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01 Sep 20:34

Make working remotely a breeze with our work-from-wherever guide

by Juli Fischer

A person sitting on a park bench, using a calendar app on a tablet, with a dog sitting nearby on the grass.

Working remotely is becoming more and more common among in the United States. In a poll conducted last year, Gallup found that the average worker telecommutes two days per month. And it’s easy to see why people like working remotely—you can save money and time on your commute, and be more focused. But is it as easy as it sounds to have an effective remote work day? It can be, as long as you do a little planning in advance. Here’s a quick guide to help you choose the perfect spot, and have everything you need with you.

Where do you get your best work done?

The image of someone working at a cafe is one we’re all familiar with: a person intently focused on their laptop, with headphones on, a cup of coffee at their side. But is this the ideal remote working situation for everyone? Lots of studies show that working in coffee shops is beneficial for some people, because of the moderate noise and creative camaraderie. But other studies show that for some people, working in open, noisy environments can make it hard to get anything done at all.

Everyone is different, so before you choose where to plug in for the next few hours, stop and think about how you get your best work done. For example, If you’re easily distracted, a library or co-working space might suit you better than a lively cafe. But if you thrive on that buzzing energy, go find the busiest coffee shop you know of and hope for a free seat!

What should you bring?

First, let’s cover the basics: Power, an internet connection, and headphones. Start by making sure you not only have a power cord for your laptop, but also making sure your working spot has outlets you can use. You may also want an external battery and charging cord for your phone. For internet, if you aren’t sure whether your spot has reliable Wi-Fi, consider getting a mobile hotspot. You can also look into tethering to your smartphone—but be careful not to go over your data limit. And bring some headphones so you can drown out your surroundings if need be.

Aside from the basics though, there are other things that can really come in handy when you’re working remotely, too. Here are some things to consider bringing with you:

  • Business cards, along with a networking-ready attitude. You never know who you’ll meet.
  • A privacy screen for your laptop, so you can work on sensitive presentations or spreadsheets without worrying about prying eyes.
  • The perfect music: Invest some time creating playlists that fit your typical working moods, and consider making them available offline so you’re not eating up public broadband by streaming.
  • Light snacks and a reusable bottle full of water, so you can keep your energy up even if there isn’t food to buy.

What else does your day have in store?

If you’re working remotely, the chances are good that you’re doing it because you have a certain amount of flexibility in your job. So maybe you’re planning on tackling a half-day of errands after lunch, or you have a business dinner across town. Regardless of what your day—or evening—has in store, make sure to think ahead about what you’ll need. Change of clothes? Reusable shopping bag? Walking shoes? If you have what you need, you can eliminate any extra trips home, and maximize your productivity.

If you’ve never tried working a full day away from the office, maybe now’s the time! Getting a change of scenery, even just once or twice a quarter, can put you in a different mindset and help you be more creative and get more done. For more ways to be productive—whether you’re working in the office or a coffee shop—check out our newest Dropbox features:

Footer image. Click to visit our website and learn more about new Dropbox productivity tools.

01 Sep 20:33

The Lonely Person

When I was a kid, one adult said to me about another adult: “It must be so lonely to be the only person who’s right all the time.”

To me, then and now, this sounded like a devastating put-down.

This made me think about the importance of being right. Everyone likes to be right, I suppose — it’s human nature. But it made me question something I hadn’t thought to question: how important is it, really, to be right?

Is it more important than being kind? Is it more important than working hard? Or learning? Or listening? Or enjoying the company of other people?

I concluded that being right is not only less important than a whole bunch of other things, it actually gets in the way of other more important things.

01 Sep 20:33

Firefox 48 and Firefox for iOS 5.1 Release Report

by rmcguigan

Firefox 48 Release and Firefox for IOS version 5.1

August 2016

This report is aiming to capture and explain what has happened during and after the launch of Firefox 48/ Firefox for iOS 5.1 on multiple support fronts: Knowledge Base and localization, 1:1 social and forum support, trending issues and reported bugs, as well as to celebrate and recognize the tremendous work the SUMO community is putting in to make sure our users experience a happy release.

We have lots of ways to contribute, from Support to Social to PR, the ways you can help shape our communications program and tell the world about Mozilla are endless. For more information: [https://goo.gl/NwxLJF]

Knowledge Base and Localization

Article Voted “helpful” (English/US only) Global views Comments from dissatisfied users
Desktop
https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/firefox-osx 70-100% 24,019 “…Don’t think you force me to update to an OS that don’t allow me to use some of the software that I have installed on my computer.”

“can’t update OS, processor limitations. I’m sure I’m not the only one.”

Android
https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/how-do-i-copy-and-paste-text-android 56-67% 5,078 “Dropdown right top was showing clipboard. friend used ph. clipboard disappeared. Bluetooth i dont want appeared. How do i put it back as was?!”

“Some websites insist on blocking the paste function for passwords and while I’ve come across a workaround for this when using desktop firefox the mobile version is another matter.”

“On some sites this does not work “

https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/awesome-bar-search-firefox-bookmarks-history-tabs 67-80% 24,308
https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/save-web-pages-your-reading-list-firefox-android 70-72% 23,970 “A bit confusing to mix bookmarks with reading list. Good breeder generally, well done.”

“Why is my reading list added to my bookmarks? Why isn’t it separate?? I don’t want them together.”

https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/make-firefox-default-browser-android 81-83% 105,530 “Procedure to set Firefox as default browser is different when setting options are seen on phone. Panasonic P75 is phone tried on.

“Trying to make Firefox my browser for smart ultra 6.”

https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/control-notifications-firefox-android 100% 241
https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/whats-new-firefox-android no votes 74

 

Support Forum Threads

Issues to note: This issue showed up in Social and the forums, with the new awesome bar functionality and test pilot awesomebar experiments the ability to turn off the “search with google” was deprecated: ”Search with google”  How to remove “search with google” in Firefox 48,  I want to disable search in the address bar and browser.urlbar.unifiedcomplete does not work ,  is there any way to disable browser.urlbar.unifiedcomplete in firefox 48? 

Disabled add on signing was removed in 48, there was an evident population did not agree  Disable add-on signing not available in Firefox 48?

Some dislike was evident in some commentary about the change in url bar style:Upgraded to Windows 10 & Firefox 47 – now almost impossible to make out active tab 

Add ons: ALl in one sidebar was fixed All-in-one sidebar not working in Firefox 48

Quicktime was deprecated for Windows

Android: Firefox for Android 48 in developer preview 5 of Android 7 Nougat may not work properly with uBlock Origins on Nexus Devices:  How to fix when Firefox for Android on Android 7 aka N aka Nougat hangs periodically?

