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Das Internet ist für uns alle Neuland. Okay, Mitte der 90er Jahre traf das tatsächlich zu. Könnt ihr euch noch daran erinnern, wie das damals war?Micha, Poldi und Chris reisen zurück in die frühen Tage des Internets – in eine Zeit, als ISDN rasend schnell war und US Robotics jedem ein Begriff. Als man neben seiner Festnetznummer auch die ICQ-Nummer auswendig konnte. Als jede Minute im Internet Geld kostete, man aus dem Netz fliegen konnte und sich um die Telefonleitung stritt.Diesmal bei den Spielosophen:
Dan Mantz, CEO of the Robotics Education & Competition Foundation talks about the upcoming 2024 VEX Robotics World Championships, sponsored by REC, the mission of the REC Foundation. their mission to grow STEM and computer science programs around the world and their venture into drones, online virtual reality and other cutting edge technologies.
Welcome to Dev Game Club, where this week we return to our series on Homeworld with an interview with special guest Alex Garden, who co-founded Relic and directed the title. We talk about the inception of the idea to the implementation difficulties and much more. Dev Game Club looks at classic video games and plays through them over several episodes, providing commentary. Podcast breakdown: 0:52 Interview 1:03:49 Break 1:04:24 Outro Comments Issues covered: the history of our guest, distributing pirated games, the cold intro, testing games, dropping out of high school, selling the company and working for some years, fixing someone else's bugs, the crystal sphere, "Spaghetti Ball," the lightning bolt, focusing on the loss, pulling together the team, a 50000-line demo, starting with multiplayer to demo, demoing for gods, "this has changed how I'll make games," not knowing how to tell stories in space, creating a reference for the ships, believing you can overcome the difficulties, finding your home and knowing you were in the right, the gravity of the situation and losing people, every life being precious, you are not the target audience, making the story and the gameplay the same, lack of dynamic range, one revolution multiple evolution, changing the licensor, ships with fantastic shapes and colors, the main ship and why it has that design, ship scale on LODs, a frequency domain audio engine, doing a lot procedurally, clock radios, joining the rebellion, what sticks with you today, trusting your vision, expectations smashed, the new game gods, trying to make designers rock stars, knowing your collaborators. Games, people, and influences mentioned or discussed: Madden (franchise), Triple Play, The Divide, PlayStation, Impossible Creatures, Warhammer 40K: Dawn of War, Company of Heroes, Nexon, Xbox Live, Zune, Zynga, US Robotics, Distinctive Software, Chris Taylor, Don Mattrick, Omar Sharif On Bridge, Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego, Sega Genesis, Beavis and Butthead, Conceptual Interface Devices, Luke Moloney, Radical Entertainment, Electronic Arts, NASA/JPL, Ptolemy, Battlestar Galactica, Jon Mavor, Greg McMartin, Scott Lynch, Sierra, Valve, Erin Daly, Rob Cunningham, Aaron Kambeitz, Jane Jensen, Rob Lowe, Roberta and Ken Williams, Peter Molyneux, Black & White, Wing Commander, Chris Roberts, Star Citizen, The Breakfast Club, Blizzard, Starcraft, Republic Commando, Games Workshop, Blur Entertainment, Chris Foss, Peter Elson, Monkey Island, Shane Alfreds, Deus Ex, Warren Spector, Harvey Smith, Tim Cain, Fallout, Ion Storm, Ken Levine, Cliff Bleszinski, Killcreek (Stevie Case), John Romero, Hal Barwood, Wil Wright, Tim Schafer, Larry Holland, Gabe Newell, American McGee, Kirk Hamilton, Aaron Evers, Mark Garcia. Next time: ??? Twitch: brettdouville or timlongojr, instagram:timlongojr, Twitter: @devgameclub Discord DevGameClub@gmail.com
Jocke har varit i Lappland, Fredrik tjatar på utvecklare, Christian löser mysterier. Milda spoilers för LasseMajas deckarhus.
This week we preview our talk with Curt Gridley '80, an entrepreneur whose tech start-up Amber Wave Systems sold to US Robotics for 40M in shares back in 1996 and who co-founded Wichita's Groover Labs with his wife Tracy Hoover. Combining Tracy's last name “Hoover” and Curt's last name “Gridley,” you get “Groover.” Hence, Groover Labs. Hear about this upcoming #ShockTalk Innovators episode wherever you listen to podcasts
In this episode Niki interviews former US Robotics engineer, software/hardware developer and part-time paramedic Michael Musiel about his lenghty career in tech includustry from the late 70s through the present day. You can follow Michael's podcast here: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-podcast-that-shall-not-be-named/id674558126Starring: Niki Ackermans, Michael Musiel See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Panelists: Paul Hagstrom (hosting), Blake Patterson, and Carrington Vanston Topic: This sandwich tastes suspiciously like a ZX Spectrum Another topic-free episode, this one discussing the smuggling of Spectrums, satirical adventure games, BBS simulations, IBM clocks, CoCo paint programs, and various other tangents. Retro Computing News: Full Motion, Double High-Res Video Playback on the Apple IIe 1988: P.R.E.S.T.A.V.B.A. 50 Years of Text Games Gaming the Iron Curtain RetroBridgeBBS (GitHub) RetroBridgeBBS (Hackaday write-up) Vintage Computer commercials: Hayes modem US Robotics 56k modem Retro Computing Gift Idea: Cryptex USB stick Auction Picks: Blake: Colorware COCO MAX HI-RES PACK input module Tandy TRS-80 Capstone Home Alone the Computerized Coloring Book Carrington: 600 page 1980s Computer Chip Handbookc Paul: Two Sanyo VM 4509s Early IBM real time clock Coleco Adam power supply See also: Making an internal Adam PSU Some Osbornes and some disks you can’t have NEC PC8201a set Closing notes: PunyInform Feedback/Discussion: @rcrpodcast on Twitter Vintage Computer Forum RCR Podcast on Facebook Throwback Network Throwback Network on Facebook Intro / Closing Song: Back to Oz by John X Show audio files hosted by CyberEars Listen/Download:
In this first episode of Robotics for All Podcast by AV&R, Michael Muldoon host of our show, with Yves Proteau from APN Global, take a dive into what the Roadmap for US Robotics report outlines as the major challenges manufacturing companies face implementing automation. It is interesting to hear what Yves classifies as challenges versus what he says calls excuses. Yves outlines his journey buying his first cobot, to bringing his company, APN Global, to be recognized as the first 4.0 technology showcase in the Province of Quebec.For more information about the report (A Roadmap for US Robotics) mentioned in this podcast click here ➡️ https://www.therobotreport.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/roadmap-2020.pdf Michael Muldoon's role at AV&R ➡️ He is the Director of Product Development and his strategic spirit, focused on the industry's evolution, has enabled the company to develop innovative products while remaining focused on market issues, and the current and future needs of customers. His goal? Maximize the potential of all, to conquer the world as a team!
