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11 Oct 23:48

Google+ for consumers is dying, but Google just gave it new features for the workplace (GOOG, GOOGL)

by Rosalie Chan

Google

  • Google announced new business features for Google+ on Thursday, just days after it closed Google+ to the public.
  • Google is in the midst of controversy — and possible legal action — over its decision not to disclose a glitch in Google+ that left users' data exposed.
  • The new features on Google+ are designed to make it easier for employees to engage in conversations across the company, and give IT admins more capabilities.

Google announced on Thursday that it's adding new features to Google+ for businesses — just days after Google shuttered Google+ to the general public after reports that it had left personal data exposed.

Google is now facing possible investigations from European regulators, and lawsuits from users from California. In addition, United States Senators are asking the Federal Trade Commission to investigate Google's decision not to disclose the security flaw to the public. 

Google+ was Google’s response to Facebook, but it never generated much of a following compared to the top social network. Even Google's top executives stopped using it years ago. However, Google is continuing to invest in the other market for Google+: Businesses. 

“Over the past year, we’ve been building a new experience that’s designed specifically to meet the needs of large organizations with distributed workforces,” David Conway, product manager at Google, said in a blog post.

Some of these new business features include tags that make it easier for employees to engage in conversations across their company, custom streams about specific tags or people, engagement metrics for content, and additional capabilities for admins.

leadership.max 2000x2000

For example, with the new features, admins can bulk-add entire groups to a Google+ community, easing the process of onboarding users. They can also view engagement metrics for employees’ Google+ communities. Later on, Google plans to roll out a feature for admins to review and moderate posts by employees, if needed.

With tags, employees can follow specific content with the tag they want to find or discuss new ideas. And with custom streams, employees can more easily receive communications from executives. Google will also provide post analytics so employees can see which teams are viewing this content.

Companies like ATB Financial have already been testing these new features, and Google is planning more features for 2019. Whether this more enterprise-driven direction of Google+ will have better success than its discontinued iteration remains to be seen.

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Ray Dalio says the economy looks like 1937 and a downturn is coming in about two years

11 Oct 23:46

Google Translate can now visually translate 13 more languages

by Makena Kelly

Starting this week, the Google Translate app will be capable of visually translating 13 new languages by using the camera on your smartphone, according to a report from VentureBeat.

In 2015, Google added the visual translation feature to the Translate app with the support of 27 different languages. It allows users to translate dinner menus and signs in real time, making communicating abroad much easier. This week’s announcement adds Punjabi, Bengali, Vietnamese, Thai, Gujarati, Kannada, Nepali, Tamil, Telugu, and Malayalam, putting the total number of supported languages close to 50.

Users can access the feature in the Translate app by navigating to the camera icon on the home screen. The app will then prompt you to line up the text...

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11 Oct 04:04

Vonage Launches Nexmo Messages API and Dispatch API

by KevinSundstrom

Vonage, a cloud communications platform provider, has announced the beta release of the Nexmo Messages API and Nexmo Dispatch API. Nexmo is an API platform that provides a number of tools developers can use to add contextual communications capabilities to applications.

10 Oct 22:43

Microsoft is now a top five PC maker in the US thanks to Surface

by Tom Warren

Microsoft has broken into the top five PC makers in the US for the first time. Market research firm Gartner revealed today that Microsoft now holds 4.1 percent of the US PC market, edging out Acer for the fifth spot. It’s the first time Microsoft has entered the top five in the US, thanks to the company’s Surface devices.

While Microsoft has secured this top spot in the US, the company still has some work to do before that position is replicated worldwide. Both Acer and Asus are jostling for the fifth spot worldwide, with Lenovo leading across the world. Gartner and IDC both agree that Lenovo is the top PC maker, but the two research firms provide differing estimates for shipments overall. Gartner says PC shipments increased by 0.1...

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10 Oct 21:39

Google failed to justify the Pixel 3 XL’s massive notch

by Nick Statt

Google’s Pixel 3 and Pixel 3 XL arrived yesterday without too much fanfare. After all, the devices leaked pretty much in entirety over the course of the last two months, leaving little to the imagination when Google hardware chief Rick Osterloh came on stage. But one aspect of the Pixel 3 XL, in particular, that became more pronounced and perplexing now that we’ve seen it in full — and heard Google’s reasoning about its existence — is the rather obtrusive display notch.

With the Pixel 3 XL, Google’s justification for the notch is that it’s been able to reduce the bezels of the device and provide a larger display, while the notch is there to accommodate better speakers and an improved dual selfie camera system. Google even claims it has a...

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10 Oct 04:42

Google’s Pixel 3 won’t surprise you, but it might delight you

by Vlad Savov
<em>Google Pixel 3 XL and Pixel 3.</em>

All the leaks and prejudgment in the buildup to the launch of Google’s Pixel 3 this week reminds me of how the original Pixel made its way into the world. Two years ago, as now, Google’s flagship phone set a new high-water mark for pre-announcement leaks. The original Pixel was also a dowdy slab of big-bezel electronics, and the new Pixel XL doesn’t do much better, featuring arguably the ugliest and most intrusive notch — a hotly-contested prize — we’ve yet seen.

The new Pixels look every bit as unexciting and quotidian as their predecessors. They have no sliding camera modules or iridescent paint jobs, and their new color this year seems almost reluctant to admit to being pink. I’ll understand if you find yourself underwhelmed.

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09 Oct 23:39

Pixel Slate is Google’s new detachable Chrome OS tablet

by Jacob Kastrenakes

Google is taking another shot at a Pixel tablet, with a high-end detachable meant to rival the iPad Pro and Surface Pro. The Pixel Slate is a Chrome OS tablet with a detachable keyboard cover that turns it into something very closely resembling a laptop.

Full details haven’t been announced yet, but a video that went up early showed the tablet being sold with a keyboard cover that included circular keycaps — something stylish, but not often seen on keyboards.

This is Google’s second attempt at making a Pixel-branded tablet. Its last try, the Pixel C, was also a detachable meant to be paired with a keyboard cover. But the Pixel C ran Android, which has never excelled on tablets due to a lack of optimized apps. The Pixel Slate, on the other...

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09 Oct 23:38

The Pixel Slate: first look at Google’s new tablet

by Dieter Bohn

Chrome OS replaces Android as Google’s tablet OS

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09 Oct 23:23

Google's Pixel 3 event in 6 minutes

by Clancy Morgan

At its October 2018 event, Google showed off new phones and other devices. The search giant debuted the new Pixel 3 and Pixel 3 XL, the Google Home Hub, and the Pixel Slate. The devices will all be available later this year.

Join the conversation about this story »

09 Oct 23:05

The breach that killed Google+ wasn’t a breach at all

by Russell Brandom

For months, Google has been trying to stay out of the way of the growing tech backlash, but yesterday, the dam finally broke with news of a bug in the rarely used Google+ network that exposed private information for as many as 500,000 users. Google found and fixed the bug back in March, around the same time the Cambridge Analytica story was heating up in earnest. But with the news breaking now, the damage is already spreading. The consumer version of Google+ is shutting down, German privacy regulators in Germany and the US are already looking into possible legal action, and former SEC officials are publicly speculating about what Google may have done wrong.

The vulnerability itself seems to have been relatively small in scope. The heart...

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09 Oct 04:29

Vonage Announces New Chief Marketing Officer Appointment

by Stephen Dykes
Rishi Dave Vonage CMO

Vonage LogoGlobal Cloud Communications vendor Vonage have announced the appointment of their new Chief Marketing Officer.

Focussed on leading Vonage’s global marketing strategy, Rishi Dave will support the Vonage’s role as a global leader in business cloud communications and help lead the Company through its next phase of growth.