 

Social Support Highlights

Brought to you by Sprinklr

Total contributors in program – 185

New users added between August 2 – August 19, 2016:

Warm welcome to Daniela and Alex Mayorga! Thank you for your help this release, we hope to see more of you.

Top 5 Contributors

This version we had a few new users and a larger amount of engagement

User Posts and Tweets Engagements (replies, likes, re-tweets)
Noah Y 82 102
Magno Reis 35 23
Andrew Truong 23 22
Daniela Albarran 16 22
Jhonatas Rodrigues Machacho 15 9
Swarnava Sengupta 9 9
Alex Mayorga 5 7

 

Outbound Top engagement:

2016-08-31_1344

“Firefox is Not Responding” Facebook post issue

 

Localization

Article Top 10 locale coverage Top 20 locale coverage
Desktop (August 2 – 18)
Firefox support has ended for Mac OS X 10.6, 10.7 and 10.8 100% 80%
Android (August 2 – 18)
How do I copy and paste text on Android? 100% 90%
Awesome Bar – Search your Firefox bookmarks, history and tabs from the address bar 100% 90%
Save web pages to your Reading List on Firefox for Android 100% 70%
Make Firefox the default browser on Android 100% 85%
Control notifications in Firefox for Android 100% 75%
What’s new in Firefox for Android 100% 75%

Questions? Contact Michał.

Thank yous from users who received SUMO help

Support Forums:
2016-08-31_1321 2016-08-31_1322 2016-08-31_1323

Twitter:

2016-08-31_1318

01 Sep 20:33

Twitter Favorites: [initdotai] @justagwailo Gwai lo? Dai lo is more like it!

Init.ai @initdotai
@justagwailo Gwai lo? Dai lo is more like it!
01 Sep 20:32

Twitter Favorites: [bmann] @Stv mine is up here — https://t.co/RLNg4diWdD

01 Sep 17:51

Hands-on with the Moto Z’s Hasselblad True Zoom Moto Mod, coming to Canada later this fall

by Igor Bonifacic

The Moto Z Play wasn’t the only thing Motorola announced today at IFA Berlin. The company also showed off a new Moto Mod co-created by legendary camera maker Hasselblad called the Hasselblad True Zoom

The True Zoom essentially turns the Moto Z and Moto Z Play into a mirrorless camera. The mod comes with its own 1/2.3-inch CMOS sensor with a maximum ISO of 3200 and 10x zoom lens. We didn’t have too much time with the accessory at our hands-on briefing, but what I saw was extremely promising. Build quality was solid, and low light performance was exceptional. To help with the fact that addon can shoot RAW images, it comes with a two year Google Photos subscription.

motozmod-12

The company said it wasn’t ready to share information on Canadian pricing and availability for the True Zoom. It did, however, tell us when the other Moto Mods will come to Canada.

All the currently announced functional mods, the in-house term Motorola uses to describe the Moto Mods that add some type of functionality to the Moto Z, will launch alongside the Moto Z and Moto Z Play when they arrive in Canada. The JBL SoundBoost Mod will cost $100, while the Incipio Power Pack will retail for $90 and last but not least the Insta-Share projector is set to set Canadian consumers back a cool $400.

motozmods-5

When it comes to the Style Shells, the mods that simply change the look and feel of the device, Canadians consumers won’t have as many choices as their American counterparts.

All Moto Z phones sold in Canada will come with the charcoal ash Style Shell included in the box — there’s no included Style Shell with the Moto Z Play. The three other Style Shells set to come north of the border are the crimson ballistic nylon, silver oak and black leather ones. They will retail separately for $29.99 At launch, Canadian consumers will not be able to buy the washed oak and herringbone nylon Style Shells.

motozandplaycovers-14

Playing around with all the Moto Mods, it became clear Motorola’s engineers put a lot of care and thought into how a modular should function. When you snap one of the functional mods to the back of the phone for the first time, the Moto Z and Moto Z Play will automatically launch a brief tutorial, explaining what the mod does.

Other neat touches abound throughout. Pull down the notifications shade when the Incipio Power Pack is attached, and you’ll see two different battery life indicators — one for the phone itself and the other for the power pack. The phone is also programmed to first draw power from the power pack and then from its own onboard battery. Similarly, it will prioritize charging its own battery first when plugged into a charger.

cameramotomod

We’ll have more on the Moto Z and Moto Z Play, as well as all the Moto Mods, prior to their official launch in Canada.

motozmod-11 motozplaymod-9

Photography by Patrick O’Rourke.

Related: Motorola announces the $650 Moto Z Play, available in Canada this September

01 Sep 17:50

Transcripts of Canadian parliamentary debates since 1901 are now online

by Jessica Vomiero

A group of political scientists, computer scientists and historians at the University of Toronto have gotten together to digitize the Canadian Hansard (or the transcripts of parliamentary debates) since 1901.

The Linked Parliamentary Data Project, dubbed LiPad, is available only in English at the moment and will eventually include the full transcripts of the debates of Canadian Senate as well as the parliamentary committees.

While what’s currently available on the site seems pretty scarce compared to what’s to come, transcribing parliamentary debates since 1901 is a huge undertaking. Currently, the site contains a timeline with archives from 1901 to 2015, as well as the option to search the archives using multiple keywords and several filters.

While access to these documents has always been a right to Canadian citizens, they’re not always as accessible as they should be – ether scattered across various places online or available for physical viewing in Ottawa libraries.

This represents an effort across federal government to bring Canada closer to the open data role model it ought to be, though several municipalities such as Toronto have already undertaken open data initiatives.

These datasets are designed primarily for scholars interested in the Canadian Hansard, though it’s open to anyone. While the French version wasn’t released alongside the website launch, the creators insist that it’s of the highest priority and will make its way to the platform soon.

Anyone can view the compiled datasets at lipad.ca.

Related: Here’s how analytics can be used to drive social change

SourceLiPad.ca
31 Aug 18:32

Sonos is opening up its speakers to third-party apps

by Igor Bonifacic

Sonos users will soon have the ability to control their speakers from a variety of third-party apps, the company announced today at an event in New York City.

Starting with Spotify and expanding to other apps in the future, users will no longer need to install the company’s dedicated Controller app to operate their Sonos speaker.

In the case of Spotify, the world’s most popular music streaming app, Sonos’s lineup of speakers appear in the app’s Connect menu.