Today we're going to look at the history of the Palm. It might be hard to remember at this point, but once upon a time, we didn't all have mobile devices connected to the Internet. There was no Facebook and Grubhub. But in the 80s, computer scientists were starting to think about what ubiquitous computing would look like. We got the Psion and the HP Jaguar (which ran on DOS). But these seemed much more like really small laptops. And with tiny keyboards. General Magic spun out of Apple in 1990 but missed the mark. Other devices were continuing to hit the market, some running PenPoint from Go Corporation - but none really worked out. But former Intel, GRiD, and then Tandy employee Jeff Hawkins envisioned a personal digital assistant and created Palm Computing to create one in 1992. He had been interested in pen-based computing and worked with pattern recognition for handwriting at UC Berkeley. He asked Ed Colligan of Radius and Donna Dubinsky of Claris to join him. She would become CEO. They worked with Casio and Tandy to release the Casio Zoomer in 1993. The Apple Newton came along in 1993 and partially due to processor speed and partially due to just immaturity in the market, both devices failed to resonate with the market. The Newton did better, but the General Magic ideas that had caught the imagination of the world were alive and well. HP Jaguars were using Palm's synchronization software and so they were able to stay afloat. And so Hawkins got to work on new character recognition software. He got a tour of Xerox PARC, as did everyone else in computing and they saw Unistrokes, which had been developed by David Goldberg. Unistrokes resembled shorthand and required users to learn a new way of writing but proved much more effective. Hawkins went on to build Graffiti, based on that same concept and as Xerox patented the technology they would go into legal battles until Palm eventually settled for $22.5 million. More devices were coming every year and by 1995 Palm Computing was getting close to releasing a device. They had about $3 million dollars to play with. They would produce a device that had less buttons and so a larger screen size than other devices. It had the best handwriting technology on the market. It was the perfect size. Which Hawkins had made sure of by carrying around a block of wood in his pocket and to meetings to test it. Only problem is that they ran out of cash during the R&D and couldn't take it to market. But they knew they hit the mark. The industry had been planning for a pen-based computing device for some time and US Robotics saw an opening. Palm ended up selling to US Robotics, who had made a bundle selling modems, for $44 million dollars. And they got folded into another acquisition, 3Com, which had been built by Bob Metcalfe, who co-invented Ethernet. US Robotics banked on Ethernet being the next wave. And they were right. But they also banked on pen computing. And were right again! US Robotics launched the Palm Pilot 1000 with 128k of RAM and the Palm Pilot 5000 with 518k of RAM in 1996. This was the first device that actually hit the mark. People became obsessed with Graffiti. You connected it to the computer using a serial port to synchronize Notes, Contacts, and Calendars. It seems like such a small thing now, but it was huge then. They were an instant success. Everyone in computing knew something would come along, but they didn't realize this was it. Until it was! HP, Ericsson, Sharp, NEC, Casio, Compaq, and Philips would all release handhelds but the Palm was the thing. By 1998 the three founders were done getting moved around and left, creating a new company to make a similar device, called Handspring. Apple continued to flounder in the space releasing the eMate and then the MessagePad. But the Handspring devices were eerily similar to the Palms. Both would get infrared, USB, and the Handspring Visor would even run Palm OS 3. But the founders had a vision for something more. They would take Handspring public in 2000. 3Com would take Palm public in 2000. Only problem is the dot com bubble. Well, that and Research in Notion began to ship the Blackberry OS in 1999 and the next wave of devices began to chip away at the market share. Shares dropped over 90% and by 2002 Palm had to set up a subsidiary for the Palm OS. But again, the crew at Handspring had something more in mind. They released the Tree in 2002. The Handspring Treo was, check this out, a smart phone. It could do email, SMS, voice calls. Over the years they would add a camera, GPS, MP3, and Wi-Fi. Basically what we all expect from a smartphone today. Handspring merged with Palm in 2003 and they released the Palm Tree 600. They merged back the company the OS had been spun out into, finally all merged back together in 2005. Meanwhile, Pilot pens had sued Palm and the devices were then just called Palm. We got a few, with the Palm V probably being the best, got a few new features, lots and lots of syncing problems, when new sync tools were added. Now that all of the parts of the company were back together, they started planning for a new OS, which they announced in 2009. And webOS was supposed to be huge. And they announced the Palm Pre, the killer next Smartphone. The only problem is that the iPhone had come along in 2007. And Android was released in 2008. Palm had the right idea. They just got sideswiped by Apple and Google. And they ran out of money. They were bought by Hewlett-Packard in 2010 for 1.2 billion dollars. Under new management the company was again split into parts, with WebOS never really taking off, the PRe 3 never really shipping, and TouchPads not actually being any good and ultimately ending in the CEO of HP getting fired (along with other things). Once Meg Whitman stepped in as CEO, WebOS was open sourced and the remaining assets sold off to LG Electronics to be used in Smart TVs. The Palm Pilot was the first successful handheld device. It gave us permission to think about more. The iPod came along in 2001, in a red ocean of crappy MP3 handheld devices. And over time it would get some of the features of the Palm. But I can still remember the day the iPhone came out and the few dozen people I knew with Treos cursing because they knew it was time to replace it. In the meantime Windows CE and other mobile operating systems had just pilfered market share away from Palm slowly. The founders invented something people truly loved. For awhile. And they had the right vision for the next thing that people would love. They just couldn't keep up with the swell that would become the iPhone and Android, which now own pretty much the entire market. And so Palm is no more. But they certainly left a dent in the universe. And we owe them our thanks for that. Just as I owe you my thanks for tuning in to this episode of the history of computing podcast. We are so lucky to decided to listen in - you're welcome back any time! Have a great day!