“I’m excited to welcome Rishi to the Vonage team,” commented Vonage CEO Alan Masarek. “His experience in technology, software, and cloud will help further position Vonage as a business communications software leader. Rishi’s expertise in leading all aspects of integrated marketing, including brand transformation, digital, social, data and analytics, will have a tremendously positive impact on Vonage’s positioning and performance.”

EASY TO REACH 728X90 Vonage Small UCC

Rishi brings more than 15 years B2B strategy, marketing and brand expertise to Vonage, having formerly been the Chief Marketing Officer at global data and analytics firm, Dun & Bradstreet. In addition, Rishi has also served in executive marketing roles at hardware and software provider, Dell, as well as software companies Rivio, Inc. and Trilogy Software.

“I’m thrilled to join Vonage at such an exciting time in the Company’s history,” added Rishi Dave, Chief Marketing Officer for Vonage

“This is an incredible opportunity to help evolve an iconic brand like Vonage as it continues to expand its presence and market share in business cloud communications. Vonage has a strong culture and strategic foundation, and I look forward to building upon the Company’s momentum through innovative and breakthrough marketing strategies.”

Rishi was also named as a Top Digital Marketer by BtoB Magazine (now AdAge) two years in a row, and as a B2B Innovator by the Demand Gen Report.

Rishi will concentrate on maximising awareness of Vonage’s capabilities and ability to provide businesses with communications software that improves collaboration and productivity among employees, while creating more meaningful engagement with customers to drive better business outcomes.

Headquartered in New Jersey and with UK offices in London, Vonage is a leading provider of cloud-based communications services with nearly 2 million customers worldwide. Over 600,000 business users every day trust Vonage to revolutionise their communications through Digital Transformation (DX) by making their phone system do more for less and with complete flexibility to manage their services however they choose.

09 Oct 04:29

WebRTC vs Zoom. Who has Better Video Quality?

by Tsahi Levent-Levi

WebRTC vs Zoom? WebRTC is actually quite good. But you knew that already – didn’t you? 🙂

They say quality is in the eye of the beholder. So behold.

We’ve all been told once and again that this video conferencing vendor or that video conferencing vendor work great. They offer the best quality. The best experience. They work in conditions that others don’t.

I even had a call once with an entrepreneur that explained to me how he is going to offer a service that is better in its 1:1 video quality than Skype and Google Hangouts. And he is going to do it with WebRTC. I spent the better part of that call to get him off that idea (something about his logic was off there).

But I am digressing.

As many others, I’ve been told time and again how Zoom is great. How in spite of the fact that it doesn’t work in the browser and forces you to download its client (some even refer to it as a virus), it gets traction and adoption. It feels like it is the best game in town. And then they mention the reasons:

  1. It’s free (until it isn’t, which is a great business model if you can make it work, and Zoom is making it work)
  2. It has better video quality than the competition. Especially WebRTC

I am not the only one who needs to listen to it, and even believe it to some extent. The guys at Jitsi got curious – why not put it to the test?

So they took a Mac device, placed it on a WiFi network, added a network limiter so they can fiddle with the network configuration, and did a 1:1 call. Once with Zoom. And once with WebRTC.

Idea is this – start with as much bandwidth as the video call wants. Then limit it to 500kbps. Check how much time it takes to adapt. Remove the limit and change how much time it takes it to adapt back. More about it in Jitsi’s blog.

Essentially – testing for this network conditions:

The longer that marked areas, the worse the experience is going to be for the users.

And guess what? Zoom faired worse than WebRTC. Not a little, but a lot worse.

Full adaptation to limiting the bandwidth took WebRTC 20 seconds. It took Zoom 156 seconds (!).

Ramp up back to 2mbps took WebRTC 32 seconds. It took Zoom 62 seconds.

Now here’s my analysis of this.

WebRTC Rocks

Yap. it really does.

The screen capture from that Zoom blog post that was pasted by Jitsi?

Stating that “web-RTC is a very limited solution that would not allow us to provide all the excellent features that our users have come to expect from us”?

That’s from 2015.

A lot have been improved in WebRTC since then, if that explanation was even correct in 2015 to begin with.

Without the need for most of us to do anything, we’re getting updates to a top notch media engine in the form of WebRTC inside the browsers we use. The code used in Chrome are open sourced, so they are accessible to all to embed it in their own applications as well.

Security fixes? New codecs? Improved media algorithms? They just “happen”. Out of thin air. For most of us.

Defending Zoom

If I look at it from Zoom’s point of view, besides the fact of being a dominant player in the market with or without WebRTC, here’s the challenges with such a test scenario:

  • It was done once, or a few times. But it is still only one scenario
  • It wasn’t a real life scenario. Just something concocted for this. Jitsi could have rigged it and tweaked it so that WebRTC would shine, but in real life, that doesn’t happen, and at Zoom we’re optimizing for real life scenarios
    • (that isn’t really so. From my experience and knowledge of the Jitsi team, I’d estimate they tried to be VERY careful here to not fall into that trap)
    • (and what’s real life scenarios anyway?)
  • The network limiter used changes behavior in ways that aren’t close enough to reality
    • (that I can understand and live with. We see faster uptake of the same type of scenarios for WebRTC at testRTC – more on that later)
  • Zoom might be working through external remote servers for that same session while WebRTC is going peer to peer on the local network. Servers behave differently than clients, so the results seem somewhat “off”
  • In other scenarios, Zoom might actually be better than WebRTC

Which leads us to the fact that more tests are needed to know which one is best and in which scenarios.

This starts to sound like the VP8 vs H.264 quality comparisons of the past (I never could tell the difference).

It’s the Infrastructure Stupid

With WebRTC, it all boils down to the infrastructure. The one with the better deployment wins the quality game.

  1. Do you peer to peer for 1:1 sessions and seamlessly switch to SFU architecture when more participants join?
  2. Where are your media servers located?
  3. Do you cascade the session across media servers to improve quality?
  4. Do you provide feedback to the user about the network conditions?
  5. Do you switch video off when there’s not enough bandwidth?
  6. How are you managing things like FEC, simulcast, SVC, … ?
  7. What about mobile and native app support?

And the list goes on.

With vendors who use proprietary codecs and transport protocols, this is doubly so, as they need to cater for the browser once they reach WebRTC. So while their native apps might be optimized, it might all go down the drain once they transcode or just “translate” to reach the browser using WebRTC.

Need to understand WebRTC and how to design and architect real world solutions with it? A first step is to understand the servers used to connect WebRTC.

Join a free video course on WebRTC servers

Which brings us to why someone like Zoom should use WebRTC and thing about the quality issues once connecting to it:

You Need WebRTC

Zoom already supports WebRTC. I just found out when I searched for stuff to write this article: there’s a Zoom Web Client

It runs on Chrome and enables using audio in Chrome when joining meetings. No video, probably because transcoding the proprietary video codec Zoom uses to the ones in WebRTC is too complicated, but using G.711 or Opus in the browser and transcoding or using the same in Zoom is way simpler.

Zoom is going through the same phases that Amazon did with Chime:

  • Amazon Chime started with a downloadable client
  • They then added limited browser support that enabled users to view the screen shared in the browser and connect via the phone without the need to download the client
  • Later on, audio support was added to the web client
  • And recently, video got supported
  • Screen sharing and remote desktop control still doesn’t work. I’d say it is a matter of time

This exact same path has been happening to other vendors in one way or another.

Why not Check Your Own Service?

