Device that modulates an analog carrier signal to encode digital information
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Wenn ihr den Bridge-Mode in der FRITZ!Box aktiviert, wird das Gerät auf die Funktion eines reinen Modems reduziert. Dadurch übernimmt die FRITZ!Box keine Router-Aufgaben mehr, sondern stellt lediglich die Internetverbindung bereit. Wir erklären euch, was das bedeutet und wie ihr den Bridge-Modus einrichtet.
Listen to a recap of the top stories of the day from 9to5Mac. 9to5Mac Daily is available on iTunes and Apple's Podcasts app, Stitcher, TuneIn, Google Play, or through our dedicated RSS feed for Overcast and other podcast players. Sponsored by Roborock: Check out Roborock's incredible Black Friday Deals now. New episodes of 9to5Mac Daily are recorded every weekday. Subscribe to our podcast in Apple Podcast or your favorite podcast player to guarantee new episodes are delivered as soon as they're available. Stories discussed in this episode: Turns out, the AI upgrade ‘supercycle' isn't happening with iPhone or Android Here's everything we know so far about Apple's 5G modem An Apple security camera could recognize people from their body Listen & Subscribe: Apple Podcasts Overcast RSS Spotify TuneIn Google Podcasts Subscribe to support Chance directly with 9to5Mac Daily Plus and unlock: Ad-free versions of every episode Bonus content Catch up on 9to5Mac Daily episodes! Don't miss out on our other daily podcasts: Quick Charge 9to5Toys Daily Share your thoughts! 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.
This week Gym talks about the benefits of the Epson ECO Tank printers. The guys go into a little into retro computing talking about old printers, modems, Gateway, BBS, beepers, and more. Computers are niche systems these days. There are far better payment methods now than sticking your debit card into a slot. Scams are everywhere, be mindful. Still getting political donation emails post election. Foo's son wants to pay with cash. Plus more!
Natalie Salmon is an accomplished journalist, currently serving as the Editor of Hello! Fashion Magazine, and formerly holding positions as Digital Editor at Vogue Scandinavia and Social Media Editor at Harper's Bazaar. In 2019, Salmon founded The Modems, a go-to destination for all things fashion, beauty and lifestyle tech.In this week's episode of CEO YOURSELF, we explore Natalie's CEO superpower, Patience. Together, we explore the power of being patient in your career and the often overlooked truth about the time and work it takes to reach your dream role. Natalie debunks the myth of an overnight success, highlighting that true, lasting career growth comes from seeking support and having the courage to put yourself out there. This episode is for anyone wanting inspiration from someone who rose through the ranks purely through grit and determination - no shortcuts, no handouts. You can find Natalie on Instagram @nataliesalmon (https://www.instagram.com/nataliesalmon/)The Modems is on Instagram @themodems (https://www.instagram.com/themodems/) and online via https://themodems.comHello! Fashion is on Instagram @hellofashion_uk (https://www.instagram.com/hellofashion_uk/) and online via https://www.hellomagazine.com/hfm/CEO YOURSELF is a community designed to inspire and motivate you on your journey. We deliver weekly podcasts on a Monday, interviewing diverse women and deep diving their CEO superpowers, so you can adopt their learnings to become the CEO of your life. You can find us on instagram @whynotceoyourself with further resources online at www.ceoyourself.com Our host Hermione Olivia is on instagram & TikTok @hermioneolivia Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This week on the Podcast, Hackaday's Elliot Williams and Kristina Panos joined forces to bring you the latest news, mystery sound, and of course, a big bunch of hacks from the previous week. First up in the news: we've announced the 2024 Tiny Games Contest winners! We asked you to show us your best tiny game, whether that means tiny hardware, tiny code, or a tiny BOM, and you did so in spades. Congratulations to all the winners and Honorable Mentions, and thanks to DigiKey, Supplyframe, and all who entered! We also announced the first round of Supercon speakers, so if you haven't gotten your ticket yet, now's the second best time. But wait, there's more! We're already a few weeks into the next contest, where we want you to show us your best Simple Supercon Add-On. We love to see the add-ons people make for the badge every year, so this time around we're really embracing the standard. The best SAOs will get a production run and they'll be in the swag bag at Hackaday Europe 2025. Then it's on to What's That Sound, which completely stumped Kristina once again. Can you get it? Can you figure it out? Can you guess what's making that sound? If you can, and your number comes up, you get a special Hackaday Podcast t-shirt. Now it's on to the hacks, beginning with non-planar ironing for smooth prints, and a really neat business card that also plays tiny games. Then we'll discuss USB modems, cool casts for broken wrists, and archiving data on paper. Finally, we ask two big questions -- where do you connect the shield, and what's the Next Big Thing gonna be? Inquiring minds want to know. Check out the links below if you want to follow along, and as always, tell us what you think about this episode in the comments!
In deze aflevering spreken we met pentesters Hidde Smit en Wietse Boonstra. Ze delen hun ervaringen over het hacken van Enphase zonnepanelen en het melden van zes zero-day kwetsbaarheden. Ze vertellen wat het werk van een pentester inhoudt, hoe je kwetsbaarheden ontdekt en rapporteert, en welke uitdagingen ze daarbij tegenkomen. Hidde en Wietse benadrukken het belang van responsible disclosure en het ethische aspect van hun werk als pentesters. Ook bespreken ze de bredere impact van cybersecurity op bedrijven en individuen, en geven ze tips over hoe je je eigen netwerk beter kunt beveiligen.ShownotesEnphase zonnepanelenDutch Institute for Vulnerability Disclosure (DIVD)Shodan – Zoekmachine voor apparatenNIS 2 regelgevingResponsible Disclosuresecurity.txtTeamleader FocusTijdschema0:00:43 Introductie van de gasten0:15:03 Zonnepanelen en kwetsbaarheden0:24:24 Communicatie met Enphase0:32:39 De uitdagingen van het melden0:34:14 Samenwerken voor een betere wereld0:34:56 Imago en naamsbekendheid0:35:37 Verantwoordelijke meldingen en bedrijven0:36:53 Bug Bounties en hun impact0:41:08 De Levensstijl van bug bounty Hhunters0:43:06 Het belang van naamsbekendheid0:43:55 Groei en tijdsbesteding0:47:58 Modems en internetbeveiliging0:51:30 Je provider houdt je veilig0:54:54 Digitale veiligheid voor kinderen0:58:22 Ethische dilemma's in de IT1:03:59 AfkondigingZie het privacybeleid op https://art19.com/privacy en de privacyverklaring van Californië op https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Throwback zur IEM Cologne! Dort haben Chris und Dennis noch eine zweite Podcast-Folge aufgenommen. Diesmal zu Gast: Robert Martin, Senior Marketing Manager Consumer, Gaming & Graphics D-A-CH beim namensgebenden Sponsor des Events: Intel. Robert ist u.a. für Intels Marketing rund um E-Sport und Großevents wie die IEM Cologne zuständig. Von ihm kriegen Chris und Dennis im Laufe der Podcast-Folge eine Menge wertvolle Insights in die Gaming- und E-Sport-Strategie des Technologie-Konzerns. Wie ist die Kooperation zwischen der ESL und Intel entstanden? Warum sponsert Intel Events wie die IEM schon seit so vielen Jahren? Welche Rolle spielen Gamer*innen als Zielgruppe für Intel? Außerdem erklärt Robert, wie viel Arbeit eigentlich in der Produktion eines Chips steckt, welche Schwierigkeiten das für die Supply-Chain-Planung mit sich bringt und wie sich der PC-Markt langfristig entwickelt. Neben den Business-Insights haben die drei auch eine Menge Spaß dabei, Anekdoten über frühe PCs, Modems und Downloadmanager auszutauschen.
