The Technology2Reality Blog Feed

 
 


Chicago, IL (PRWEB) November 29, 2012

Today product design firm PDT took a step forward in responding to a growing problem how to leave a tip for a job well done when fewer people are carrying cash. With more stores supporting gift cards, credit card payments and mobile payment apps, neighborhood baristas and other service providers are suffering the consequences.

Enter Tipsy!, a conceptual project from PDT, born from the companys ongoing internal drive to uncover innovation opportunities. Tipsy! looks like a classic tip jar, but the eco-friendly cork top houses a smartphone that receives tips electronically.

A customer with a smartphone automatically locates the establishment through GPS using the Tipsy! app, selects the amount of the tip, then bumps the phone to the cork lid to submit. Tipsy! means customers can safely leave tips over a secure web connection, whether wired, Wi-Fi or cellular.

In the United States, only about 7 percent of transactions are done with cash. For those with cash on hand, Tipsy! also has a slot for tipping with coins and bills.

We want to be ready for a world without cash, said Lisa Yanz, product designer at PDT. As product designers, we try to understand how our changing economy affects the way people work, shop and play. We saw the economic and social implications of electronic payments on tipping during our own trips to the coffee shop, and knew there had to be a better way.

Tipsy! is designed to be compatible with all current and next generation smartphones:

Tagged with:
 

Apple Inc. has always maintained its standard for developing revolutionary products in tech world. Company has reached heights in designing and manufacturing computer software, consumer electronics, and personal computers. Apple’s best-known hardware products include Macintosh laptops and desktop computers, iPod, iPhone and now iPad.

iPad is the new revolutionary electronic product by Apple. It is a tablet PC with highly advanced features meant for Internet browsing, gaming, media consumption, and light content creation. Apple iPad is the best way to experience web, photos, emails and video only with a touch of finger. Unlike many other tablet PCs, Apple iPad uses fingertips for input rather than a QWERTY keyboard. All built-in apps on iPad are designed from the ground up to take advantage of large Multi-Touch screen and advanced capabilities of iPad.

Must praise for its design, as its very spectacular. iPad very much looks like an over-sized model of iPod Touch. Weighing about 1.5 pounds with only 0.5 inch thickness, iPad has a 9.7-inch multi-touch screen, high-resolution LED-backlit IPS display along with a battery life of 10 hours. This device uses Apple’s own 1GHz A4 chip, and flash memory ranging from 16 to 64 gigabytes. The tablet also boasts high-definition built-in YouTube and online Apple iTunes Store.

iPad’s other functions include web surfing, movie watching and music listening. e-mails can be sent via Mail app on iPad, with a split-screen view and expansive on-screen keyboard. You’ll find more than 150,000 apps including Real Racing HD, The Wall Street Journal, E*TRADE Mobile Pro, and many more on Apple App Store, and iPad can run almost all of them.

iPad is not only a tablet, it’s an e-Book Reader too. With Apple’s iBooks app, one can buy as many as new e-Books from iBookstore and can experience reading them just like reading an original book or magazine. Text looks crisp and bright, and pages turn with a flick.

That’s not the end of iPad features. This fantastic electronic gadget beautifully does all the neat stuff of an Apple iPhone too, except for the camera. You can find locations easier than ever with street view, satellite view, or terrain view, all using Google Map services. iPad also have a calender and contacts feature, and it also helps in keeping notes in a hassle-free way. Making presentations now would be easier with Apple iPad. So, it also works as a laptop replacement for kind of basic work we do most of the time.

This wireless device can be used with Wi-Fi, as well as run on AT&T’s 3G, or third-generation, wireless network. Apple iPad costs $ 499 for a 16GB model, $ 599 for 32 GB version and $ 699 for a 64GB model with Wi-Fi. Various iPad accessories are also there to enhance workability of this gadget. iPad accessories include iPad Keyboard Dock, iPad Case, iPad Camera Connection Kit, iPad Dock and iPad 10W USB Power Adapter.

After knowing much about the features of this revolutionary product by Apple, now you may decide if it’s a perfect all-in-one entertainment gadget for you or not! If you’re interested in this product, then Apple coupons can help you get this and other Apple products at discounted prices.

Tim is an associated author with DealRocker.com, which is an attempt to make online shopping an easy and not-so-time-consuming experience for online shoppers. Tim assists his team in writing posts on regular basis at Blog.Dealrocker.com, for consumers to stay in-the-know about hottest online deals, free coupons, discounts, sales, deals and free shipping offers available at various online stores.