While writing this article, it dawned on me, that this is one of these scenarios that is ridiculously easy to simulate using testRTC, so I went ahead and created a script that does just that:

  • Loads up Jitsi with 2 participants. That should cause them to work peer-to-peer
  • Run the call for 1 minute unhindered
  • Limit bitrate to 500kbps and run for 2 more minutes
  • Remove bitrate limit and run for 2 more minutes

Here’s how the main part of the script looks like:

   // Wait for 1 minute
client
   .pause(60*sec)
   .rtcScreenshot('ALL GOOD');
   if (probeType === 1) {
   client
       .rtcEvent('Start limit', 'global')
       .rtcSetNetworkProfile('custom', 'bandwidth', 500000, 'both', 'both')
   }

   // 2 minutes with bandwidth limits
client
   .pause(60*sec)
   .rtcScreenshot('LIMITED')
   .pause(60*sec);

   if (probeType === 1) {
    client
       .rtcSetNetworkProfile('') // back to pristine network conditions
       .rtcEvent('Stop limit', 'global');
   }

client
   // 2 more minutes unlimited
   .pause(60*sec)
   .rtcScreenshot('BACK TO NORMAL')
   .pause(60*sec);

 

The .rtcEvent() calls are there to place a vertical lines on the graphs while the .rtcSetNetworkProfile() is there to fiddle around with the network conditions.

There were two probes here, each one a participant in the call. The first one is the one I limited while the second one was left “untouched”.

Here’s what the graphs look like on the second probe:

The above graph shows the outgoing birate. Within a span of 5 seconds, WebRTC finds out the new effective bitrate and adapts to it. Ramping back up takes some 20 seconds.

The above graph shows the incoming frame rate. You can see how frame rate reporting in WebRTC takes a bit of time to get back to its usual self – also some 20 seconds or so.

I wanted to check how the Jitsi SFU would behave, so I tweaked the test URL for that. The results? Still better than the Zoom one. 20 seconds to hit 30 frames per second and around 50 seconds to get back to full bitrate.

If you want to try it yourself, just import the JSON file in this Google Drive folder to your testRTC account and modify it to fit your needs.

Where to now?

WebRTC is more than good enough.

Making it better is usually about thinking your way through the best possible architecture, along with media servers that take care of network conditions properly.

As for Zoom… please make sure your next call with me is on something that has WebRTC. The machine I regularly use for call is Linux. Zoom doesn’t work there… it doesn’t really support Chrome or Linux. Yet.

The post WebRTC vs Zoom. Who has Better Video Quality? appeared first on BlogGeek.me.

09 Oct 04:25

HP’s latest convertible Chromebook starts at $599

by Jon Porter

The HP Chromebook x360 14 is a convertible laptop running Google’s lightweight ChromeOS operating system. HP is advertising that this is the thinnest Chromebook its ever produced at just 16mm think, but depending on your budget its size won’t limit its power, with your choice of either an 8th-generation Intel i3 or i5 processor. That’s paired with 8GB RAM and 64GB SSD, so this device shouldn’t struggle with light workloads.

Despite how thin the chassis is, you’re still getting a decent array of ports. There are two USB Type-C ports, a standard sized USB Type-A port, and a MicroSD slot. The battery isn’t too shabby either, with HP promising that it should last as long as 14 hours on a single charge, although you’re only getting a Full HD...

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09 Oct 04:24

Avaya to Demonstrate Social Platform for Chatbots at GITEX 2018

by Stephen Dykes
Avaya Chatbots

Avaya LOGOUnified Communications manufacturer Avaya is to demonstrate a new ‘Social’ Platform for Chatbots at the GITEX 2018 event in Dubai on the 14th October.

Echoing traditional social media, Avaya’s platform is believed to be the first of its kind in the World and would allow any enterprise to register its chatbot with a unique social profile and ‘friend’ other member bots from different domains and industries. The chatbots will be able to rate each other, and store confidence metrics based on the quality of information received and feedback from end customers, leading to constant improvements in each bot’s quality and speed of customer service.

The impetus for this innovation came from a 2018 global Avaya survey of 8,000 consumers which found that 80% of people expect an immediate response from their banks, hospitals, hotels and even their governments, highlighting the need for efficient and ‘always-on’ customer service.

“With automation, organisations can overcome their human resource limitations and meet these customer expectations by delivering seamless, intuitive and intelligent experiences across all touch points. Bots are rapidly becoming one of the most powerful means to positively impact customer service, second only to face-to-face interaction,” said Laurent Philonenko, Senior Vice President, Innovation at Avaya.

However, one of the issues facing the growing acceptance and use of Chatbots in the Enterprise space is that they can typically only respond to a relatively narrow set of dialogues. This has limited their ability to fully and efficiently service customers’ requests when they face questions they haven’t been trained to answer.

“But what if we could enable chatbots from different domains and industries to collaborate and exchange information via a highly regulated platform?”

“And find answers from other chatbots, not just humans? We could, in effect, securely link enterprises, significantly expanding the efficacy and expertise of any single bot thereby enabling organisations to deliver an exceptional level of customer service, reducing the need for human intervention and enabling deeper self-service, as well as reducing the need for supervised learning,” added Ahmed Helmy, Solutions Architects Director, Avaya EMEA & APAC.

Avaya Equinox Banner
According to Avaya there are two scenarios for how customer and bot interactions will be handled in real time—either the original bot contacts a friended bot on the customer’s behalf and delivers the received answer, or the original bot connects the customer to a friended bot in the style of a conference call.

“This is a huge step forward in addressing the information and service bottlenecks of chatbot systems,”

The social platform model also means that Avaya’s customers can increase the value of their chatbot solutions without having to engage in lengthy and costly data curation or warehousing projects,” added Helmy.

Avaya is incorporating this groundbreaking, patent-pending capability in its Avaya Ava smart self-service platform, which already provides a chatbot and messaging framework associated to natural language processing and machine learning.

09 Oct 04:20

The scariest parts of the new climate change report: The goals the world set are inadequate, and the track we're on is disastrous

by Kevin Loria

earth from space apollo 8 nasa

  • The world will see catastrophic effects of climate change if temperatures climb to 1.5 degrees Celsius over pre-industrial levels, according to a new report.
  • These effects include extreme heatwaves, severe droughts, the death of coral reefs, mass extinctions, sea-level rise, and more.
  • We're on track to hit that 1.5-degree temperature rise by 2040. If we reach 2 degrees C of warming, the effects will be even more disastrous.
  • It's still possible to avoid the worst of these predictions, but doing so requires a transformation of the world's energy and economic systems.

The world could see severe, catastrophic effects of climate change far sooner than anticipated, according to a new report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).

And we're running out of time to thwart it.

The goal of the global Paris climate agreement, which was signed in 2015, was to keep the world's temperature from rising more than 2 degrees Celsius over pre-industrial times. To do that, nations agreed to cut their emissions of heat-trapping greenhouse gases.

But the agreement's more ambitious goal was to prevent temperatures from rising more than 1.5 degrees C. That's because even 1.5 degrees of warming will cause catastrophic effects, including more intense storms, searing heat waves, mass extinctions, and droughts. If we hit 2 degrees of warming, the effects will be even worse.

According to the new report, we're already close to blowing past those thresholds, into temperature zones that will have devastating consequences. We're expected to hit that 1.5-degree mark around 2040. By 2100, we're on track to see more than 3 C above pre-industrial levels.

It's still possible to prevent the world from warming more than 1.5 C, the authors of the report said. To do that, we'd have to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 45% by 2030 compared to what they were in 2010. Then by 2050, we'd have to reduce emissions to zero.

Doing that would require an immediate, massive, coordinated transformation of the global economic system — especially the energy system.

china smog

What this new report means

When countries signed the Paris agreement, the consequences of a 1.5-degree temperature rise weren't very clear, IPCC chair Hoesung Lee said at a press conference.

