Monday, 17 December 2012

12 Letters That Didn’t Make the Alphabet


You know the alphabet. It’s one of the first things you’re taught in school. But did you know that they’re not teaching you all of the alphabet? There are quite a few letters we tossed aside as our language grew, and you probably never even knew they existed.

Read the full text here: 

Thursday, 13 December 2012

London buses to offer NFC contactless card payments

London buses are to start accepting contactless payments from Thursday.
Passengers on the city's 8,500 vehicles will be able to buy tickets by swiping a credit, debit or charge card by an NFC (near field communication) reader.
Transport for London follows Stagecoach which began installing NFC equipment on its buses in 2009.
TfL also operates the Oyster smartcard scheme which uses an earlier RFID (radio-frequency identification) technology.
The buses' Oyster card readers have been upgraded to be compatible with both types,
Smartphones that can mimic contactless cards should also work with the equipment.



The 50 Coolest New Businesses In America

Year after year, cities across America continue to surprise us with new, innovative, and downright awesome businesses.
This year we've already brought you the coolest new businesses in Philadelphia, Chicago, and San Francisco, and now we've gone nationwide, finding the hottest restaurants, boutiques, startups, and everything in between across the U.S. 
There's a corner store with a bike-through window, a mobile shop that sells vintage clothing from a 1960s trailer, America's first pizza museum, and a Chinese restaurant that serves dumplings that look like Pac-Man characters.
Some of the businesses are based in brick and mortar stores, while others—like food trucks and mobile shops—sell their wares on wheels. We've also included several online-only businesses.
From San Francisco to New York (and everywhere in between), we've found the coolest new businesses in America that opened or expanded within the last year and a half. Email MNisen@businessinsider.com if we left off your favorite.


Friday, 7 December 2012

What's the loveliest word in the English language?

It was the linguist JR Firth who, in 1930, coined the term phonoaesthetics to refer to the study of how words sound. I came across it recently when, 26 years later than most, I heard Marlow ask in Dennis Potter's The Singing Detective: "What's the loveliest word in the English language, officer? In the sound it makes in the mouth? In the shape it makes in the page? E-L-B-O-W." (And yes, for anyone else who didn't know, it is where the band got its name.)
The film Donnie Darko offers a tip of its hat, too, in the lines of Drew Barrymore's character, teacher Karen Pomeroy: "This famous linguist once said that of all the phrases in the English language, of all the endless combinations of words in all of history, 'cellar door' is the most beautiful." The famous linguist was none other than JRR Tolkien, and he made the claim in his 1955 lecture English and Welsh.
There's also Robert Beard's The 100 Most Beautiful Words in English. Although you're unlikely to agree with them all, Beard's list does help make some phonetic links: the B and L common to bungalow, elbow and one of my favourites, for example. Long vowels and liquid sounds such as L and R have been considered particularly beautiful since the ancient Greeks, but I'd love to know where B fits in.
So, in no particular order, here are five that for me illustrate Tolkien's description of the phonetic pleasure of words as "simpler, deeper-rooted, and yet more immediate" than any practical or structural understanding of their sense.

10 Buzzwords to Take Off Your LinkedIn Profile

More than 50 million people have joined the ranks of the social-media site LinkedIn since the networking hub released its list of overused buzzwords last year. Yet the lessons appear to still be lost on many of the site’s 187 million members, who are still sullying their online profiles with generic, less-than-compelling descriptors.
One of the best ways to recognize a word that’s not up to par is to consider the minimum ability it promises. Take analytical, one of only two new words to make the top 10 this year, ousting the equally unhelpful dynamic. Whereas dynamic promised potential employers that you would produce motion of some kind, analytical merely tells them that you will examine things closely and determine essential features. If the job entails finding the 10 differences between two cartoons depicting farm animals, you’re their guy.


Kommunikationspause Daimler löscht auf Wunsch Mails seiner Mitarbeiter

E-Mail ist für viele Angestellte längst kein willkommenes Kommunikationswerkzeug mehr, sondern eine ständige Belastung. Bei Daimler will man dem nun abhelfen, zumindest im Urlaub - wer will, kann dort künftig alle E-Mails löschen lassen, die während seiner Abwesenheit ankommen.
Der Betriebsrat habe die Regelung zusammen mit der Unternehmensleitung verabschiedet, teilte Daimler am Freitag in Stuttgart mit. Start soll Anfang 2013 sein. Nach Angaben einer Daimler-Sprecherin kann künftig jeder Mitarbeiter bis hin zum Manager davon Gebrauch machen. Damit Anfragen nicht ins Leere laufen, verweise eine Abwesenheitsnotiz auf den zuständigen Vertreter.

http://www.spiegel.de/netzwelt/web/daimler-loescht-e-mails-im-urlaub-a-868960.html

Kulturausflug nach Yorkshire: Kunst zwischen Kötteln

Bei dem Wort Yorkshire denken viele unweigerlich an den gleichnamigen Terrier. Andere erinnern sich an den kaum minder bekannten Pudding, jene englische Sättigungsbeilage zum Sonntagsbraten. Die Grafschaft im Osten Englands steht auch für unberührte Natur, liebliche Hügel und unendliche Weiten. Was die wenigsten aber wissen: Yorkshire hat auch Kulturfreunden ganz Besonderes zu bieten.