Corona-matthet Fredrik är inne på sin andra vecka rent hemmajobb Jocke inne på sin första vecka av rent hemmajobb Minnen av forna tiders USB-hubbar Fredrik tillbringade helgen ute i solen, satte ner foten, besökte vårdcentralen Fredrik väcker sin tolvtums-Powerbook. Mysfaktorn finns kvar. Textmate, tangentbord, ljudet av snurrande disk och utseendet på Mac OS X 10.5. Jocke väcker sin tolvtums-Powerbook. Disken är död och DVD:n har en skiva som vägrar komma ut. Fram med skruvmejseln…. till nästa vecka. Apple släpper ny Ipad, och framför allt nytt tangentbord med trackpad. Jocke halvsugen.. fast… ? Fredrik har installerat IOS 13.4 på sin iPad minsann… Jocke har inte mycket på sina datorer längre Apple släpper ny Air, Fredrik hade köpt om hans Macbook dog idag (och batteriet tycker att det behöver service igen). Om inte nya Ipad får möjlighet att koda och podda förstås Diskussion om POWER-plattformen i vår chatt. Varför ska man ens överväga nåt annat än x86 eller ARM? Albert Uderzo, Asterix skapare, har lämnat oss. Jocke hämtar mer loot. Novell Netware-kartonger och böcker, fler US Robotics-modem, en låda med minnen, osv. En del ska ges bort så håll ögonen öppna i vår chattkanal. Jocke sugen på att koppla upp modemlinjer till sin BBS igen. Helt onödigt, givetvis FÖNSTER MOT TV-VÄRLDEN: Devs - ny serie som ser ytterst lovande ut. Jocke har inte hunnit titta ännu. Picard S1 går mot sitt slut - Jocke ligger efter. Fredrik? J har inte hunnit se Westworld heller. Fredrik har, såklart, inte lyckats se något alls Länkar Kolloidalt silver Tolvtums Powebook * Apple extended keyboard II Hur muspekaren (med mera) funkar i IOS 13.4 Nya Ipad Magic keyboard för Ipad Prompt Nya Macbook air Lineageos 16 Android 9 POWER-processorer SPARC Albert Uderzo Novell netware Picard Westworld, säsong 3 Devs, strömmas på Hulu Peertube Två nördar - en podcast. Fredrik Björeman och Joacim Melin diskuterar allt som gör livet värt att leva. Fullständig avsnittsinformation finns här: https://www.bjoremanmelin.se/podcast/avsnitt-202-egen-modempool-pa-gang.html.
Today, more than 80% of the Fortune 500 and over 20,000 enterprises (and 18M end-points) and service providers across every vertical entrust Pulse Secure to empower their mobile workforce to securely access applications and information in the data center and Cloud while ensuring business compliance. Sudhakur Ramakrishna is CEO of Pulse Secure and joins me on Tech Talks Daly to talk about a variety of security trends that will be impacting the tech industry in 2020. We discuss the impact that the Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) trend is having on security in the enterprise and What Zero Trust is going to mean to the enterprise in 2020. We also talk about the evolution of security, SaaS, and Cloud before tackling Hybrid IT and the expanded attack surface too. Meanwhile, I learn more about how Pulse Secure provides software-driven Secure Access solutions that provide visibility and seamless, protected connectivity between users, devices, things, and services. Sudhakar Ramakrishna is CEO of Pulse Secure, where he oversees all aspects of business strategy and execution. With nearly 25 years of experience across the Cloud, mobility, networking, security, and collaboration markets, Sudhakar joined Pulse Secure from Citrix. At Citrix, Sudhakar served as the senior vice president and general manager for the Enterprise and Service Provider Division, where he had profit and loss responsibility for approximately a $2.5 billion portfolio of virtualization, cloud networking, mobile platforms, and cloud services solutions. Before Citrix, he was at Polycom and was president of products and services. Sudhakar has also held senior leadership roles at Motorola, 3COM, and US Robotics and brings significant experience in strategic planning and execution, organization development, and incubating and scaling new businesses to Pulse Secure. Sudhakar earned his master’s degree in Computer Science from Kansas State and an MBA from Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management. Sudhakar is a member of the board of directors at Health iPass. He has significant experience as a board member and advisor of Public and Private companies.