But we now have a better idea of how bad 1.5 degrees C of warming looks, since we've already heated the world by about 1 degree Celsius over pre-industrial levels by sending greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.

Half a degree more (about .9 F) might sound small. But that number is an average of temperatures all over the globe, so some places will become significantly hotter. The Arctic, for example, is likely to be several degrees warmer, increasing ice melt and sea level rise.

That half of a degree will make drought-prone regions much more likely to experience severe drought, and areas prone to heat waves or intense hurricanes will get more of those disasters, too. These factors could trigger huge migrations of people and mass extinctions of animals. Most coral reefs will die, which could trigger rippling effects throughout the oceans.

The new report says we'll see those effects in just over 20 years unless major changes are implemented. 

hottest year

What happens if we get all the way to 2 C or beyond

The Trump administration's plan to withdraw from the Paris agreement and eliminate regulations designed to lower emissions will almost certainly fuel more warming. 

If the world sees 2 degrees C of warming, ice sheet collapse in Antarctica becomes far more likely. Sea levels would be at least 10 centimeters higher by the end of the century at 2 degrees than they would be with 1.5 degrees. Collapse of coral reefs would be essentially ensured. The Arctic, which would be ice-free about once per century at 1.5 degrees of temperature rise, would be ice-free once per decade at 2 degrees.

"Every extra bit of warming matters, especially since warming of 1.5 C or higher increases the risk associated with long-lasting or irreversible changes, such as the loss of some ecosystems," said Hans-Otto Pörtner, co-chair of one of the IPCC groups, in a news release.

These effects will make certain parts of the world less habitable for humans. Coastal cities like Miami or New York will have to adapt or abandon part or all of their territory. And for the millions of people who live in nations that are particularly vulnerable to warmer temperatures, significant societal disruption and migration are likely.

At 2 degrees C, we'd expect "disproportionately rapid evacuation from the tropics," according to the report.

hurricane florence

There are financial estimates of the damage, too. Damage from 1.5 degrees of warming is estimated to be about $54 trillion, a number that rises to $69 trillion for 2 C temperature rise.

As climatologist Michael Mann told National Geographic, the more we can to prevent this temperature rise, the better. "The further we go the more explosions we are likely to set off: 1.5C is safer than 2C, 2C is safer than 2.5C, 2.5C is safer than 3C, and so on," he said.

Theoretically, technologies that suck carbon out of the air and allow us to bury it underground could help — and will be needed. But right now, they aren't cost-effective or efficient enough.

Scientists have been sounding the alarm on climate change for decades, yet global emissions are expected to rise again in 2018. This latest report shows that the need for action is more urgent than ever.

SEE ALSO: The world faces a future of floods, famine, and extreme heat — here’s what it’ll take to bounce back

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Neil deGrasse Tyson explains the real problem with climate skeptics

08 Oct 03:58

Apple and Microsoft are both making a big bet on the future of USB — and they’re both wrong (AAPL, MSFT)

by Antonio Villas-Boas

Surface Pro 6

  • Microsoft latest Surface Pro 6 and Surface Laptop 2 devices, announced this week, won't come with USB-C or Thunderbolt 3, the latest and fastest standards for connecting accessories and charging your computer.
  • Apple's recent MacBook Pros have taken the opposite approach by only including USB-C ports — alienating those who don't necessarily adopt the latest tech the moment it rolls out.
  • Neither company has the right idea.

Just last week, Microsoft unveiled a brand new laptop lineup that has zero compatibility with the latest standard for connecting accessories — USB-C.

In other words, these laptops may sport 2018 specs, but are about as cutting-edge as devices released in 2015. 

Meanwhile, Microsoft's direct competitor Apple has a polar opposite approach: Give the people USB-C, and nothing else, to force them into the future. Indeed, Apple's current MacBook and MacBook Pro lineups are entirely devoted to USB-C, with nary a traditional USB port in sight. 

Interestingly, neither tech behemoth has it right. At all.

My colleague Matt Weinberger shared his concerns with Apple's USB-C-only strategy in an earlier post. It means dongles and frustration for anyone who's not ready to make the move. Even Apple isn't ready, judging by the fact that it ships the usual USB cable with its latest iPhone, rather than a newer USB-C cable. 

Today, I'm focusing a little more on Microsoft's move to completely ditch USB-C.

What is USB-C? 

In a nutshell, USB-C is a new standard that uses one cable to connect everything from headphones, to external monitors, to flash drives, and even to wall chargers — it all uses one port that's standard across devices. 

USB-C also supports the "Thunderbolt 3" standard that began rolling out in late 2015. It delivers ultra-fast data speeds for heavy-duty accessories like external graphics cards (eGPUs) and Thunderbolt 3 external hard-drives — stuff that professionals might use to streamline their workflow. It has theoretical data transfer speeds of up to 5 gigabytes-per-second, which is significantly faster than previous USB generations, the latest of which (USB 3.2) could reach speeds of up to 2.5 gigabytes-per-second. 

surface laptop 2

I don't expect most people to immediately adopt USB-C/Thunderbolt 3, but I have to question why anyone would buy a laptop in 2018 that doesn't allow them to future-proof themselves as USB-C becomes more common. 

What's surprising is that it's Microsoft being the "weird" one among its peers. There are a wide variety of third-party Windows 10 laptops that come with similar, older-style USB ports as Microsoft's new Surface laptop lineup, as well as the newer USB-C. It's just an odd decision. 

Last year, Microsoft's Surface engineering chief Pete Kyriacou told the Verge that USB-C and Thunderbolt 3 are still confusing to a lot of people.

Kyriacou has a good point. It is confusing, even a year later. USB-C cables all look the same, but some work with Thunderbolt 3 accessories, and some don't. Unless you're in the know, you may never make sense of it all. You could say the kinks of USB-C and Thunderbolt 3 are still being ironed out. 

In an interview with journalist Lance Ulanoff around the big reveal event, Microsoft Surface boss Panos Panay spelled it out: USB-C is on Microsoft's radar. But it's not going to ditch traditional USB any time soon. 

What Microsoft and Apple get wrong

microsoft surface studio 2

Still, to completely omit the latest technology because it's confusing, especially when it's not a necessity, feels a little like helicopter parenting on Microsoft's part. It's not like anything will break if I plug in the wrong USB-C cable into the wrong USB-C port. Let me run my own life, Microsoft mom and Microsoft dad.

Plus, Microsoft apparently believes that USB-C and Thunderbolt 3 aren't too confusing for buyers of Microsoft's $3,499 Surface Studio 2. The new desktop from Microsoft, indeed, features the latest technology.

To be fair, I haven't yet tried the new Surface Pro 6 or Surface Laptop 2, beyond a few minutes with them at Microsoft's announcement event earlier this week. And when I do dig in on them, something tells me I'm not going to terribly miss the USB-C/Thunderbolt 3 ports that come standard on my 2016 MacBook Pro. Nearly all the accessories I own and use would plug in directly into the Surface laptop lineup. 

But what about anyone who has already adopted USB-C devices, especially pros who like the ultra fast data speeds of Thunderbolt 3 for their heavy-duty accessories? Microsoft offers no laptop that can suit their needs, and so, it could be  completely alienating a crowd of forward-thinking tech users. In other words, it's not pro enough for professionals or early adopters.

It's also completely alienating anyone who may wish to adopt USB-C/Thunderbolt 3 during the time they own a Surface Pro 6 or Surface Laptop 2. Say you own the Surface Pro 6, and you need a new external hard drive. You'd be stuck buying a slower model that uses older technology.  