Going digital: The new look of business cards

The business card isn’t dead. It’s just evolving.
A cottage industry of startups has sprung up around the slow but steady transformation of the business card from something you keep in your wallet to something you keep in your smartphone.
With more and more people carrying tiny computers in their pockets, the limitations of the traditional cards are glaring. Perhaps the most obvious is the decidedly static nature of paper-based cards.

South Korean men get the make-up habit

South Korean men have a particular kind of image - hard-drinking, hard-working and prepared to fight bravely for their country. But now major cosmetics companies are seeing a different side to Korean manhood - a growing interest in skincare products, and even foundation.
Two years of compulsory military service and centuries of Confucian culture have left many South Korean men with a deeply traditional sense of gender - something young Korean women often complain about these days.
So their new appetite for skincare and make-up comes as a slight surprise.



http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/64522000/jpg/_64522745_cukes_think624.jpg


Thursday, 29 November 2012

Canada prepares for an Asian future

Chinese immigrants have flocked to Canada's west coast and transformed Vancouver into Canada's very own Asian metropolis. The days of concern over the city being turned into 'Hongcouver' have gone. What does the future hold for Canada's Asian population?
Shoppers stroll casually past a Lamborghini store in Richmond's Aberdeen Centre - a major Asian mall in this once sleepy Vancouver suburb known for its farmland and fishing village.
Outside the shopping centre, people are queuing at the many Chinese restaurants. In the local supermarkets, butchers are picking live seafood out of fish tanks, chopping off the heads, then gutting and packaging them up under the watchful eye of customers, almost exclusively Chinese-Canadian.
Richmond is North America's most Asian city - 50% of residents here identify themselves as Chinese. But it's not just here that the Chinese community in British Columbia (BC) - some 407,000 strong - has left its mark. All across Vancouver, Chinese-Canadians have helped shape the local landscape. 

‘Mis-hires’ and how to avoid them

In today’s hyper-competitive business environment, organizations can ill afford to “mis-hire” – especially at the senior-most levels. Yet, bad hiring decisions are made all the time. These mis-hires are costly, disruptive, demoralizing and difficult to undo. The Globe and Mail spoke with executive recruiter Hart Hillman, senior partner leading the global technology search practice for the Bedford Group/Transearch International in Toronto, about finding Mr. or Ms. Right for those critical C-Suite roles.

Wednesday, 28 November 2012

English or Hinglish - which will India choose?

Today's aspirational Indians want their children to go to a school where lessons are taught in English. But often the pupils leave speaking a language that would not be recognised in London or New York. Could this Hinglish be the language of India's future?
Why, half a century after Indian independence, does English remain the language of higher education, national media, the upper judiciary and bureaucracy and corporate business?
The answer is that India, unlike its rival Asian giant China, has no truly national language of its own. Hindi, the official language of central government, is an artificial and largely unspoken 20th Century construct.

Hobson-Jobson: The words English owes to India

In 1872 two men began work on a lexicon of words of Asian origin used by the British in India. Since its publication the 1,000-page dictionary has never been out of print and a new edition is due out next year. What accounts for its enduring appeal?

Nobody's Perfect Und beginne keinen Satz mit "und"

Wollen Sie Barack Obama etwa vorhalten, dass er nicht das Englisch der Queen spricht? Das gelingt doch nicht einmal der Queen selbst. Unser Lieblingsbrite Ian McMaster hört Amerikanern gern zu: Sie finden selbst ein Putensandwich phantastisch. And now let's switch to American English.

"Oh, you're from England, are you? So, are you related to the Queen?" I had no idea how to answer the woman in the coffee shop in Columbus, Ohio, where I had come to follow the recent US elections. 

http://www.spiegel.de/karriere/ausland/a-866419.html

5 tips to learn from your failed speeches – Obama did

It’s an awful experience to give a presentation that bombs.
You can feel shocked, humiliated and angry, all at the same time.
You can walk away from your talk convinced that your career has been ruined, and that your colleagues will never speak to you again.
Or, you can decide to deal with reality and demonstrate an invaluable vocational trait called speaker resilience.

Four ways to make the most of your career

Media coverage regularly reminds us that unemployment rates are still hovering around 8 per cent, but when you've lost the love you once had for your job, even with the knowledge that having one at all is a blessing, the bulk of your week is an uphill challenge. Before you write off all hope, focus less on what's lacking and more on shifting your lackluster perspective. Here are four easy ways to feel better about your job.



Friday, 16 November 2012

How TV Killed the Republican Party’s Family Values

Republicans are searching for an explanation as to why voters rejected their vision of America. The answer may be on their television screens, where an ever-expanding, bluer definition of family values makes their nostalgic idea of family values feel like a foreign world.

The biggest loser of last week’s elections may have been the Republican Party’s image of the American family. Al Mohler, president of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, blamed the Republican loss on a dramatic change in our country’s “moral landscape.” He’s right, but this isn’t new: the GOP vision of America, which includes patriarchal churchgoing families with sexually abstinent teenagers who have no use for birth control hasn’t been a reality since the 1950s.

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2012/11/15/how-tv-killed-the-republican-party-s-family-values.html

Who, What, Why: Who first called it a 'fiscal cliff'?

