Once thought of as productivity tools used primarily in the business world, smart phones are becoming increasingly popular among average cell phone users who want e-mail and web access on a smoother, less clunky interface but who dislike the bulk and cost of traditional smart phones like the Blackberry and Treo lines. Palm, which makes Palm Pilots (PDAs) and Treos, is planning to release a slimmer smart phone for under $100--way cheaper than the $500-$600 cost for Blackberries and Treos.
Link | CNET News.com
Saturday, September 29, 2007
Technology has teenagers and parents talking - Yahoo! News
This article discusses the impact of technology on typical family life in the U.S. According to child psychologist Richard Woolfson, while the idea of sitting around the family table for dinner every night is becoming a thing of the past, the ability to stay in touch via technology has actually resulted in families communicating more with teach other than in the past. And, Woolfson argues, by communicating more via technology, families are more comfortable and open discussing things with each other when they do talk face to face. Even so, I can't help but feel oddly nostalgic for chewing with my mouth open to gross out my sisters, the soon-to-be-lost art of gargling your Jell-O at the table, laughing so hard at something that milk flew out my nose, being told not to sing or read at the table, or having to bear the guilt and the shame for starving kids in Africa if I didn't eat all my vegetables.
Link (Yahoo! News)
Link (Yahoo! News)
Backpacker turns Myanmar activist via Facebook - Yahoo! News
Another example of the power and influence that can be achieved by writing online, a 19-year-old student backpacking through Myanmar was so affected by the civil unrest in that country that he has started a MySpace to help draw international attention to the unrest. His site has gained wide popularity.
Link (Yahoo News)
Link (Yahoo News)
43 Folders | Personal productivity, life hacks, and other cool stuff
43 Folders is one of the best blogs out there for improving our personal productivity through "life hacks" and a system of "Getting Things Done" (aka GTD). The site is the effort of Merlin Mann, a personal productivity guru and maven, and his staff of researchers and web site builders. The site also also spawned a podcast and video podcast (both hosted by the quirky Mann), and users can stay abreast of new postings through RSS feeds (as with any blog). Personal productivity is a big issue for many of us in this digital age, when we are constantly being distracted by incoming e-mails, or the schizophrenia of constant web surfing, the lure of the computer screen, instant messaging and texting and chatting, telephones, cell phones, PDAs, iPods, our frequent tendency to procrastinate, and the more traditional distractions/interruptions created by other people. People who are serious afficianados of personal productivity and the constant giving and sharing of tips and strategies for dealing with life's distractions in a technological age refer to their discourse back and forth as "productivity porn" or "pr0n" because it can be as addictive as Internet porn for some people as we constantly strive to find ways to enjoy the technology, resist the technology, deal with the overwork that this so-called modern convenience frequently creates and maintain our sanity while being constantly bombarded by distractions. I changed my system for dealing with e-mail after reading one of Mann's postings (in which he referenced another blog and credited the blog for the system--i.e., he didn't try to claim it as his own), and I do find much of this discourse fascinating. For instance, e-mail alone causes so much angst for some people that it has led to discussions of "declaring e-mail bankruptcy" (Lawrence Lessig) and trying to achieve "e-mail zero" (an empty inbox) on a daily basis. For those of you who have more than a hundred e-mails sitting in your inbox that you've read but haven't processed, you'll find much of this discussion to be worthwhile reading. Enjoy.
The Machine is Us/ing Us (Final Version)
This video provides a good (and fairly quick) overview of what "Web 2.0" is all about--linking people to each other with interactive sites that are user-friendly. Do you find this to be a revolutionary development in the Internet and the Web, or do you find it an example of technology creating a cacophony of voices?
Sunday, September 23, 2007
How's that for irony? Bosnian couple have online affair ... with each other
This definitely belongs in "News of the Weird." A Bosnian couple who were unhappy in their marriage each went online to find true love and wound up finding each other. Now they're getting a divorce!
What does that have to say about technology and society?
News blogger Ben Greenman has the story.
Couple Divorce After Having an Online Affair... With Each Other
What does that have to say about technology and society?
News blogger Ben Greenman has the story.
Couple Divorce After Having an Online Affair... With Each Other
Wednesday, September 12, 2007
AppleInsider | Free iPhone unlocking solution released for download
A team of hackers attempting to unlock Apple Inc.'s iPhone for use with GSM-based wireless carriers other than AT&T appear to have finally succeeded in their efforts, and last night began distributing their solution as a free download via several websites.
Dubbed "iUnlock," the SIM unlocking tool represents the fruits of a multi-month effort on the part of the unofficial "iPhone Dev Team" -- a community of independent contributors who've banded together to discover and develop additional uses for the inaugural Apple handset.
Unlike commercial efforts from groups such as iPhoneSIMfree and UniquePhones, iUnlock was released Tuesday evening as a free download, and has since begun to spread rapidly across the web. Several iPhone owners and members of Apple online communities claim to have tested and verified the solution as genuine.
Tuesday, September 11, 2007
Steve Jobs: iCame, iSaw, iCaved - New York Times
Steve Jobs: iCame, iSaw, iCaved - New York Times
By DAVID CARR
Published: September 10, 2007
Let me get this straight: Steve Jobs insists that songs on iTunes cost 99 cents and television episodes cost $1.99 because consumers crave simple pricing.