Groover Labs is a concept that takes elements from tech centers like Boston and Silcon Valley and brings that start-up vibe to Wichita, Ks with a space that includes activities for business start-ups, the arts, technology, co-working space, hot seats, classrooms and events. We talked with the founders of the labs, Curt Gridley and Tracy Hoover in the podcast. Curt Gridley, a native of Kansas and his wife, software engineer Tracy Hoover says that when they lived in the Boston area, they were immersed in emerging technologies and start-ups. “You would go to the grocery store and be surrounded by people talking about their latest tech start-up, it was pretty cool.” In the podcast, Curt tells the story of, while working in Boston realizing a simple messaging switch that was the size of a refrigerator could be reduced in size and cost, leading to the establishment of Amber Wave Systems, a venture-backed Boston startup that he sold to US Robotics for $50 million. They now hope to foster that kind of atmosphere in Wichita with Groover Labs, a nonprofit opening soon in the former Printing Inc. building at Third and St. Francis. Groover Labs is a 42,000 square foot co-working center and maker space near the Old Town section of Wichita. Old Town is known for being a bit edgy and includes many of the start-up featured on Saunders and Cash. Many in Wichita feel that Old Town is the neighborhood that sits as the anchor of the startup revival we have been seeing in Wichita over the past year. The two co-founders want Groover Labs to be a place where entrepreneurs take ideas from concept to market. While Wichita has other maker spaces like the expanding MakeICT and GoCreate spaces, Groover Labs will be the only one to focus on product prototyping. “Some but not all of these things are available at other maker spaces”, Gridley and Hoover say. MakeICT and GoCreate “definitely fill a niche in the community,” Hoover says. Wichita has existing maker spaces — and both Curt and Tracy have been involved with them. They are eager to build on that and offer a place where people can take ideas from concept to market — something that’s not really being done right now in Wichita Tracy says Groover Labs isn’t about taking anything away from those places. They really want to add to the capacity in Wichita to be a place where collaboration and creation happens. What the founders are hoping to do is grow a culture at Groover Labs where anyone with heart and drive has the opportunity to innovate. Prototyping is a key part of the discovery process in innovation for many tech start-ups. It is typically the third step behind ideation, design, and then prototype. Many startup ecosystems struggle to build growing companies because they lack the ability to build physical prototypes cheaply. Groover Labs fill an important role in the development of startup ecosystems – providing space and expertise in building the first, flawed product. Groover Labs is more than a prototyping space, it will offer hotseats, dedicated work space, private offices and 14,000 square feet of maker space including electronics shop, a CNC mill, a CNC plasma table, a stable of 3D printers and a wood shop with a CNC router table and more. The Groover Labs team also offers a 275-person event center, and Wichita State University’s student-operated art gallery, ShiftSpace, has moved in. The event space will be utilized for community space and available for rent. Two classrooms for all sorts of seminars and educational events is also part of the space as is a board room and meeting room spaces. In the podcast, we sat down with the founders of Groover Labs learned more about their backgrounds, careers and the motivation for starting the space, with the intention of making it a diverse set of working spaces that can be the seed to grow businesses. Tracy grew up in New Jersey and after college, worked as a software engineer at Hewlett-Packard. More recently she has taught music at Wichita State. The founders want to create a place to fuel collaboration and product development. They hope Groover Labs, with co-working and maker space labs as well as event space, will create a community that not only encourages people to learn new skills but also take risks and launch startups. Curt, who grew up in Kansas, went to college here. Curt and Tracy moved back to Wichita in 2005 after careers in the Boston area, because they wanted to be closer to family and they valued the lifestyle in Wichita. Curt talked about the desire to bustling technology community where members contribute to and celebrate each other’s wins. He especially wants to help teams start successful Kickstarter campaigns, and see members huddled together working out solutions and figurative making sparks in the fab lab, electric, metal and wood shops. The goal is to create a community where everyone at Groover Labs feels invested in a community of inventors, innovators and start-ups. At Groover Labs, the goal is to make sure people are meeting like-minded folks who understand that the startup culture is not limited to the coasts. And some people might even re-locate to Wichita to work in the labs, as they create their products, Conserve your startup capital by doing your initial product development here. Groover Labs is in an Opportunity Zone, which opens up funding sources for startups that make their home at Groover Labs. Groover Labs is an excellent addition to the Wichita startup scene. To discover more about the company, check out its website at www.grooverlabs.org. Be sure and check out our sponsors and let then know you found them on Saunders and Cash: Foreman Law, Retreat To Joy, FlagshipKansas.tech, SCKEDD, Lee Gray Action Coach, Friends University, Shaken not Stirred Bartending
一年多以前,Leon 专门录了一期节目告诉大家他特别爱搞机,事实上在众多「机」里,他特别爱 Palm。今年科技圈又死灰复燃地出现了 Palm 的新消息,这让 Leon 忍不住拉上懵懵懂懂的 JJ 郑重其事地进行一次久违的考古,从头「考」一下这家从诞生之初起就命运多舛的公司。内容比较多,今天算是第一坑,哦不对,第一集。也许节目里提到的那些设备已经连某宝都找不到了,但也许这些科技公司、科技产品的起起伏伏能给我们带来一点不一样的思考内容提要00:28 一款和老品牌已经基本没有关系的新手机让我们起意录了这期节目08:46 正题之前,虽不想聊,但还是得聊一聊这个和老 Palm 没啥关系的新 Palm 手机11:44 我们的考古从 Palm 公司曲折的诞生经历和两位创始人开始20:03 Palm 的悲剧也许从一开始他们到处找投资就注定了23:22 短暂的平稳时期之后,第二次相关收购案发生了24:46 创始人离开,然后继续做跟原公司类似的业务,这个戏码是不是有点耳熟?28:00 虽然掌舵人有动荡,但 Palm 还是有过一段「黄金时期」36:50 2002 年,Handspring 制造了另外一款划时代的智能手机 Treo39:38 我台又多了一个「高管」—— CAO,首席气氛官41:12 过于注重商业人士而忽略大众需求使 Palm 开始被对手赶上49:24 蝴蝶效应般的收购间接成就了如今的 Apple,也为 Palm 的陨落买下伏笔参考链接今年新出品的以 Palm 为名的新手机 00:48第 76 期节目《与 Yuki Gu 的谈话内容记录》 03:02第一首配乐毫无悬念来自莎拉布莱曼的 Time to Say Goodbye 06:18陈佩斯和朱时茂那个关于「抢戏」的小品你还记得吗? 08:29新款 Palm 手机的官网 09:30粉丝拯救宝利来的故事 09:58请允许我在嘻嘻哈哈扯谈之后,配上这么伤感的一段狼叔闭眼时候的 BGM 10:43Palm 创始人 Jeff Hawkins 11:54另一位创始人 Donna Dubinsky 12:01感受一下 Jeff 的真实形象:2003 年他在 TED 上的演讲《大脑研究将改变计算机科学》 12:20BMW 品牌发展初期的故事 12:37专门用于掌上设备的 Graffiti 输入法 14:01讲到 Graffiti 的我台第 54 期节目《UI の 上古卷轴》 14:52Apple 出品的掌上电脑 Newton 15:22Palm 史上第一次被收购,母公司变成了 US Robotics 20:30划时代的第一款 Palm 设备 Palm Pilot 21:14第一代太空歌姬林明美 21:40BGM 响起来~ 私の彼はパイロット 22:03来感受一下 1.0 时代的 Palm OS 系统 UI 22:533Com 公司 23:42两位创始人离开之后创立的 Handspring 公司 24:46主播一号拥有的第一个掌上设备:文曲星 27:29支持各种彩壳的 Handspring Visor 28:11Sony Clié 系列 PDA 产品 29:13Sony Clié TH55 30:35Leon 最想收藏的 SONY Clié UX50 30:37使用 Palm OS 4 的文字处理机 Alphasmart Dana 32:06HiPDA 论坛 33:06使用 Palm OS 的手表 Fossil Abacus Wrist PDA 33:26爱立信 R380 35:40高通推出的 Palm OS 手机 PDQ 800 36:31Handsprint 第一台真正意义上的手机 Treo 180 37:00多年以后,乔布斯「嘲笑」全键盘的那一页 Keynote 38:14微软的两个手持设备操作系统 PocketPC 和 Smartphone 40:28诺基亚阵营的塞班(Symbian)操作系统 44:30配乐来自《被嫌弃的松子的一生》 47:32设计之初就擅长多媒体处理的 BeOS 操作系统 49:40Palm 推出的装载微软操作系统的手机 Treo Pro 53:56
