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Touch and Go with WHDI

Posted by Tattletech on Feb 28, 2012 in Mobile World Congress, TV, Tablets, Technology
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Want to see just how smoothly WHDI technology can work? Well, they have been showing us quite a lot at Mobile World Congress this year. Wireless HD mirroring between devices? Yes please.

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Monday Jumpstart

Posted by Tattletech on Feb 27, 2012 in Monday Jumpstart
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“Authority doesn’t work without prestige, or prestige without distance.”

-Charles de Gaulle

 
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Clutch: Say Goodbye to Luke Warm

Posted by Tattletech on Feb 23, 2012 in Clutch, Cool stuff, Technology
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Don’t you just hate cooking a huge meal? It takes so much time and effort, causing you to plan ahead so all items will be ready at the same time. But it seems no matter how hard you plan, some are ready before others, leaving them either piping hot and ready to go, or cold. This forces you to have to heat up the food in the stove or microwave, assuring everything is at the same temperature.

Sounds like a huge hassle to me, which is why I’d rather go out to eat. Besides I can’t cook anyways.
However, if I did cook, I would certainly use this helpful new devise for heating or cooling down food. The device is called the Electrolux Ribbon: Mobile Food Heater/Cooler and it seems like the perfect solution for timing problems in the kitchen.

Once an item is fully cooked, you simply place the “Ribbon” around the pot or container and choose to keep it hot, or cold. How sweet is that? You can keep it at a safe temperature, all while prepping and finishing up the other items for the meal.

The Ribbon works on many small battery-powered thermoelectric cells and is a flexible belt shape that allows it to wrap around almost any container or pot. Simple. And it alleviates one of the biggest annoyances in the kitchen.

Still, I probably won’t be cooking in my kitchen unless I find a robot to cook for me and I’d gladly go buy one of these.

-KB


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Fif-TECH-Teen: MixCloud

Posted by Tattletech on Feb 22, 2012 in Fif-TECH-teen, Internet Stuff, Music
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Last week was SoundCloud week. This week I will be informing you, the Tattletech readers, about yet again another fantastic site, one that has a few things in common with SoundCloud: MixCloud.

MixCloud is a fairly new website, launched in 2008 by four friends and Cambridge University graduates: Nikhil Shar, Nico Perrez, Matt Clayton and Sam Cooke (ed: no, not that Sam Cooke). Their plan? Establish a website with the intention of building a home for radio presenters and DJs to share and promote their shows without having to use file sharing sites.

Mixcloud lets you listen to the best radio presenters and DJs in the world. You will find talent like the resident DJ at Space in Ibiza, Carl Cox, or famous Slovenian DJ and producer Uroš Umek. You will find loads and loads of other great DJs, producers and radio presenters as well. The other amazing thing is that you can easily get recognition in the scene by uploading your own DJ mixes, podcast, or even your very own Radio show. Cool, right? There are no boundaries; anyone can listen to your “Cloudcast’s” (what MixCloud call your mixes, podcast, or radio show) around the world and the same goes for you, you may listen to anything in any place.

This idea reminded me of SoundCloud because you may also upload any type of audio, but MixCloud seems to have thing over SoundCloud, a thing that made me to sign up to MixCloud in the first place: I love the fact that when you sign up (for free) you may upload as much content as you please. When you sign up for SoundCloud for free, you are only allowed 120 minutes of content before upgrading to a Premium account and spending from twenty-nine to five hundred euros a year, depending on the premium account you purchase. This is not so cool for DJs uploading long mixes, like me. I recently uploaded a mix to SoundCloud and I only have about sixty minutes of audio left, which is the equivalent to one good mix, so that is not so cool.

On the other hand, on MixCloud you can’t download songs and remixes like you can on SoundCloud, due to copyright issues. I would suggest having both an account for MixCloud for all mixes, podcast or radio content, and on SoundCloud if you are into producing songs or remixing songs.

Overall, I thoroughly recommend this site because it is an easy way of “getting your self out there” by having the power to upload your work in a matter of minutes and share it.

Great job MixCloud, you guys nailed it!

You can read Fif-TECH-teen weekly right here on Tattletech. You can also follow Sean on Twitter @sean_edwards1.

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Monday Jumpstart

Posted by Tattletech on Feb 21, 2012 in Monday Jumpstart
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In honor of this being Tuesday and all…

“He was always late on principle, his principle being that punctuality is the thief of time.”