Das waren Zeiten, als Internet noch Neuland war. Unsere drei Fathers und Sons schwelgen heute in der Vergangenheit, zwischen nervigen Modems und Websites in Zeitlupenaufbau bis hin zum Alltagsbeschallungsmedium in der Hosentasche. Gerahmt wird das Ganze mit dem größten Tag im Lebens unseres Sons. Es geht um absurde Surfversuche. Es geht um gigantische Telefonrechnungen und die Angst vor der Erreichbarkeit. Es geht um Hans Peter, der die Bühne rockt. Es geht um das Ja-Sagen und die Drinks danach. Unsere father and Son Playlist bei Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/3IpygVukH4WO966uiYiVZZ?si=BQLN9ryVSAexq8p60Yiz4A yeah! Folge direkt herunterladen
[Referências do Episódio] DarkGate again but... Improved? - https://www.trellix.com/blogs/research/darkgate-again-but-improved/ Hacking Millions of Modems (and Investigating Who Hacked My Modem) - https://samcurry.net/hacking-millions-of-modems Ransomware Rebounds: Extortion Threat Surges in 2023, Attackers Rely on Publicly Available and Legitimate Tools - https://cloud.google.com/blog/topics/threat-intelligence/ransomware-attacks-surge-rely-on-public-legitimate-tools/ Roteiro e apresentação: Carlos Cabral e Bianca Oliveira Edição de áudio: Paulo Arruzzo Narração de encerramento: Bianca Garcia
The Transcription and Summarization Episode: LLMs, Modems, Magic, Technology, Infinite Toys, Change, Promises, Reality, Tascam, Amiga, Manuals, Summarization, Weird But Tireless, Always a Revolution. Some quick thoughts on the world of LLMs as they start entering my life (and many others) from the point of view of a half century of technology.
The story of Jovan's tech career is pretty amazing! Back before Google, when Jovan and Mark Cuban were innovating and 14.4 and 28.8 Modems where the MEGA FAST SPEEDS for dial-up (remember those days?). Hear the story of the festering Love/Hate relationship between Dallas Traditional Old School Media and Tech Pioneer Jovan as he "prophesied the traditional media's demise (which we now know came true!) HISTORIC FLASHBACK in the collective history of us all!
In this 171st episode of The G2 on 5G, we cover:1. Dish claims the world's largest 5G VoNR deployment with recent Denver addition2. Is Apple going to kill its 5G modem efforts?3. Ericsson publishes its mobility report with 5G subscriber projections4. Project Kuiper adds support for AWS private connectivity and signs deal with NTT DoCoMo5. Verizon trials network slicing for first responders6. Inseego launches new enterprise FWA FX3100 router on T-Mobile
Mon, 20 Nov 2023 21:30:00 GMT http://relay.fm/upgrade/487 http://relay.fm/upgrade/487 Under the Thumb of Qualcomm 487 Jason Snell and Myke Hurley The possibilities that Apple will release a lower-cost MacBook, Apple's difficulties in building a 5G radio to rival Qualcomm, Apple attempts to appease the EU by adopting RCS, and all hell breaks loose with OpenAI. The possibilities that Apple will release a lower-cost MacBook, Apple's difficulties in building a 5G radio to rival Qualcomm, Apple attempts to appease the EU by adopting RCS, and all hell breaks loose with OpenAI. clean 6135 The possibilities that Apple will release a lower-cost MacBook, Apple's difficulties in building a 5G radio to rival Qualcomm, Apple attempts to appease the EU by adopting RCS, and all hell breaks loose with OpenAI. This episode of Upgrade is sponsored by: Fitbod: Get stronger, faster with a fitness plan that fits you. Get 25% off your membership. Electric: Unbury yourself from IT tasks. Get a free pair of Beats Solo3 Wireless Headphones when you schedule a meeting. TextExpander: Your Shortcut to Efficient, Consistent Communication. Get 20% off. Vitally: A new era for customer success productivity. Get a free pair of AirPods Pro when you book a qualified meeting. Links and Show Notes: Get Upgrade+. More content, no ads. Submit Feedback The Tenth Annual Upgradies - Nominations Form Give the Gift of Relay FM Congress demands answers after Apple cancels Jon Stewart - 9to5Mac Kuo: Apple Considering Low-Cost MacBook Launch in 2024 - MacRumors About that low-cost MacBook rumor… – Six Colors Apple Project to Replace Modems Made by Qualcomm Falls Further Behind to 2026 - Bloomberg Apple In-House Technologies Team Eyes Making Cameras, Screens, Modems, Batteries - Bloomberg Apple Vision Pro Onboarding Videos Unearthed in visionOS Beta 6 - MacRumors Apple announces that RCS support is coming to iPhone next year - 9to5Mac Apple Files Legal Challenge Against EU Law as Sideloading Requirement Looms - MacRumors After firing Sam Altman, what's next for OpenAI and ChatGPT? - The Verge OpenAI's Misalignment and Microsoft's Gain – Stratechery by Ben Thompson