The phrase "fiscal cliff" is now part of the American lexicon, describing the looming deadline when tax cuts expire and spending cuts kick in. But where did the term come from and is the image a helpful one?
No sooner had President Barack Obama awoken from his election night victory rally than the media was discussing the next pressing issue sitting atop his in-tray.
The so-called fiscal cliff describes the automatic tax increases and spending cuts due to take effect on 1 January, a combination which economists say would push the US into recession - with global consequences. 

Thursday, 15 November 2012

Using iPad at night 'could trigger depressio

Using your iPad or watching television late at night could make you depressed, according to a study that shows exposure to bright light during sleeping hours affects behaviour and stress levels.
American scientists found that mice regularly exposed to light at night became ‘depressed’ - showing less interest in doing ‘fun’ things, being less likely to explore new objects in their cages and not moving around as much. They also had higher levels of cortisol, the stress hormone.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/healthnews/9677947/Using-iPad-at-night-could-trigger-depression.html

When Colleges Look Up Applicants on Facebook: The Unspoken New Admissions Test

Judging by its Facebook network, Hastings High School in New York has one strange senior class. A student named “FunkMaster Floikes” is somehow rubbing shoulders with Lizzie McGuire and the fictional parents from That ‘70s Show. Meanwhile Samwise Gams (a nickname of a hobbit in Lord of the Rings) is listed as a 2012 alum. At first glance, such social media profiles have all the makings of crude online pranks. But in reality, they have been strategically created by actual Hastings seniors determined to shield themselves from the prying eyes of college admissions officers. “There’s a fairly big party scene there,” says Sam “Samwise” Bogan, who is now a freshman at Dickinson College in Pennsylvania. “When the college search process comes around, people start changing their Facebook name or untagging old photos that they don’t want anyone to see. It’s kind of a ritual.”

Thursday, 25 October 2012

Time to stop avoiding grammar rules

The evidence is now in: the explicit teaching of grammar rules leads to better learning

The straightforward, pre-planned teaching of grammar in English language teaching has been under attack for years. Various alternatives have been proposed: to expose learners to language that is just a bit more advanced than what they currently produce; to wait until a communicative situation demands a certain structure before introducing it; to let the grammar emerge naturally from vocabulary learning, or from the lived context of the classroom. Each approach has been defended with carefully structured arguments, and some approaches have been embraced enthusiastically by ministries of education around the world.
However, evidence trumps argument, and the evidence is now in. Rigorously conducted meta-analyses of a wide range of studies have shown that, within a generally communicative approach, explicit teaching of grammar rules leads to better learning and to unconscious knowledge, and this knowledge lasts over time.

Business needs help with English language test selection

Companies and organisations that want to know more about the English language skills of their workforce or select candidates for jobs can now turn to the British Council's new Aptis language test.
The launch of the test last month has taken many in the English language testing community by surprise, and as the Council's ambitions for Aptis become clear the test is likely to generate more questions.

Viewpoint: More women needed in technology




Lost in stereotypes in this image from her book, Belinda Parmar wants a change in attitude towards women in technology

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-19884720 

LISTEN: The Five Worst Sounds in the Universe

Prepare to cringe. Nails on a chalkboard has company.
Researchers from Newcastle University endured the most spine-tingling sounds to determine the five worst offenders to the human ear. Based on the way our brains and bodies react, the scientists found that nails on a blackboard is only the fifth-worst sound in existence, according to a study published in the Journal of Neuroscience.
And while chalkboards are no longer commonplace in our society, the worst transgressors—a knife and a bottle—certainly are.

Nine tips for young job hunters

In the past few months I have been deluged with recent graduates bemoaning the tough job market.
Although they are poised, and sophisticated in their general understanding of the job search process, they are often naive about the mechanics and etiquette that underlie an effective search.
For example, they know how to network, write a résumé, and prepare for an interview. But they don’t understand subtle details or basics, such as how to behave in a networking situation, follow up with a potential contact, or present themselves in the best possible light.

Wednesday, 24 October 2012

Romney’s Binders: The Meme Women Love to Hate

Thank you Mitt Romney for your “binders full of women” gaffe. Surely you weren’t intending to be condescending at the second presidential debate, but it turned out to be a perfect metaphor for the obstacles so many women face in the workplace. The image of women in binders is so good, so visually acute, it might just replace the shopworn “glass ceiling.” After all, you can’t dress up for Halloween as a glass ceiling. Something about women in binders is both disturbing and funny. That’s useful because there’s nothing less popular these days than a humorless feminist. It’s no wonder that binders have become a kind of exquisitely evocative shorthand the way that hoodies were after the death of Trayvon Martin.


Damn Yankees: Is Texas Losing Its Twang?

Kathleen Phillips hustles around the Donut Chef in Van Alstyne, Texas, on a pair of bad knees, pouring coffee, taking orders, frying eggs and manning the register, much like she’s done for the last 38 years. The hole-in-the-wall joint in this small town north of Dallas has been in the family since it opened in 1974. She greets customers by name with her syrupy Texas drawl and pulls three syllables out of the word “yeah.” When patrons get testy she fires back with her favorite one-liner: “Kiss my grits.”
Phillips hopes the restaurant will stay in the family for another four decades. Even if it survives, however, University of Texas researchers say her Texas accent won’t. Indeed, it may just become something of a social strategy.