The answer is definitely not to buy a USB-C-only MacBook Pro, either. Apple was too aggressive in ditching more traditional ports and force-feeding USB-C and Thunderbolt 3 to regular users. It's too pro, and the overly eager switch to USB-C is seeming more and more like a misfire by the company.

As nice as it is to plug all my regular USB accessories into a single USB-C adapter and port, relying on the tech can be a real pain. It's fine if you're a professional going all in on the latest technology, but maybe not so great for the rest of us.

My answer, for anyone who asks, will likely be to look elsewhere at third-party laptops that come with the ports you want, as well as those you might want in the near future so you can make the gradual shift to the latest technology at a pace that's comfortable for you.

And that's a huge shame, because the new Surface Pro 6 and Surface Laptop 2 could have been among the best laptops you can buy. Plus, they look really, really good in the new matte black color option.

SEE ALSO: There's a huge new update to Windows 10 that's going out — here are the 9 best new features and upgrades

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NOW WATCH: This smartphone has 5 cameras — here's what it's like

08 Oct 03:56

20 things we could do right now to prevent the wave of natural disasters, poverty, and pollution to come

by Hilary Brueck

A woman wades through a submerged street at the UNESCO heritage ancient town of Hoi An after typhoon Damrey hits Vietnam November 6, 2017. REUTERS/Kham

  • An initiative called Project Drawdown is bringing researchers together to figure out the best ways to cool down the planet and prevent more damaging floods, hurricanes, wildfires, droughts, and starvation.
  • Chad Frischmann, vice president of the project, spoke about the group's plan at TED's New York offices.
  • The solutions he proposed all exist already, and many have to do with better management of our food systems — wasting less and reducing spoilage.

There's a lot of fear and uncertainty going around about the future of our planet.

Sea levels are rising, we could soon face a "Hothouse Earth" scenario, and severe flooding from torrential rains is expected to get worse. If the atmosphere keeps heating up, some towns could even be threatened by wayward icebergs.

But Chad Frischmann doesn't think things are so bleak.

He's vice president of an initiative called Project Drawdown: a group of scientists, researchers, and writers who've calculated how to cool the planet over the next 30 years by reducing the amount of greenhouse gas in the atmosphere. The two-pronged plan is designed to both cut planet-warming emissions from fossil fuels and also suck more carbon dioxide into the ground, largely via photosynthesis. 

"Drawdown is a new way of thinking about and acting on global warming," Frischmann told an audience gathered at TED's New York conference stage last week. As he spoke, world leaders were gathered on the other side of Manhattan at the United Nations, debating the best ways to solve extreme poverty, disease, and malnutrition.

Frischmann said that solving those issues and tackling climate change are part of the same puzzle. He's convinced his drawdown plan can improve lives around world by feeding the hungry and educating young minds, all while reducing the Earth's temperature a bit for future generations.

He listed the top 20 ways that everyone — consumers, policy makers, food growers, and energy providers — could reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

Some of the solutions he proposed are already in use; these include universal education, family planning, sustainable refrigerants, better farming methods, and more wind power. 

"We have real, workable technology and practices that can achieve drawdown," Frischmann said. The problem is that the necessary changes to the ways we put food on the table and generate energy aren't happening fast enough.

"What we need is to accelerate the implementation," he said. 

A wish list for the planet

Chad Frischmann drawdown climate change

Below is Frischmann's ranking of the best ways to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, based on how many gigatons (billions of tons) of carbon dioxide emissions each approach could be expected to cut over a 30-year period. 

The solutions are grouped into a few key topic areas, like energy sources, food, and education of women and girls.

For example, according to Project Drawdown's calculations, by adopting a more plant-rich diet and eating less beef, we could cut more than 66 gigatons (that's billions of tons) of carbon dioxide emissions over the next 30 years. Other solutions include changing the way we cool our offices and homes, using less fertilizer on crops, improving soil health, regrowing forests, and restoring carbon-sucking peat bogs.

The cost of implementing all the solutions in Project Drawdown is estimated to be $1 trillion a year over the next 30 years, according to Frischmann.

"I know that sounds like a lot," he said, but he reminded the crowd that global GDP is now above $80 trillion a year, so it would cost less than 1.25% of our annual purse to enact these potentially planet-saving strategies.

Here are the top 20 things on the Project Drawdown list:

top 20 things we can do to cool down planet chart

The number one way to reduce carbon dioxide emissions, according to the list, is to change the way we keep food and buildings cool.

Currently, air conditioners and refrigerators run on hydrflurocarbons, also known as HFCs, which heat up the planet. HFCs will start being phased out in high-income countries in 2019 as part of the Kigali accord, but they'll still be used in other corners of the globe, where incomes are rising and more people are buying fridges and A/C units. Plus, we'll still have to make sure to properly dispose of all HFC-powered fridges and air conditioners; otherwise the refrigerant left inside could become a huge source of emissions.

[Read moreThe one thing a renowned climate scientist does to reduce her own impact on the environment]

But the number one solution to global warming may have nothing to do with energy

Eight of the other 20 items on the list have to do with the way our food system is set up, from how we till and fertilize land to what we consume. That 's something anyone can take action on right now, Frischmann said. 

"The decisions we make every day about the food we produce, purchase, and consume are perhaps the most important contributions every individual can make to reversing global warming," he said, adding, "we don't need to cut down forests for food production. The solutions to reversing global warming are the same solutions to food insecurity." 

But beyond food and farming, there's another powerful weapon that the Project Drawdown list doesn't fully highlight.

"Taken together, educating girls and family planning is the number one solution to reversing global warming," Frischmann said. 

Letting more girls continue their education, receive wanted contraception, and space out their youngsters as they’d like could cut around 120 billion tons of greenhouse gases that we'd otherwise emit over the next 30 years, according to Project Drawdown's calculations.

That's because better control of the population size would reduce demand for energy, food, travel, buildings, and all other resources on the planet.

SEE ALSO: An economist has a wild proposal to give all kids in the US up to $60,000 at birth

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: These houses can survive natural disasters

06 Oct 16:11

Google is overhauling Assistant on smartphones to add more visual tools (GOOGL)

by Peter Sarnoff

This story was delivered to Business Insider Intelligence Apps and Platforms Briefing subscribers hours before appearing on Business Insider. To be the first to know, please click here.

Google announced that it’s overhauling Assistant on smartphones to bring more visually engaging voice experiences to users in the coming weeks. The move is important, as nearly half of all Assistant interactions already include both voice and touch. Additionally, this can boost overall engagement with the voice assistant since it allows for a richer and more informative user experience. 

Google Assistant for Smartphones

Here’s an overview of the latest developer tools and feature functionality Google’s introducing to make the Assistant more visually assistive on smartphones:  

  • The new Rich Responses tool enables developers to craft their own customized visual experiences for Assistant Actions. Rich Responses are premade developer tools that bring visual components such as text, images, GIFs, and videos to Actions. Starbucks, for example, received early access to Rich Responses and is already using them to provide photos of recommended products to Assistant users on smartphones. Previously, Rich Responses were limited to smart displays.
  • Assistant’s upgraded interface allows for more visual touch controls. Assistant can now provide a full-screen, visually interactive experience when consumers are using apps, discovering information, and controlling smart home products. For instance, when asking Assistant to turn down the heat, a display will show up on the phone with a way to adjust the temperature (see below). Additionally, Google added an interactive messaging interface so users can use touch to add a comma, change a word, or make any other quick edits while they compose messages.

The move plays into Google’s larger strategy to make the overall Assistant experience more visual. Google partnered with a number of third-party manufacturers in January, such as Lenovo and JBL, to release Assistant-powered smart displays, and is reportedly planning to launch its own Assistant-powered smart display at its upcoming hardware event next week.