Mon, 20 Nov 2023 21:30:00 GMT http://relay.fm/upgrade/487 http://relay.fm/upgrade/487 Jason Snell and Myke Hurley The possibilities that Apple will release a lower-cost MacBook, Apple's difficulties in building a 5G radio to rival Qualcomm, Apple attempts to appease the EU by adopting RCS, and all hell breaks loose with OpenAI. The possibilities that Apple will release a lower-cost MacBook, Apple's difficulties in building a 5G radio to rival Qualcomm, Apple attempts to appease the EU by adopting RCS, and all hell breaks loose with OpenAI. clean 6135 The possibilities that Apple will release a lower-cost MacBook, Apple's difficulties in building a 5G radio to rival Qualcomm, Apple attempts to appease the EU by adopting RCS, and all hell breaks loose with OpenAI. This episode of Upgrade is sponsored by: Fitbod: Get stronger, faster with a fitness plan that fits you. Get 25% off your membership. Electric: Unbury yourself from IT tasks. Get a free pair of Beats Solo3 Wireless Headphones when you schedule a meeting. TextExpander: Your Shortcut to Efficient, Consistent Communication. Get 20% off. Vitally: A new era for customer success productivity. Get a free pair of AirPods Pro when you book a qualified meeting. Links and Show Notes: Get Upgrade+. More content, no ads. Submit Feedback The Tenth Annual Upgradies - Nominations Form Give the Gift of Relay FM Congress demands answers after Apple cancels Jon Stewart - 9to5Mac Kuo: Apple Considering Low-Cost MacBook Launch in 2024 - MacRumors About that low-cost MacBook rumor… – Six Colors Apple Project to Replace Modems Made by Qualcomm Falls Further Behind to 2026 - Bloomberg Apple In-House Technologies Team Eyes Making Cameras, Screens, Modems, Batteries - Bloomberg Apple Vision Pro Onboarding Videos Unearthed in visionOS Beta 6 - MacRumors Apple announces that RCS support is coming to iPhone next year - 9to5Mac Apple Files Legal Challenge Against EU Law as Sideloading Requirement Looms - MacRumors After firing Sam Altman, what's next for OpenAI and ChatGPT? - The Verge OpenAI's Misalignment and Microsoft's Gain – Stratechery by Ben Thompson
If you've got questions, Chuck Z has the answers. Listen in: See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Contact your host with questions, suggestions, or requests about sponsoring the AppleInsider Daily:charles_martin@appleinsider.com (00:00) - 01 - Intro (00:12) - 02 - Smartphone drop tests (01:57) - 03 - iPhone 15 line get better 5G modems (02:29) - 04 - Genshin feels Apple's "impact (03:14) - 05 - Cook disperses "greenwashing" blather (04:34) - 06 - Future Apple Vision products to be lighter (05:25) - 07 - Old Intel Mac into Lean Mean Steam Machine! (06:10) - 08 - Outro Links from the showDrop test shows iPhone 15 Pro Max glass no more fragile than other premium phonesiPhone 15 teardown reveals updated Qualcomm 5G modemGenshin Impact maker tried to dodge App Store fees — twiceTim Cook defends Apple against greenwashing accusationHeavy Apple Vision Pro leads Apple to lighten future headsetsHow to turn your vintage Mac into a Steam gaming machine using BazziteSubscribe to the AppleInsider podcast on: Apple Podcasts Overcast Pocket Casts Spotify Subscribe to the HomeKit Insider podcast on:• Apple Podcasts• Overcast• Pocket Casts• Spotify
Contact your host with questions, suggestions, or requests about sponsoring the AppleInsider Daily:charles_martin@appleinsider.com (00:00) - 01 - Intro (00:13) - 02 - Updates for older OSes (00:57) - 03 - Qualcomm reprieve (01:49) - 04 - No iPads for Tuesday (02:15) - 05 - Hermés pulls leather bands from site (03:06) - 06 - QN: Apple endorses SB253 (03:41) - 07 - QN: RICO not suáve (04:20) - 08 - QN: Pixelmator PDF (04:55) - 09 - QN: Apple Pay-pal (05:21) - 10 - Apple Store shelter (06:04) - 11 - Outro Links from the showApple issues updates for iOS 15.7.9, iPadOS 15.7.9, macOS Monterey 12.6.9, Big Sur 11.7.10Apple will keep using Qualcomm 5G modems until 2026iPad Air refresh could skip event for press release launch insteadHermes pulls all Apple Watch bands from online storeApple may discontinue silicone iPhone case in eco-friendly pushApple officially endorses California's Climate Corporate Data Accountability ActEx-Apple employee files RICO lawsuit over whistleblower retaliationPixelmator Pro 3.4 adds extensive PDF editing supportPayPal slowly rolls out Apple Pay support for its cardsMissing autistic boy found safe at Apple StoreSubscribe to the AppleInsider podcast on: Apple Podcasts Overcast Pocket Casts Spotify Subscribe to the HomeKit Insider podcast on:• Apple Podcasts• Overcast• Pocket Casts• Spotify
Welcome to another engaging episode of Get Your Tech On, titled "Your Questions, Our Answers: SNR (RxMER) and DOCSIS 3.1 Modems." In this episode, we delve into listener queries about DOCSIS technology, focusing on Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR), RxMER, and the details of DOCSIS 3.1 modems. Our host, Brady Volpe, founder of NimbleThis and The Volpe The post SNR (RxMER) and DOCSIS 3.1 Modems appeared first on Volpe Firm.