“Our mission is to fill every home with music,” said Patrick Spence, president of Sonos, in a statement issued to MobileSyrup. “We don’t care what you listen to, how you get to it, or in what room — we just want it to be effortless, quick and epic.”

The company will begin beta testing the feature in October.

Sonos also announced Amazon Echo users will be able to control their speaker with Alexa.

Related: Here’s how to use the Amazon Echo in Canada

SourceSonos
31 Aug 18:32

“The fun they had” or about the quality of MOOC


Patrizia Ghislandi, Journal of e-Learning and Knowledge Society, [Sept] 02, 2016


I remember the Isaac Asimov story referenced in this article (16 page PDF). I credit my extensive reading of science fiction with a lot of the foresight I've been able to bring to our field, including with respect to MOOCs. Not surprisingly, this paper concludes, "the relevant literature about MOOC’ s evaluation is still uncertain between the need to adopt one of the few quality enhancement frameworks specifically created for MOOC or reuse the e-learning quality models available online." As I mentioned the other day, ultimately we'll have to evaluate online learning in terms of impact with respect to provider and participant objectives.

[Link] [Comment]
31 Aug 18:32

With 100M daily users, Instagram is adding Stories to its Explore feed

by Igor Bonifacic

Instagram may have outright copied its new Stories feature from Snapchat, but that hasn’t stopped the app’s more than 500-million users from embracing the story-telling format.

In an interview with TechCrunch, the Facebook-owned company revealed 100-million people use the feature every day. To put that number in perspective, this past June Instagram revealed it has 500-million monthly active users and approximately 300-million daily active users.

Now Instagram says users will start seeing Stories show up in the app’s Explore feed; like the other images and videos currently found in the tab, these will come from people the user doesn’t follow.

This does mean Instagram Stories is now at least a bit different from its inspiration.

While Snapchat’s Discover tab lets users see Stories from large publications like Mashable and Vice, there’s currently no way for them to see Stories from regular people they don’t know.

As it did when it added videos to the Explore tab, the feature doesn’t appear to be live in Canada yet. That said, don’t be surprised if you start seeing them pop up in the next couple of days and weeks.

31 Aug 18:32

Things People Should Know About Being a Teacher

by Eugene Wallingford

In 7 things I wish people understood about being a teacher, Andrew Simmons captures a few of the things that make teaching so rewarding and so challenging. If you don't understand these truths, you may not understand why anyone would want to teach. You also run the risk of misunderstanding the problems with our education system and thus supporting changes that are unlikely to fix them. Check it out.

Even though Simmons writes of teaching high school, most of what he says applies just as well to university professors. I especially liked this comment, on what software developers call sustainable pace

... would-be superteachers are smart, sometimes masochistic 23-year-olds working 18-hour days to pump up test scores for a few years before moving on to administrative positions, law school, or nervous breakdowns. They embrace an unsustainable load.

I used to wonder why so many good teachers ended up leaving the classroom. One reason is burn-out. Universities burn out researchers and teachers alike by pushing them onto a treadmill, or by letting them get on and stay there of their own volition. Good teaching can happen every year, if we learn how to maintain balance.

My favorite line of the article, though, is this gem:

Everything I learn is filtered through the possibility that it might be taught.

When I read that line, I nodded my head silently. This guy really is a teacher.

31 Aug 18:32

Anker issues refunds to consumers who bought its latest USB-C cable

by Igor Bonifacic

A quick heads up to anyone in the market for a new USB-C to USB-C cable to power their Nexus 6P, HTC 10, Note 7 or other USB-C equipped device. Do not buy the Powerline 3.1 Gen 2 USB-C cable from Anker.

Nathan K, a researcher who has been testing to verify in-market cables comply with the USB-C standard, has discovered that this specific cable (model number A8185011) has a good chance to damage any device it’s plugged into. He details the issue in the YouTube video below.

The Anker USB-C to USB-C cable that’s on sale Amazon.ca is not the exact same one, but just to be safe, avoid it for the time being.

If you already own said cable, Anker will refund your purchase, so get in touch with the company.

SourceGoogle+
31 Aug 18:32

The Battle Between Trader Joe’s & Pirate Joe’s Rages On

by Chris Morran
mkalus shared this story from Consumerist:
Unless you're blind and daft there is no way you can mistake (P)irate Joe's with Trader Joe's.

Can you effectively recreate a supermarket by buying a bunch of that store’s products, shipping them across the border and selling them in a store with a deliberately similar name? That’s the question at the center of a years-long legal battle between Trader Joe’s and its Canadian lookalike Pirate Joe’s.

We first wrote about this dispute back in Aug. 2013, when Trader Joe’s filed a lawsuit against Pirate Joe’s, a small Vancouver retailer that re-sold TJ products bought in the U.S. and shipped across the border.

Trader Joe’s argued that this was a case of trademark infringement and dilution that could cause possible confusion and harm to the brand. The Canadian store sells TJ-branded products, but at a substantial markup. Additionally, the U.S.-based chain said its reputation could be indirectly hurt if someone were to fall ill from eating frozen food that was improperly transported.

But the court disagreed, dismissing the lawsuit and ruling that the Lanham Act — the U.S. law that bars abuse of trademarks — does not apply to Pirate Joe’s conduct in Canada because the potential for harm posed by one small Vancouver shop does not merit extraterritorial application of the law.

However, last week the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals overturned the lower court’s decision, ruling that TJ’s had indeed met the standard for allowing the company to bring a Lanham Act complaint against the Canadian owner of Pirate Joe’s, and that it didn’t matter that the alleged trademark infringement occurred in another country.

The appeals panel says that the effect on Trader Joe’s need not be substantial for the case to move forward, just “some effect.” This is important here because this effect usually involves foreign goods coming into the U.S. and allegedly harming a trademark. In this case, TJ’s makes no claim that the items sold at Pirate Joe’s are working their way back south of the border.

Nevertheless, argues the retailer, the fact that PJ’s is selling Trader Joe’s branded food at a significantly higher price to people who are familiar with — and may even drive to the U.S. to shop at — Trader Joe’s is sufficient to make the “some effect” claim.

What about the doctrine of “first sale,” which holds that after you buy something you’re pretty much free to do with it as you please? This is why there are used book stores, yard sales, eBay, Craigslist, etc. Why shouldn’t you be able to just resell Trader Joe’s brand food at whatever price you want to charge?