Google also launched the Visual Snapshot feature to the Google Assistant app in July, which visually displays users’ personal information, such as commute navigation, scheduled meetings, reminders, and reservations, in a single overview.

Google’s not alone in pursuing this strategy, as Amazon’s also doubling down on visual experiences for Alexa. Amazon was the first to launch a smart display, the Echo Show, in June 2017, and the company’s releasing its next-generation Echo Show next week. Amazon also rolled out a developer toolkit in September that enables developers to craft visual elements such as GIFs, images, and videos into Alexa-enabled devices.

 

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06 Oct 16:04

Salesforce acquires Rebel, maker of ‘interactive’ email services, to expand its Marketing Cloud

by Ingrid Lunden

Salesforce’s Marketing and Commerce Cloud is the company’s smallest division today, so to help beef it up, the company is making an acquisition to add in more features. Salesforce has acquired Rebel, a startup that develops interactive email services for businesses to enhance their direct marketing services: recipients of interactive emails can write reviews, shop and take other actions without leaving the messages to do so.

In an announcement on Rebel’s site, the startup said it will be joining Salesforce’s Marketing Cloud operation, which will integrate Rebel’s API-based services into its platform.

“With Rebel’s Mail and API solutions, brands, including Dollar Shave Club, L’Oreal and HelloFresh, turn emails into an extension of their website or app – collecting data, removing friction from the conversion process, and enhancing the customer experience. Rebel will enhance the power of Salesforce Marketing Clod and fundamentally change the way people interact with email,” the founders note.

That makes it sound as if the company’s existing business will be wound down as part of the move, although Salesforce and Rebel are not specifically commenting on that yet, and so customers haven’t been informed yet one way or the other.

Terms of the deal have not been disclosed in the Rebel announcement. We have contacted both the startup and Salesforce for further comment and to ask about the price. To date, Rebel — co-founded originally as Rebelmail by Joe Teplow and Trever Faden — had raised only about $3 million, with investors including Lerer Hippeau, Sinai Ventures, David Tisch, Gary Vaynerchuk, and others, so if the deal size is equally small, Salesforce likely will not be disclosing it.

Salesforce has made a number of acquisitions to build and expand its marketing services to compete with Adobe and others. Perhaps most notable of these was buying ExactTarget, one of its biggest-ever acquisitions, for $2.5 billion in 2013. (And according to some, it even wanted to buy Adobe at one point.) Competition has been heating up between the two, with Adobe most recently snapping up Marketo for $4.75 billion.

But on the other hand, marketing is currently Saleforce’s smallest division. It pulled in $452 million in revenues last quarter, putting it behind revenues for Sales Cloud ($1 billion), Service Cloud ($892 million) and Salesforce Platform ($712 million). Adding in interactive email functionality isn’t likely to float Marketing and Commerce Cloud to the top of that list, but it does show that Salesforce is trying to improve its products with more functionality for would-be and current customers.

Those customers have a lot of options these days, though, in targeting their own customers with rich email services. Microsoft and Google have both started to add in a lot more features into their own email products, with Outlook and Gmail supporting things like in-email payments and more. There are ways of building such solutions through your current direct marketing providers, or now directly using other avenues.

What will be interesting to see is whether Rebel continues to integrate with the plethora of email service providers it currently works with, or if Salesforce will keep the functionality for itself. Today Rebel’s partners include Oracle, SendGrid, Adobe, IBM, SailThru and, yes, Salesforce.

We’ll update this post as we learn more.

04 Oct 21:00

Facebook is now making users wait twice as long to delete their accounts (FB)

by Rob Price

facebook ceo mark zuckerberg

  • It now takes a full month to delete your Facebook account — twice as long as before.
  • When a user tries to delete their account, it makes them wait for a "grace period" before it is actually deleted.
  • The change comes after months of scandals and PR crises for Facebook, including Cambridge Analytica and the recent hack of 50 million people.

Thinking of deleting your Facebook account? Not so fast.

The social network has recently more than doubled the amount of time it takes before a user's account is actually deleted — it's now a month, up from 14 days before.

The change comes as the Silicon Valley tech giant battles to contain the fallout of a massive hack affecting 50 million of its users, and as it attempts to move on from a chain of scandals, from Cambridge Analytica to the spread of fake news and Russian propaganda. The change to the deletion time was first noticed by The Verge.

So what's going on? When a user decides to delete their Facebook account, it doesn't actually get deleted straight away. Instead, there's a "grace period," in which the account remains inactive but accessible — just in case the user gets cold feet and decides to stay on Facebook after all.

Historically, that grace period has been 14 days, or two weeks. But Facebook has since decided to up it to 30 days, around a month.

A Facebook spokesperson did not immediately respond to Business Insider's request for comment. But the company told The Verge in a statement: "We recently increased the grace period when you choose to delete your Facebook account from 14 days to 30 days ... We’ve seen people try to log in to accounts they’ve opted to delete after the 14-day period. The increase gives people more time to make a fully informed choice."

Of course, a longer grace period is also to Facebook's advantage. Facebook's value is tied to its massive number of users, so anything it can do to keep that number from declining — including doubling the time for someone to reconsider quitting — is a good thing for business.

Got a tip? Contact this reporter via Signal or WhatsApp at +1 (650) 636-6268 using a non-work phone, email at rprice@businessinsider.com, WeChat at robaeprice, or Twitter DM at @robaeprice. (PR pitches by email only, please.) You can also contact Business Insider securely via SecureDrop.

SEE ALSO: FEMA will send a test 'Presidential Alert' to your phone today, and you can’t turn it off

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NOW WATCH: Everything we know about the Google Pixel 3

04 Oct 20:59

The Mercedes-Benz EQC SUV’s best feature are its three USB-C ports

by Vlad Savov

It’s also prettier in person than photos would lead you to believe

Continue reading…

04 Oct 19:41

Report: Verizon signs $700M outsourcing deal with Infosys

Verizon's deal is an outlier as outsourcing technology services have become less popular. U.S. government calls to "Buy American, Hire American" have also had an impact on how companies acquire talent for hard-to-fill tech jobs. 

04 Oct 19:39

BlackBerry races ahead of security curve with quantum-resistant solution

by Ron Miller

Quantum computing represents tremendous promise to completely alter technology as we’ve known it, allowing operations that weren’t previously possible with traditional computing. The downside of these powerful machines is that they could be strong enough to break conventional cryptography schemes. Today, BlackBerry announced a new quantum-resistant code signing service to help battle that possibility.

The service is meant to anticipate a problem that doesn’t exist yet. Perhaps that’s why BlackBerry hedged its bets in the announcement saying, “The new solution will allow software to be digitally signed using a scheme that will be hard to break with a quantum computer.” Until we have fully functioning quantum computers capable of breaking current encryption, we probably won’t know for sure if this works.

But give BlackBerry credit for getting ahead of the curve and trying to solve a problem that has concerned technologists as quantum computers begin to evolve. The solution, which will be available next month, is actually the product of a partnership between BlackBerry and Isara Corporation, a company whose mission is to build quantum-safe security solutions. BlackBerry is using Isara’s cryptographic libraries to help sign and protect code as security evolves.

“By adding the quantum-resistant code signing server to our cybersecurity tools, we will be able to address a major security concern for industries that rely on assets that will be in use for a long time. If your product, whether it’s a car or critical piece of infrastructure, needs to be functional 10-15 years from now, you need to be concerned about quantum computing attacks,” Charles Eagan, BlackBerry’s chief technology officer, said in a statement.

While experts argue how long it could take to build a fully functioning quantum computer, most agree that it will take between 50 and 100 qubit computers to begin realizing that vision. IBM released a 20 qubit computer last year and introduced a 50 qubit prototype. A qubit represents a single unit of quantum information.