In the security news: feel free to cry a bit, honeytokens are the shiny new hotness, it's fixed in the future, backdooring electron, should we move to passkeys, the turbo button, why Cisco hates SMBs, old vulnerabilities are new again, MSI, Boot Guard and some FUD, fake tickets, AI hacking, prompt injection, and the SBOM Bombshell! Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/psw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/psw784
In the security news: feel free to cry a bit, honeytokens are the shiny new hotness, it's fixed in the future, backdooring electron, should we move to passkeys, the turbo button, why Cisco hates SMBs, old vulnerabilities are new again, MSI, Boot Guard and some FUD, fake tickets, AI hacking, prompt injection, and the SBOM Bombshell! Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/psw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/psw784
Endlich wieder alle drei o/ Und dieses Mal gibt es sehr viel E: Balkonkraftwerke von Anker, mit dem id.2all ein spannendes Konzept-Auto von VW zu einem vertretbaren Preis (leider erst für 2025 geplant) und die "Abrechnung" mit den E-Fools... äh E-Fuels. Außerdem hat Mike ein wenig in die erste der beiden Betas von Diablo 4 reingespielt, Googles Sicherheitsteam Lücken in den Modems von Samsungs Exynos SoCs gefunden und Deutschland bemerkt, dass man das 5G-Netz doch lieber nicht mit Komponenten von Huawei und ZTE ausbauen sollte. Viel Spaß mit Folge 144! Sprecher: Meep, Mohammed Ali Dad, Michael Kister Besucht unsim Discord https://discord.gg/SneNarVCBMauf Twitter https://twitter.com/technikquatschauf Youtube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCm7FRJku8ZzrZkmeY79j0WQ 00:07:30 Ersteindrücke zur Diablo 4 Beta https://diablo4.blizzard.com/de-de/beta 00:19:35 5G-Ausbau ohne Komponenten von Huawei und ZTEhttps://www.computerbase.de/2023-03/komponenten-im-5g-ausbau-bundesregierung-plant-verbot-fuer-huawei-und-zte/ 00:24:55 Preiserhöhung von 5 Euro bei Vodafone für DSL- und Kabelanschlüssehttps://www.computerbase.de/2023-03/erhoehung-von-5-euro-vodafone-erhoeht-dsl-und-kabel-preise-fuer-bestandskunden/ 00:26:12 5G noch kein großes Verkaufsargument 00:29:23 Sicherheitslücken in Modems von Samsung (Update für Pixel 6 jetzt verfügbar)https://www.theverge.com/2023/3/16/23644013/samsung-exynos-modem-security-issue-project-zero 00:36:45 Balkonkraftwerk-Sets von Ankerhttps://www.computerbase.de/2023-03/solix-mini-pv-anlage-anker-bringt-balkonkraftwerk-sets-ohne-halterung-und-mit-einem-modul/ 00:39:34 VW-Konzeptauto id.2all für unter 25K Euro im Jahr 2025https://www.computerbase.de/2023-03/vw-id-2all-das-e-auto-von-volkswagen-fuer-unter-25-000-euro/ 01:07:36 E-Fuels für E-Foolshttps://www.concawe.eu/wp-content/uploads/Rpt_21-7.pdfhttps://www.transportenvironment.org/discover/neue-analyse-bestatigt-autos-mit-e-fuels-sind-weit-weniger-umweltfreundlich-als-elektroautos/https://www.tagesschau.de/wissen/klima/e-fuels-elektroautos-verbrenner-vergleich-101.html
On this episode of the Futurum Tech Webcast Interview Series, I am joined by Ignacio Contreras, Senior Director Product Marketing at Qualcomm Technologies to talk about AI, next generation modem technology, and more. In our conversation, we discussed the following: Qualcomm's latest modem, Snapdragon X75 The modem's AI capabilities The industries that can leverage the Snapdragon X75 and modem-RF system Top benefits for OEMs and their consumers
In this two-part episode, Austin and Kris meet to wrap up the talking points from the Daytona 24 Hour, while Michael and Chris take on the Bathurst 12 Hour. Did Cookie make it to Daytona on time? How did GTP look on it's first outing? How many people went to Bathurst just to see Rossi? What does Maro Engel need to do to win Bathurst? All this and more! Timestamps: 0:01 The atmosphere in the speedway 0:06 BoP gripes with GTD - Porsche neutered? 0:12 How does GTP compare to DPi? 0:17 A look at the lower classes 0:21 Broadcast woes - Peakock and NBC showing more ads than racing? 0:29 General discussions 0:33 Bathurst! How's the atmosphere? 0:42 Disappointments from the weekend - Audi and Invitational Class 0:49 Surprises? Rossi, Feeney, and SunEnergy1 0:59 The awkward bits: Modems, Contact between team mates, and a tense press conference 1:14 Bits and pieces, and the future of the event
This week’s episode is a little rough. Tom is sick, and his modem was having problems. So apologies for being a little out of sorts. Hopefully we can make it up next week! Trinnov Active Acoustics is essentially a Double Bass Array. Martin Logan released new Motion and Motion XT Series speakers. And WARNING: Mark […] The post AV Rant #848: COVID & Modems Attack! appeared first on AV Rant.
A look in 1985 at the realm of Bulletin Board Systems and modems. Complete show post at https://coyote.works/2022/computer-chronicles-modems.html
Finding geeks ways to make your computing life more efficient is fun, and your three favorite geeks share tips for resizing images, managing calendars, using the Finder's toolbar, controlling your Apple TV and much, much more. Listen as John, Pete, and Dave answer your questions and share your tips, ensuring […]
This episode of Fleet Momentum is sponsored by and created in partnership with AT&T
Today we welcomed David Lee King from the Topeka Shawnee County Library system in Kansas to talk about innovative learning and creative spaces that have blossomed during the pandemic. Regular Regulars Tom, Jill, Paul and Maurice da host were also on the call. Notes and Quotes: Full notes on the T is for Training blog @ tisfortraining.wordpress.com We were Google Kansas for just one day. Check out the American Connectivity Program part of the big infrastructure bill for resources (aka cash) to do some work libraries already do for the community. “My Soul Patch was on Fire” 30-dollar broadband with equipment can help the economic angle of the digital divide. How do we deal with the first/last mile? Modems, access points in a home/apartment, computers/internet-ready devices for all? Think like a designer. Create, screw up, fix, recreate, repeat until you reveal the sculpture in the marble. Do we hire staff to open the library on Local, State and Federal holidays? What does that mean for recruitment, management, and unions? How do we help libraries become Design Organizations? (There are links on the blog post all about how) The goalposts have shifted from access to technology to access the knowledge to use the technology.
