Tech Intelligence – Signature9 http://198.46.88.49 Lifestyle Intelligence Wed, 15 Jul 2015 06:26:14 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.4 When to Shop Amazon Prime Day for the Best Deals http://198.46.88.49/?p=24291 http://198.46.88.49/?p=24291#respond Wed, 15 Jul 2015 06:15:44 +0000 http://198.46.88.49/?post_type=clips&p=24291 amazon-boxes
If you’re not a parent of a small child, being an early bird/extreme night owl may not help you catch any deals that are of particular interest for Amazon’s Prime Day blowout. While the floodgates are set to open at 3am EST/12am PST, most of the earliest deals are heavy on the toy, crib and stroller category so those looking for any of the teased TV or tech deals can sleep a little longer.

With such heavy promotion, it’s not clear how long items will stay in stock, so do try to wake up as early as your interest allows. Check back for updates on worthwhile deals throughout the day.

Tech Deals

nikon-coolpix-p600-prime-day

7:50am PST/10:50am EST. This is when some of the teased (and in our humble opinion, most worthwhile) deals drop.

Among the not-too-early morning deals? More than 50% off the Nikon Coolpix P600 16.1MP camera, though it’s not specified if that’s off of the list price or the current Amazon price. Other worthwhile products with deals launching at this time are the Ausdom M05 Bluetooth Wireless Headphones, IMNEED Mini 3200mAh External Battery Charger and the Securifi Almond Long Range Touchscreen Wireless Router/Range Extender. While there are a handful of tech products launching earlier, they’re primarily phone cases, USB cords and other items that you shouldn’t lose sleep over.

Men’s Fashion & Style Deals

baume-mercier-8485-classima-prime-day

7:30am PST/10:50am EST. This Baume & Mercier 8485 Classima watch, currently priced at $1309, is slated for a 7:30am deal start time along with several other watches. Everything before are things you may need (underwear, socks), but nothing you’d want badly enough to justify an earlier wakeup.

Women’s Fashion & Style Deals

dior-womens-black-bezel-watch-prime-day

7:30am PST/10:50am EST. This women’s Dior watch, currently priced at $4895 (list price, $8900) is certainly worth keeping an eye on, as is this silver Baume & Mercier. While there are other nice enough jewelry items that make an earlier appearance, it looks like the deals to get excited about won’t be making an appearance until later in the day.

Food, Drink and Home Deals

Go back to sleep. Nothing earth shattering or early alarm setting to see here before 8am.

Amazon box arch image by Ed Hunsinger via Flickr

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Turning Back the Hands of Time May Be Possible With Blood Magic http://198.46.88.49/?p=23725 http://198.46.88.49/?p=23725#respond Mon, 05 May 2014 15:26:03 +0000 http://198.46.88.49/?post_type=clips&p=23725 True Blood cast members in character

As it turns out, vampires may be on to something. Scientists have discovered that a protein called GDF11, which is abundant in young mice, was key to stimulating the hearts, muscles, and brains of old mice. The older mice on the receiving end of the blood transfusions were stronger, faster and less prone to memory loss after getting a bit of young blood running through their veins.

Researchers from Stanford, Harvard and UCSF, built off the work of a much older Cornell University study which actually sounds like the start of an “American Horror Story” plotline.

The research builds on centuries of speculation that the blood of young people contains substances that might rejuvenate older adults.

In the 1950s, Clive M. McCay of Cornell University and his colleagues tested the notion by delivering the blood of young rats into old ones. To do so, they joined rats in pairs by stitching together the skin on their flanks. After this procedure, called parabiosis, blood vessels grew and joined the rats’ circulatory systems. The blood from the young rat flowed into the old one, and vice versa.  {NYTimes}

There’s hope that the human version of the blood protein may have similar effects on adults, and help reverse the effects of cognitive diseases like Alzheimer’s. While that’s quite exciting, we really hope the human tests can be carried out through more standard blood transfusions.

Or sexy vampires, who have been having a bit of a moment, and now have a bit of science to support their claims.

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Credit Card Transaction App Rambler Wins TechCrunch Disrupt Hackathon http://198.46.88.49/?p=23472 http://198.46.88.49/?p=23472#respond Mon, 29 Apr 2013 12:37:10 +0000 http://198.46.88.49/?post_type=clips&p=23472 tech-crunch-disrupt

TechCrunch Disrupt, the startup conference held twice a year in New York and San Francisco, kicked off their spring edition with a 24-hour hackathon. The $5000 top prize (just a note hackers: Decoded, the fashion focused hackathon associated with the conference, had a top prize of $10,000, so consider fashion tech a serious option for your next hack) went to a web app that helps users map their purchases.

