Apple's Siri is the AI poster girl for the iPhone 4S, and she's charming and clever--if limited. But based on the original tech Apple bought to make Siri work, we can say that in 2012 she'll charm your socks off, internationally. "Siri, why did Apple make you?"..."Apple doesn't tell me everything you know." Thus speaks Siri , the artificially intelligent personal digital assistant from the iPhone 4S that's all over the tech and regular press because she's charming, useful, novel (even if her sharp wit wasn't originally developed by Apple ), and works unlike almost every other encounter with voice-recognition tech you may have had: well.
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Feed SubscriptionIs a Cool Office Worth It?
Sure, they're fun places to work.
Read More »Work/Life: Two Smartphones Or One?
The international wireless association that represents the wireless communications industry is officially recommending to employers to let workers "bring their own device to work." I put that in quotation marks because its actually the name of CTIA's formal campaign being pushed at this week's Enterprise & Application conference in San Diego. So, do you agree? Should employers let their workers use their personal smartphones and tablets for work
Read More »How Visa Protects Your Data
A rare trip inside the network's top-secret security center. Location: We can't say
Read More »LaunchRock: A Startup That Helps Other Startups Hype Themselves
LaunchRock helps startups lure thousands of users--before they even debut. How do you sell something that doesn't exist?
Read More »Don’t Shoot The iMessager: Why Cell Phone Networks May Soon Have To Shrink Your Bill
Tomorrow Apple is due to launch its iOS 5 update to the iPhone, iPad, and iPod Touch's systems, bringing iMessage with it. Because of this, and other new tech, how your cell phone provider charges you for your service may be close to radically changing--powered not by internal company decisions, but by smartphone advances
Read More »Netflix Kills Qwikster after 1 Million Subscribers Leave
I’ve written about Netflix before and how much I like the service. I love the instant gratification of streaming movies and apparently I am one of the few people who doesn’t use the DVD option.
Read More »How to Sell an Idea to a Venture Capitalist
%excerpt% Continued here: How to Sell an Idea to a Venture Capitalist
Read More »Stolen Data: How Thieves Get Your Identity and Other Information
Despite our (usually modest) efforts to protect our personal information, thieves and hackers are constantly accessing our records. These data breaches have soared since 2005 . Although crooks still account for most invasions, many of the largest breaches are now made by "hacktivists"--individuals or groups who are angry about a company or organization's actions and expose its records as a way to protest or to strike back.
Read More »FTL neutrinos (or not)
The recent news from the Oscillation Project with Emulsion-tRacking Apparatus (OPERA) neutrino experiment, that neutrinos have been clocked travelling faster than light, made the headlines over the last week and rightly so.
Read More »Evaluating scientific claims (or, do we have to take the scientist’s word for it?)
Recently, we’ve noted that a public composed mostly of non-scientists may find itself asked to trust scientists , in large part because members of that public are not usually in a position to make all their own scientific knowledge.
Read More »Foresight Is 20/20: Predictive Analytics And The Business Of Certainty
Want to make really smart decisions for your company? It's simple as looking into the future and assessing the data--a service that a few young companies dealing in "predictive analytics" are selling. Business swims in a sea of data.
Read More »The All-Male Start-up is Dead
Is your start-up starting to feel like a frat house? New research suggests that having more women at your company, and increasing diversity in general, can improve your chances of success. Women own about 40 percent of the private businesses in the United States, according to the Center for Women's Business Research
Read More »Creep Factor: OnStar Tracking Former Customers
General Motors's subsidiary, OnStar, is now the one getting tracked by some Congressional leaders after a controversial e-mail it sent out to customers earlier this month.
Read More »As Facebook Rolls Out Next-Gen Newsstand, Pew Reports That Americans Have Multiple News Sources
Last week, Mark Zuckerberg shook things up at the social media/news interface when he announced Facebook's upcoming partnerships with a number of major news organizations. The Washington Post's Social Reader already looks like a slick piece of work , and apps such as that from other news organizations could dramatically change the way 750 million people (give or take) encounter and read news on the web.
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