Thursday, 18 October 2012

Can This Bra Detect Cancer?

That’s the claim for First Warning Systems new bra, equipped with a series of sensors embedded in the cups that pick up temperature changes in breast tissue and, says the Reno, Nev.-based company, provide a thermal fingerprint that can alert doctors to the presence of malignant cells




What does your sleeping position say about you?

The way you sleep can give startling insights into your personality, even giving away how stubborn, bossy or stressed you are, a body language expert has claimed. 

Robert Phipps, a body language expert, has studied the four most common sleeping positions to determine how it reflects a person's personality and outlook on life.

The results, he claims, can identify how stressful your day was, how much you worry and how much control you have over your life.
It is said to reveal traits such as stubbornness, bossiness and fanciful dreaming, as well as how self-critical a person is or whether they feel in control of life. 

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/howaboutthat/9617122/What-does-your-sleeping-position-say-about-you.html 

 

A Turn of the Page for Newsweek

We are announcing this morning an important development at Newsweek and The Daily Beast. Newsweek will transition to an all-digital format in early 2013. As part of this transition, the last print edition in the United States will be our Dec. 31 issue.
Meanwhile, Newsweek will expand its rapidly growing tablet and online presence, as well as its successful global partnerships and events business.

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2012/10/18/a-turn-of-the-page-for-newsweek.html

Sunday, 7 October 2012

Why Long Lectures Are Ineffective

If students can only focus for 15-minute intervals, shouldn't we devote precious class time to something more engaging?
Each school day, millions of students move in unison from classroom to classroom where they listen to 50- to 90-minute lectures. Despite there being anywhere from 20 to 300 humans in the room, there is little actual interaction. This model of education is so commonplace that we have accepted it as a given. For centuries, it has been the most economical way to “educate” a large number of students. Today, however, we know about the limitations of the class lecture, so why does it remain the most common format?
 

Putting a mobile phone on the restaurant table will ruin your meal

Two studies showed that if a mobile is visible during a conversation it causes people to feel less positive towards the person with whom they are chatting.
The findings suggest that fiddling with your mobile or simply leaving it in view during a romantic dinner or a meeting with a friend could be a serious social faux pas. 

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/science-news/9589232/Putting-a-mobile-phone-on-the-restaurant-table-will-ruin-your-meal.html 

Wednesday, 3 October 2012

Be Happier: 10 Things to Stop Doing Right Now

Sometimes the route to happiness depends more on what you don't do.




Happiness--in your business life and your personal life--is often a matter of subtraction, not addition.
Consider, for example, what happens when you stop doing the following 10 things:

http://www.inc.com/jeff-haden/how-to-be-happier-work-10-things-stop-doing.html?nav=pop 

Monday, 1 October 2012

The 15-minute rule for buying cars

Fifteen minutes. That’s how long most new vehicle buyers (60 per cent) want to spend on price negotiations, once the test drive is complete, reports a recent J. D Power and Associates online survey.
“This is likely due to the overwhelming majority of shoppers who build and price their vehicle online before arriving at a dealership,” reports J.D Power in a research note. “In fact, 63 per cent of shoppers say they knew the exact vehicle they wanted (including colour and options) before they set foot in a showroom.”

End work-life balance anxiety: How to make a change

In April, as University of Victoria English professor Janelle Jenstad prepared to make the best use of her coming summer break from teaching, she came across Globe Careers’ online Balance scorecard and questionnaire, and decided to give it whirl.
As she edged through the step-by-step questions about her work-life balance, it crystallized her thinking, prodding her to focus on the most important factors and pick between them on what to emphasize in each of the next thee months. Now, her summer over and in retrospect quite successful, she plans to share the questionnaire with her new graduate students in the time management class she always gives to those recruits as they flow from the relatively structured life of undergraduates to the more unstructured, and thus potentially thorny, life of a graduate student.

Geschäftsmodelle für 3D-Drucker gesucht

Was passiert, wenn 3D-Drucker alltäglich werden? Was werden die Menschen drucken wollen? Und wie kann man damit Geld verdienen? Erste Firmen bringen sich in Stellung.

Thursday, 27 September 2012

The Falling Man



Do you remember this photograph? In the United States, people have taken pains to banish it from the record of September 11, 2001. The story behind it, though, and the search for the man pictured in it, are our most intimate connection to the horror of that day.


power points Bill Clinton's speech secret: A strategic pause

If you want to dazzle a crowd like former U.S. president Bill Clinton did at the Democratic convention, presentations specialist Sam Harrison says you need to learn to pause and take advantage of dead air in mid-sentence – even several times in a sentence – as Mr. Clinton did, so your message sticks. Remember that your facial expressions can dramatically accentuate your words so don’t be deadpan. 

Career Strategies 10 Ways to Rejuvenate Your Brain While You Work

In my last column, I wrote about how I lead groups of volunteers to work with the Kenyan Children Foundation in Africa, and how we all return home exhausted but with our brains refreshed and renewed. We take a break from our usual ways of thinking and open our minds to new ideas and experiences. But you don’t have to travel thousands of miles from home to recharge your brain.