-Oscar Wilde

 
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Cellrox. Columbia University. Yes.

Posted by Tattletech on Feb 20, 2012 in Emerging tech, Mobile, Software, Technology
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Cellrox Ltd. announced today the signing of a worldwide exclusive agreement with Columbia University to license certain mobile technology developed at Columbia that will enables corporate IT departments to securely accommodate the Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) trend.

Using virtualization technology developed at Columbia’s School of Engineering and Applied Science, Cellrox addresses the challenges of BYOD by allowing both corporate and personal individual “personas” to co-exist on a single smartphone. Employees have secure access to data and applications necessary for their jobs, while reducing security and compliance risks for corporate networks. This also alleviates the need for employees to carry two smartphones, knowing that their personal data and applications are kept separate.

As somebody who uses two phone, I like where this is going. Sold.

-JO

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Repeat This! Webinar – Why is Simon Cowell so smug?

Posted by Tattletech on Feb 16, 2012 in PR, webinar
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For all our readers in the PR world (and any other interested parties), Hammerkit, the repeatable solutions resource for PR, is offering a webinar next Thursday, February 23, 2012 at 4pm CET. They will be to talking about how the PR industry can benefit from easily repeatable digital solutions, about business trends in PR and how the shift to digital is affecting PR industry revenues. And somehow Simon Cowell has something to do with it. Sold!

Sign up here.

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Clutch: Ink Removal – No, Not Tattoos

Posted by Tattletech on Feb 16, 2012 in Clutch, Cool stuff, Innovation, New things, Technology
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Green is my favorite color, so naturally I like to consider myself a “green” individual. I bring my own reusable bags while food shopping and recycle every chance I get. And I’m not the only one.

Times have changed–and for the better. Most people these days are constantly trying to cut down on the habit of printing paper and on the usage of paper and plastic bags. The trendy new thing while shopping at clothing stores is to get the receipt emailed to you–just another clever way to reduce the constant usage of paper. In addition, many universities throughout the US (and Europe) have limited the amount of printing a student is allowed throughout the semester. If you exceed that limit, you have to pay a fee. This helps teach students to only print what is absolutely necessary.

For me, working from home in a virtual office, I don’t find myself printing material that often. However, in other facilities such as hospitals and schools, it is an essential part of the workday. Patients and staff are constantly filling out paperwork; teachers are passing out handouts. All together, there is a huge amount of paper wasted unless it’s recycled.

But what if we could reuse a sheet of paper? Put different content on it? Consider it done. There is now a printer that operates a laser-removal technique to eliminate ink, so you can reuse the original sheet of paper. This way, you can print all you want without feeling guilty. Reusing and recycling at its finest, from Yanko Design,

Green thumbs up if you recycle!

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Most Predictable Valentine’s Day Gifts

Posted by Tattletech on Feb 14, 2012 in Technology
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Here’s our Valentine’s Day gift to you wonderful readers: some timely advice. The folks at EggDrop put together an infographic on the most predictable gifts of the season. Be original this year and steer clear of the below!

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Fif-TECH-Teen: SoundCloud Q&A

Posted by Tattletech on Feb 14, 2012 in Fif-TECH-teen
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This week, I was fortunate enough to have a Q&A session via e-mail with Alexander Ljung, founder and CEO for SoundCloud.

For those who aren’t familiar with SoundCloud, the website began as a platform for musicians to share recordings with each other, but then transformed into a full publishing tool which also allows musicians to distribute their tracks. I love this site and spend most of my nights downloading new, unique material by upcoming artists and producers. I would recommend  SoundCloud to everyone looking for new, unreleased music, people looking to sign artists to their label or for DJ’s looking for new and unique sounds to create a whole new set jam-packed of music that the audience has probably never heard.

I would like to thank Alex Ljung and Kristina Weise for taking their time away from their busy schedules to reply to my questions. I realize that not many fifteen year old “kids” get the opportunity to do this and I am very grateful.

Tattletech: In brief, can you tell me a little bit about yourself?

Alexander Ljung: My name is Alexander Ljung. I am the founder & CEO of SoundCloud, the leading social sound platform on the web. Since its launch in 2008 with my co-founder, Eric Wahlforss (CTO), I have been responsible for all aspects of the company’s strategy, vision, and leadership.

TT: What was the vision behind SoundCloud?