Trader Joe’s contends that unfettered reselling of its products may result in harm to its reputation and reduce the value of its trademarks if, for example, people get sick after eating a resold item, or obtain a substandard product that was harmed during the shipping process.

“There is nothing implausible about the concern that Trader Joe’s will suffer a tarnished reputation and resultant monetary harm in the United States from contaminated goods sold in Canada,” writes the Ninth Circuit. “Incidents of food-born illness regularly make international news, and Trader Joe’s alleges that it is aware of at least one customer who became sick after consuming food sold by Pirate Joe’s. Courts have held that reputational harm to an American plaintiff may constitute ‘some effect’ on American commerce.”

Additionally, there is the similarity of the names of the two stores and Trader Joe’s contention that Pirate Joe’s is attempting to pass itself off as an authorized partner of TJ’s.

If Pirate Joe’s customers mistakenly believe the two retailer’s are linked, the shoppers may incorrectly assume that Trader Joe’s is okay with the higher prices being charged at Pirate Joe’s, notes the ruling. TJ’s also contends that Pirate Joe’s provides a lower quality of customer service, which it says could harm the U.S. retailer’s reputation if shoppers believe the two stores have an official relationship.

“False endorsement gives rise to an actionable harm under the Lanham Act,” notes the court, “and Trader Joe’s contends it will suffer this harm in the United States because it draws international shoppers to its northern-Washington stores, and its trademarks stand to lose value in the United States.”

Finally, while Pirate Joe’s only resells the TJ’s items in Canada, Trader Joe’s alleges that the smaller store is nonetheless doing business in the U.S., by purchasing the food for resale in Washington and also allegedly hiring U.S. citizens to buy food on PJ’s behalf.

“This domestic economic activity weighs in favor of applying the Lanham Act” to Pirate Joe’s, says the court, which overturned the District Court’s 2013 dismissal of the case.

None of this means that Trader Joe’s has won the dispute or will ultimately prevail. The Ninth Circuit ruling only means that the Trader Joe’s lawsuit against Pirate Joe’s has been given new life and can continue to move forward.

A lawyer representing Pirate Joe’s tells the WSJ Law Blog that “We are obviously disagree with, and are disappointed in, the Court’s ruling. We are evaluating the opinion and our options going forward.”





31 Aug 18:30

Apple acquired Turi

by Rui Carmo

Wow. This caught me completely by surprise, even though it happened a little while ago.

I’m pretty interested in this one, since Turi (formerly Dato) maintained a Python package called GraphLab, which is used in the University of Washington Machine Learning Specialization (which I’ve been doing in Coursera on my sparsely available free time).

Although they’ve already made a statement that the academic version of their toolkit will still be available (which I just got by e-mail), I hope the normal version will also be kept alive somehow — it’s a really nice toolkit (probably part of the reason Apple bought them), and I was getting to like it…

31 Aug 18:30

Midnight Riot

Peter Grant is a young police constable in London. He’d love a permanent assignment to the Murder Squad, but he’s been marked down for a permanent posting in bureaucracy. But young constable Grant has a talent his superiors haven’t yet discovered: at a crime scene, he sees clues that his colleagues miss. In Grant’s case, his clue is a witness to a brutal Covent Garden mugging, a witness who is helpful and informative but who is also, inconveniently, a ghost.

31 Aug 18:29

Getting Garmin Software (VIRB Edit, etc.) to Work with Your GPX Files

by Jeffrey Friedl
“  If the intercom doesn't seem to be working please push the bell  ” — detail of the front wall of this house — -- Kyoto, Japan -- Copyright 2008 Jeffrey Friedl, http://regex.info/blog/ -- This photo is licensed to the public under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ (non-commercial use is freely allowed if proper attribution is given, including a link back to this page on http://regex.info/ when used online)
Nikon D700 + Nikkor 24-70mm f/2.8 @ 38mm — 1/200 sec, f/6.3, ISO 1800 — map & image datanearby photos
“  If the intercom doesn't seem to be working
please push the bell
 ”
— detail of the front wall of this house in Kyoto, Japan—

I've recently started futzing with video on my bike rides, having posted a few on “Lovely Bicycle Ride Revisiting Uji Countryside Photographed Five Years Ago” the other day, including this fast descent down some twisty mountains and into the flats.

I had some trouble getting Garmin software (VIRB Edit, Garmin BaseCamp, and Garmin Connect) to work with my GPX files, or as Garmin has lately taken to re-brand in their own silly name, “G-Metrix” data files.

When trying to import GPX files, I'd get a terse, frustrating “Failed to read file” or “... is not a valid GPX file and could not be opened” message. After much experimenting I found that in each <trkpt> element, Garmin requires the <ele> to come before the <time>. Get anything out of order and it bails.

I ran a little script to ensure <ele> came first, and they were imported without complaint.

What's most shocking to me about this is that Garmin isn't wrong. I've been working with GPX files for more than a decade, and it never even occurred to me that the various order-can't-possibly-matter sup-parts of a <trkpt> might actually be required in a specific order, but inexplicably, that's how the GPX standard was written:

<xsd:sequence>
  <-- elements must appear in this order -->
  <xsd:element name="ele" type="xsd:decimal" minOccurs="0"/>
  <xsd:element name="time" type="xsd:dateTime" minOccurs="0"/>
</xsd:sequence>

This restriction on ordering seems utterly nonsensical... I'd guess it's because whoever created the standard was simply lazy as a software engineer. In any case, the standard is the standard.

It turns out that other artificial orders are mandated, such as the metadata summary requiring the author (if there is one) before the copyright (if there is one). I always thought that the GPX standard was a bit wonky as far as XML standards go, but this puts it into the decidedly “bizarre” category.

Anyway, as much as Garmin continues to deserve the world's ire for design in both hardware and software that pushes new limits in just how poor a user experience one can endure, in this issue they are technically not “wrong”. Yes, it'd be nice if they were generous in what they read, but I'm sure their own “G-Matrix” files are standard conforming, and considering that their software is free, working with their own stuff seems to be a reasonable lower bar.

31 Aug 18:29

New Twitter on Windows Phone Thinks Different

by Bardi Golriz

I'm seeing quite a love-in for the new Twitter Windows Phone app. There's one new feature in specific that has got me wondering: 

Streamlined navigation brings you the new Home, Connect, Discover and Me tabs (emphasis mine)

It doesn't use the panaroma or pivot navigation paradigms that have become a part of Windows Phone apps' furnishings (first and third party apps that I use anyway). By taking a more platform agnostic approach and seemingly adhering to popular convention, it's actually being unconventional from a Windows Phone (and Metro) perspective. And, I like that. A lot. 

