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Technology is Great, but Are We Forgetting to Live?

By Sarah Perez / January 22, 2009 7:30 AM

Imagine you're at a concert where your favorite band is playing for the last time. Or you're watching President Obama get sworn into office. Or maybe you're just sitting around with your family under the Christmas tree watching your children open gifts. What are you doing in all those scenarios? If you're like most people today, you're probably recording it with some sort of technological gadgetry, be it a smartphone, digital camera, or camcorder. You might also be sharing the moment with others across the web via Twitter, Facebook, or FriendFeed.

Cashnxt: Low-Cost Banking for the Rural Poor

By Sarah Perez / January 14, 2009 6:13 AM

A couple of entrepreneurs out of Kerala, India, are re-envisioning the way that banking is done. Anish Achuthan (26) and Rameena Rabeedin (28), have developed a branchless network consisting of low-cost ATMs, Smart Teller Machines, E-POS terminals, and a mobile banking gateway that lets you perform transactions using your cell phone. The end result of their efforts brings modern banking technologies to semi-urban and rural markets where traditional banks are unwilling or unable to set up ATMs.

Updated: Twitter Security Collapses; Obama, Fox and Britney Accounts Hacked

By Marshall Kirkpatrick / January 5, 2009 9:21 AM

Days after a wave of phishing attacks fooled thousands of Twitter users, it appears that another security hole has been found by...someone. Obama's account, unused since election day, sent out an affiliate link to a survey with a gas card prize, Fox News said that "Bill O'Reily is gay" (not that there's anything wrong with that) and Britney Spears' made a lewd post about her anatomy. Rick Sanchez, the Twitter loving CNN anchor, says he's "high on crack and might not be coming into work today."

The Fox tweet was deleted an hour after it was posted, so the password may not have been changed. The Facebook account on Twitter just posted a link to porn, so it appears that the situation remains unresolved. Update: Twitter says it's been resolved but that users should change their passwords! The Twitter blog has just posted an explanation of the breach. Screen shots of the hacked accounts below below.

Embed Ads In User-Generated Videos With ZunaVision

By Sarah Perez / November 26, 2008 7:30 AM

During the U.S. presidential elections, one of the campaigning methods which got a lot of attention was President-Elect Obama's in-game billboard ad inserted into the Xbox 360 racing game, Burnout Paradise. Now a similar technology for embedding images is making its way into online, user-gen video. Instead of pre-rolls, post-rolls, or overlays, this technology allows for inserted images to be rendered onto any planar surface in a video, whether wall, floor, or ceiling. Oh, and they don't have to be images, either - the technology supports embedding videos within your videos, too.

Scared Of Technology? You're Old!

By Sarah Perez / November 17, 2008 10:30 AM

Apparently, growing up digital doesn't just mean being used to technology - it means not being scared of it when things go wrong, either.

Do crashing computers and busted Blackberries completely freak you out? Does a cryptic error message on your screen leave you feeling defeated or discouraged? According to a new study from the Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project, your age might have something to do with your attitudes and emotions surrounding technology.

Social Media In The Military: Insight Into The Future of Social Networks

By Sarah Perez / July 31, 2008 10:55 AM

iLink, a social network analytics technology from SRI International has recently been integrated into three online communities used by the military: Platoon Leader, Company Command, and the Family Readiness Group. The iLink technology improves the way the military community members share critical information across several different interest areas - from battlefield problem solving to supporting military families. Here, we take a look at the technology the military is using and how it can impact the future of social networking.

Get Great Tech Product Coverage With Tech NewsJunk

By Corvida / July 5, 2008 9:42 AM

There's a new aggregator in town folks. If you're a fan of Dave Winer's political NewsJunk aggregation site, Techmeme, or FriendFeed, then you're going to love Winer's counterpart to the political NewsJunk site, Tech NewsJunk. Created because Winer wasn't getting enough news about products, Tech Newsjunk is the latest product review aggregator to hit the market.

Goodwill Using Web Technologies to Drive Business

By Sarah Perez / March 3, 2008 11:27 AM

Steve Bergman, CIO of Goodwill Industries, recently discussed Goodwill's use of innovative technology for the non-profit and how it drives the business. For example, some of the company's new offerings include their recent launch of an open source web portal for online collaboration and the company's use of geo-spatial mapping tools for their public web site. Meanwhile, internally, his company's technology focus was on improved inventory management and "going green."

Google Sites the Next Sharepoint? Maybe Not....Why Google Apps Could Lose the Enterprise Market

By Sarah Perez / February 28, 2008 4:35 PM

Lately, we've been discussing the concept of tech populism and the how enterprises are moving towards a more people-centric focus when it comes to their IT infrastructure. Although we support this movement of bringing social tools into the workspace, one could argue that there's a right way and a wrong way to do this. For some, it's a matter of introducing social or collaborative features into enterprise software; for others, like WorkLight, it's about adapting existing consumer tools for the enterprise.

Social Tools Go to Work...Facebook, MySpace, Netvibes, iGoogle, and More in the Enterprise

By Sarah Perez / February 28, 2008 9:12 AM

A company called WorkLight, Inc. is hoping to bridge the gap between the ease-of-use of the social applications consumers use at home and the complexity of the enterprise applications that are used in business. To do so, WorkLight isn't just taking enterprise applications and adding web 2.0-like features, they are actually taking the social applications and tools that already exist and are adapting them for business use. Currently, the company works with fourteen of the most common social networks and social tools, including MySpace, Facebook, Netvibes, iGoogle, RSS, del.icio.us, and more to create enterprise-grade applications. The software, which was previously Linux-only, has now been made available for Windows servers, too.

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