Have you seen the Samsung S9? Listen in to hear what Craig thinks about it and if it is worth getting. I don't know about everyone in this audience -- but many of you I am sure love to learn and so do I. Today, I am going to tell you about a new Google learning venture. Have you ever taken an UBER or a LYFT? I am going to tell you about what some drivers are doing and why? More news out of Google! I am going to tell you how Google has prevented phishing in its facilities. There is so much to talk about that I ran out of time so be sure to check out the related articles below. Craig is putting up a new membership site (Yes, it is free, but you have to sign up) On it will have all his special reports that he puts out and you will be the first to get them. These and more tech tips, news, and updates visit - CraigPeterson.com --- Transcript: Below is a rush transcript of this segment, it might contain errors. Airing date: 08/04/2018 Samsung S9 Struggling. Free online business courses from Google. Ridesharing live stream dangers. Google Titan Security key. Craig Peterson: [00:00:00] Hey, Good Morning everybody. Craig Peterson, here. We've got another show this next half-hour or actually 25 minutes. We'll see what we can squeeze in. But, we're going to talk about your smart TV how to stop it from tracking what you watch and what video games you're playing. Did you know they track that as well? Russian hackers, a little bit more about them and what they apparently have already done that most of us just plain aren't aware of. Google, Now, I've talked about this a little bit before but they've got their own security key. We've got an update on that, and why you should consider that, right. Ridesharing. Did you know you might be live streamed? It depends on the state that you're in [00:00:42] There are people that are paying to watch people taking rides in Uber and Lyft. These free online courses from Google may help you boost your career. And why is Samsung's Galaxy S9, their brand new flagship phone, struggling so badly? So, here we go [00:01:09] On the front lines and ahead of the trends in business and consumer technology speaking with the top minds and creators behind the products and ideas that help to drive our everyday lives. [00:01:19] Dean Kamen is joining us now. He's the inventor of the Segway and the founder of US First. Steve Forbes, I appreciate what you do with Forbes magazine for all these years. It's one of my first go to places. We're going talk right now with the guys and gals behind Siri and we're joined right now by the director of Digital technology. We're joined right now by the CEO of Ebates, Kevin Johnson, on air for more than 15 years. [00:01:43] Over 20 million podcast downloads. This is Tech Talk with Craig Peterson. [00:01:53] Hey, everybody. By the way, if you get my e-mail I send out a weekly with hot items of the week. All of these articles are available to you. There is no chance of getting to them all today, right. But, all of these articles are available you can just click through it'll take you to my website at Craig Peterson dot com. You'll get a summary and then if you want to read more you can click on the read more link at the bottom and that will take you to the original article that I am quoting. Of course, many times these articles are written by me or a member of my team. In which case you, you're gonna see the whole thing right there, and you don't have to hit the read more button. Well, Samsung you know has been selling phones and smartphones for a while and their success came when they switched to the Android operating system. Android, the number one worldwide, as far as installed units go, for mobile device operating systems. Also, the number one world-wide worst operating system for a mobile device if you want security. So I know people who love Android, they've just become hooked on it. They know it well, they don't want a change, and they just kinda of sit there with their fingers in their ears and they say I can't hear you. Can't Hear you NAH NAH NAH NAH [00:03:12] And they're still using Android, I just don't get it right. So, for my customers, I always advise them don't use Android. Use Apple use iOS, iOS two years ago was finally approved by the federal government for military use. You're not seeing that with your standard Android phone that you're buying at the local retailer. So, if you want security, stay away from Android. But, that doesn't answer the question here about Samsung. Samsung, of course, they are probably, if you're going to buy an Android phone, they're probably the best ones to buy them from. Huawei has out a new phone that's got some really great camera features on them. But, we also know that they're blocked from the U.S. market, at least a large part of it, because the government, now won't buy them, won't use them won't sell them in the NEX/PX on base. Because of potential spying problems that were revealed in Huawei designs and chipsets. [00:04:16] You might also remember on the show we talked about how they had more than, I think, it was north of a billion dollars worth of fines, which is a pretty hefty fine if you ask me. So, Huawei's kind of out of the market, here. You've got some others, HTC, I'm trying to think of some of them over the years. A few of them are actually out of business, now. Samsung's it, right. They're the big guys, South Korean outfit. They make pretty decent hardware. So, what's happening now? Obviously, the sales are not what Samsung or its investors were hoping for. They added some cool little silly things if you ask me. Which Apple did too, right. You saw with the release of the iPhone 10 you know these emojis'. That will take on some of your facial expressions on iOS. Which is just stupid really. Really, that's going to sell more phones. Who buys a phone for that. Well, Samsung did much the same thing, and they were pretty jazzed about it, right. They have images that look like you, which I think is really kind of cool, but it's no reason to spend eight hundred bucks on a phone. If you asked me, or twelve hundred bucks if you get a fully loaded iPhone Ten. The electronics division over at Samsung just said, that they "had lower than expected sales of the flagship Galaxy S9" and that's the main reason because it wasn't just the nine but