10 questions for leaders to ask themselves

Good leaders are self-aware, and have thought through the issues and complications of leadership, says professional development consultant Todd Cherches. On the ThoughtLeaders blog, he offers 10 questions to ask yourself – and to answer:


Voicemail & Business Phone Etiquette

Today's sophisticated business phone systems can do more harm than good if proper business phone etiquette is not employed. Simply put: Treat your callers in a way that you would want to be treated on a business telephone call. The main areas of business phone etiquette are listed below and they will help you and your employees create a business phone culture in your company that your customers and business associates will enjoy using. 

10 Must-Have Mobile Apps for Entrepreneurs

I’m on the go a lot, which means I spend just as much time–if not more–on my phone as I spend on my computer.
This would not have been possible even just a few years ago. But luckily, technology has made it easy to be more and more productive with just a smartphone. Here’s a list of 10 mobile apps I love that help me save time and get things done.


http://business.time.com/2012/09/26/10-must-have-mobile-apps-for-entrepreneurs/?iid=biz-article-mostpop1


Apple: One Year After Steve Jobs’ Death, iPhone Sales Disappoint Wall Street

It's time to look again to the future. But the fundamental question is: What if Jobs already introduced all of Apple’s breakthrough products?

Only Apple could sell 5 million iPhones in three days and still disappoint Wall Street’s number crunchers. The Cupertino-based cash machine’s new mobile phone debuted last Friday, and consumers lined up around the block — around the world — to purchase the new device. In the SoHo neighborhood of New York City on Friday, a line more than 100 deep snaked around the corner at noon. “The iPhone 5 didn’t make my iPhone obsolete,” a New York tech reporter remarked to me. (She was granted anonymity because she is not authorized to speak to the press.) “All the people who are upgrading on the first weekend are cell-phone junkies.”
She’s right. The people who line up overnight with camping gear and sleeping bags days in advance to buy new Apple products are fanatics – or what we would call fanboys. They must have the newest device as soon as possible. Not me: I’m only now learning how to use an iPad, thanks to a friend’s instructions.
Apple has reeled off one of the most profitable runs in the history of capitalism. This company, founded by a Reed College dropout and a Bay Area geek-genius, is sitting on over $100 billion cash. For perspective, that’s $30 billion more than New York City’s annual budget.


Chinese internet users to overtake English language users by 2015

The number of internet users accessing the web in Chinese is set to overtake English language users by 2015, according to a report by the UN Broadband Commission.

 In May 2011, there were 565 million English internet users, compared to 510 million Chinese users, representing 27 per cent and 24 per cent of total global internet users, respectively.

The report predicts that if current growth rates continue, Chinese will overtake English as the main language used by internet users in 2015.
This switch is largely due to China's massive population, now over 1.3 billion people. 

 http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/broadband/9567934/Chinese-internet-users-to-overtake-English-language-users-by-2015.html

Thursday, 20 September 2012

10 questions for leaders to ask themselves

Good leaders are self-aware, and have thought through the issues and complications of leadership, says professional development consultant Todd Cherches. On the ThoughtLeaders blog, he offers 10 questions to ask yourself – and to answer:

1. How do you personally define leadership?
Definitions of leadership abound. But if one of your subordinates asked what your definition is, would you have an answer?

My 15 Best Tips for Successful Disagreement

Disagreement can happen in any setting. You can disagree with your neighbor in cubicleville. You can disagree with your boss or initiate a discussion with a coworker over lunch. But, many disagreements occur during meetings – or they should.
The reason organizations hold meetings is so that employees can engage each other in discussion. Otherwise, why hold a meeting? Meetings are for discussion, decisions, and commitments. If you don’t state your opinion, whether you agree or disagree, you are not part of the discussion. 

Thursday, 23 August 2012

The Internet a Decade Later

Here is an infographic by Best Education Sites that shows how much the internet has changed over the last 10 years with sections on the growth of the internet, internet usage, the number of websites and more.

Tuesday, 21 August 2012

Hotel-Experiment in England: eBook-Reader ersetzt Bibel im Nachtschränkchen

Die digitale Revolution macht auch vor der Heiligen Schrift nicht halt: In einem Hotel in Newcastle finden Gäste jetzt anstelle der Bibel einen Kindle in ihrem Zimmer vor - sie sollten gut auf das Gerät achten.

http://www.spiegel.de/reise/aktuell/hotel-indigo-newcastle-e-reader-kindle-ersetzt-bibel-im-nachttisch-a-843395.html 

Sunday, 19 August 2012

Sunday, 15 July 2012

Here’s how to outwit the smartphones

They make loud phone calls in public places, and take their iPads to the dinner table. Here's how to beat the new social savages 

A recent study of dining habits reveals how far standards have slipped. The majority of Britons no longer eat together as a family, but of those who do four out of ten can’t see anything wrong with bringing their laptops, iPads and smartphones to the table and carrying on engaging with them.
Some of us are surprised by this news. Can you tell us, Birmingham Food Fest, who conducted the survey, why are the figures so low? We had thought the epidemic was more widespread. 

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/9399954/Heres-how-to-outwit-the-smartphones.html 

 

Facebook software screens chats for criminal behaviour

Facebook is using a piece of software which screens it users’ conversations for criminal activity and suspicious behaviour, according to a report. 