Admittedly, the update may not blend into the core OS as seamlessly as other Windows Phone apps that strictly follow the Metro design language, but this doesn't make it any less intuitive or pretty. On the contrary, it's fast, easy and (most importantly) fresh. 


I'm not advocating Windows Phone developers to suddenly engage in mass rebellion against Metro. But it would be nice to see them think out of the box a little more. Even if it means to look elsewhere for inspiration. To see if their furniture can be rearranged for a better experience. Or if the whole place needs to knocked down to make room for something new. After all, Metro isn't execution. It's a philosophy

Update: Windows Phone Central forum user Gaichuke made me aware of the following tweet from Windows Phone designer Jon Bell:

That is, new Twitter technically uses a pivot and so I was wrong to say it didn't. I didn't consider it a pivot as I considered the lack of visual cue to suggest a horizontal swipe is supported and the ability to jump to any section as enough practical differences for it to not be a considered a pivot. Apparently not. In any case, I'm happy to lose on semantics because that doesn't really matter. I'm more happy that Jon welcomed the evolution of the pivot, which is essentially what I was asking for originally. Developers to challenge misconceptions. 
31 Aug 18:29

Is It Just A Novelty?

by Richard Millington

This happens a lot. You launch a new idea, type of discussion, or content series and it’s instantly popular. It might be one of the most popular things you’ve done yet.

Over the following weeks and months, the popularity fades.

This is because what you launched is a novelty. It was original, fun, and surprising. Ultimately, however, it didn’t yield any major value to the group and the popularity quickly faded.

This happens with many things; types of discussions, AMAs, working out loud discussions, feature-style content, weekly live chats, breakdowns etc…

Don’t continually tweak a novelty hoping to regain the initial burst of popularity. This is never going to happen. And don’t constantly hop from one novelty to the next. You will never find enough novelties to sustain engagement.

Novelties capture short-term attention, but they don’t change long-term behavior. And it’s long-term behavior change which is the purpose of a community. Hopping from one novelty to the next is a bad idea.

A better approach is to test small ideas. See what grows in popularity one week to the next without an initial explosion. Look for things within the community already taking place that you can amplify. If you have lots of technology-related discussions, maybe list the top few each week. Share the latest technology news. Showcase a good example. Make small bets and find something that increases in popularity from one week to the next.

31 Aug 18:29

Becoming a Rotary Past President...

by Arjun Singh

Rotary_inductions_feb1_2016

 

In July, I completed a one year term as President of my Rotary Club - the Rotary Club of Kamloops. In continuous operation since 1922, our club is one of the oldest community service / fellowship organizations in our community. I don't claim we are better than any of the other 4 Rotary Clubs in operation today in Kamloops. We all do great work. I know our club is built on a very solid foundation and tradition that we continue to try to adapt to meet the changing desires / needs of our members and our community. Often known as the old mans' club, we are no longer, and haven't been for a while. 

When I started as President in July 2015, taking over from my friend Sue Porter, I was certainly nervous. I didn't want to screw anything important up. I found the key club operations have a deep and committed group of members who keep things moving, no matter who occupies the role as President. This was very comforting. I was also excited for the opportunities offered by being President. Within the stable foundations of ongoing club operations, our club gives the President quite a bit of latitude to offer direction. I decided to ask the club to focus on membership growth and also initiated our (perhaps renewed?) participation in the Rotary Club of Ottawa's Adventures in Citizenship program for Canadian youth. These initiatives were very gratifying for me and I really appreciated the support of the club.

The picture above is from one of the very best meetings of the year. It is of a membership induction ceremony at which we inducted three new members - all very dynamic and caring female leaders in Kamloops. We had quite a few of these inductions through out my year. I'm again grateful for the many members who sponsored new members into our club.

In becoming President of the Club, I followed in the footsteps of my father, who served as our President in 1997-98. My father passed away in March 2o15 and I became President in July. In some ways, the time commitment was a bit tough sometime. It, however, also kept me quite busy and gave me an added connection to my father. I grieve my father's passing every day and, in meaningful ways, being President of the Club kept me busy and kept the grief more at bay. It also allowed me another meaningful way to continue to connect to his great legacy of service. 

Rotary Club Presidents typically turn into pumpkins after a one year term. We have a new President now, my friend Devon O'Toole, and he is doing a fabulous job. I want to give him all the support and freedom I can to have a great year. Being a recently minted Past President feels a bit tricky sometimes. You still want to contribute but you don't want to seem like you are stepping on the new Prez's toes. I have enjoyed a bit of a break from full on Rotary responsibility. I have been a member for almost 16 years and have always enjoyed being engaged and involved in the club. So, I am now starting to think about what that means from the vantage point of being a Past President as well as long time member. There are so many amazing opportunities to serve through Rotary.

31 Aug 18:29

Presence, Structured Exposure and Desire

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Keith Lyons, Clyde Street, [Sept] 03, 2016


I can understand the desire on the part of some (many, even) to put down the screens and engage face-to-face, uninterrupted. My sympathy with this view ends when professors - even Clay Shirky - are "moving from recommending students set aside laptops and phones to requiring it." At the point something is required the arguments in its favour become irrelevant, and it is simply the exertion of power that makes it so. And if power is what defines the dynamic in a classroom, then any effort to support the empowerment and the enfranchisement of the student is undermined. I realize a lot of people don't see the classroom dynamic as a question of power. But they are, after all, the ones with the power.

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31 Aug 18:29

Why is so-independent Michelin running wine-and-dine events in Hong Kong and Macau?

by admin

PR for travel and restaurant guides publisher says events it is co-hosting will be in hotels, not restaurants – but many of Michelin’s top-rated restaurants in both cities are in hotels

31 Aug 14:49

The Cons of Social Media for E-Learning

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Tom Kuhlmann, The Rapid E-Learning Blog, [Sept] 03, 2016


The link to his ebook (73 page PDF) appears in his RSS feed, but not the web version of the same post, which is interesting. No matter, it's free and worth a look. To the post: it caught my eye when I found myself sympathizing with how difficult it is to keep up. This is my job and I'm in awe of how a simple thing like computers and websites became this great tangled mass of applications, standards, protocols and formats. And that's just the surface level! And then there's the way the internet has changed from being a place where people share with each other to a place where people relentlessly market themselves (maybe rereading his post was what led him to remove the link to his book). That said, I think he's wrong when he says "Social media is what you make of it." Companies like Facebook and Twitter are working very hard to make sure you can't make it into something that works for you - they need it to work for their advertisers. And we need to rethink 'social'. It's not just 'conversations'. I want to write well-thought-out pieces and engage in thoughtful and reasoned criticism - not conversation. Just saying.