their overall profitability was hurt badly because people just aren't buying them [00:05:54] You know it gets to a point, where you're good enough, right. Do I really need to spend money on another device? And, the answer to that is, probably no. I usually wait for two major releases before I buy a new one. So, like right now, I have an iPhone 8. Before that, I had an iPhone 6, and the iPhone 6 I was using, my wife now uses because she's just plenty happy with it, doesn't need any of the newer features, or you know that new speed or memory stuff that I tend to use. You'd expect that right. Yeah, that's it. That's the reason that's why I got a table saw for Christmas last year. But, you know the newer phones are faster, I can run the newer apps on them so I can test them out. And I have more security stuff because I do use it with some of the clients that I have and there's some information I don't want to get out. So, this handset the S9 was launched in February, and some of the critics are praising these new camera tricks. You know really, really, really, super slow motion. [00:06:59] What? What's that going to buy you? Are you going to buy a phone because it has super slow motion, really? I don't think I've ever used slow motion on my phone or any of my video cameras. Would you use that? I don't understand it. Here, but anyways despite the speculation in the S9 sales have been the weakest since the Samsung S3. Samsung still not disclosing any of the real numbers and they have a 20 percent revenue drop in the division. Why, are they struggling to stand out? Well, frankly the physical differences between the 8 and 9 are almost nonexistent. Which makes you wonder about Apple? So, many people complaining about that. You know the top center of the apple screen where they've got the camera. So there's this little divot, at the top and people make fun of it. In fact, Samsung came up with some ads making fun of that feature on the iPhone. But, it looks different, doesn't it? It makes it visibly different. Well, there's not much of a difference between the S8 and the S9 as far as looks. A little bit of a difference in the position of the fingerprint sensor. They have a dual aperture lens, which is you know kind of cool. But if you're not a photography geek. Why would you care? [00:08:22] There just isn't the differentiation. [00:08:25] We've got the Chinese rivals, also out there, and frankly I think one of Samsung's biggest problems is they're paying too much attention to Apple. All right there's a lot of innovation in the Android space, I'll give you that Samsung's always been able to outspend their competitors on marketing. But I think they're just focusing too hard in trying to, really overstep Apple. And what Apple's doing in the U.S. market. And even with some of the criticism, Apple's been having lately, it just doesn't make sense, it's not worth all of the effort all of the trouble. Samsung, just go ahead and make a difference come up with a really great device that everybody wants and Why don't you let Apple start chasing you for a change. So, on the S9 verdict isn't probably worth your time or your money. [00:09:23] Hey, if you're looking to learn a little bit more, an uptick your job and your earning potential [00:09:30] It's always been around learning, hasn't it. I don't know that it's necessary to have a college degree. I certainly don't think it is in many, many, careers. I think most of the H.R. people are just taking an easy out, by looking for that checkboxes, says yeah you've got a master's or a bachelor's degree. I think they're taking the easy way out. It's you know I think it's kind of insane. What matters are the skills? What skills are you bringing? Oh, you've got five years experience fighting malware on large networks using great Cisco hardware and software and you've been providing tech support. And everybody says wonderful things about you. Well, that's worth way more than a bachelor's degree, that's worth way more than even a certification from one of these companies like you know the Cisco certifications. But you know what are you going to learn in them. This is a good opportunity for you, you'll find these links up on my Web site. Craig Peterson dot com. [00:10:31] I've got a link to a great article from Inc. magazine. You'll find it online there, as well. But, they've got a class on getting your startup started. Now, all of these classes they're called Class central. They're all pretty darn basic. And, you know if you ask me, a lot of stuff so basic. So, I don't know maybe it's advanced to you, but it's really aimed more at startup people. People who are just learning. So, this particular course on getting your startup started is going to help you with your mission and vision statement. Find mentors team members. Find financing for your business. Pitch deck to try and get customers or VCs on board. By the way, I would advise getting customers. You need people paying you money, once you have people paying you money, then you can go and find your investors. Frankly, I think that's a way that should work in most cases. I never cheated and went to VC or angel route. But it's a self-paced course takes about three weeks. They've got another one, on App Marketing. If you've got the best idea for the app store or Google Play store. Wow, this is going to be great for you, right. Apps, I don't know there's not that much money in them anymore, unless you are making apps that are aimed at a particular company's internal customers. [00:11:51] You know their supply chain, but an app marketing course, so you can learn about creating and launching an app. It sounds like can be pretty useful for anybody doing online marketing. So kind of any business owner might want to take this. It's about a two-week course, again from Google. App Monetization. This is a course is targeted at people who want to create apps or some free online content and have it generate income. But, depending on how much you know, it might not be very useful again. It's kind of a beginner thing if you're out of school and you're thinking about maybe making apps, it's a free thing, about a month is what it takes. Product Design. You've got a great idea for a product, that can help you with your idea, create a mock-up design, and quickly connect with potential customers. Check with them to see if your product can be viable. And, of course, the only real test, I go right back to this is, someone gives you money, because people will say they're going to buy it, but they don't, OK. So, it's a good thing to check out, to ask and get a little direction [00:13:01] But, if you can get people to pay you money, even before you develop your product, you'll be much better off. In fact, there's a company. What's it called G.T. Solar I think is the name in Merrimack. It was founded and he made he grew some chips for silicon wafers and things