The social network uses the technology to monitor chats for certain phrases and vulgar words which may indicate something is wrong with the exchange.
Depending on the language, suspicious exchanges will be reported to police, revealed Facebook’s chief security officer, Joe Sullivan, to Reuters.
The software pays more attention to conversations between people who do not have regular interaction.
If a chat is considered suspect in any way, it is reported to a Facebook security staff member, who will then make a judgment on whether the police should be called. 

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/facebook/9398590/Facebook-software-screens-chats-for-criminal-behaviour.html 

 

Saving BlackBerry from its 'deathbed'

'There is a lot of excitement about this future but we need to get to this future." The words of Research in Motion's chief executive, Thorsten Heins, at the company' annual shareholder meeting last week in Waterloo, Ontario, neatly summed up the BlackBerry maker's problem. The future is bright – but is their business going to be part of it?
Angela Merkel is the German leader who has faced the greatest pressure over the past six months, but the 6ft 6in Heins would surely be second in any list of Germans in the line of fire.
Unexpectedly promoted to the top job at RIM in January, the former Siemens executive is tasked with engineering the revival of the company that brought the world its once-favourite communication device.
The BlackBerry was, at its peak, so popular it was nicknamed the CrackBerry and fans could point to President Barack Obama as its most famous addict. 

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/mediatechnologyandtelecoms/electronics/9400106/Saving-BlackBerry-from-its-deathbed.html 

Monday, 9 July 2012

Social media top news source for under 25s

Young people are almost twice as likely to discover a news story through social networks rather than search engines, according to a new study. 

The first Reuters Institute Digital Report has found that 43 per cent of Britons aged between 16 and 24 are now much more likely to access news through social networks, such as Facebook, rather than search engines.
However, the report, which is aiming to chart the consumption of news in the digital age, found that only 11 per cent of over 45s access news stories through social media while 33 per cent still favour search engines.
Facebook has been deemed the most important social network for news – accounting for over half of all news sharing in the UK (55 per cent), followed by email (33 per cent) and Twitter (23 per cent).

 http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/social-media/9386445/Social-media-top-news-source-for-under-25s.html

Sunday, 8 July 2012

Queen's English Society says enuf is enough, innit?

The Queen may be celebrating her jubilee, but the Queen's English Society, which has railed against the misuse and deterioration of the English language, is to fold.
For 40 years the society has championed good English – and hasn't been above the occasional criticism of the Queen's own pronouncements – but it has finally conceded that it cannot survive in the era of textspeak and Twitter.
Having attempted to identify a role for the society and its magazine, Quest, "for the next 40 years", the society chairman, Rhea Williams, decided it was time to close. She announced the group's demise in a terse message to members following the annual meeting, which just 22 people attended. "Despite the sending out of a request for nominations for chairman, vice-chairman, administrator, webmaster and membership secretary, no one came forward to fill any role," she said. "So I have to inform you that QES will no longer exist. There will be one more Quest, then all activity will cease and the society will be wound up. The effective date will be 30 June 2012."

Thursday, 5 July 2012

Manager mit Chinesisch-Kenntnissen gesucht

Weil die Sprachkenntnisse der Mitarbeiter zu schlecht sind, beklagen Unternehmen Umsatzeinbußen, stellt eine Studie fest. Neben Englisch ist vor allem Mandarin gefragt.

Wednesday, 4 July 2012

Apple’s ‘smaller iPad due for Christmas’

The move would set up a battle between Apple’s iPad, Amazon's Kindle Fire and Google’s Nexus 7 tablet, announced last week in San Francisco.
The new model will have a screen that’s 7 inches to 8 inches diagonally, less than the current 9.7-inch version, Bloomberg claimed.
Apple is expected to announce new products in October, including a new iPhone. The 7” iPad is unlikely to have the “retina display” high definition screen of the full-size version. It may, however, have the same number of pixels as the iPad 2.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/apple/9374730/Apples-smaller-iPad-due-for-Christmas.html 

Science: It's a Girl Thing !

Mit einem allzu poppig-pinken Video hat die EU versucht, junge Mädchen für die Wissenschaft zu begeistern. Nach erbosten Netz-Protesten wurde das Video zurückgezogen. Jetzt antwortet der Schwarm: mit Ingenieurinnen im Cheerleader-Kostüm und singenden Meeresbiologinnen.

Read the article:
http://www.spiegel.de/netzwelt/web/science-a-girl-thing-kritik-am-video-der-eu-kommission-a-842092.html

Watch the video:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g032MPrSjFA

Why are athletes wearing coloured tape?

Why are athletes wearing coloured tape?
In the Euro 2012 Championship, Italian striker Mario Balotelli was sporting three tramlines of blue sticky tape on his back.
And at Wimbledon, Serbian tennis player Novak Djokovic has had his elbow patched up with the same stuff.
So what's behind this latest sporting fad?
The Japanese makers of Kinesio tape say it gives players an edge by mending injuries.

