock- Self Striping in the After the Storm Colorway Needles: US 1.5 (2.5 mm) Pattern: OMG Heel by Megan Williams Fluffy Sheep Pattern: Chinese New Year Sheep/Lamb by Stephanie Jessica Lau Yarn: Bernat Pipsqueak (fluffy yarn) + worsted weight acrylic yarn Brainstorming Idea from TwinSet Jan re: options for Color Collusion shawl. I need to start Christmas stockings for this year. Eme wants partners for her bunnies sheep and elephant. She recommended I start with baby bunnies in fun colors! Can do. From the Armchair Check out this cool documentary: REUSE! Because You Can't Recycle the Planet- Documentary Knitting in Passing My niece Emelyn (almost 13 years old) wants to finish the cowl she cast on last year after the RI Fiber Fest. Riley wanted to knit on socks at a fundraiser we were at last week, so she, Megg and I all knit together for a few minutes. KAL News 12 Months to Christmas KAL Click here to find about more about this KAL. Check out: Chat Thread & FO Thread Finish 1 project during each/all of the 12 months of 2017 that you plan to gift for the 2017 holidays. Post 1 item (max) per month of the year. Prizes will be drawn randomly throughout the year from all posts in the FO thread. First Quarter Prizes: Project Bag of Winner's Choice from She is Sew Whimsical on Etsy Slip and Swirl Sock pattern by Kristi Barnwell WIP’ing 2017 in the Butt Declare a WIP from 2016 or earlier within the first 5 days of the month, posting a photo of it in the thread. Finish the project by the end of the month, update your post with your FO photo and you'll be eligible to win a Ravelry downloadable pattern of your choosing up to $8. Additional prize for March— Fibernymph Dye Works resist-dyed sock blank – either with sparkle or without – custom dyed in the winners choice of colors. Events Where are Jen & Lisa?: check out the thread in our Ravelry Group Fiber Marketplace: April 8 (Maine) Connecticut Sheep and Wool: April 29, 2017 Stitches United: April 27-30, 2017 Gore Place Shearing Festival: April 29, 2017 Maryland Sheep & Wool: May 6 & 7, 2017 NH Sheep and Wool: May 13 & 14, 2017 RI Fiber Festival: May 20, 2017 Massachusetts Sheep and Wool: May 27 & 28, 2017 Adirondack Wool and Arts Festival: September 23 & 24 VT Sheep and Wool: September 30 & October 1, 2017 Life in Focus Happiness Project 2017 March Happiness Project- Automation I've made some progress Set up my credit card to auto pay each month. Set up my phone and Dan’s phone to auto upload our photos to Dropbox. I am still looking for better photo management solution to replace iPhoto. Have any tips for me? I've backed up my photos to Google Photos I am working on a new habit of deleting photos off my phone each night before bed. I purchased an eye-fi SD card from Amazon. This will send my camera photos onto my phone so I can edit, upload, share with others, put right into Project life app on my phone. I love it! It was easy to set and it is easy to use. Contests, News and Notes Fuller Craft Museum- Revolution in the Making: The Pussyhat Project (opens 1/21/18): article link The Fuller Craft Museum is calling for submissions to come with a written description of the story behind the hats, which are often made as an act of meditation. Contributors are also asked to first send a photograph of their pussy hat to the Fuller Craft Museum before submitting, to make sure there is no overlap in design with other hats already received by the museum. Patterns I'm excited about Slip and Swirl Socks by Kristi Barnwell of the In a Sknit podcast Susan B Anderson's Butterfly & Cocoon pattern available for individual sale on Ravelry Life in Focus Happiness Project 2017 March Happiness Project- Automation Struggling a little more with this one but I have made some progress. Only have 1 credit card. Set it to auto pay each month. Set up my phone and Dan’s phone to auto upload our photos to Dropbox. I store all of our photos and its easier and takes less time this way than having to take Dan’s phone and plug it into my computer. Still looking for better photo management solution. If others have tips. Have all Macs. iPhoto. Slow. crashes. Not