Article Source:
http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Tim_A_Smith

Apple - iPhone 5 - TV Ad - Cheese

Introducing the iPhone 5. Now taking beautiful photos in panorama is as simple as saying “cheese”.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Tagged with:
 

Apple_iPad_keynote
Apple iPad

Image by cattias.photos
Apple_iPad_keynote

more at attias.net/blog/

Palo Alto council committee expected to recommend switch to electronic devices
The popular Apple iPad has worked its way into the backpacks and briefcases of Palo Altans, and now it could end up on the dais at City Hall.
Read more on San Jose Mercury News

Five questions about iPad HD
The rumors are flying about a new iPad HD that features an ultrahigh-resolution display. Is it really coming this year? Originally posted at Fully Equipped
Read more on CNET

Apple Goes After HTC Flyer, Droids With ITC Complaint
Days after filing a patent complaint against Samsung with the International Trade Commission (ITC), Apple submitted a similar filing against HTC that focuses on its HTC Flyer tablet and Droid phones.
Read more on PC Magazine

Tagged with:
 

Consumers Slow To Adopt Electronic Personal Health Records
Some patients are still concerned about online security, while healthy consumers seem indifferent to the benefits of PHRs, according to a study by IDC Health Insights.
Read more on InformationWeek

Strausbaugh gives lecture on genetics
A lecture on home genetic tests and their social impacts was given by Dr. Linda Strausbaugh, director of the Center for Applied Genetics and Technology, on Sunday. …
Read more on The Daily Campus

Movers and shapers: April 11
• Julia Andrews, marketing strategist at Spike Advertising in Burlington, has been named to the CarShare Vermont board of directors. CarShare Vermont is a nonprofit organization that provides a network of vehicles around Burlington for residents and commuters to share on an as-needed basis.
Read more on The Burlington Free Press

Banks, credit-card issuers warn of security breach on email addresses, names
Attack on ad firm affects banks.
Read more on The Tennessean

Tagged with:
 

Priest needed: Catholic iPhone App electronic confessions ‘invalid’
The separation of Church and the state of the iPhone is in no way under consideration with today’s news showing a new religious union, hitherto unknown, between God, man and iMachine, although there’s already a complaint the company has accepted.
Read more on iTWire

Keeping Track of Your iPhone Data Usage
In the wake of a law suit accusing AT&T of intentionally overcharging for data use, consider keeping tabs on your iPhone data usage yourself.
Read more on PC World

Shops jump on-board the on-line express
ARGUS journalist and Ipad devotee, Shana Thatcher, looks at the pros, and a few cons, of on-line shopping…
Read more on Goondiwindi Argus

New iPhone app to help with confession
A ‘confession’ app for Apple’s iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch has received the blessing of a Catholic bishop.
Read more on BigPond News

Tagged with:
 

San Francisco, CA (PRWEB) March 6, 2006

Latent Anxiety’s latest album “Perception” is now available worldwide in Apple’s iTunes Music Stores, Delvian Records announced today. Hard to classify but very easy to listen to, “Perception” is a fine and refined collection of 16 songs from very different genres (rock, electronic, pop and dance), written, performed and recorded by a sonic chameleon that is the sole singer/guitar-player.

Voices span an amazing range from modern rock, industrial metal, pop, dance, blues and even to an opera tenor covering 3 full octaves. Musically, there are edgy guitar echoes of KMFDM, the hard dance-beat of the best DJs and a sonic collection befitting a gallery showing. Latent Anxiety is also working with Mortal Loom on their upcoming album, also to be released on Delvian Records.

Latent Anxiety stands for a fresh music project from Los Angeles and Germany centered on a multi-talented male artist. He is a true and rare sonic chameleon with different “faces” and a well-recognized flair for improvisation, whether it is creating songs from diverse and experimental styles, writing lyrics on interesting, thought-provoking topics, playing guitar or singing with very different voices. Latent Anxiety presents more than something for anyone but something substantial for everyone.

“Perception” is available now on iTunes worldwide and Real’s Rhapsody, with the CD itself at Amazon.com and major national retailers in the United States.

Artist site: www.latentanxiety.com


Label site: www.delvianrecords.com


Distributor site: www.gatemusic.com

###



More ITunes Store Press Releases

Tagged with:
 

U.S. Job Seekers Exceed Openings by Record Ratio
Medical Internet Technology

Image by Renegade98
By PETER S. GOODMAN
September 27, 2009.

Despite signs that the economy has resumed growing, unemployed Americans now confront a job market that is bleaker than ever in the current recession, and employment prospects are still getting worse.

Job seekers now outnumber openings six to one, the worst ratio since the government began tracking open positions in 2000. According to the Labor Department’s latest numbers, from July, only 2.4 million full-time permanent jobs were open, with 14.5 million people officially unemployed.

And even though the pace of layoffs is slowing, many companies remain anxious about growth prospects in the months ahead, making them reluctant to add to their payrolls.

“There’s too much uncertainty out there,” said Thomas A. Kochan, a labor economist at M.I.T.’s Sloan School of Management. “There’s not going to be an upsurge in job openings for quite a while, not until employers feel confident the economy is really growing.”

The dearth of jobs reflects the caution of many American businesses when no one knows what will emerge to propel the economy. With unemployment at 9.7 percent nationwide, the shortage of paychecks is both a cause and an effect of weak hiring.

In Milwaukee, Debbie Kransky has been without work since February, when she was laid off from a medical billing position — her second job loss in two years. She has exhausted her unemployment benefits, because her last job lasted for only a month.