Monday, 2 July 2012

A Conversation With Bill Gates About the Future of Higher Education

Bill Gates never finished college, but he is one of the single most powerful figures shaping higher education today. That influence comes through the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, perhaps the world's richest philanthropy, which he co-chairs and which has made education one of its key missions.
The Chronicle sat down with Mr. Gates in an exclusive interview Monday to talk about his vision for how colleges can be transformed through technology. His approach is not simply to drop in tablet computers or other gadgets and hope change happens—a model he said has a "really horrible track record." Instead, the foundation awards grants to reformers working to fix "inefficiencies" in the current model of higher education that keep many students from graduating on time, or at all. And he argues for radical reform of college teaching, advocating a move toward a "flipped" classroom, where students watch videos from superstar professors as homework and use class time for group projects and other interactive activities. As he put it, "having a lot of kids sit in the lecture class will be viewed at some point as an antiquated thing."

Sunday, 1 July 2012

Facebook changes everyone's listed emails to '@facebook.com'

Without asking for permission, Facebook has changed users' listed email address to one ending in "@facebook.com."

The changed was discovered Saturday, and has resulted in either users having their @facebook.com address being listed or simply having all of their other addresses be hidden, as happened in my case.

The @facebook.com email service was announced in 2010, but it hasn't really gained traction as a replacement to other email service. It makes sense for the social network to want to promote its own service, but the way it's gone about it is sure to upset some people.


http://www.latimes.com/business/technology/la-fi-tn-facebook-changes-emails-20120625,0,1918913.story

TEDGlobal: Smart city ideas awarded at TED

Developers with innovative ideas about how the cities of the future should look have been honoured at the TEDGlobal conference in Edinburgh.
This year's TED (Technology, Entertainment, Design) prize, normally given to an individual, was awarded to an idea dubbed "City 2.0".
Ten projects that are improving city life were selected to benefit from the $100,000 (£64,300) prize fund.

Winners include a designer of an open-sourced "wiki-house".

The first winner, announced at the TEDx summit in the spring, was Ruganzu Bruno who will be using the money to create a play centre, built entirely from plastic water bottles, for children in the slums of Uganda to play and learn.

Four of the winners were announced at TEDGlobal, while the rest to be revealed in the autumn.

http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-18607438

5 Steps to Pizza-Grilling Success

Of the less-than-conventional foods to throw on the grill, my favorite is probably pizza. I love a luscious, melted pie in any form, but there's something about the crunch and char of the crust from the grill that makes barbecued pizza irresistible. Thinking of throwing a pizza on your grates for the first time? Here are a few tips for grilled pizza pizzazz.

http://www.yumsugar.com/How-Grill-Pizza-23714615

The one question to ask before starting a business

Most people take ‘Build something people want’ to mean ‘Pick a problem to solve and solve it well.’ This is not sufficient to build a world-changing company. ‘Why now?’ is the question entrepreneurs really need to answer, because it encompasses two important and closely related concepts: Why have previous attempts at this idea failed? What enabling factors have emerged that enable you to succeed today?

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/small-business/starting-out/the-one-question-to-ask-before-starting-a-business/article4204470/

New-tech moguls: the modern robber barons?

Are today's captains of industry – the wealthy and powerful figures who control the digital universe – any different from the ruthless corporate figures of the past?

Here's an interesting fact: 10 of the people on Forbes magazine's tally of the world's 100 richest billionaires made their money from computer and/or network technology. At the top (second on the list) is Bill Gates, co-founder of Microsoft, whose net worth is estimated by Forbes at $61bn, despite the fact that he continues to try to give it away. Gates is followed by Larry Ellison, boss of Oracle, with $36bn, and Michael Bloomberg with $22bn. Larry Page and Sergey Brin – co-founders of Google – occupy joint 24th place with $18.7bn each. Jeff Bezos of Amazon is No 26 with $18.4bn while the newly enriched Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook sits at No 35 with £17.5bn. Michael Dell, founder of the eponymous computer manufacturer, is at No 41 with $15.9bn while Steve Ballmer, Microsoft's CEO, is three places lower on $15.7bn and Paul Allen – co-founder of Microsoft – brings up the rear at No 48 with a mere $14.2bn. Steve Jobs, who was worth about $9bn when he died, doesn't even figure.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2012/jul/01/new-tech-moguls-robber-barons

Thursday, 21 June 2012

The cult of TED

Once a select forum of the great and good, the Technology Entertainment and Design (TED) conference now has millions of avid online fans. How did an elite ideas-sharing gathering go mainstream?

Falling animals, misbehaving toddlers and footage of Justin Bieber may populate the bulk of any YouTube most-viewed list.

But amid the viral clips and pop music promos is a series of videos that seems to go against all received wisdom about what online audiences like to consume.


http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-18511696

How to successfully teach young and older workers new tricks

Since the economy, regrettably, has given older workers cause to defer retirement, workplaces are suddenly finding themselves accommodating a wide range of ages. This has ramifications for companies that are looking at offering technology training – but not because, as conventional wisdom might have it, Boomers are technologically averse. Successful training across generations is a matter of picking the right approach, and recognizing how changing demographics will affect your workplace.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/small-business/sb-digital/web-strategy/how-to-successfully-teach-young-and-older-workers-new-tricks/article4310647/

Slow down. Savour your work

The slow food movement has caught people’s attention, with the lure of healthier eating. What about slow work, for a healthier, more balanced life?