ideal. I have lightroom from disc, not creative cloud. may move to one of those options but need to decide. In the meantime, at least our photos are safe and backed up. Also backing up ALL my photos phone and computer to Google Photo which I mentioned in this segment last month. Trying out new habit of deleting photos off my phone each night before bed. Strategy of pairing- write in journal and delete bad photos before bed Bought an Eye fi card from Amazon. Puts camera photos onto my phone so i can edit, upload, share with others, put right into Project life app on my phone. Really easy to use. Connect to the wifi network when it comes up. open app on my phone and photos download into the app. Download onto my phone's photo app only if I choose, which is nice! Easy to use. Glad I have it. Still may not always use it, but I enjoy having that option. On A Happy Note Spring shopping. Not totally happy about the shopping process but happy to have a few things that fit well. Trying new recipes (I don’t enjoy the process, but the result make me happy) New to me things: cooking lentils and trying chipotle sauce (to replicate bowl from B Good). Scrapbooking, documenting important memories, ordering photos from Persnickety Prints Hanging out with our friends daughters- Carina and Ella Dinner and movie for my friend Megg's birthday! Family fun at a local fundraiser. Emelyn asking to go on a birthday date with Dan (and him saying yes, but they need to go out for a fancy dinner!) Quote of the Week "Two things define you. Your patience when you have nothing, and your attitude when you have everything." -Unknown
0:45 - Introducing Carina C. Zona Website Personal Twitter Callback Women We So Crafty 2:10 - Coding consequences RubyConf 2015 Keynote: “Consequences of an Insightful Algorithm” Slides Code Newbies discussion 6:00 - Examples of consequences Flickr Deep Learning Google Photo 10:50 - Data quality theories 14:05 - Preventable Mistakes and Algorithmic Transparency 17:30 - Predictive Policing and Biased Data “The Reality of Crime-Fighting Algorithms” “Machine Bias” 22:07 - Coder Responsibility Mechanical Turk Google Crowdsource App “Social Network Nextdoor Moves To Block Racial Profiling Online” “raceAhead: How Nextdoor Reduced Racist Postings Using Empathy” 31:35 - Algorithm triggers Eric Meyer: “Inadvertent Algorithmic Cruelty” 37:20 - Fixing a mistake 40:15 - Trusting humans versus trusting machines Facebook Trending Topics Article on leaked documents Former contractor’s experience Trending topic mistakes 44:30 - Considering social consequences 47:30 - Confronting the uncomfortable 50:30 - Fitbit Example “How Data From Wearable Tech Can Be Used Against You In A Court Of Law” “This chicken breast has a surprisingly healthy heart rate, considering it’s dead” OSFeels 2016 Talk by Emily Gorcenski with chicken example Picks: 99 Bottles by Sandi Metz (David) Vivaldi Browser (Saron) Magnetic Sticky Notes (Saron) Oregon Shakespeare Festival (Sam) Ruby Remote Conf Recordings (Charles) Rails Remote Conf (Charles) Webinars (Charles) Books by Howard Zinn (Corina) On Food and Cooking by Harold McGee
0:45 - Introducing Carina C. Zona Website Personal Twitter Callback Women We So Crafty 2:10 - Coding consequences RubyConf 2015 Keynote: “Consequences of an Insightful Algorithm” Slides Code Newbies discussion 6:00 - Examples of consequences Flickr Deep Learning Google Photo 10:50 - Data quality theories 14:05 - Preventable Mistakes and Algorithmic Transparency 17:30 - Predictive Policing and Biased Data “The Reality of Crime-Fighting Algorithms” “Machine Bias” 22:07 - Coder Responsibility Mechanical Turk Google Crowdsource App “Social Network Nextdoor Moves To Block Racial Profiling Online” “raceAhead: How Nextdoor Reduced Racist Postings Using Empathy” 31:35 - Algorithm triggers Eric Meyer: “Inadvertent Algorithmic Cruelty” 37:20 - Fixing a mistake 40:15 - Trusting humans versus trusting machines Facebook Trending Topics Article on leaked documents Former contractor’s experience Trending topic mistakes 44:30 - Considering social consequences 47:30 - Confronting the uncomfortable 50:30 - Fitbit Example “How Data From Wearable Tech Can Be Used Against You In A Court Of Law” “This chicken breast has a surprisingly healthy heart rate, considering it’s dead” OSFeels 2016 Talk by Emily Gorcenski with chicken example Picks: 99 Bottles by Sandi Metz (David) Vivaldi Browser (Saron) Magnetic Sticky Notes (Saron) Oregon Shakespeare Festival (Sam) Ruby Remote Conf Recordings (Charles) Rails Remote Conf (Charles) Webinars (Charles) Books by Howard Zinn (Corina) On Food and Cooking by Harold McGee