At TechCrunch Disrupt last month, Dario Gil, IBM’s vice president of artificial intelligence and quantum computing, and Chad Rigetti, a former IBM researcher who is founder and CEO at Rigetti Computing, predicted we could be just three years away from the point where a quantum computer surpasses traditional computing.

IBM Quantum Computer

IBM Quantum Computer. Photo: IBM

Whether it happens that quickly or not remains to be seen, but experts have been expressing security concerns around quantum computing as they grow more powerful, and BlackBerry is addressing that concern by coming up with a solution today, arguing that if you are creating critical infrastructure you need to future-proof your security.

BlackBerry, once known for highly secure phones, and one of the earliest popular business smartphones, has pivoted to be more of a security company in recent years. This announcement, made at the BlackBerry Security Summit, is part of the company’s focus on keeping enterprises secure.

03 Oct 18:31

Burger King’s ‘AI-written’ ads show we’re still very confused about artificial intelligence

by James Vincent

Each of Burger King’s new ads starts with an anachronistic burst of noise from a dial-up modem and a solemn warning: “This ad was created by artificial intelligence.” Then, over shots of glistening burgers and balletic fries, a robotic-sounding narrator deploys exactly the sort of clunky grammar and conceptual malapropisms we expect from a dumb AI.

“The chicken crossed the road to become a sandwich. Burger King encouraged the chicken,” says the voice. “The Whopper lives in a bun mansion, just like you,” it chirps.

They’re good ads! And, of course, they’re lies. In a press release, Burger King claims the videos are the work of a “new deep learning algorithm,” but an article from AdAge makes it clear that humans — not machines — are...

Continue reading…

02 Oct 18:45

Verizon’s 5G home internet is sort of real, sort of fake

by Jacob Kastrenakes

Verizon became the first major ISP to launch 5G home internet service yesterday. It’s a major step on the road to making 5G a reality, but if you’ve ever in your life interacted with an internet provider, you’re probably at least a little bit skeptical: is this really 5G?

The answer is sort of. In a phone call yesterday, Verizon’s chief technology architect, Ed Chan, said that the newly launched home 5G service uses a number of technologies that have been deemed a part of 5G. Most important among those is the use of millimeter wave, the radio waves that will be the backbone of 5G connections. Millimeter wave connections work over a much shorter distance, but they’re far faster, enabling Verizon to deliver gigabit speeds wirelessly.

But...

Continue reading…

02 Oct 18:45

7 mystery fees that are lurking in your everyday expenses

by Sponsor Post

Simple Mobile Article #3

You would never think of throwing your hard earned cash away in the trash, but that’s essentially what many of us end up doing every day without even realizing it.

It’s easier to spend more money than you think — like signing up for a “no-fee” credit card that charges fees after the first year, or a gym membership with astronomical cancellation fees. But, the good news is there are simple solutions to avoid paying more than you bargained for when it comes to your home, finances, travel, devices, and more. One of the easiest changes you can make is switching your wireless carrier to SIMPLE MOBILE. With SIMPLE MOBILE, there are no mystery fees, or long-term contracts, ever.

As with everything in life, knowledge is power. So, arm yourself with intel on the following mystery fee culprits so you can learn how to kick them out of your life for good.

1. Internet modem rental

Roughly two-thirds of American adults have broadband internet service at home. But what you may not realize is that if you use an internet modem supplied by your internet provider, you could be adding an extra $6 to $10 to your monthly bill for a modem rental fee. Buying your own modem is a way to circumvent this cost. While the investment up front is larger, usually between $40 to $200 depending on the model you purchase, the savings in the end could pay for themselves, especially considering the fees on a 12-month contract will roughly equal the cost of owning a modem outright.

2. Paper bank statements

In an increasingly paperless world, it’s no surprise that many businesses are prioritizing online portals and e-documents for customer service operations. Banks are no exception to this trend. Some charge $1 to $2 per paper statement to keep up with the increasing price of postage. To avoid this cost, switch to paperless statements. Going paperless is also a great way to streamline the payment of your other bills too, which is why SIMPLE MOBILE has online portals for enrolling with your desired service plan.

3. Car lease overage miles

The number of leased vehicles on the road has doubled over the past five years. The perks of leasing a car can be enticing — and zero interest, no money down, extended warranty — but there are other factors to consider. Many leases dictate a limit on the number of miles you can drive, and if you exceed it you could be looking at 25 cents-per-mile overage costs — which adds up fast. Read your lease agreement thoroughly, try to negotiate for a higher limit if you know you’ll be traveling long distances, and monitor your mileage to ensure you’re not hit with a big cost down the road.

4. Hotel mini bar sensor

When you’re on vacation, you don’t want to have to worry about anything. This carefree bubble can burst quickly when you check out of your hotel. While occupancy, state, and local taxes already add sticker shock to a hotel bill, you may also find a line item on your receipt for a mini bar restocking fee. Hotels use sensors in their mini bars to track activity —&but these sensors can’t distinguish between when you’re just browsing or when you’ve actually consumed something. Some hotels even charge a restocking fee for simply storing personal items in the mini bar. Make sure to review your bill carefully and dispute any charges that don’t add up.

5. International roaming costs

Vacation mode also extends to your cellphone habits, and when you're traveling the last thing you want to have to do is keep track of how many minutes or data you're using. Unfortunately, many providers charge per minute or per megabyte for overseas data usage, rendering the 'mobile' part of a mobile device rather oxymoronic. And the reality is these fees can add up fast, which is not what you want to deal with after returning from a relaxing vacation. SIMPLE MOBILE wants to change this, which is why all of the company's 30-day service plans have international roaming available for when you're traveling in 16 Latin American countries. 

6. Concert and event processing fees

There’s nothing worse than seeing a ticket advertised for one price and inputting your credit card information, only to get to the online checkout to see a processing fee added to the total. It’s a tactic many of the major online ticket retailers use to try and sneak in a fee right before you hit the ‘submit’ button. States like New York have introduced legislation forcing ticket retailers to include these fees upfront in the initially advertised price — but seeing as this level of transparency is not standard. Be sure to double check the total price at every step of the checkout process so you know exactly what it will cost to see your favorite band or team play.

7. 401k expense ratios

401(k) plans help you to plan for your retirement — but if you’re not careful, you could be losing out on thousands of dollars at your payout. That’s because of a controversial, but legal, practice of revenue sharing, in which you pay an asset-based fee to maintain your account. Essentially, this means that the more money you invest into your plan, the more revenue sharing will chip away at your savings. To take control of this practice, look into your company’s plan investment options and consider investing in index funds, which typically do not partake in revenue sharing.

Find out more about SIMPLE MOBILE’s no-contract and no mystery fee service plans.

Please refer always to the latest terms and conditions of service available at SimpleMobile.com

This post is sponsored by SIMPLE MOBILE.

Disclaimer: Please note, if you switch to SIMPLE MOBILE, you may be subject to fees from your current provider. International roaming is available only in the following select countries: Mexico, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, El Salvador, Colombia, Argentina, Chile, Uruguay, Brazil and  Peru. These plans allow calls and texts within the select roaming countries to the US and other international destinations while roaming. Data used while roaming in select  countries will be deducted from your high speed data allotment in the US. Not for extended international use; you must reside in the U.S. and primary usage must occur in the U.S.  Device must register on our U.S. network before international use. Service may be terminated or restricted for excessive roaming or misuse. International calling while roaming is subject to the Simple Mobile International Long Distance Service restrictions. Other limitations, terms and conditions apply. Please refer always to the latest terms and conditions of service available at Simplemobile.com. For Auto ReUp enrollment, you need a credit or debit card and a SIMPLE MOBILE account.