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31 Aug 14:49

The Critical Importance Of Defining Your Purpose

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Dan Pontefract, [Sept] 03, 2016


Dan Pontefract is still plugging his book, and we need to keep that in mind. He's also doing a bit of name-dropping. But I also think he's on target with this post. "Constantly redefining who one is in life and at work increases the likelihood that  your personal purpose  will be realized. Being relentless in the quest for personal purpose is key to achieving the sweet spot." What's my purpose? Same as it has been for a very long time n- working for an equitable society in which each person can find their own sense of fulfillment, whatever they perceive it to be.

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31 Aug 14:48

Google & Android – Closed source pt. II

by windsorr

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Google is inching closer and closer to taking Android proprietary. 

  • It looks very much as if Google’s Nexus devices this year will show the first signs of a badly needed move to take Android from open source and make it proprietary like iOS and Windows.
  • Google typically updates its Nexus line of products in the autumn to coincide with the availability of the latest version of Android (N).
  • This has been done to demonstrate to handset makers what it thinks the ideal implementation of Google Android should look like.
  • To date, the Nexus project has produced pretty good devices but with tiny volumes that have been largely ignored by the handset industry.
  • Google has already said that it intends to become more opinionated about the design of phones which to me is the first step in accelerating a trend that is been ongoing for three years.
  • Google Mobile Services (GMS) is a proprietary piece of software that contains all of Google’s ecosystem and sits on top of the open source Android OS (AOSP).
  • For the last three years Google has been gradually migrating functionality from AOSP into GMS because Google can prevent fragmentation in GMS as well as distribute updates directly to users.
  • While, this has enabled some improvement in the Android user experience, the AOSP is more fragmented than ever, with most handsets never being updated resulting in a poorer user experience for users driving lower usage and loyalty.
  • It is of paramount importance that Google’s fixes these problems because if they continue, revenue generation from Android devices will continue to substantially undershoot its potential.
  • I have long been of the opinion that the only option for Google to fix this is to take the entirety of Android proprietary and thereby prevent fragmentation in future versions of its ecosystem devices as well as take full control of the updates.
  • The net result should be a user experience that is more likely to delight users that has the scope to be much more secure resulting in much needed higher usage and loyalty.
  • It looks very much as if the new Google devices that it will launch in the coming weeks will herald a real move in this direction, which I expect to continue with the launch of Android O at Google i/o in May 2017.
  • For the creators of Android forks such as Alibaba, Xiaomi, Tencent, Cyanogen and so on, this means that they will also be forced down the same road resulting in a series of proprietary operating systems all based on a common kernel.
  • For developers, this will make their lives generally easier as developing apps for Google Android devices will become much easier but more work will be required to also develop for others.
  • I continue to believe that this is the only way that Alphabet can reach the market’s expectations in terms of medium term revenue growth for its Google business.
  • This is why I see risk in Alphabet’s numbers because the path to making Android proprietary will be difficult as developers will need to be convinced that this for the best.
  • Furthermore, Alphabet will also still have to contend with the EU which is already concerned with what it considers to be Alphabet’s monopolistic practices in Android.
  • Hence I think that in the best instance, Alphabet’s share price is fair leading me to want to look elsewhere.
  • Samsung, Microsoft and Baidu are the places where I would be looking while I am waiting for the right time to look at Facebook.
31 Aug 14:48

Perpetual Motion Machines

by Chenoe Hart

The video that introduces Nissan’s IDS automated concept car resembles any other car commercial: vaguely propulsive background music, tracking footage shot from a helicopter sweeping over a city, a handsome man behind the wheel. Then, as the narrator promises that Nissan’s technology will make driving more “enjoyable” by allowing computers to take over during moments of heavy traffic, the car’s manual controls vanish beneath an elaborate folding-panel system. The driver role is replaced with the equally familiar role of passenger, gazing contemplatively at the passing scenery of the same conventional streets and bridges and office buildings that would be visible today.

But new technologies may ultimately evolve far beyond machines “automating” the recognizably human task of driving. Hypotheses about “driverless” cars still presume there will be such a thing as drivers and passengers, trapping us within the current incarnation of our transportation system. Frequently applied terms like “automated” and “driverless” are inadequate in that they continue to posit manually piloted vehicles as the norm from which the new technologies deviate. Rather than robot drivers piloting cars that humans might otherwise be driving, these new technologies may transport us in an entirely different way that dispenses with accommodating human capabilities.

While attempting to describe an upcoming future that we do not yet understand, predictions like those in Nissan’s IDS video remain burdened with obsolete concepts. It is telling that Nissan’s concept car and the vehicles imagined by Volvo and IDEO retain familiar characteristics of gasoline-powered cars. They have a hood and front grille as ornamentation, for instance, even after their electrical propulsion mechanisms have rendered them nonfunctional. The electric drivetrain of Tesla’s Model S makes the front hood vestigial; the company’s nickname for that anachronistic space where the engine once was — a “frunk,” or front trunk — embodies the awkwardness of adapting new designs to our current expectations.

Our future passenger experience might bear little resemblance to either driving or riding; we’ll inhabit a space that only coincidentally happens to be in motion

Once designers of automated vehicles are no longer bound by the outdated limitations of accommodating either internal combustion technology or human operators, they could move far beyond our present-day intuitions of what a car should look like. Replacing bulky gasoline engines and transmissions with multiple smaller electric motors and slim under-floor battery packs would enable radical new possibilities for the configuration of interior space. As early as 2002, GM’s Hy-Wire concept car separated an interchangeable passenger compartment from its fuel cell and electric motor powertrains, opening up space for an interior that more closely resembled a living room than conventional expectations of passenger-car seating. Where one would expect to see a hood and dashboard, the windshield extended to become a panoramic window framing the road ahead as a scenic view.

The Hy-Wire’s technology suggests that the focus of car design could turn inward, yielding a range of new possibilities for vehicle interiors. Our future passenger experience might bear little resemblance to either driving or riding within a vehicle; we’ll inhabit a space that only coincidentally happens to be in motion.

