technology


Online companies like Google are probably the future of polling

Google has been driven by big data since day one and they have been continuously analyzing their results and tweaking algorithms to optimize their results.

Reshared post from +Google Consumer Surveys

Google Consumer Surveys ranked the second most accurate poll (most accurate online poll) during the presidential race according to Nate Silver.

We're really proud of the platform we put together and continue to be excited about the opportunity to help businesses of all sizes make accurate, data driven decisions.

Which Polls Fared Best (and Worst) in the 2012 Presidential Race
A number of polling firms that conduct their surveys online had strong results. Some telephone polls also did well. But others, especially those that called only landlines or took other methodological…

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Our devices are learning about our habits and adapting 3

Back before the +Chevrolet Volt went on sale, the engineers talked about using your destination information to adapt the way the energy in the battery was used. For example based on your distance from home, it could run the engine for a while before it normally would to save the remaining battery power for the final stretch. If you were 5 miles from home and only had 2 miles of capacity it might run the engine for 3 miles and use the battery as you go through your neighborhood. Alternatively it could also run the battery into the buffer zone if your close to home where you will plug in. The goal is to get as many miles on the battery as possible, since charging costs less per mile than gas. At this point, none of that has been implemented yet on the Volt.

+Ford Motor Company has however implemented EV+ on it's new generation hybrid systems in the C-Max and Fusion. Information about your location and driving habits is aggregated using SYNC GPS, to look for patterns. As the system learns when you are approaching regular destinations, the battery gets used more aggressively to save fuel. This works on the regular hybrids, but it really comes into its own on the plug-in hybrid C-Max Energi and Fusion Energi where it will try to use up the battery power as you approach locations where you regularly plug in. Both C-Max versions and the Fusion hybrid are available now and the Fusion Energi PHEV goes on sale early in the new year.

Between this and systems like Google Now on Android phones, the cloud will soon no more about us than we do. 

Reshared post from +Green Car Reports

Would't it be nice if your electric car just knew when you were close to home?

2013 Ford C-Max Energi: New EV+ Feature ‘Learns’ Regular Routes
Every driver of a plug-in hybrid electric car eventually wants to drive more on electricity and less on gasoline. So it’s frustrating when the battery charge indicator shows a reasonable level of char…

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Why would anyone buy from QVC?

I've never bought anything from QVC and probably never will. However, my wife was flipping through channels to see whats on and noticed that they were selling iPads and wondered why Apple would be pushing their stuff on a shopping channel. I turned it on for a couple of minutes and quickly realized that they were pushing the latest (or should that be the late) 3rd gen iPad which has just been supplanted by an upgraded faster 4th gen model. My first thought was that if Apple was involved at all they are probably just clearing out leftover stock now that new models are in all the retail outlets. 

Then I noticed the price they were charging for these tablets. Until the 4th gen replaced it a couple of weeks ago, a 3rd gen 16GB WiFi iPad cost $499.   QVC is bundling a bunch probably third-rate accessories (definitely not Apple brand stuff) and charging $779 for the previous generation model. That's more than 50% more than the iPad alone cost direct from Apple. 

Please if you are considering buying this stuff from QVC, DON'T! You can get a newer faster one from Apple and get a similar bundle of accessories for under $100. If you really want a deal go to the Apple online store and get a factory refurbished unit that comes with the same one-year warranty as a brand new one for just $379 http://store.apple.com/us/product/FC705/refurbished-ipad-with-wi-fi-16gb-black-3rd-generation

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As a kid I once had dreams of being a pilot and I've always been fascinated by…

As a kid I once had dreams of being a pilot and I've always been fascinated by aircraft. Being an official Boeing photographer would be a great gig.

Boeing Flight Test Photographer: World’s Greatest Avgeek Job?
Meet a team whose job it is to fly around in vintage fighter jets to take pictures of new Boeings.

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Next week is the National Sleep Foundation's Drowsy Driving Prevention week.

Next week is the National Sleep Foundation's Drowsy Driving Prevention week.

http://drowsydriving.org/

The +Ford Motor Company "expert-in-residence" explains the importance of taking a break and how the Driver Alert System available on the #2013FordFusion  and Explorer as well as the Lincoln MKS can help remind you when it's time to rest.

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If the cable companies really gave a damn, they would look at changing their business… 2

If the cable companies really gave a damn, they would look at changing their business models and forcing the networks to unbundle all the channels we don't want to watch or pay for.  Stop forcing those of us with no interest in watching sports to subsidize Disney and ESPN and don't make us pay for stuff like the Golf channel. Let us create our own bundles for a reasonable price.