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02 Oct 18:45

Google's cloud business may have finally found the weapon it needs to beat Amazon's AWS (GOOG, GOOGL)

by Greg Sandoval

Diane Greene

  • Google's cloud division is taking its first steps into streaming games.
  • This could be a big source of revenue down the road, provided Google can pull it off.
  • Streaming video games is a complex engineering problem.  

Google is getting get into gaming in a big way with its new streaming project, but the move appears to be as much about fighting Amazon's massive cloud as it is about Google becoming a player in the world of gaming. 

The effort, announced on Monday, is being led by the Google Cloud Platform (GCP) group, which will provide the fundamental infrastructure for a new cloud-based videogame platform. 

Beginning on Friday, GCP will enable a limited number of US gamers to play Ubisoft’s popular “Assassin’s Creed” game via their Chrome browser. Users will play directly through their Chrome browser via streaming, and Google says that very little computing power is required on the user's end. 

This as an opportunity for Google to "drive traction for GCP," Morgan Stanley analyst Brian Nowak wrote in a research note on Tuesday.

"In addition to its efforts to build a Twitch competitor at YouTube and its partnership with game engine Unity, launching a cloud gaming platform could allow GOOGL to form a more direct relationship with gamers, which it could leverage to expand further into the video game value chain," Nowak wrote.

The foray into gaming by GCP has long been rumored and comes as Google is searching for new sources of income. Investors see Google as a growth company and to keep that narrative going, managers need new revenue sources ready for the day when the company’s colossal ad business tops out. To that end, Google is throwing a lot of resources into developing cloud and artificial intelligence.

GCP's management, led by Diane Greene, have described the new streaming-game initiative as a test of Project Stream's technology, formerly code named Yeti (You can read more about the announcement here). Google will face steep technical hurdles in making the effort a success — as Business Insider's Dave Smith writes, this kind of thing has been tried before by others with mixed results.

But there's a big payoff if Google can pull it off by providing an opportunity to forge direct ties to gamers, which Google could mine in the future.

'A source of upside'

“We learned last week at our AMZN Disruption Symposium that AWS is currently the leading provider of cloud tools for video game development,” Nowak wrote. “This represents Google’s first attempt to move ahead in distribution... the company has strong engineering talent and cloud gaming has proven to be a difficult engineering problem.”

Project Stream also represents a chance for GCP to continue its rapid expansion into the broader cloud market, Nowak said.

When it comes to the market leaders, GCP trails Amazon’s AWS and Microsoft’s Azure cloud services by a significant amount Nowak indicated.  

According to the analyst’s estimates, GCP has a value of $45 billion while he values AWS at $375 billion. Still, Nowak likes the direction that GCP is headed.

“Success in gaming,” he wrote, “could be a source of upside.”

SEE ALSO: Google's ambitious new project could fundamentally change the way we play video games

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Watch Apple unveil the new iPhone XR, XS, and XS Max

02 Oct 18:43

Apple expands Business Chat with new businesses and additional countries

by Ron Miller

Apple Business Chat launched earlier this year as a way for consumers to communicate directly with businesses on Apple’s messaging platform. Today the company announced it was expanding the program to add new businesses and support for additional countries.

When it launched in January, business partners included Discover, Hilton, Lowe’s and Wells Fargo. Today’s announcement includes the likes of Burberry, West Elm, Kimpton Hotels, and Vodafone Germany.

The program, which remains in Beta, added 15 new companies today in the US and 15 internationally including in the UK, Japan, Hong Kong, Singapore, Canada, Italy, Australia and France.

Since the launch, companies have been coming up with creative ways to interact directly with customers in a chat setting that many users prefer over telephone trees and staticy wait music (I know I do).

For instance, Four Seasons, which launched Business Chat in July, is expanding usage to 88 properties across the globe with the ability to chat in more than 100 languages with reported average response times of around 90 seconds.

Apple previously added features like Apple Pay to iMessage to make it easy for consumers to transact directly with business in a fully digital way. If for instance, your customer service rep helps you find the perfect item, you can purchase it right then and there with Apple Pay in a fully digital payment system without having to supply a credit card in the chat interface.

Photo: Apple

What’s more, the CSR could share a link, photo or video to let you see more information on the item you’re interested in or to help you fix a problem with an item you already own. All of this can take place in iMessage, a tool millions of iPhone and iPad owners are comfortable using with friends and family.

To interact with Business Chat, customers are given messaging as a choice in contact information. If they touch this option, the interaction opens in iMessage and customers can conduct a conversation with the brand’s CSR, just as they would with friends.

Touch Message to move to iMessage conversation. Photo: Apple

This link to customer service and sales through a chat interface also fits well with the partnership with Salesforce announced last week and with the company’s overall push to the enterprise. Salesforce president and chief product officer, Bret Taylor described how Apple Business Chat could integrate with Salesforce’s Service Bot platform, which was introduced in 2017 to allow companies to build integrated automated and human response systems.

The bots could provide a first level of service and if the customer required more personal support, there could be an option to switch to Apple Business Chat.

Apple Business Chat requires iOS 11.3 or higher.

01 Oct 15:43

Someone bought an unreleased Chromecast from a Best Buy store nearly a week before Google's big hardware event (GOOG, GOOGL)

by Antonio Villas-Boas

google leaked chromecast best buy

  • A Reddit user bought an unannounced and unreleased Chromecast streaming device from Best Buy over the weekend.
  • The new Chromecast wasn't in Best Buy's system yet, but it was listed to release on October 9 at the same price as the current model, so the store sold it to the Redditor as a current-generation Chromecast.
  • The Redditor wasn't able to set it up, as it required an update to the Google Home app on their smartphone.

A Best Buy customer bought an unannounced and unreleased model of Google's Chromecast media streaming device on Saturday, according to Android Police, which first spotted the customer's post on Reddit.

The Redditor said the Best Buy cashier at first wasn't able to scan the device because it wasn't in Best Buy's system yet. It showed a release date of October 9 — the same day as Google's upcoming event, where the company is expected to announce its Pixel 3 smartphones. 

The new Chromecast appeared to have the same price as the previous generation Chromecast, so Best Buy rang it up as an older Chromecast and sold it to the Redditor. 

The Redditor wasn't able to set up the new Chromecast, as it required a Google Home update on their smartphone to support the new media streamer, which Google hasn't yet released.

Otherwise, the new Chromecast appears to have a matte finish compared to the glossy finish from the previous generation Chromecast, and the Chromecast logo has been replaced by Google's "G" logo. Google also apparently removed the magnetic HDMI jack that would allow it to snap to the Chromecast's body when disconnected from a TV. 

Google is expected to announce new devices during its October 9 event, including new Pixel 3 smartphones and new Chromebooks — and now, new Chromecast devices. 

SEE ALSO: Google's next major Pixel phone has already leaked in Russia, and we just got our best look at it so far

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01 Oct 05:17

The FBI used a suspect’s face to unlock his iPhone in Ohio case

by Andrew Liptak

When Apple debuted Face ID with the iPhone X last year, it raised an interesting legal question: can you be compelled to unlock your phone by looking at it? In an apparent first, Forbes reports that the FBI got a suspect to unlock his phone during a raid in August.

In August, the FBI raided the home of Grant Michalski, looking for evidence that he had sent or received child pornography. They were armed with a search warrant [warning: this documentation contains explicit descriptions of sexual abuse] which allowed them to search Michalski’s computer for evidence, and during the raid, agents recovered his iPhone X.

The agents who found the iPhone asked Michalski to unlock the device via Face ID, which he did. They “placed the [phone] into...

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