in order to make solar panels. And, he was able to fund his company, entirely, from his customers. So his customers were going ahead sending him a few bucks and that few bucks then went the extra mile, frankly because he had his customers fund him as he built all of his systems out. Product Design. Strengthening your LinkedIn network and brand. Again, this is part of the entry level grow with Google curriculum. So, if you're seasoned already as a networker or LinkedIn user it might not be great for you. But these courses and a lot more if you're thinking about doing a little entrepreneurial thing with the market doing so well. The economy doing, so well. Check it out you'll find links to this up on my Web site. Craig Peterson dot com. Look in today's email. It'll be right there for you. You can just click right through and find out anything that you might need, right there. [00:14:22] Hey, did you hear the news out of New York City this week, if you are a cab driver or wannabe cab driver and you may be doing something for Uber Lyft. Make a few extra bucks with your car. It's really kind of a nice thing. There have been some instances where bad things have happened with Uber and Lyft but I've had bad things happen with regular cabs, as well. Well, in New York City, apparently they passed a new ordinance, that is basically going to ban Uber and Lyft from their streets. We're not going to go into that right now, that's not part of this show. But, you might have a hard time finding Uber and Lyft next time you're in New York City because of that. Well, what we're going to talk about are called live streams. Now, there are a few kinds of cool sites, out there, that you can use in order to live stream. Twitch is one of them T W I T C H and we use it with US Robotics. I don't know if you're familiar with that, great program, if you're not involved. Make sure you get involved and you'll find them online. I think it's us first dot Org. I know they changed its name but anyways I think you can still get their US first dot Org. They use twitch in order to broadcast these competitions that are held all over the world which is really, really, cool. [00:15:47] I love that thing. Well, when you step into one of these ride-sharing cars, do you realize that you might be on video? Now up on the dashboard, there's usually the little smartphone right and might be Android it might be iOS. And on that, they're running the app from Uber or from Lyft, and that app is tracking where they're going that lets them say you'll pick up this rider and lets them score the rider after, the fact, right. It lets you do all of these things. So, you know there's one other thing that's been happening, you might not have expected. And that is that some of these guys, apparently, have been live streaming on Twitch. So, you get in the car and the whole ride is live-streamed. Now, I can see one side of this, which is it's a safety factor for the driver, because now it is out, in the ether, his wife or her husband or family, whoever can watch it at home make sure everything looks safe everything's good. And, from that standpoint, I think that's really kind of a neat safety feature. Depending on which state you're in, that may or may not be legal. There is something called two-party consent, and that means that both people who are being recorded need to give permission. And, it needs to be explicit permission. Now, I record people all the time from my radio show from my webinars. [00:17:20] You know, the FBI webinars I do, all of these things. So, all of that is legit because they know they're being recorded, right.I even will say, OK we're going to start recording now, just so I have that. Well, in this case, this particular guy Jason Gargack, I guess it is. He's an uber and Lyft driver and he's been broadcasting apparently hundreds of trips on twitch without explicitly obtaining consent. Now, he's taken steps to protect passengers, so he mutes addresses moderating lewd chat comments, at least some of the customers said they wouldn't have entered the car or if they knew they were being live streamed. And it's certainly possible to identify some of the passengers based on the details that are there in the archived videos. But, he's asserting that the streams are legal. He's in Missouri. Missouri has a one-party recording consent law which means you only have to have one person who consents to the recording. Now, I personally go back and forth on this I think of it's a public official in the performance of their public duties or under the color of law. I think it should always be recordable. Always. It's a public official whether it's a town clerk, a police officer, a fire hydrant inspector, a federal agent, doesn't matter that should be recordable without the consent of the public official. And, many times you see that happening even in two-party states where you have a whole bunch of people out there with video cameras on their smartphones videotaping a police officer in the performance of their duty. [00:19:07] Right, you see that sort of thing fairly frequently. Well, in many cases it's illegal in my home state, here. It's illegal to do that as well. So, what's happening here? Well, Missouri allows him to record other people without their consent. He has a sticker on his car that tells passengers that they're consenting to be recorded if they enter the vehicle and he describes it, as for security. Now, that's the part I mentioned earlier I think that kind of makes sense, right. Well, here's where things get a little bit fuzzy. Apparently, he is charging some people to get his live stream. Now, his live stream remember is going out on twitch and twitch does allow you to sell access to a stream. So, apparently, there are at least according to one report he's been charging five bucks or more a month. He's got more than 100 paid subscribers. It's really interesting. Uber had shut off his access to the driver's app while it "evaluates his partnership". So, even though live streaming might be legal in Missouri, Uber guidelines bar any kind of inappropriate or disrespectful behavior including comments on appearance. So, who knows, right. Twitch wasn't commenting on it. But, you can find this article up on my Web site as well. OK, so, one more article here for today and this is about security coming out of our friends at Google. [00:20:52] Now, Google has been using this technology in-house here for a while. And, remember they have tens of thousands of employees and they have not had a single case of a successful phishing attack since they started doing this. That's pretty darn cool, frankly. Google has been following the standard that's out there. It's called The FIDO's specification. But here's the bottom line. It's a key, it's a USB key. It has some smarts in it and it allows a web page to authenticate you. It allows your laptop to authenticate you. Your