0:45 - Introducing Carina C. Zona Website Personal Twitter Callback Women We So Crafty 2:10 - Coding consequences RubyConf 2015 Keynote: “Consequences of an Insightful Algorithm” Slides Code Newbies discussion 6:00 - Examples of consequences Flickr Deep Learning Google Photo 10:50 - Data quality theories 14:05 - Preventable Mistakes and Algorithmic Transparency 17:30 - Predictive Policing and Biased Data “The Reality of Crime-Fighting Algorithms” “Machine Bias” 22:07 - Coder Responsibility Mechanical Turk Google Crowdsource App “Social Network Nextdoor Moves To Block Racial Profiling Online” “raceAhead: How Nextdoor Reduced Racist Postings Using Empathy” 31:35 - Algorithm triggers Eric Meyer: “Inadvertent Algorithmic Cruelty” 37:20 - Fixing a mistake 40:15 - Trusting humans versus trusting machines Facebook Trending Topics Article on leaked documents Former contractor’s experience Trending topic mistakes 44:30 - Considering social consequences 47:30 - Confronting the uncomfortable 50:30 - Fitbit Example “How Data From Wearable Tech Can Be Used Against You In A Court Of Law” “This chicken breast has a surprisingly healthy heart rate, considering it’s dead” OSFeels 2016 Talk by Emily Gorcenski with chicken example Picks: 99 Bottles by Sandi Metz (David) Vivaldi Browser (Saron) Magnetic Sticky Notes (Saron) Oregon Shakespeare Festival (Sam) Ruby Remote Conf Recordings (Charles) Rails Remote Conf (Charles) Webinars (Charles) Books by Howard Zinn (Corina) On Food and Cooking by Harold McGee
Dominic Venturo, CIO of US Bank Visiting Dominic Venturo is a little like walking onto a James Bond movie set during the Q gadget briefing scene. There is a wonderful "wow" factor in encountering the most fascinating new technologies in banking. The title "CIO" used to mean Chief Information Officer. It still does, of course, but today that "I" increasingly stands for another word too: innovation. Dominic Venturo, the Chief Innovation Officer of U.S. Bank, reflects a growing trend of banks assigning specialized leaders to spearhead their work in innovative technology. U.S. Bank actually took this step long ago. As we learned in Episode 12 with CEO Richard Davis, this is the country's fifth largest bank, and its focus on innovation caused them to name Dominic for this role eight years ago. In fact, he was such an early user of Twitter that he got the extremely cool handle @innov8tr (be sure to follow him on Twitter - he's one of my favorites). I always love hearing the backgrounds of our podcast guests, and especially noticing how they break down between people with financial backgrounds, and people with anything but. Dominic is a career banker with 16 years at U.S. Bank and 26 years overall in financial services product development and management, commercial risk management, commercial lending and sales management. He talked with me about how he's complemented that background with a wide mix of the other skills. He has 25 people, including many who, as he says, probably "spent a lot of time in the principal's office." In our conversation, he talks about how to make these trouble-makers highly productive and more broadly about the "art" of making great innovation happen inside a big company. There's a lot of conventional advice about that challenge, including the need to wall-off the innovators. Dominic agrees with that, and also emphasizes that innovation must be a full-time job - he thinks it's delusional to imagine that part-time people will somehow stay on top of today's tech trends by catching up on their reading backlog after hours. At the same time, he talks a