Apple will continue to source modem chips from Qualcomm for the 2023 iPhone 15 lineup, MacRumors reports, citing Bloomberg's Mark Gurman. Meta Platforms's India chief Ajit Mohan has stepped down and will join rival social networking company Snap, Economic Times reports. Wipro yesterday named Amit Choudhary, a former Capgemini executive, as a chief operating officer and member of the Bengaluru IT services company's executive board. Notes: Apple will continue to source modem chips from Qualcomm for the 2023 iPhone 15 lineup, MacRumors reports, citing Bloomberg's Mark Gurman. Qualcomm said it is set to provide the "vast majority" of modem chips for Apple's devices, despite earlier expectations that it would provide just a fraction of modem chips. Qualcomm in November 2021 said that it expected to supply 20 percent of Apple's modem chips in 2023, signalling a potential shift to Apple's modem chips. Apple has been working on its modems and purchased Intel's modem chip business to get a head start. Initial rumours pointed to 2023 as the year Apple would be ready to transition, but it looks like it will take a bit longer for Apple to end its reliance on Qualcomm, according to the report. WhatsApp yesterday announced that its communities feature will start rolling out to users globally and will be available to everyone over the next few months. The new feature, touted as a major update, allows the creation of sub-groups, multiple threads, and announcement channels. WhatsApp is also rolling out polls and video calling for up to 32 people at a time, according to a press release. To get started, users can tap on the new communities tab at the top of their chats on Android and the bottom on iOS. From there, users will be able to start a new Community or add existing groups. Once in a community, users can easily switch between available groups to get the information they need, and admins can send important updates to everyone in the community. In more news about Meta Platforms, the parent company of WhatsApp, Instagram and Facebook, the company's India chief Ajit Mohan has stepped down and will join rival social networking company Snap, Economic Times reports. Mohan joined Meta in 2019, then Facebook, from Hotstar, and served as a vice president and managing director of the India business for the social media company. Wipro yesterday named Amit Choudhary, a former Capgemini executive, as a chief operating officer and member of the Wipro Executive Board. Amit will be responsible for improving organizational operational efficiency, helping drive sustainable growth, the Bengaluru IT services company, India's fourth biggest, said in a press release. At Capgemini, Amit was the Chief Operating Officer for the Financial Services Business Unit, as well as a member of their Executive Committee. Before Capgemini, Amit held various leadership positions at Boston Consulting Group and Cadence Design Systems and consulted with Boards and CXOs in industries including financial services, healthcare, pharmaceuticals, and industrial goods. Amit is an alumnus of the Indian Institute of Technology – Kanpur, and the Indian Institute of Management – Calcutta. He is based in New York. Theme music courtesy Free Music & Sounds: https://soundcloud.com/freemusicandsounds
A fellow Conspiracy Realist writes in with a unique perspective on reincarnation. A late-night modem noise triggers a primal response. Ben remains away on what he only describes as a "secret project." All this and more in this week's listener mail. They don't want you to read our book.They don't want you to read our book.: https://static.macmillan.com/static/fib/stuff-you-should-read/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Clinton Curtis and Rep Janel Brandtjen Refute Dominion CEO on Voting Machines Hooked to Modems
Episode 32: Not Smell-O-Vision compatible wird gruselig: ES HAT RÄDER! Wenn wir uns vom Schreck erholt haben vergraben wir nachts Modems, heulen den Vollmond an und bauen gruselige Dinge aus Scheibenwischern. Hört uns zu wie wir Episode 2ACV18 "The Honking" besprechen.
KPMG on air Financial Services - Insights für die Finanzbranche
Wer mit Frank Jacob über Nachhaltigkeit und ESG spricht, hört aus seinem Mund viel öfter ein ganz anderes Wort: Transformation. Denn bei Union Investment bringt das Thema vor allem einen stetigen Wandel, und das schon seit langem. Deshalb kann Frank aus eigenem Erleben berichten: Nachhaltigkeit ist ein Marathon – und ein Kraftakt. Aber sie muss sein, wenn Anleger:innen und Asset Manager gemeinsam etwas verändern wollen. Mit KPMG-Experte Kevin Naumann diskutiert Frank die Rolle von Daten, Veränderungen im Investmentprozess und den EU-Aktionsplan. Die beiden erörtern, ob die Kapitalmärkte den Planeten retten können. Und wer dann noch wissen möchte, was das alles mit Modems und Videorekordern zu tun hat, sollte jetzt schnell auf Play drücken.
Get off the phone, we're logging on! Bobby, Hillary and Meredith go back in time to their early online experiences, inbound faxes be damned. Bobby recounts meeting an old online friend (long before this batch of internet friends), Hillary tells the tale of her alleged brush with fame, and Meredith wept, seeing as she had no more foreign language chats to conquer.Plus: Times you paid the dumdum tax, our future TikTok consultant, and the DJ for our eventual next THSE meetup. TSHE RecommendsWho Framed Roger RabbitConnect with the show! This is your show, too. Feel free to drop us a line, send us a voice memo, or fax us a butt to let us know what you think. Facebook group: This Show Has Everything Feedback form: throwyourphone.com Email: tsheshow@gmail.com Twitter @tsheshow
Host: Adam Sommer - @Adam_Sommer85Donate To the Mighty MO Funding Project: https://secure.actblue.com/donate/showmeblueAndyLeighton andy@leightonfordemocracy.comAdrian Plank adrianplank47@gmail.comAnn Zimpfer az4rep95@gmail.com https://heartlandpod.com/Twitter: @TheHeartlandPOD"Change The Conversation"
Host: Adam Sommer - @Adam_Sommer85Donate To the Mighty MO Funding Project: https://secure.actblue.com/donate/showmeblueAndyLeighton andy@leightonfordemocracy.comAdrian Plank adrianplank47@gmail.comAnn Zimpfer az4rep95@gmail.com https://heartlandpod.com/Twitter: @TheHeartlandPOD"Change The Conversation"
Lex learns that if you get the right sales representative, you can get higher internet speed AND talk about Jollibee.
