Archive for the ‘web 2.0’ Category

Bluetooth celebrates 10th birthday in style…5th September, 2008

Ten years since the introduction of Bluetooth the vastly successful technology is set to get a significant birthday upgrade, with its standard range increasing from roughly 10 to 100m. With new uses being developed on a nearly daily basis things are looking promising for gadget lovers and technophiles who should see the fruits of this upgrade in the coming months.

Bluetooth already boasts a myriad of uses and applications, particularly in relation to handheld devices, enabling everything from free filesharing between mobile phones (or laptops) to cordless photo printing with Polaroid’s PoGo printer, to name but a few. Now that range is set to increase on such a significant scale here is a little personal wish list of potential future Bluetooth applications:

1.…

Continue Reading »

Is cloud computing the future of IT for small businesses?19th August, 2008

Cloud computing is definitely here to stay. As web accesibility improves on a nearly daily basis so too does the potential for cloud computing concepts to be applied to more areas of corporate IT and provide new business solutions. As companies rush to capitalise on the new options available to them, the question is; what can cloud computing do for small business? And what does the longer term picture look like?

Cloud Computing

(Broadly speaking, the term refers to the transfer of application running and data storage processes away from individually owned client computers to centrally run and maintained systems, which are then accessed by users/clients/businesses on a pay-per-use basis via the web. For a more detailed description see the Wikipedia link at the…

Continue Reading »

Ted.com – An intellectual’s Youtube?31st July, 2008

Ted.com is the website of the long-running Technology, Entertainment & Design conference which since 1984 has brought together many of the world’s leading thinkers and intellectuals, and challenged them to give the talk of their lives in just under 20 minutes…

For many years the conference was an invite only affair, and even then tickets cost around $6,000, meaning that the general public had very little benefit from this remarkable series of talks and presentations.

However in 2006 the website started featuring videos of some of the mini-lectures delivered at TED each year, and has continued to add both new and archive videos since then. The site now resembles a much smaller, Youtube-style, content database, containing nearly 300 20-minute videos of some of…

Continue Reading »

Has technology rendered traditional notions of privacy obsolete?29th July, 2008

We have long been aware of the potentially Orwellian threats to individual privacy that come with new developments in technology. Often the trade off is inevitable: technology permits a modern soceity to meet the needs of its members, but in return heightens the level of technological dependence to which we are subject.

How many times have we heard someone speculate about a return to the world of fifteen years ago in which mobile phones were entirely unused and unnecessary? In only one decade such technology has become so deeply entrenched in modern life that such a return to a previous state seems about as possible as reversing the movement of tectonic plates or the erosion of mountains.

There is no doubt that…

Continue Reading »

Update to Google vs. Viacom privacy debate5th July, 2008

I have just read a very interesting post on the Google vs Viacom lawsuit on Mashable.com (a leading social networking blog).

(N.B. If you are new to the topic check the previous post on this blog for background info).

The Mashable article is very condemning of Viacom in making their requests for logging history, and also critical of the US judge who ruled in their favour on the action, mainly out of anger that Youtube users might now be at risk from facing potential (and probably successful) copyright violation lawsuits from Viacom.

To draw a parallel with another similar high profile case – it is as if Metallica (the famous heavy metal band), who sued Napster over enabling illegal filesharing of their music a few…

Continue Reading »

Page 20 of 24« First ... «1819202122» ... Last »