Cable companies want to ‘re-energize’ TV with new Silicon Valley research center
Cable TV executives are to establish a new research center in the heart of Silicon Valley to try to halt the emerging trend of “cord-cutting,” according to Reuters. CableLabs, a non-profit research……

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Sometimes you need to toss your most basic assumptions in order to solve a problem…. 3

Sometimes you need to toss your most basic assumptions in order to solve a problem.

The heart is simply a pump that circulates blood through the body to deliver oxygen and remove carbon dioxide. But if you think about it, who says you need to deliver the blood in pulses rather than continuously. All previous attempts at an artificial heart tried to replicate the beating of a human/animal heart.

Doctors Bud Frazier and Billy Cohn realized that blood could be distributed more efficiently by a pair of turbines that would probably be more reliable over the long term. Sure, the recipient of a turbine heart has no pulse, but he is very much alive regardless.

#medicine

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Some excellent thoughts on the possible unintended consequences of the recent movement… 1

Some excellent thoughts on the possible unintended consequences of the recent movement to regulate privacy online.

The cost of trying to ensure privacy could be much greater than just educating people about online behavior in some very basic ways. Let's be clear, if there are things about your life that you want to keep private, don't post them online in any way shape or form. Once something gets online, you can never truly erase it or forget.

Since the earliest days of the web, I've always used my own real name rather than pseudonyms. The stuff I don't want people to know about, I don't put online anywhere, period. There are plenty of benefits to sharing and contributing to online discussions. However, just as in the real world, we must all learn that there are consequences to what we say and do. Think before you speak/post.

We also need to expose companies that might be doing things they shouldn't such as Path uploading address books without notifying users. Thankfully, white-hat hackers and researchers are discovering these issues and triggering changes in behavior.

That said, the development of open two-way communications between consumers and companies has created unprecedented transparency in pricing and service. By using social networks like G+, Facebook and Twitter, consumers can call out companies that might have been unresponsive in the past and actually get improved service.

Let's not let a moral panic prematurely pull the plug on these benefits.

#privacy #socialbusiness

Reshared post from +Francine Hardaway

If businesses had already been social in 2008, would the financial crisis have been less severe and crippling? And will looming changes in privacy rules interfere with the changes that might keep that kind of disconnect between businesses and their customers from happening again?

I was starting to write about Obama's Consumer Privacy Bill of Rights when it occurred to me that perhaps it might have the unintended consequence of disconnecting people further from businesses that might want to breakdown barriers.

One of the toxic and unnerving aspects of the recent foreclosure crisis was the impersonality of its customer interactions, From the shredding of mortgages into small sub-atomic particles to the disappearance of bank employees who should have been tasked to help consumers negotiate mortgage modifications and short sales, the entire process of keeping or losing one's home became one in which the customer (the homeowner) lost control, and the resulting anxiety rose to cataclysmic levels. A side effect of the crisis was that thousands of small businesses had credit lines lowered and pulled at the same time, even though their owners were not in default, in trouble, or late in paying them.

One the foreclosures began, one size fits all solutions based on too little personal information shut down the economy across the country and rippled out across the world.

In theory, the concept of social business, in which objectives are more closely aligned with customers and silos give way to transparency, should prevent something like that from ever happening again. As the enterprise slowly transforms itself from a hierarchy to a network,and the customer becomes a node on the network, things should get better, right?

I don't know. In the past few weeks, it seems as if the nascent social business initiative might get snuffed out before it even takes hold.

It's difficult not to ask how all the recent discussions about privacy — spurred by the White House's Consumer Personal Information Act and the EU's new privacy rules–are going to affect the fledgling effort toward making businesses, their vendors and suppliers, and their customers more aligned in objectives and more closely connected. Won't the hesitancy of consumers to have their comings and goings on the internet tracked limit what businesses can do to help customers they're not free to get to know? I know, I know, the act is aimed more at advertisers and marketers, spammers and retargeters. BUT…

To some degree, the discussion is a sign of the maturity and scale of online communities. When early adopters came online, they considered privacy a given, even to the point of adopting handles and avatars rather than real names. How you identified yourself on the internet was a choice, almost from Day One. It was in the hands of the user.

But Google and Facebook changed all that, encouraging millions of people to put their real names and actual personal information online in exchange for "free" services. Business models have been built around the use of consumer personal information: advertising technologies, market research, direct marketing, polling, and political campaigns have all used the information consumers innocently put online.

An entire generation has forgotten or never learned that if you want to keep your information private, you should probably not put it online in the first place.

I just wonder whether the gathering of information, and the resulting insights the could come from mining it, could not also be a help rather than just an annoyance.

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