Rambler, created by William Hockey, Zach Perret and Michael Kelly, is a web app that lets users view their credit and debit card transactions on a map. During the dev process, the team tapped the Foursquare API for locations and the Plaid API to access user spending data. {TechCrunch}

Though FourSquare can’t seem to get a lot of love from investors, who want to see more revenue growth from the company, it remains an API favorite at hackathons and with developers building location aware apps.

Rambler’s team is also behind Plaid, which already has an app connecting Foursquare data with Square swipes, so the win isn’t a completely new idea, but should serve as a bit of a boost for the existing startup.

Learn to Drive, a virtual driving instructor app, and Radical, an embeddable calendar, were first and second runners up.

 

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RIP: Google to Shutter Google Reader July 1st http://198.46.88.49/?p=23070 http://198.46.88.49/?p=23070#respond Thu, 14 Mar 2013 02:26:05 +0000 http://198.46.88.49/?post_type=clips&p=23070 google-reader-dead

Arguably one of the best RSS feed readers out there, and at the very least the API behind some of the best feed readers out there, Google broke the hearts of many tech savvy bloggers, journalists and blog followers when they announced the July 1, 2013 shutdown of Google Reader, along with 7 other products.

“We launched Google Reader in 2005 in an effort to make it easy for people to discover and keep tabs on their favorite websites. While the product has a loyal following, over the years usage has declined. So, on July 1, 2013, we will retire Google Reader. Users and developers interested in RSS alternatives can export their data, including their subscriptions, with Google Takeout over the course of the next four months.” {Google Blog}

While RSS feeds still provides the plumbing for many aggregators and web apps, they never got the mainstream adoption of something like Twitter. Google’s new focus on core products that fit a search, social or ads function for the company means that as fervent an audience as a particular product might have, anything not contributing to those areas could find itself on the chopping block. Prediction: don’t be surprised to see a similar deadpool announcement for Feedburner in the near future.

So that’s the news and the reasoning, but allow us to make the totally emotional argument: whyyyyyyyyy? Noooooo!

That feels a little better, but really Google? You can’t figure out how to make a product with a regularly engaged, passionate following  fit within your search/social/ad strategy? Facebook figured out how to integrate with publishers to let users easily share what they were reading on different sites to gain deeper insights into interests and make reading, well, more social. Sure, Google+ is still trying to topple MySpace for engagement, but it seems like a pretty obvious solution would be to at least bring Google Reader options into the fledgling social network. Considering that Robert Scoble has more Google+ followers than Cristiano Ronaldo, the tech savvy people who still regularly use RSS would probably consider it a plus, and end up spending more time on Google+. A win win for both sides.

Alas, it seems Google anticipated some of this reaction at the news of Reader being sent to the glue factory.

These changes are never easy. But by focusing our efforts, we can concentrate on building great products that really help in their lives.

Still seems like throwing out the baby with the bathwater.

Other products headed for the deadpool include Search API for Shopping, Google Voice App for Blackberry, Google Cloud Connect and 4 others that you probably never heard of anyway (the bathwater).

 

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New Survey Says Only the Affluent Are Interested In Same Day Delivery http://198.46.88.49/?p=23007 http://198.46.88.49/?p=23007#respond Wed, 06 Mar 2013 16:54:51 +0000 http://198.46.88.49/?post_type=clips&p=23007 net-a-porter-vans

Net-a-Porter same day delivery vans in New York (L) and London (R)

Just a few hours ago, we picked up on the report that Google is working on an Amazon Prime competitor that will try to differentiate itself by offering same day delivery from brick and mortar stores. According to a Boston Consulting Group survey of 1500 consumers, only 9 percent said same day delivery would encourage them to shop online more often.

“Urban shoppers aged 18 to 34 with household income over $150,000 a year – known as affluent millennials – are more interested in same-day delivery, but this group accounts for only 2 percent of the market, according to the consulting firm’s report.

Consumers said they would only use same-day delivery in certain circumstances, like when they needed to buy a last-minute gift or could not get to a physical store, the survey found.” {Reuters}

Cited by 75% of the respondents, free shipping actually topped the list of things more likely to drive online shopping, followed by lower prices.