Episode 73 of the podcast kicks off with the horrifying true story of the scariest place I have ever visited, Medfield State Hospital in Medfield, Massachusetts. For a century patients were kept there, through various iterations of the property. Though it was used for the backdrop of a few movies the reality of this long standing hospital is stranger than fiction.There are a few places in New England that feel like home to me. One such place is Mid-Coast Maine. The town of Camden, Maine is a big part why. Mountains, lighthouses, harbor views, a classic Main Street, and so much more. This week's Road Trip should be one that gets you ready to pay Camden a visit.Today many people have unlimited and easy access to the internet, some through their smartphones. A quarter-century ago the internet was a vastly different place. Modems, dial-up, different search engines, primitive websites, and more. We go way Back In the Day to reminisce with a Part 1 of Internet in the 1990's.This week's Top 5, by special request, dives into some of the scariest television show themes that scarred your childhood. Which ones made the list?There is a new This Week In History and Time Capsule centered around the very first Major League Baseball Hall of Fame induction ceremony.Helpful Links from this Episode(available through Buzzsprout)Purchase Iconic Hotels and Motels of Cape CodBuy Me A Coffee!Wear Your WishDJ Williams MusicKeeKee's Cape Cod KitchenChristopher Setterlund's YouTube ChannelChristopher Setterlund.comThe In My Footsteps Podcast BlogCamden Rockland.comArchive.orgListen to Episode 72 here.Support the show
Voici l'épisode 12 de "la quotidienne iWeek" en ce mercredi 15 juin 2022. Apple prend les commandes du MacBook Pro 13 pouces M2 dès samedi. Présentation : Benjamin VINCENT (@benjaminvincent) + Fabrice NEUMAN (@fabriceneuman). Production : OUATCH Audio. Tags : le MacBook Pro M2 ouvre le bal ; iPad 14 pouces : pro ou pas pro ? ; des images qui bougent pour Lightroom ; le soccer aussi ! ; un milliard de dollars qui repartent dans l'autre sens. Bonne découverte de "la quotidienne iWeek" si vous nous écoutez pour la première fois, parlez de nous autour de vous, retweetez-nous (@iweeknews ), bonne journée, bonne écoute et à demain ! Benjamin VINCENT & la team #iweekLQI PS : rejoignez la communauté iWeek sur Patreon et bénéficiez de bonus exclusifs !
Twitter using your cell number for 2FA and then selling it!! Duck Duck Go say it ain't so, The Nano Bots are coming…..they are smaller than a flea, Zoom meeting performance issues, Why would we NOT recommend a Microsoft Surface, Best VPN, Can I add Modems in every room of my home to avoid Wifi Radiation?, Google Privacy not able to get my Nursing Lic # off the internet.
From smart factories to connected fleets, businesses have come to expect seamless operations at the push of a button, but there are millions of moving pieces and years of work behind powering up and connecting the hardware and software that makes their systems hum. The developments behind 5G act as a backbone that many of the latest technologies rely on. From the early strategies behind design to the creation of flourishing ecosystems, advancing any technology is difficult. One as critical and fast-moving as wireless communications is a gargantuan task. In this episode of The Restless Ones, we sit with Durga Malladi, SVP and GM, Cellular Modems & Infrastructure, at Qualcomm Technologies, Inc, has spent his career advancing the technologies powering the wireless industry. In a world that has evolved from devices simply talking to humans to devices talking to millions of other devices, Durga and Qualcomm's work to constantly increase throughput and reliability while lowering the latencies of these communications has brought us to point of the “Connected Intelligent Edge”. A space where, with the help of wireless networks, data can be consumed in ways we could never have imagined possible. They say “advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.” Thanks to Durga and his team, this may be true. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
From smart factories to connected fleets, businesses have come to expect seamless operations at the push of a button, but there are millions of moving pieces and years of work behind powering up and connecting the hardware and software that makes their systems hum. The developments behind 5G act as a backbone that many of the latest technologies rely on. From the early strategies behind design to the creation of flourishing ecosystems, advancing any technology is difficult. One as critical and fast-moving as wireless communications is a gargantuan task. In this episode of The Restless Ones, we sit with Durga Malladi, SVP and GM, Cellular Modems & Infrastructure, at Qualcomm Technologies, Inc, has spent his career advancing the technologies powering the wireless industry. In a world that has evolved from devices simply talking to humans to devices talking to millions of other devices, Durga and Qualcomm’s work to constantly increase throughput and reliability while lowering the latencies of these communications has brought us to point of the “Connected Intelligent Edge”. A space where, with the help of wireless networks, data can be consumed in ways we could never have imagined possible. They say “advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.” Thanks to Durga and his team, this may be true.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Attempting to evolve rules of cyber conduct during a hot hybrid war. Waiting for major Russian cyber operations. Viasat terminals were hit by wiper malware. Patches and detection scripts for Spring4shell. Warning of ransomware threat to local governments. Emergency data requests under Senatorial scrutiny. NSA employee charged with mishandling classified material. Andrea Little Limbago from Interos on Bots, Warriors and Trolls. Rick Howard speaks with Maretta Morovitz on cyber deception. And no April Foolin' here For links to all of today's stories check out our CyberWire daily news briefing: https://thecyberwire.com/newsletters/daily-briefing/11/63 Selected reading. Russia's War Lacks a Battlefield Commander, U.S. Officials Say (New York Times) Putin may be self-isolating from his military advisers, says White House (The Telegraph) Confronting Russian Cyber Censorship (Wilson Center) Zelensky Fires Two Generals (Wall Street Journal) French intelligence chief Vidaud fired over Russian war failings (BBC News) Cyber War Talks Heat Up at UN With Russia at Table (Bloomberg.com) Foreign Ministry statement on continued cyberattack by the “collective West” (Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation) New Protestware Found Lurking in Highly Popular NPM Package (Checkmarx.com) Russia targeting Ukraine, countries opposing war in cyberspace (Jerusalem Post) Conti Leaks: Examining the Panama Papers of Ransomware (Trellix) British intelligence agencies: Moscow continuously attacks Ukraine in cyberspace (The Times Hub) AcidRain | A Modem Wiper Rains Down on Europe (SentinelOne) SentinelOne finds ties between Viasat hack and Russian actor (SC Magazine) ExtraHop CEO: Expect a Russian cyber response to sanctions (Register) Treasury sanctions Russian research center blamed for Trisis malware (CyberScoop) Treasury Targets Sanctions Evasion Networks and Russian Technology Companies Enabling Putin's War (U.S. Department of the Treasury) Evgeny Viktorovich Gladkikh – Rewards For JusticeArtboard 4Artboard 4 (Rewards for Justice) Spring confirms ‘Spring4Shell' zero-day, releases patched update (The Record by Recorded Future) Spring4Shell (CVE-2022-22965): Are you vulnerable to this Zero Day? (Cyber Security Works) Ransomware Attacks Straining Local US Governments and Public Services (IC3) Senate's Wyden Probes Use of Forged Legal Requests by Hackers (Bloomberg) NSA Employee Charged with Mishandling Classified Material (Military.com) National Security Agency Employee Indicted for Willful Transmission and Retention of National Defense Information (US Department of Justice) National Security Agency Employee Facing Federal Indictment for Willful Transmission and Retention of National Defense Information (US Department of Justice)
Apple is getting closer to ditching Qualcomm as its 5G modem supplier, according to a new Digitimes report. The company has reportedly begun coordinating with other chip companies to develop custom-made 5G modems for future iPhones. These chips could appear in iPhones in 2023. Plus, Google will roll out increased user privacy tools in future versions of Android by implementing measures to limit ad tracking across websites and apps. Computerworld executive editor Ken Mingis and Macworld executive editor Michael Simon join Juliet to discuss how Apple will transition to its own 5G modems (and what that means for Qualcomm) and what Google's new privacy measures mean for users.