lot about how to keep innovation focused on the practical. One key, he says, is that "innovation loves constraints." Another is not to start with an abstract white board session, dreaming up brilliant solutions in search of problems, but rather to focus on finding the real problems that need to be solved - especially problems impacting the customer. When you do that, your bank will usually want them, even if implementation is going to take some work. At the same time, though, the practical focus has to be balanced with imagination and vision. Dominic's group tries to look 3-5 years ahead in thinking about the bank's operations, and at how people are behaving differently and doing jobs differently. They brainstorm trends and find the insights that will reshape markets and technologies. One key to getting this balance right is to set up new kinds of success metrics. Dominic discusses the dissonance between bank cultures built to keep risks and failures extremely low, versus innovation that requires trying a lot of things that will fail. Financial companies need new ways to keep score. Our conversation also covered the downside risks that innovation creates for consumers; his thoughts on how regulation impacts innovation; and his advice on how to keep up with technology change. As I mentioned in my year-end wrap up, I always advise bankers to attend some fintech conferences. Dominic shares his list of favorites, including Finovate, Bank Innovation, and SXSW (I'll see you there this year, and also check out my end-of-year interview with Chuck Harris of Netspend for my own list of suggestions, including Emerge). We also got Dominic's recommendations for fintech trend-watching: Wall Street Journal Personal Tech, TechCrunch, and qz.com. And last but not least, again, I recommend following him on Twitter for cutting edge insight on tech trends, mixed with humor, such as on much needed respites from the content overload. Dominic's background: A few highlights on Dominic's background. He is frequently featured as a keynote speaker at industry conferences and has been recognized by Bank Innovation as a Top Innovator in Financial Services (#3, 2013), Bank Systems & Technology as one of "Elite 8" CIOs (2012), Twin Cities Business Magazine as one of "200 Minnesotans You Should Know" (2011), "Bank Technology News as "Mobile Banker of the Year" (2011) and as "Top 10 Innovator" (2009) and by Paybefore Magazine as a "Top 5 Innovator" (2011). He also serves on the board of directors of the Minnesota Community and Technical College Foundation. He earned a bachelor's degree in finance from Oregon State University and is a graduate of the Pacific Coast Banking School at the University of Washington Graduate School of Banking. The Q Factor: In our discussion, Dominic shares examples of innovation successes at U.S. Bank, including "advances in mobile payments, voice bio-metrics, tokenization and integrated mobile and web commerce solutions." As often happens, though, I found that our discussion got even more interesting after we turned off the microphone. He showed me an amazing product demo that's still embargoed but that really wowed me. And we talked about the Internet of Things. And then, he admired my iPhone 6s - we met just after they came out, and I'd gotten one before he did. He started talking about the Live Photo tool, which he described as "Harry Potter feature." As often happens with me, I had a cool feature on my phone without even realizing it. So we recorded a little bonus feature as he showed me how to make a photo animation that looks a bit like the living portraits in Harry Potter's world. These are fun, as is my Google Photo tool dreaming up little animations for me using the photos I've taken. If you have Live Photo and don't know how to use it, here it is. Enjoy my conversation with Dominic Venturo. If you enjoy our work to bring together thought provoking ideas and people please consider a contribution to support the site. Support the podcast Please subscribe to the podcast by opening your favorite podcast app and searching for "Jo Ann Barefoot", or in iTunes.