With a system of automated vehicles, transit passengers will no longer need to pay any attention while distances are being traversed. With the possibility of traffic collisions theoretically eliminated, safety requirements mandating fixed seats, air bags, and seat belts would become obsolete. Passengers who no longer needed to be restrained would be able to move around freely. After ease of handling becomes an irrelevant design consideration for new vehicles steered by computers, designers will be free to stretch wheelbases, raise ceiling heights, and specify softer suspensions to make that movement more natural and comfortable. And since the people inside wouldn’t necessarily need to see where they were going, a growing range of possible wall fixtures — storage cabinets, LCD screens, perhaps a kitchen sink — could substitute passenger convenience over views of the world outside. The elimination of the driver will mean the end of the car as a car.

The social impact could be broader than we expect. When we don’t have to look where we are going, we have to deliberately choose what we want to see. One of IDEO’s more radical visions of how automated vehicles could be used, the WorkOnWheels mobile office, is designed to allow employees to travel to new locations as they work. The pod contains office furniture and pull-down shades over the windows, letting workers choose which aspects of their surrounding environment they want to see, without having to visually process the travel in-between. Cityscapes become optional, consumable on demand rather than by necessity. Meanwhile, the mobile workplace’s controlled internal habitat would remain constant no matter where it was.

Such a vehicle would not have to travel any faster for us to perceive a dramatic reduction in travel time. The time once spent in vehicles inertly waiting to arrive could now be filled with the same sort of activities we’d be doing if we were already there — or had never left.

The time once spent in vehicles inertly waiting to arrive could now be filled with the same activities we’d be doing if we were already there — or had never left

The opportunity to multitask while traveling could make the journey into the destination. Given the expanded possibilities of what one could do inside a vehicle, our existing distinctions between vehicles and buildings, between transit and destination, between static and mobile spaces, may begin to blur. Imagine commuting while sleeping, or socializing at happy hour while the bar transports you home. Imagine if a garage was also the car. If commuting entails being in a space that is functionally equivalent to being at home, one might eventually skip returning home, and commute perpetually. The journey to work could commence as soon we fall asleep. The idea of having a destination becomes as obsolete as drivers and cars. Highways would host listless roaming bedrooms, meandering through the night.

Our understanding of a house as a stable locus of physical and emotional shelter could become diluted. There would be no reason for homes to not also be vehicles. A range of new options for customizing these vehicle-home hybrids would emerge: Homes could be made up of modular docking pods, and specific rooms could be shared, swapped, rented out, or sent away for cleaning or restocking. Modern conveniences that we currently take for granted — such as being able to use a bathroom without needing to arrange for its presence in advance — could become tomorrow’s luxuries. The homeless would be the only people not constantly in motion, the people closest to retaining a fixed physical location called home. Stasis would become homelessness.

If vehicular interiors can accommodate the activities possible at most destinations — if the vehicle becomes a destination in and of itself, and destinations become other vehicles — the mediating experience of a journey between places would be eliminated. There will be no signs to point us anywhere. There would be no need to know directions, and no sense of what being “on the way” to somewhere looks or feels like. There will be no need to know how to get anywhere once we forget the concept of having anywhere to go.


Driverless cars will not be the first transit technology to challenge our conceptions of time and space. The travel speeds of the first railroads were unprecedented, surpassing the contemporary ability to perceive the distance between destinations. Train routes became abstractions, navigated by means of timetables rather than maps. Eventually, transit system diagrams, like the iconic Vignelli New York City subway map, eliminated realistic representations of geography. Mass-market novels grew in popularity as a way for riders to pass the time while their capacity to comprehend or influence the direction of their journey was suspended.

Geographic proximity became less relevant than whether or not the destination was connected to the transportation network. Early transit-oriented developments, such as theme parks and department stores, were built by railroad interests to take advantage of the audiences captive within their systems. Growing suburban commuter towns expanded to the limit of convenient walking distance from a train station; areas beyond that boundary remained rural.

At the same time railroads were offering passengers prescribed choices between linear routes, other technologies were bringing a wider scope of self-directed travel to many consumers. The growing popularity of early bicycles was met with a moral panic over whether they would allow female riders the freedom to travel unsupervised and mingle with members of the opposite sex. While exploratory automotive road trips are now romanticized as integral to American culture, a continuing reminder of the bicycle’s early reception can be seen in Saudi Arabia’s laws prohibiting women from either driving cars or riding bikes.

The user interface for navigation would no longer be a map, but a clock or calendar. Place would be synonymous with occasion, and more closely resemble verbs than nouns

External rules can always be imposed to limit the freedoms that might seem innately afforded by transportation technologies. Driverless cars would seem to retain the automobile’s capability to allow passengers free individualized movement, but their software may introduce new avenues for regulatory control over those movements. Physical impediments like gates and cul-de-sacs would become less relevant compared with restrictions or service fees implemented at the level of code. People and buildings in different service networks might pass each other by without experiencing the slightest hint of one another. And a software error could make certain places impossible to access even as you go right through them. It may require special attention for passengers to know what choices they actually have over their journeys, what potential detours they might be missing. Passengers content to surrender responsibility over their journeys could find themselves back on de facto railroad tracks.

A “driverless car” could become conceptualized as a horizontal elevator. After an elevator’s initial acceleration, the difference in time between reaching higher and lower floors is minimal. Traveling between buildings could become closer to traveling between different floors in the same building, and with no greater awareness of the other numbered floors or buildings blinking past in between. Destinations become equally accessible entries in an arbitrary numeric index, with the differences in access time reminiscent of the slight delays in retrieving digital information from a mechanical hard drive.

It should be no surprise that Google, a technology company focused on information retrieval, has been the first to replace the analog interface of a steering wheel with the binary option of a single push button. Our wider urban environment could become randomly accessible in the same way that Amazon’s “Chaotic Storage” warehouses already organize their contents, independent of any traditional spatial categorization scheme.

Maps would no longer be relevant outside the internal processes of a vehicle’s guidance computer. If one sought, say, the nearest coffee shop, it would not have to be a question of geography. The desire for coffee wouldn’t be a matter of a destination or a journey. Behind the scenes, software would instruct a vehicle to take its passenger to a nearby coffee shop, or it could summon a mobile coffee shop toward the customer. There would be no trip to a fixed location, only trajectories calculated dynamically to unite the various moving parties to facilitate an exchange. The divergent aims and cross-purposes of individual drivers pursuing their goals would be subsumed by a swarm of vehicle-buildings coordinated across a shared network, moving collectively in fluid patterns. Extrapolate this principle, and one can see how dispersed low-rise communities of mobile buildings might replace fixed, vertically oriented cities.