Peter Bacevice, a senior consultant at workplace consulting firm DEGW in New York and an aficionado of slow food, thinks that concept translates well to the workplace. “If we let people work at a pace consistent with their own cognitive capacity, we’ll have a healthier and more productive work force,” he says in an interview.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/careers/career-advice/life-at-work/slow-down-savour-your-work/article4262792/

How I learned to shut up and listen to constructive criticism

My knee-jerk reaction to receiving negative feedback has always been the immediate and aggressive pursuit of personal vindication. Like a rabid defence lawyer in the court of Me, I deflect, make excuses, question the aptitude of my accuser – anything to avoid taking responsibility for my actions. At least, this is what my dollar-store psychology degree tells me is going on. Before embarking on my quest to openly accept and learn from constructive criticism, I opted to get some advice from the experts.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/life/how-i-learned-to-shut-up-and-listen-to-constructive-criticism/article4271422/

Sunday, 17 June 2012

Microsoft 'to launch tablet to compete with iPad'

Event invitation to journalists leads to speculation that Microsoft plans to take on Apple's dominance with own-brand tablet

Microsoft is to launch an own-brand tablet running a new version of Windows in a bit to compete with Apple's iPad, according to rumours swirling in the technology industry.

An invitation to an event in Los Angeles on Monday evening sent out by the software giant at the last minute on Thursday to a broad range of journalists – but lacking even venue details – has led to widespread expectation that Steve Ballmer's company is now ready to take on Apple's dominance in the tablet market.


http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2012/jun/17/microsoft-tablet-compete-ipad-apple?CMP=twt_fd

Wednesday, 13 June 2012

No thanks, boss, I brought my own laptop

Employees not only want to use their preferred smartphone on the job, they are starting to use their computer of choice, a trend called bring-your-own-device to work, which often favours Apple devices.

Company-issued PCs and mobile phones are being challenged by some employees who argue they work more efficiently on their own devices, say experts.


http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/careers/career-advice/life-at-work/no-thanks-boss-i-brought-my-own-laptop/article4235824/

Healthy Travel: The 5 Germiest Places At The Airport

Germs may be the carry-on no one talks about, but that doesn't mean the little buggers aren't hiding throughout airport terminals and on planes, waiting to make us sick.

Recently, Coverall, a company specializing in commercial cleaning, analyzed data from airports with the aid of a microbiologist to pinpoint the top five germiest places in airports, making some illuminating -- if gross -- discoveries.


http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/06/08/the-5-germiest-places-at-the-airport_n_1578571.html?ncid=tweetlnkushpmg00000002

Draw up a to-think list alongside your to-do list

Many of us spend the day in slavish obedience to our to-do lists. While it’s important to get things done, entrepreneur Rajesh Setty, on his Life Beyond Code blog, says it’s also important to think, and that means keeping a to-think list.“Without one, you will be swamped with catching up on your to-do list, and taking time to think will keep going back on your priority list,” he writes. Place items on it that you want to think over in future; when you get the time, tackle items from the list.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/careers/management/draw-up-a-to-think-list-alongside-your-to-do-list/article4242537/

The End of the Phone Is Getting Closer

Verizon has just announced the first ever data-share cell phone plans, meaning that end of the phone we predicted a couple weeks ago just got closer. After a prescient prediction from AT&T CEO Randall Stevenson that cell phone companies would soon enough offer data only plans, Verizon Wireless has put out the first iteration of these voice-light plans, reports AllThingsD's Ina Fried. "The plans, known as 'Share Everything,' allow users an unlimited number of calls and texts and also allow data usage to be pooled among up to 10 devices on one account," she writes. Don't let the unlimited voice offer fool you, this is step one to a voice-less world. And, as we explained the other day, without the audio part, we can't really call a phone a phone.

http://www.theatlanticwire.com/technology/2012/06/end-phone-getting-closer/53429/

Friday, 8 June 2012

Weather talk: Is there a way to make it interesting?

The rain-lashed Jubilee weekend provoked a torrent of weather talk. But how can this most British of conversations be made interesting?

There's only one thing more British than talking about the weather. Apologising for doing it.

Samuel Johnson, the poet and lexicographer, said in 1758: "When two Englishmen meet, their first talk is of the weather." And 250 years later surveys suggest it is still regarded as the most British of traits.

The UK is often said to be blessed with "a lot of weather" unlike places with a fixed climate or predictable seasons. In 1858, The Water-Babies author Charles Kingsley wrote: "Tis the hard grey weather breeds hard English men."


http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-18296086

6 Ways to Beat Procrastination – on Big and Little Tasks

Ask almost anyone what holds them back from reaching their goals, or what bad habit they’d like to overcome, and there’s a good chance they’ll say “procrastination.”

All of us procrastinate, at least a little bit. We put off things that we feel we should do, and even things that we want to do: anything from doing the dishes to writing a book.

Sometimes, a certain level of putting-things-off is a smart move. After all, if you’ve got a bunch of tasks on your list, you’re much better off prioritizing the important ones and letting the others slide for a few days, instead of running yourself into the ground trying to get everything done.

Often, though, procrastination is simply a bad habit. If you constantly procrastinate over little tasks, to the extent that they cause problems, or if you never get round to tackling bigger tasks, even though you’d really love to complete some major projects … then read on.


http://www.pickthebrain.com/blog/6-ways-to-beat-procrastination-on-big-and-little-tasks/