AL: Originally, SoundCloud was born out of frustration with the options available for sending and receiving large music and audio files over the web. [Co-Founder and CTO] Eric Wahlforss was (and still is) a musician, while I was working as a sound designer. We worked together on a couple of music projects, and at the time we had to make do with either nascent online file locker services or clunky email attachments to send elements of tracks that we were working on to each other–neither of which were particularly intuitive or much fun to use. More than anything we wanted to build a way for sound creators and artists to showcase their work and streamline collaboration between people.

TT: Do you have a musical background?
AL: Prior to SoundCloud, I worked in sound design for feature films.

TT: What are your musical influences?
AL: Björk, Rick Ross, Arvo Part, Gregory Isaacs and Sigur Rós.

TT: What was your motivation? Passion for music? Money?
AL. (1) Sound is fundamental part of the human experience; it’s a key part of life. As a previous sound designer, I recognize how much we use sound and value it in our everyday lives, but it’s underrepresented somehow. The web does a great job of making people more social and it’s odd to me that sound has not been largely represented there. My goal is to change that, to make sound just a part of our everyday online life as it is in our offline.
(2) It’s an amazing time to be a tech entrepreneur as we have the opportunity to influence hundreds to millions of people with a small team that believes in the same passion.

TT: Have any well known artists come up through SoundCloud? If so, who?
AL: Numerous artists from Lady Gaga (sharing a track on Christmas Day that she recorded one night while on the Monster Ball tour by uploading to SoundCloud and sharing across her social networks), to 50 Cent (has over 120K followers and generates massive amounts of plays from regularly uploading freestyles, new tracks and remixes, while engaging a community with such moves as asking young producers to create on top of his freestyles), to  M83  (sharing promotional tracks and remixes, while using SoundCloud Labs projects such as social unlock while amassing a following of 50K+ just on SoundCloud).

TT: What is the future for SoundCloud?
AL: We’re part of a larger movement to unmute the web and make sound a key part of it, whatever shape that takes. That’s what we’re trying to do with SoundCloud.

TT: Do you think that SoundCloud is an effective social media tool? There’s nothing that is as simple to create as sound.
AL: Here are a few reasons it is so effective:

  • Simplicity: Twitter is popular because it gives users a way to express themselves in only 140 keystrokes. But now everybody with a smartphone has a microphone in their pocket and it takes only one click to record something. It’s a lot less intrusive to record a conversation or sound snippet than it is to point a video camera in somebody’s face.
  • Multitasking: video requires your undivided attention, but you can listen to audio in the background while reading or doing other things.

Creation tools are evolving. People often associate audio with music that’s professionally recorded by major label artists, but the tools to record and remix sounds are becoming cheaper and easier to use.
Sound is connected to your emotional centers more than video. Don’t believe it? Try plugging your ears the next time you’re watching a scary movie.

TT: How does SoundCloud make enough money to secure survival?
AL: Signing up for SoundCloud is free, but we offer paid subscriptions to premium services that allow bigger uploads, easier sharing and more.

TT: High point of the journey to create SoundCloud?
AL: Our recent 10 million user announcement shows the incredible support of our stellar community.

TT: Yes I heard, Congratulations! How did you finance the start up?
AL: The company received angel funding in 2007 and 2008 by a small group of private investors with backgrounds in the music production, music software, web start-up and investment sectors. Doughty Hanson Technology Ventures then invested in 2009 and Index Ventures and Union Square Ventures in 2010. In January 2012, SoundCloud announced an undisclosed amount in a fundraising round led by Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers. GGV Capital also participated.

TT: I know that you guys work with Facebook. Did you approach Facebook or did Facebook
approach you?

AL: We’ve always held a solid relationship with Facebook. They are a natural partner for SoundCloud because Facebook is the go-to social network and SoundCloud is swiftly becoming the default sound sharing platform. It’s a natural fit. You can read more on our blog.

TT:.Reasons for working with Facebook?
AL: We hope that more people on Facebook will share their sounds with one another. Second, we want to make it easier for people to discover new sounds online with their friends.

TT: How long did it take to create SoundCoud?
AL: We launched in 2008 but were developing the foundation for our company since 2006.

TT: Thank you for your time. Do you have any parting advice for young entrepreneurs?

AL: My advice to anyone thinking about starting a company is to just start. There is no time for hesitation. Try something new. You can’t let the fear of failure stop you. It’s easy to get started; it’s the afterwards part that is more challenging. So just start.

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