Adam Sommer kicks off with an update on the POD feed. Then an Opening Statement about the labeling of party politics, and why he uses “pragmatic progressive” to label his politics. Then Rachel Parker joins in for this week's Talkin' Politics, including: True or False: I was too mean to the Mo Dem Party last weekRachel's article: https://www.patreon.com/posts/missouri-party-61512787?utm_medium=clipboard_copy&utm_source=copy_to_clipboard&utm_campaign=postshareYeah…no: Covid is over in Missouri and everything is fine Mo Gov Parson declares mission accomplished over Covid Min. Leader Quade hits back: Kids are a the capital instead of school BECAUSE of Covid AG Schmitt suing all the schools - even some that don't even have a mandateClaim is psychological damage for having to wear a maskPretty tall hill to climbBuy or Sell: At some point voters will realize their states are big run by corporations and PACs Heritage foundation writing legislation to suppress the vote https://twitter.com/andrew_rudick/status/1484310206448234498?s=21https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2022/01/how-republicans-are-taking-over-election-system-big-lie/Alec https://alec.org/Show Me Institute https://showmeinstitute.org/Not to leave out - Americans for Prosperity the Koch arm of it allTHIS IS NOT EVEN AN EXHAUSTIVE LIST it's like an icebergTHE BIG ONE Mid-Term Polling Numbers Look Bad for Dems - deep dive for the episode with some “call to action”https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/meet-the-press/poll-numbers-are-pointing-midterm-shellacking-democrats-n1287624https://theintercept.com/2022/01/21/koch-missouri-senate-eric-greitens/ https://heartlandpod.com/Twitter: @TheHeartlandPOD"Change The Conversation"
Adam Sommer is joined by folks from the Missouri Democratic Party to discuss the state of the party and how things may have lead Missouri to where it is today, and what may need to happen to get where we need to go tomorrow. Bailey Netsch - (Nayh-ch) - Managing Communications Director for the Missouri Democratic PartyAndy Hatem - Data Manger for the Missouri Democratic PartyRandy Dunn - Executive Director of the Missouri Democratic Party https://heartlandpod.com/Twitter: @TheHeartlandPOD"Change The Conversation"
Website: https://www.kathrynwilking.comLinked IN: Kathryn Wilking Free GIFT: https://kathrynwilking.com '10 Ways to Raise Chi-Energy' in Your SpaceNarration taken from Kathryn Wilking Designs BLOG 'The Art of Balance'. https://www.kathrynwilking.com/no-thrive-zone/ EMF References: Freddie Kimmel on "The Beautifully Broken Podcast". Werner Brandmaier Institute of Feng Shui & Geopathology 207-772-7888www.Geopathic-Stress-Solutions.comwww.Geopathology.comThe E-Workbook "Is Your House affecting Your Health?"
Welcome to the History of Computing Podcast, where we explore the history of information technology. Because understanding the past prepares us for the innovations of the future! Today we're going to talk about Gopher. Gopher was in some ways a precursor to the world wide web, or more specifically, too http. The University of Minnesota was founded in 1851. It gets cold in Minnesota. Like really cold. And sometimes, it's dangerous to walk around outside. As the University grew, they needed ways to get students between buildings on campus. So they built tunnels. But that's not where the name came from. The name actually comes from a political cartoon. In the cartoon a bunch of not-cool railroad tycoons were pulling a train car to the legislature. The rest of the country just knew it was cold in Minnesota and there must be gophers there. That evolved into the Gopher State moniker, the Gopher mascot of the U and later the Golden Gophers. The Golden Gophers were once a powerhouse in college football. They have won the 8th most National titles of any University in college football, although they haven't nailed one since 1960. Mark McCahill turned 4 years old that year. But by the late 80s he was in his thirties. McCahill had graduated from the U in 1979 with a degree in Chemistry. By then he managed the Microcomputer Center at the University of Minnesota–Twin Cities. The University of Minnesota had been involved with computers for a long time. The Minnesota Education Computing Consortium had made software for schools, like the Oregon Trail. And even before then they'd worked with Honeywell, IBM, and a number of research firms. At this point, the University of Minnesota had been connected to the ARPANET, which was evolving into the Internet, and everyone wanted it to be useful. But it just wasn't yet. TCP/IP maybe wasn't the right way to connect to things. I mean, maybe bitnet was. But by then we knew it was all about TCP/IP. They'd used FTP. And saw a lot of promise in the tidal wave you could just feel coming of this Internet thing. There was just one little problem. A turf war between batch processed mainframes had been raging for a time with the suit and tie crowd thinking that big computers were the only place real science could happen and the personal computer kids thinking that the computer should be democratized and that everyone should have one. So McCahill writes a tool called POPmail to make it easy for people to access this weird thing called email on the Macs that were starting to show up at the University. This led to his involvement writing tools for departments. 1991 rolls around and some of the department heads around the University meet for months to make a list of things they want out of a network of computers around the school. Enter Farhad Anklesaria. He'd been working with those department heads and reduced their demands to something he could actually ship. A server that hosted some files and a client that accessed the files. McCahill added a search option and combined the two. They brought in four other programmers to help finish the coding. They finished the first version in about three weeks. Of those original programmers, Bob Alberti, who'd helped write an early online multiplayer game already, named his Gopher server Indigo after the Indigo Girls. Paul Lindner named one of his Mudhoney. They coded between taking support calls in the computing center. They'd invented bookmarks and hyperlinks which led McCahill to coin the term “surf the internet” Computers at the time didn't come with the software necessary to access the Internet but Apple was kind enough to include a library at the time. People could get on the Internet and pretty quickly find some documents. Modems weren't fast enough to add graphics yet. But, using the Gopher you could search the internet and retrieve information linked from all around the world. Wacky idea, right? The world wanted it. They gave it the name of the school's mascot to keep the department heads happy. It didn't work. It wasn't a centralized service hosted on a mainframe. How dare they. They were told not to work on it any more but kept going anyway. They posted an FTP repository of the software. People downloaded it and even added improvements. And it caught fire underneath the noses of the University. This was one of the first rushes on the Internet. These days you'd probably be labeled a decacorn for the type of viral adoption they got. The White House jumped on the bandwagon. MTV veejay Adam Curry wore a gopher shirt when they