A few months ago, we sent out a survey on a topic that appears to be the bane of many listeners' existence: digital clutter. Over one third of respondents told us that the thing that drives them MOST crazy – the biggest, worst, most frustrating clutter quagmire in their lives – is photos. We promised you a podcast and a plan of attack, and our word was good (if a little bit, um, enthusiastic – listen above). With the help of organizational guru Alan Henry, Deputy Editor of Lifehacker, we've put together a customized step-by-step system to help you back up, sort, and organize your digital photo collection for the long haul. By then end of this process, you're going to be scrolling through your pictures and contemplating the role photos really play in our lives. But first, the time has come to get your photos in shape. Seriously. Now. It'll be more fun than you think. Mostly. The Note to Self System For Decluttering Your Photos and Coming to Terms With Your Mortality I. The Basic ToolsII. Decide How Deep You Want to Go Steps for the Casual Snapshooter Steps for the Moderate Snapshooter Steps for the Enthusiastic Snapshooter Find Your Photos: A List of Places to Look III. Tell Us What You Found (Part Two!) The Basic Tools According to Alan, these are the terms, tools, and basic tricks you'll need to get started – though how far you go with them is up to you. See: Deciding How Deep to Go. Back-up services: This is a centralized place on the cloud where you can get to the raw files of your photos if you need to. Alan recommends Dropbox, but iCloud, Google Drive, OneDrive or the like could serve a similar function, so long as you're willing to pay for extra storage. One work-around: sign up for an extra account just for photo storage purposes. Auto-upload: You have two options with your back-up service. The first is turning on the auto-upload feature, which means you'll be syncing the full-sized files to your computer. If you want to get these photos printed, use another service like Apple Photos or Picasa or Aperture, or plan to edit your photos with software such as Photoshop, this is a good idea. The other, more space-friendly option: leave that setting off, and instead be really judicious about how many of your photos you sync to your computer, or commit to going in and taking the ones you don't want down. This is going to take some introspection, some cutting-of-your-losses, and also maybe some back-up hardware. Back-up hardware: An external hard drive that can hold all of the files you don't want taking up space on your devices. It's the digital version of flossing your teeth. In this case, pick whatever works for you – if you've got less than 64 gigabytes of files you care about, a solid USB could work. If you've got a lot more than that (or if you just want to keep your options open), you should spring for an external hard drive. Photo management services: This is the service you'll use to help you categorize and sort through your pictures, whether that's by date, location, or content. Alan's favorite is Google Photos, which gives you unlimited space as long as your photos fall below a certain resolution (16 megapixels or 1080p HD video). You can set it so that Google will automatically reduce anything above that size to lower quality as well – for most people this should be just fine for organizing and digital-viewing purposes. From there, Google's photo categorization technology will help you label and organize the photos into albums and galleries. You could also choose a social media platform like Facebook or Instagram, you just have to commit to making them more or less public. Facial recognition: A type of deep learning used by such services as Google Photos to categorize and organize your photos. This comes with some very real caveats. Scanner: The best way to collect all your old physical photos and store them with your digitla photos. Alan says you can go high tech and buy a picture scanner (he recommends the Doxie or the Doxie Go WiFi) to scan them at home, or send them out to get scanned. Or – if you're OK with really low fidelity– you can just take a picture of the picture. Meta! Privacy/sharing settings: Be sure to double check that you're only sharing what you want to share, no matter which services you choose. That said, Alan Henry says his rule is to only upload the images he is OK with his friends and family seeing. The only way to absolutely ensure privacy (well, as much as we can possibly absolutely ensure privacy), is to avoid using the cloud altogether. In Alan's words: "As for what to snap and what not to snap - well, I'm not of the mindset that 'if you don't want it public you shouldn't take it or store it on the Internet' – that blames *people* for problems with *technology.