Once physical locations are rendered as abstract coordinates in a user interface, they effectively become arbitrary, as interchangeable as the retail spaces of big-box stores. The experience of inhabiting any particular interior space might become decoupled from its existence within a specific place, free from the baggage of associated historical and geographic context. Real estate would no longer need to be valued according to its location, because proximity would always be subject to change. Travel to visit or inhabit buildings still standing in fixed physical locations might join horses and antique cars as nostalgic hobbies for the wealthy.

Our memories of the spatial processions encountered while traveling through urban architecture — approaching the public facade of a building, the transition between the street and lobby, the awareness of landmark reference points on a skyline, the interstices between buildings — might eventually begin to fade. The experience of passing from one destination to another could become akin to watching the progress bar of a software download. Traveling to a different location, or having that location travel to you, would be more akin to updating an app.

The user interface for navigating space would no longer be a map, but a clock or calendar. Distances once traced on a map would be transmuted into blocks of time plotted on one’s daily schedule. Place would be synonymous with occasion, with movement through time corresponding to automatic movements through space. Frequent destinations such as “home” and “work” might transform into abstract zones differentiated mainly by when rather than where they happen. Our motives and desires would be foregrounded over the experience of traveling, shifting our conception of destinations to more closely resemble verbs rather than nouns. Your workout routine might take place in a different gym than it did the morning before, but you wouldn’t know the difference; they would be identically convenient. As soon as our scheduled time within one destination expired, we would be able to walk through a docking port into the next, like a cinematic cut skipping the passage of mundane events that might otherwise have unfolded between selected scenes.

Driverless passenger cars and delivery vehicles will further accelerate our current move to on-demand services that let us bypass those inconvenient interstitial moments of everyday life — walking to a store, standing in line, cooking a meal, and so on. The logistics of scheduling automated vehicles will ensure that even more of our time becomes consciously programmed and structured, optimized for maximum productivity. With each advance, our surrounding environment will become increasingly hostile to serendipity and chance meetings, known sources of creative breakthroughs.

Contemporary urban-planning guidelines are based on assumptions that the rich pedestrian life of a street or a park emerges from adjacencies with surrounding businesses. Driverless cars posit a possible future without street life and without spaces for spontaneity. As with previous planning mistakes in developing automotive-oriented cities, carmakers and technology companies are moving forward with their ideas without reckoning with the full range of potential social impacts. These futures must be imagined before they can be embraced or resisted. Otherwise driverless cars may steer society into a blind cul-de-sac, and we will discover we have nowhere left to go.

31 Aug 14:47

Brad Feld wonders — since he’s primarily posting at Wordpress — whether crossposting at Medium is…

by Stowe Boyd

My sense is that it is not worth the trouble if you are simply reposting. But if you create a topically-oriented Medium publication, and…

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31 Aug 14:46

CIBC adds fingerprint ID support to its Android app

by Ian Hardy

Here’s a quick update for the 1 million to five million CIBC customers that have downloaded the bank’s Android app.

In the app’s latest update, the financial institution states it’s listening to customer feedback and has redesigned the app’s drawer to make it easier for users to find what they’re looking for. However, most importantly, CIBC has finally enabled fingerprint ID sign-in, which adds another layer of security and convenience to the app.

Screen Shot 2016-08-30 at 3.15.17 PM

In addition, other changes include the ability to see your rewards points balance on credit cards and the option to change your mortgage payment details, as well as make a loan, mortgage or CIBC U.S. Dollar Visa payment.

Download CIBC’s Android app here.

Source CIBC
31 Aug 14:45

How to stop WhatsApp from sharing your data with Facebook

by Rose Behar

In a move that outraged many of its users, WhatsApp recently updated its terms of service to begin sharing a limited amount of user data with Facebook.

“By coordinating more with Facebook, we’ll be able to do things like track basic metrics regarding how often people use our services and better fight spam on WhatsApp,” said the company in a blog post, adding that by connecting a phone number, the social media platform can offer better friend suggestions and show more relevant ads.

While the messaging app’s post portrays the change as only beneficial to users, it seems at odds with its long-held and often stringent commitment to privacy, as evidenced by a blog post from 2014 when the company was acquired by Facebook.

Founder Jan Koum wrote, “We don’t know your likes, what you search for on the internet or collect your GPS location. None of that data has ever been collected and stored by WhatsApp, and we really have no plans to change that.”

Considering the stark change in policy, this may be an entry into a new era for WhatsApp — an era in which it caters only to the vast demographic of its one billion users who aren’t privacy-focused.

For those of you who are, however, and would rather keep your information away from the reach of brands and advertisers at all costs, there are ways to opt out– as long as you’re quick. Below are the two methods.

Terms of Service method

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The first opportunity you’ll get to opt out of sharing WhatsApp information is in the new terms of service. Once you see the notification that they’ve changed, hit ‘Read’ and scroll all the way to the bottom of the document. Down there, you’ll see an option for sharing information with Facebook. Simply uncheck the box beside it, then hit ‘Agree.’

Settings method

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If you accidentally breezed past that option when the new terms of service rolled around, you can still opt out through the settings within 30 days of agreeing.

To do so, head to ‘Settings,’ then ‘Account,’ then ‘Share my account info’ and uncheck the box.

But wait…

Note that even if you do opt out, WhatsApp states on its FAQ page that “the Facebook family of companies will still receive and use this information for other purposes such as improving infrastructure and delivery systems, understanding how our services or theirs are used, securing systems, and fighting spam, abuse, or infringement activities.”

At the very least, however, your WhatsApp won’t feed into more annoying ad targeting.

31 Aug 14:45

Google could be turning Waze into a ride-sharing platform

by Patrick O'Rourke

It looks like Google could be planning to pivot Waze into a carpool-based ride-sharing service, according to a new report from the Wall Street Journal.

According to the rumour, the service will be confined to the Bay Area, at least at launch. This new feature would allow drivers and passengers headed on the same route to connect with each other via the app.

The app, dubbed Waze Commute, will launch this fall, but unlike Lyft and Uber, will operate more like an ad-hoc carpool system. A pilot is currently running that’s limited to select Waze employees.

The Wall Street Journal says that drivers will make approximately $0.54 per mile, significantly less than what an Uber or Lyft driver typically earns.

31 Aug 14:45

Why we need more Women on Top

by Stowe Boyd

Once women attain a loosely defined “critical mass” of representation — generally accepted as between 20 and 30 percent — within…

Continue reading on Work Futures »