announced their Gopher site. There were GopherCons. Al Gore showed up. He wasn't talking about the Internet as though it were a bunch of tubes yet. So then Tim Berners-Lee had put the first website up in 1991, introducing html on Gopher and what we now know as the web was slowly growing. McCahill then worked with Berners-Lee, Marc Andreessen of Netscape, Alan Emtage and former MIT whiz kid, Peter J. Deutsch. Oh and the czar of the Internet Jon Postel. McCahill needed a good way of finding things on his new Internet protocol. So he invented something that we still use considerably: URLs, or Uniform Resource Locators. You know when you type http://www.google.com that's a URL. The http indicates the protocol to use. Every computer has a default handler for those protocols. Everything following the :// is the address on the Internet of the object. Gopher of course was gopher://. FTP was ftp:// and so on. There's of course more to the spec, but that's the first part. Suddenly there were competing standards. And as with many rapid rushes to adopt a technology, Gopher started to fall off and the web started to pick up. Gopher went through the hoops. It went to an IETF RFC in 1993 as RFC 1436, The Internet Gopher Protocol (a distributed document search and retrieval protocol). I first heard of Mark McCahill when I was on staff at the University of Georgia and had to read up on how to implement this weird Gopher thing. I was tasked with deploying Gopher to all of the Macs in our labs. And I was fascinated, as were so many others, with this weird new thing called the Internet. The internet was decentralized. The Internet was anti-authoritarian. The Internet was the Subpop records of the computing world. But bands come and go. And the University of Minnesota wanted to start charging a licensing fee. That started the rapid fall of Gopher and the rise of the html driven web from Berners-Lee. It backfired. People were mad. The team hadn't grown or gotten headcount or funding. The team got defensive publicly and while traffic continued to grow, the traffic on the web grew 300 times faster. The web came with no licensing. Yet. Modems got faster. The web added graphics. In 1995 an accounting disaster came to the U and the team got reassigned to work on building a modern accounting system. At a critical time, they didn't add graphics. They didn't further innovate. The air was taken out of their sales from the licensing drama and the lack of funding. Things were easier back then. You could spin up a server on your computer and other people could communicate with it without fear of your identity being stolen. There was no credit card data on the computer. There was no commerce. But by the time I left the University of Georgia we were removing the gopher apps in favor of NCSA Mosaic and then Netscape. McCahill has since moved on to Duke University. Perhaps his next innovation will be called Document Devil or World Wide Devil. Come to think of it, that might not be the best idea. Wouldn't wanna' upset the Apple Cart. Again. The web as we know it today wasn't just some construct that happened in a vacuum. Gopher was the most popular protocol to come before it but there were certainly others. In those three years, people saw the power of the Internet and wanted to get in on that. They were willing it into existence. Gopher was first but the web built on top of the wave that gopher started. Many browsers still support gopher either directly or using an extension to render documents. But Gopher itself is no longer much of a thing. What we're really getting at is that the web as we know it today was deterministic. Which is to say that it was almost willed into being. It wasn't a random occurrence. The very idea of a decentralized structure that was being willed into existence, by people who wanted to supplement human capacity or by a variety of other motives including “cause it seemed cool at the time, man.” It was almost independent of the action of any specific humans. It was just going to happen, as though free will of any individual actors had been removed from the equation. Bucking authority, like the department heads at the U, hackers from around the world just willed this internet thing into existence. And all these years later, many of us are left in awe at their accomplishments. So thank you to Mark and the team for giving us Gopher, and for the part it played in the rise of the Internet.
Greyfore takes the helm as he talks about the various ways you could assess the internet the SEGA way; with your consoles!
If modems are a commodity why did Apple just pay $1B to acquire one? Apple's acquisition of Intel's modem business is not only a bargain cost-wise but a great deal for Apple AND Intel from a focus and control perspective. Apple gains 2,200 high-end engineers ready to take modems to the next level, control over a key component in its iPhone products, and over 17,000 wireless patents, while Intel sheds a product and development line that was an increasingly unprofitable distraction. A predictable fallout of the Apple-Qualcomm litigation settlement, we're surprised it too them this long to pull it off. Apple has a long history of bringing technology in-house, particularly when the availability (or lack of) becomes a risk to its operational delivery, if cost control can improve margins, or if the technology needs to be embedded into other components, rather than just remain a discrete component. Modems fit all three criteria. The question now becomes how, or when, might Apple leverage this new skillset into its broader product lines, from wearables to healthcare and perhaps the automotive/infotainment market? THIS WEEK's FAST FIVE > US to deny tariff relief for Apple Mac Pro parts from China > Johannesburg Ransomeware Attack > T-Mobile and Sprint finally find their holy grail as their merger is approved by the DOJ > How Apple, Microsoft and Foxconn are investing in technology, this time through SoftBank's Vision Fund 2 focusing on AI > Australia's new Algorithm Policing Office seeks to pull back the veil of secrecy on the algorithms Google and Facebook use in their products This week's Tech Bites Winner: Are digital delivery apps stealing their employee's tips? In the latest twist on the app-based service economy it appears that some app companies are using customer's tips to offset their own labor costs. Our Crystal Ball: When will Apple release its own 5G modem in a flagship iPhone? Hint: Pick a year and add one more to be safe. INFORMATION: This Futurum Podcast features Olivier Blanchard (@OABlanchard), Fred McClimans (@fredmcclimans) and Shelly Kramer (@ShellyKramer). If you haven't already, please subscribe to our show on iTunes or SoundCloud. For inquiries or more information on the show, email the team at podcast@futurumresearch.com or follow @FuturumPodcast on Twitter. To learn more about Futurum Research please visit www.futurumresearch.com. DISCLOSURE: Futurum Research is a research and analysis provider, not an investment advisor. The Futurum Tech Podcast (and all related written notes and materials) is a newsletter/podcast intended for entertainment and informational purposes only. Futurum Research does not provide personalized investment advice and no investment advice is offered or implied by this podcast.