* However, it's important to be mindful when you snap, and maybe take it into your own hands to choose what to upload and what not to, then back up or encrypt anything you want to save but don't want out of your reach to delete at any time. :)" via GIPHY Decide How Deep You Want to Go Alan thinks we all fit into one of three photo-taking categories: casual snapshooters, moderate snapshooters, and enthusiastic snapshooters. Figuring out which category you belong to will help you decide how far you really need to go in your personal photo-decluttering process. You've been sorted! (Kristeli Zappa M./Note to Self) BUCKET 1: THE CASUAL SNAP SHOOTER Characteristics: You have a bunch of photos all over the place, but you're not as concerned about organizing the past as you are setting up a solid system for the future. You primarily take photos with your phone. Your goal is to go from disorganized to organized, not necessarily to group all of your photos in the same place. Your steps: Pick a system for automatic back-up. Download the app if you don't have it already. Turn on auto-upload. On Dropbox – Alan's pick – this is called “camera upload.” On Google Drive, this is “back-up and sync." On iOS, this is "iCloud photos." That's it! Save your password somewhere safe. Invest in an external hard drive if you're feeling really responsible. Digital hygiene, everybody. Be sure to tell us what you've found. BUCKET 2: THE MODERATE SNAP SHOOTER Characteristics: For the most part, your photos are already digital – just in a billion different places. You may have a few old phones, some SD cards from a DSLR or other high-end digital camera, but you're not terribly concerned with really old physical photos. You probably have hundreds (or maybe a couple thousand but no more than that) of photos you care about, and want them to be organized, both past and present. Your Steps: Turn on auto upload for your back-up system of choice (i.e., Dropbox). On Dropbox – Alan's pick – this is called “camera upload.” On Google Drive, this is “back-up and sync." On iOS, this is "iCloud photos." Choose your photo management service, and transfer the photos you care about the most into it (i.e. Google Photos.). Start hunting down the rest of the digital photos you really care about and pull them into your photo management service. Be judicious: What's really worth migrating off of, say, that Flickr account you started and never went back to? Which Facebook Photos do you want to make sure you're saving in higher quality? Did you have a SmugMug account you need to check? Once you've uploaded the photos you care about most into this central service, look through the albums it has created for you. See where the system has sorted it correctly, and where it has gotten details wrong. Take over as the human here, and start adjusting into a system that will be meaningful to you. This can be as intense of a process as you choose, just be sure to label with names that will be memorable. (I.e., not “August 2015,” but “Trip to Paris With Family.”) This system should recognize dates and location at the very least. If they're wonky – and older photos probably will be – pick and choose which ones you care about correcting. Starting to sort through your photos will also help you jog your memory about any meaningful pictures you may have forgotten. Track them down, rinse, repeat. BUCKET 3: THE ENTHUSIASTIC SNAP SHOOTER Characteristics: You have thousands of photos — probably more than Dropbox or Google Photos' drag-and-drop interfaces can handle in one go. You use multiple devices, including cameras with SD cards and phones. You're looking for all of your memories to be organized, both past and present. You might even want to organize all of the photos from the whole family's set of gadgets, like phones or tablets everyone uses. Your Steps: Pick a back-up system. Turn on auto-upload for your current and future photos. Let the current batch upload. This could take a few minutes. On Dropbox – Alan's pick – this is called “camera upload.” On Google Drive, this is “back-up and sync." On iOS, this is "iCloud photos." Once you're done uploading, drag and drop as many of your already-digital but easily-accessible photos from your back-up system to your photo management system. For now, draw the line at your primary devices—the laptops or computers you already use, the phone you already use, and the SD card currently in your favorite camera you've been meaning to back up. Aim to get the majority of your current and most recent photos centralized. Once the bulk of your current photos are on your two services, spend some time getting in touch with your memories again, building galleries and doing searches through your most recent upload. Look through the albums your photo management service has created for you, and see where the system has sorted it correctly, and where it has gotten details wrong. Start sorting into albums that will be meaningful to you. This can be as intense of a process as you choose, just be sure to label with names that will be memorable. You're also teaching the system which details actually matter to you. From here, start hunting down old photos to add to the collection. Then, batch by batch, pull in old folders. Then, as you have the time, energy, or desire to centralize those old photos, you can power up that