desktop to authenticate you. So, you have to use this key in order to get your machine to allow you to log in. They've had this by the way since 2014, so that's pretty substantial that FIDO specification. And Google has been supporting it the Google accounts have. So, this titan key is something Google has now released. Anyone who is using their cloud services, the Google Cloud Services, has first dibs on it. You can go out and get it. I've had a couple of my clients now asking about it because they've been following my weekly e-mails and I've been kind of hinting that this is going to be coming and we're probably going to use a different kind of key here. The, you know, the Google Key is now quite yet. [00:22:20] And some of these other ones are well supported as well. Also, follow the FIDO log in specs. So, we're starting to move some of our customers over. We're already using some of this technology including, DUO, which by the way, I think it was Google just bought this week. So, that's kind of cool, we're once again going to be ahead of the game in keeping our stuff secure. But, this is all available you can check it out Google's advance protection program. I've got a link to all of this up on my Web site. Craig Peterson dot com. And, of course, it's also in this week's newsletter, which you can sign up for also at Craig Peterson dot com slash subscribe. We've got subscriptions open, again. Well, there's other stuff we didn't get to today. You might want to check out. We've got Russian hackers. Looks like they may have penetrated hundreds of U.S. based, electrical grid networks. That's a very big deal. Apparently, they could turn off the power, at will, and cause some major havoc here. A lot of victims. This is bad. Your smart TV may be tracking you. If you have a smart TV and you can tell because they have built into them things like YouTube or Netflix or right your Hulu access to those TVs not only track what you're watching because it's easy enough for them to know, but they have a special software that's built into them and did you know even know this existed? [00:23:49] It's called automatic content recognition, by SAMBA TV, usually. And, this automatic content recognition even recognizes video games that you're feeding into the TV and tracks your use. So, I've got a very detailed article from the New York Times that's up on my Web site Craig Peterson dot com. You can go there and have a look, it's got instructions for all of the major smart TV brands and what you can do to turn that off. I think it's important to do, although, you know the marketing side of it, I can see it's a great thing. I personally would rather only see ads for cars, when I'm looking to buy a car right. Well, they show me things that I'm interested in. But, the problem comes in when the bad guys get their hands on this information. This stuff's eminently hackable. It's been hacked before, it will be hacked again. So, be very, very, careful. You'll find it all. Craig Peterson dot com. Hope you have a great week. We'll be back next week with more. Until then if you have any questions just text me directly 8 5 5 3 8 5 55 53. How many people do you know to give you their phone number? That's me 8 5 5 3 8 5 55 53 with any questions at all, during the week have a great week. Take care. Talk to you next week. Bye-bye. --- Related articles: --- How to Stop Your Smart TV From Tracking What You Watch Russian Hackers May Have Penetrated US Electricity Network and Could Turn Off Power, Officials Say Ridesharing live streams on Twitch raise privacy worries (update: Uber cuts access) Google announces its own security key for stronger logins These Free Online Courses From Google Will Boost Your Career No Matter What Business You’re In Why is Samsung’s Galaxy S9 flagship struggling? --- More stories and tech updates at: www.craigpeterson.com Don't miss an episode from Craig. Subscribe and give us a rating: www.craigpeterson.com/itunes Message Input: Message #techtalk Follow me on Twitter for the latest in tech at: www.twitter.com/craigpeterson For questions, call or text: 855-385-5553
“Olá, você está online!” Passou da meia-noite e apenas um pulso telefônico será cobrado, ENTÃO É HORA DA FESTA EM BAIXÍSSIMA VELOCIDADE! Munidos de seus US ROBOTICS de 56kbps, Guilherme Baldi, Oliver Perez, Js Neto e Ed Palhares conversam por mIRC para relembrar os áureos tempos da internet discada, onde tudo era uma aventura! Comentado no cast: Mamute pequenino [youtube id=”wkDyDS9tGpw”] Change Band (ChangeMan) [youtube id=”0yDaWdHYPFI”] Coma um boi [youtube id=”GtWc0rGJpDU”] O Cara Tussiu [youtube id=”udaFtXNrryc”] Te dou um queijo Jiban [youtube id=”iyLNYmxjZ0o”] As Árveres somos nozes [youtube id=”GDKMnOiqruE”] Baratinha [youtube id=”3PbMddw6TAc”] Vaca Louca [youtube id=”Ocn2Py0NXaU”] Pipi Duro [youtube id=”RlYexxHU01I”] Avaiana de Pau
DevSecOps, una historia de amor http://podcast.jcea.es/podcast1984/5 Notas: 00:00: Presentación. 02:03: Jesús Cea (@jcea) entrevista a Javier Espejo (@javiespejo) sobre sus antecedentes y la charla que ha presentado a la llamada a ponencias del congreso Navaja Negra: DevSecOps, una historia de amor. 02:30: ¿Quien es Javier Espejo? 05:00: Madrid Wireless. 09:10: Drivers WIFI para modo monitor. 09:40: Linux AP. 09:50: US Robotics. 10:55: Entrando en materia: DevSecOps, una historia de amor, charla presentada a la llamada a ponencias del congreso de seguridad informática Navaja Negra. 11:30: ¿Qué es DevOps? 18:05: ¿Qué es DevSecOps? 25:14: ¿Cómo se convence a la gente del dinero para que inviertan en seguridad ANTES de que ocurran cosas malas? Se ve el coste pero no se ve el beneficio. 27:00: Desde un punto de vista empresarial pagar multas puede ser más barato o conveniente que prevenir el problema. 29:20: ¿Impacto real de aplicar DevSecOps? 32:05: ¿Cómo vendes DevSecOps?. La empresa es Raipson. 35:00: ¿Qué hace el producto Raipson SecOps? 36:50: ¿Alguna sorpresa para Navaja Negra. 37:50: Cierre. 38:27: Autonomía digital: Pedro (@nn2ed_s4ur0n) nos es explica por qué y cómo montar nuestra propia VPN. Pedro hace referencia constante a un documento que aún no está online. Lo lamentamos. 38:27: La privacidad y el anonimato son fundamentales para la democracia. 39:35: ¿Qué es una VPN? 40:40: Algunos servicios listos para usar: VPN Providers. VPN Gate - Public VPN Relay Servers. Free VPN Servers List. 41:35: Siete mitos sobre anonimato y privacidad. 44:24: Preguntas que debemos hacernos al emplear un servicio VPN ajeno. 46:25: Monta tu propio servicio VPN. Ejemplo detallado. 52:10: Despedida.
#TropaQuadrimcast, TÁ NA HORA DO COMBO! Em mais um Quadrim Entrevista em áudio, conversamos com um grande artista e figurinha carimbada dos quadrinhos nacionais… Ele, o mito, a lenda, o ex-Lanterna Verde… FÁBIO YABU! O ano é 1998… Época dos modems US Robotics, das conexões discadas, do Netscape (olha a gente denunciando a idade)… E […]