Except, of course, when it comes to Apple’s own products.
On Thursday, I was at the massive Apple temple just off Central Park. From a pricing perspective, it was chaos — a very lucrative form of chaos. The day before, Mr. Jobs had dropped the price of the iPhone, introduced the iPod Touch, re-priced the original iPod, and introduced a new Nano with video capability.
The tables contained both new and old versions of the devices, but the signs listed the old prices.
“These signs are wrong,” said Bryan, a clerk in sort of general-announcement mode near the mob at the iPhone table late in the afternoon. “The price just dropped $200, and you should get ’em while the getting’s good.”
There were wrinkles created by all the dynamic pricing. Customers who paid $599 when the iPhone came out two months ago saw their status drop from early adopter to, well, sucker, after Mr. Jobs cut the price of the device by a third.
In 3 Months, iPhone Sales Top a Million - New York Times
In 3 Months, iPhone Sales Top a Million - New York Times
By BLOOMBERG NEWS
Published: September 11, 2007
Apple Inc. has sold its millionth iPhone less than three months after the device’s debut, allaying investor concerns that demand had slowed.
Last week, the company, which had set out to sell a million iPhones by the end of this month, cut the price of the handset, which doubles as an iPod music player, by a third, to $399.
It took almost two years for Apple to sell a million iPods, the chief executive, Steven P. Jobs, said in a statement yesterday.
Monday, September 10, 2007
Writing, Sharing And Protecting Your Life’s Story
Writing, Sharing And Protecting Your Life’s Story

A new class of startups is emerging that is part blogging, part genealogy and part something unique. They are focused on the very long term - getting and then keeping customers for decades, and encouraging friends and especially family members to join, too. Once they’re hooked, they’ve spent so much time building content that they are very unlikely to ever leave.
Wednesday, September 5, 2007
Apple Slashes iPhone Price And Dials Up An iPhone-Like iPod
Apple Slashes iPhone Price And Dials Up An iPhone-Like iPod: Financial News - Yahoo! Finance
Sep. 5, 2007 (Investor's Business Daily delivered by Newstex) --
With an eye on the holiday shopping season, Apple Wednesday refreshed its lineup of iPod portable media players and slashed the price of its iPhone by a third.
Apple's AAPL new slate of iPods includes a high-end model that borrows the looks and features of the i- Phone. That model, the iPod Touch, has the same widescreen display and touch-screen controls as the i- Phone, which debuted in late June.
Apple also introduced new models of the iPod Shuffle, iPod Nano and the original product, now called the iPod Classic.
Plus, it announced a new wireless music download service for the i- Phone and iPod Touch called the iTunes Wi-Fi Music Store. And it started selling customizable ring tones via the iTunes store.
"They have a very deep and complete lineup for the holiday at very aggressive price points that their competitors are going to have a hard time matching," said Michael Gartenberg, an analyst with Jupiter Research. "It's looking like another very strong holiday for Apple."
Chief Executive Steve Jobs unveiled the new products at a press and analyst event Wednesday in San Francisco.
Apple's lineup of iPods covers all parts of the market, he says. From the low-cost iPod Shuffle, which sells for $79 for a 1-gigabyte model, to the feature-rich iPod Touch, which costs $299 for an 8 GB model and $399 for a 16 GB model.
The iPod Touch is basically a "phoneless iPhone," says Ezra Gottheil, an analyst with Technology Business Research. It has Wi-Fi for wireless Web browsing and the same multi-touch interface and applications as the iPhone. But the iPod Touch is only 8 millimeters thin, compared with 11.6 mm for the iPhone.
"We think it's one of the Seven Wonders of the World," said Jobs, describing the iPod Touch.
Sunday, September 2, 2007
God goes digital on new Christian version of YouTube
The Herald Bulletin - God goes digital on new Christian version of YouTube
On any Sunday morning, members of Faith Church in Anderson expect to sing several hymns and listen as Walt Weaver preaches. They also expect to watch some TV without leaving their pews.
Weaver has been sprinkling his services with multiple video clips for more than a year because he said they can add texture to a song or enhance his sermon.
“We incorporate them into just about everything we can,” he said. “It’s hard for people to live in this fast-paced culture and then come to this church and have nothing visual.”
More churches are turning to new technology in the hope that it will engage their congregations and stop the national decline in church attendance.
But Godtube.com, a new Christian video-sharing site, makes it possible for people to bypass the bricks and mortar and experience their faith in a completely digital format.
The site hosts more than 20,000 clips. They range from amateur home videos to professionally produced television segments, and they include sermons, music videos, sketch comedies and infomercials.
Like Youtube.com, Godtube allows anyone to post a video and share it via the Internet. The only difference is videos on Godtube must pertain to Christianity.
Many religious sites have copied nonreligious models. MyChurch.org is similar to the social networking site MySpace, and Conservapedia.com is the religious right’s response to Wikipedia, an online encyclopedia for which anyone can write.
That these religious sites exist at all is the latest example of churches using new technology to convey their message, said Merle Strege, a historian of Christianity and professor at Anderson University’s religious studies department.
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