old laptop and upload them, or dump them to an external hard drive and upload them in batches (all of your old 2003 trip photos at once, for example.) This way you're making continual progress without committing yourself to a week-long wrestling match with the tendrils of Google and Dropbox every time you want to back-up your memories. When you're as far as you're going to get for the moment... tell us what you've found! Where to Look For Old Photos If you're like most people, you've probably stored your photos in all kinds of different places over the years. Here's a not-at-allcomprehensive-but-hopefully-inspirational list of places to look: Your phone's built-in photos app Your old phone's built-in photos app Photo apps on your laptop/PC Drive/ Desktop Folders on your laptop/PC External harddrive CDs/DVDs USBs Old cameras Email Text messages (these can take up a surprising amount of space!) Facebook Instagram Picasa PhotoBucket SnapFish ShutterFly Flickr DropBox Google Drive Google + Box Google Photo iCloud Microsoft OneDrive Image Shack SmugMug EverNote ShoeBox Imgur Got more? Comment here, tell us on Twitter or Facebook, or email to notetoselfradio@wnyc.org. Subscribe to Note to Self on iTunes, Stitcher, TuneIn, I Heart Radio, or anywhere else using our RSS feed.
This is a story about an incident that happened to 22-year-old freelance web developer Jacky Alciné, the racist slur that caught him off-guard, and the machines behind it. You may have heard about it earlier this summer: On Sunday, June 28, Jacky sat relaxing, half-watching the BET awards and messing around on his computer. It was just a normal evening, until a selfie from his friend popped up in the Google photo app. As Jacky scrolled through his photos, he realized that Google has rolled out “photo categorization" – his pictures had automatically been labelled and organized based on what was in them. His brother's graduation? No problem, Google's software totally figured it out. But as he kept scrolling, he came upon a series of photos of himself and a friend at a concert. But the label didn't say “people” or "concert." The label Jacky saw on all of the pictures he had taken with this particular friend. (Jacky Alciné/Twitter) "It says 'gorilla,' and I'm like 'nah,'" Jacky says. "[It's] a term that's been used historically to describe black people in general. Like, 'Oh, you look like an ape,' or 'you've been classified as a creature,'" Jacky said. "[B]ecause the closer they looked to a chimp... the more black, the more pure the blackness was supposed to be, so they were probably better for cropping, going back to the days of slavery and cattle selling... [and] of all terms, of all derogatory terms to use, that one came up." He tweeted at the company and they resolved it within 14 hours. @jackyalcine Can we have your permission to examine the data in your account in order to figure out how this happened? — Yonatan Zunger (@yonatanzunger) June 29, 2015 But this isn't the only example of a machine making a problematically human mistake. Flickr has been fielding complaints for auto-tagging people in photos as "animals," and concentration camps as "jungle gyms." According to computer scientist Yoshua Bengio, these stories are just going to keep making headlines. Because to prevent a machine from drawing a offensive conclusion? You have to teach a machine how complex society is – and it just may be impossible to code around all of the deeply human social pitfalls. As he tells Manoush Zomorodi on this week's Note to Self: Yoshua Bengio: "We would have to have people tell the machine why it makes specific mistakes," Bengio said. "But you would need not just like two or three examples, you would need thousands or millions of examples for the machine to catch all of the different types of errors that we think exists." Manoush Zomorodi: So should companies like Google be even using deep learning like this if there is the possibility that these really offensive mistakes can happen? Bengio: Well, that's a choice that they have to make. The system can make mistakes and you have to deal with the fact that there will be mistakes. Google Photo uses a type of artificial intelligence called "machine learning." Scientists give the machine millions of examples and teach it to start recognizing objects or words. Then, through an even more specific approach called "deep learning," it trains machines to start seeing patterns in the data, to draw their own conclusions, and to, in a way, think for itself. This enables them to process huge reams of previously unmanageable data. In many ways, it's one of the most exciting advances in Artificial Intelligence to date. On this week's show, however, we're taking a closer look at how AI could get it so wrong in practice, and why mistakes like this one matter for big tech companies and those of us who use their products. Manoush and Jacky Alciné take a Note to Self(ie). (Manoush Zomorodi/Note to Self) Subscribe to Note to Self on iTunes, Stitcher, TuneIn, I Heart Radio, or anywhere else using our RSS feed.