The key to getting same day delivery to take hold seems to be a lower price for the cost of delivery. That doesn’t seem to conflict with what Google is planning. As we mentioned yesterday, the $64-$69/year service is unlikely to bring in significant revenue from subscription fees, and will probably actually lose money. Net-a-Porter, who falls perfectly into the affluent audience/high-margin product zone mentioned in the survey, offers same day delivery in New York for $25, and for no charge in London. It would only take 3 orders to exceed Google’s annual rate for the service in the US. While the London delivery service is likely still a loss leader for Net-a-Porter, it does seem to imply that the challenge of offering same day delivery at a low price point – one of the things cited as a factor in the low interest among this group – is one of logistics. i.e. Can Google, or any of the companies competing in the space, create the kind of well oiled delivery machine that takes advantage of existing delivery schedules and routes to pass along lower costs to consumers?

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RUMOR: Google Is Preparing to Take On Amazon and eBay for Same Day Shipping http://198.46.88.49/?p=23002 http://198.46.88.49/?p=23002#respond Tue, 05 Mar 2013 20:18:04 +0000 http://198.46.88.49/?post_type=clips&p=23002 google-shopping-vs-amazon

While online shopping generally offers a selection advantage over brick and mortar stores, one big disadvantage is shipping. Free shipping is usually slow, and faster shipping generally comes at a much higher price. Amazon Prime meets those challenges somewhere in the middle, offering relatively quick shipping at a relatively affordable annual rate. TechCrunch reports that Google is hard at work on an Amazon Prime competitor called “Google Shopping Express,” and they’re prepared to lose a little to gain ground.

The Google program would offer same-day delivery from brick and mortar stores at $64-69/year. Amazon Prime is $79/year for two-day shipping, so there’s probably not going to be a significant monetary gain from Google’s delivery service. It does serve another purpose though, which is merchant and user adoption.

One of the biggest challenges in setting up any e-commerce venture is logistics and shipping. Even among large multi-national chains like WalMart and Target – two of the rumored partners for Google Shipping Express – online inventory, which is often stored at a warehouse, is completely separate from in-store inventory. And while you can generally check in-store availability from products, if something is available at a store 20 miles away, your only options are generally to travel a bit further to get it, or wait an extra few days to get it. It sounds like Google is trying to fill that gap by sourcing from brick and mortar stores that are closer to the end location than a warehouse, but further than a walk down the street.

“If the Google Shopping Express service debuts publicly, and we have no reason to think that it won’t, this would mean that the company could capitalize on its recent acquisitions of both BufferBox and Channel Intelligence to dominate the online-to-offline retail market. Google could possibly use its BufferBox delivery lockers to facilitate the ease of shipment — like what Amazon has been testing in Seattle, New York and the UK. It could use Channel Intelligence’s data-management platform to coordinate sales and delivery.” {TechCrunch}

Which actually seems like a brilliant way to challenge Amazon. We’ll keep an eye on any further specifics.

 

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Apple Testimony Reveals Why Consumers Choose Android http://198.46.88.49/?p=22428 http://198.46.88.49/?p=22428#respond Tue, 14 Aug 2012 01:13:47 +0000 http://198.46.88.49/?post_type=clips&p=22428

In Apple‘s ongoing case against Samsung, all kinds of interesting peripheral information is emerging. One of the most fascinating is a 2010 survey that shows the top reason for consumers going with an Android phone rather than an iPhone was carrier loyalty.

With the survey indicating that 25 percent of overall Android buyers at the time had considered an iPhone, the numbers gives us a real look at just how much the iPhone’s AT&T exclusivity may have hurt it while Android — and Verizon’s Droid brand — surged in the US.

43% Wanted to stay with current provider
36% Trusted Google brand
30% Preferred larger screen
27% Preferred Android Market
26% Wanted better Google services intergration
25% Wanted latest and greatest smartphone
25% Wanted turn-by-turn GPS
25% Wanted latest and greatest technology

{The Verge}

Research firm IDC put Android’s global marketshare at 68% in Q2 of this year, dwarfing Apple’s 17%.

More specifically, IDC pegged Android’s gain “directly” to Samsung, which represented 44% of all Android phones shipped during the quarter. That’s more than the next seven Android vendors combined, IDC said. {CNNMoney}

The iPhone is, of course, now available on 3 out of the 4 major US mobile carriers (T-Mobile being the lone network to not offer an iPhone), and Apple’s strategy of offering older versions to compete with lower priced Android phones could help in carving out a larger slice of the market.

 

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Unbaby.me Lets You Trade Babies for Cats (or Anything Else) http://198.46.88.49/?p=22395 http://198.46.88.49/?p=22395#respond Sun, 05 Aug 2012 08:20:25 +0000 http://198.46.88.49/?post_type=clips&p=22395

The first two pictures unbabied via Unbaby.me

If you’re of a certain age, you may be secretly sick of looking at the endless stream of chubby cheeks and little bald heads filling your Facebook newsfeed as old friends become new parents. Well, now you can maintain your friendship and do something about the baby overload.