Thu, 04 Jun 2015 19:10:00 +0000 https://www.protokollcast.de/22-privatheit 08994e0b8bf6e1db915b2ac47bcb00cf TextExpander 500, Spark Mail, Google Photo Ich habe diese Woche drei Themen aufgegriffen, die mit Privatheit in Verbindung stehen: TextExpander 5.0, Spark Mail für iPhone und Google Photo. Die Links für diese Sendung: Smile Blog: TextExpander 5, featuring snippet suggestions Michael Tsai - Blog - TextExpander 5 and Notification Center Privacy Spark Review Tweet von @jamesthomson @jamesthomson verweist auf @nstanke Tweet von @nstanke Why not Google? - Marco Arment Why Not Google? - Daringfireball Apple’s Tim Cook Delivers Blistering Speech On Encryption, Privacy https://images.podigee.com/0x,sN4jTj521RTbiYgKbz47j7Cs_hcMWtpsic0dQkr4QBRs=/https://cdn.podigee.com/uploads/u301/1433443887e83a.jpg Privatheit https://www.protokollcast.de/22-privatheit 22 full TextExpander 500, Spark Mail, Google Photo no Marc Kalmes
Google I/O大会1:Android M公布细节2:Google Photo无限免费服务开通3:Google Now新特性然而这些在大陆并没有什么卵用范爷公开恋情,爆发全网最大规模商业正面公关活动“我们”全民祝福,“我们”携程网,支付宝难兄难弟服务器宕机尼康公布特种相机D810A和副主播金大头讨论尼康佳能相机特性,6D被黑的不要不要的
Google I/O大会1:Android M公布细节2:Google Photo无限免费服务开通3:Google Now新特性然而这些在大陆并没有什么卵用范爷公开恋情,爆发全网最大规模商业正面公关活动“我们”全民祝福,“我们”携程网,支付宝难兄难弟服务器宕机尼康公布特种相机D810A和副主播金大头讨论尼康佳能相机特性,6D被黑的不要不要的
Ryan Rampersad and Matthew Petschl discuss the latest Virgin Mobile plan, Sprint's French competition and a joint adventure with T-Mobile, broken LG G Watches, HP's next mass market failure, a planned HTC event, MacBook Pro updates, Google+ Photo's dissolution, and so much more!
On today's show we talk about Seinfeld's Reddit AMA and the Facebook shutdown, Russia's restrictions on bloggers, the Killing campaign by Netflix, Google + Photo, the guy 3-d printing his house, Twitter hashtags, Adam Corolla, Kid president and the new vlogger CoverGirl All the tech, social media and blog headlines that Bloggers love, need and use everyday.
Au sommaire de Rendez-Vous Numérique #3, rencontre hebdomadaire sur les médias sociaux : - WhatsApp racheté par Facebook pour la somme de 19 milliards. - Postcard pour iPhone, publiez sur tous les médias sociaux depuis la même application. - Bitstrips fait une levée de fonds de 15 millions. - Les tendances sur Twitter maintenant offertes dans plus de 50 pays! - Google publie un guide des bonnes conduites avec les Google Glass. - Google Analytics dans le panneau des administrateurs de pages G+. - Google+ Photo, sauvegarde automatiquement les photos et vidéos de votre ordinateur. - Mise à jour de l’éditeur de lieux de Facebook (Crowdsourcing). - Instagram, plus de 150 millions de membres actifs. - Pinterest : les GIFs arrivent sur mobile. - LinkedIn ouvre sa plateforme de publication à l’ensemble des utilisateurs.