Unbaby.me is a Chrome extension that recognizes baby photos on social networking sites like Facebook, and replaces them with photos of cats or dogs or cars or whatever you want. You just add to Chrome, update a few keywords, and tell it what to change the photos to. (The default is cats.)” {TechCrunch}

The extension already has more than 45,000 likes on Facebook, and 1400 tweets to its credit, so there’s obviously a user base.  Still, are baby pictures really that bad?

“Once you’ve seen one baby, you’ve seen them all,” you say, and that’s mostly true. Sure, there are different colored eyes, some with hair, some without, but in general they’re all toothless little people who are, by definition, cute.

Granted there are some unfortunate looking babies out there (author’s note: this refers to no one I know), and some parents who take things too far (your child covered in placenta is not adorable), but in general you get to experience all of the adorable things that go along with babies with none of the spitup, late night crying or poopy diapers.

In seriousness, there are some valid reasons why someone might not want to see baby pictures: a parent who’s recently lost a child might have trouble seeing reminders of their loss, someone struggling to conceive could also be effected negatively. While it’s doubtful that all 45,000 people who liked this extension on Chrome fall into that category, there could be a legitimate use for Unbaby.me beyond catering to grumps.

 

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Rumored: CNN to Acquire Mashable for $200 Million http://198.46.88.49/?p=22219 http://198.46.88.49/?p=22219#respond Mon, 12 Mar 2012 19:02:37 +0000 http://198.46.88.49/?post_type=clips&p=22219

CNN will reportedly buy social media blog Mashable for more than $200 million, according to Reuters blogger Felix Salmon.

Salmon said that a source told him that CNN will announce the deal on Tuesday. {VentureBeat}

Should the rumors prove to be true, it would only confirm that life is not fair. Not only would a $200 million acquisition price tag  be 6 to 10 times what AOL paid for TechCrunch and their network of sites, but it would also value the site’s visitors even higher than AOL did in its merger with the Huffington Post. Somewhere, Michael Arrington has to be kicking himself for selling when he did (though there are plenty of other reasons why he might regret selling).

Then there’s the fact that Pete Cashmore looks like this:

Which is not particularly relevant to the acquisition, but just thought we’d throw in there that Cashmore is already one of the better looking tech bloggers out there, and he could be on his way to becoming one of the richest. Don’t hate him because he’s beautiful though; hate him because he’s negotiating one absolutely stunning deal.

For those keeping notes, the Huffington Post – also founded in 2005 –  had nearly 40 million visitors (according to Quantcast) at the time of acquisition, valuing each visitor at roughly $8. Mashable has roughly 9.5 million visitors, which would value each of their visitors at more than $21.

Mashable has never reported raising any money from investors, whereas the Huffington Post had $37 million in funding when they were acquired. Which means that Cashmore may come out of the deal with a better payoff than Arianna Huffington.

At the time of the TechCrunch acquisition, we predicted that one for Mashable was in the cards, though we obviously misjudged CNN’s level of interest in a purely digital publication.

 

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IBM’s Watson Gets a New Job http://198.46.88.49/?p=22167 http://198.46.88.49/?p=22167#respond Wed, 07 Mar 2012 17:36:08 +0000 http://198.46.88.49/?post_type=clips&p=22167

Wall Street's latest whiz kid

Just when you think the job market couldn’t get any more competitive, along comes a super computer know-it-all that doesn’t request time off, or lunch or bathroom breaks like pesky humans. Forget what the Terminator taught you: the machines won’t try to kill you, they’ll just make your tiny little brain obsolete, and you’ll voluntarily bow down to your new automated overlords.

Or they’ll help humans do their jobs better, but the other version just sounds more ominous/interesting.

Kicking things off in the machine takeover of the world is Watson, the IBM super computer that ruined Jeopardy! for humanoids.

“IBM has signed a deal with banking group Citi to use the data-analyzing abilities of the Watson supercomputer to help deal with its customers.

Citi will try out Watson – which beat off human competition to win the US quiz show Jeopardy! last year – in a variety of roles. These could include building customer profiles based on their banking interactions, blogs, and Twitter feeds, and using those profiles to advise human staff on loans and transactions. ” {the Register}

Did you hear that social media experts? Pretty soon Watson is going to be stalking people on Twitter faster and better than you can.

With some of the existing automation on Twitter, at some point it’s just going to be one machine talking to another and social will go back to meaning actually interacting with people in person. Then the machines will annoy each other with how many bytes they used up before breakfast, what the computer down the hall said.

And on the plus side, at least Citi doesn’t have to worry about their latest employee dressing too sexy.

 

 

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