Indeed, in a perverse quirk of the unemployment system, she would have qualified for continued benefits had she stayed jobless the whole two years, rather than taking a new position this year. But since her latest unemployment claim stemmed from a job that lasted mere weeks, she recently drew her final check of 0.

Ms. Kransky, 51, has run through her life savings of roughly ,000. Her job search has garnered little besides anxiety.

“I’ve worked my entire life,” said Ms. Kransky, who lives alone in a one-bedroom apartment. “I’ve got October rent. After that, I don’t know. I’ve never lived month to month my entire life. I’m just so scared, I can’t even put it into words.”

Last week, Ms. Kransky was invited to an interview for a clerical job with a health insurance company. She drove her Jeep truck downtown and waited in the lobby of an office building for nearly an hour, but no one showed. Despondent, she drove home, down in gasoline.

For years, the economy has been powered by consumers, who borrowed exuberantly against real estate and tapped burgeoning stock portfolios to spend in excess of their incomes. Those sources of easy money have mostly dried up. Consumption is now tempered by saving; optimism has been eclipsed by worry.

Meanwhile, some businesses are in a holding pattern as they await the financial consequences of the health care reforms being debated in Washington.

Even after companies regain an inclination to expand, they will probably not hire aggressively anytime soon. Experts say that so many businesses have pared back working hours for people on their payrolls, while eliminating temporary workers, that many can increase output simply by increasing the workload on existing employees.

“They have tons of room to increase work without hiring a single person,” said Heidi Shierholz, an economist at the Economic Policy Institute Economist. “For people who are out of work, we do not see signs of light at the end of the tunnel.”

Even typically hard-charging companies are showing caution.

During the technology bubble of the late 1990s and again this decade, Cisco Systems — which makes Internet equipment — expanded rapidly. As the sense takes hold that the recession has passed, Cisco is again envisioning double-digit rates of sales growth, with plans to move aggressively into new markets, like the business of operating large scale computer data servers.

Yet even as Cisco pursues such designs, the company’s chief executive, John T. Chambers, said in an interview Friday that he anticipated “slow hiring,” given concerns about the vigor of growth ahead. “We’ll be doing it selectively,” he said.

Two recent surveys of newspaper help-wanted advertisements and of employers’ inclinations to add workers were at their lowest levels on record, noted Andrew Tilton, a Goldman Sachs economist.

Job placement companies say their customers are not yet wiling to hire large numbers of temporary workers, usually a precursor to hiring full-timers.

“It’s going to take quite some time before we see robust job growth,” said Tig Gilliam, chief executive of Adecco North America, a major job placement and staffing company.

During the last recession, in 2001, the number of jobless people reached little more than double the number of full-time job openings, according to the Labor Department data. By the beginning of this year, job seekers outnumbered jobs four-to-one, with the ratio growing ever more lopsided in recent months.

Though layoffs have been both severe and prominent, the greatest source of distress is a predilection against hiring by many American businesses. From the beginning of the recession in December 2007 through July of this year, job openings declined 45 percent in the West and the South, 36 percent in the Midwest and 23 percent in the Northeast.

Shrinking job opportunities have assailed virtually every industry this year. Since the end of 2008, job openings have diminished 47 percent in manufacturing, 37 percent in construction and 22 percent in retail. Even in education and health services — faster-growing areas in which many unemployed people have trained for new careers — job openings have dropped 21 percent this year. Despite the passage of a stimulus spending package aimed at shoring up state and local coffers, government job openings have diminished 17 percent this year.

In the suburbs of Chicago, Vicki Redican, 52, has been unemployed for almost two years, since she lost her ,000-a-year job as a sales and marketing manager at a plastics company. College-educated, Ms. Redican first sought another management job. More recently, she has tried and failed to land a cashier’s position at a local grocery store, and a barista slot at a Starbucks coffee shop.

Substitute teaching assignments once helped her pay the bills. “Now, there are so many people substitute teaching that I can no longer get assignments,” she said.

“I’ve learned that I can’t look to tomorrow,” she said. “Every day, I try to do the best I can. I say to myself, ‘I don’t control this process.’ That’s the only way you can look at it. Otherwise, you’d have to go up on the roof and crack your head open.”

Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

The New York Times
www.nytimes.com/2009/09/27/business/economy/27jobs.html

Michael Last Internal Medicine Selects the 2011 Waiting Room Solutions Web Based Internal Medicine Electronic Health …
Michael Last Internal Medicine PC has chosen to implement the 2011 Waiting Room Solutions Web Based Internal Medicine Electronic Health Record and Practice Management V4.0 software. This Internal Medicine Specialty EMR / EHR and PM will allow the practice to carry out scheduling and charting functions electronically.
Read more on PRWeb via Yahoo! News

Two Time SF 49ers Super Bowl Champion Tight End John Frank, MD & Anapelli Hair Clinic Announce Hair Transplant …
Two Time SF 49ers Super Bowl Champion Tight End John Frank, MD & Anapelli Hair Clinic Announce Hair Transplant SuperBowl Sweepstakes. Dr. Frank and the Anapelli Hair Clinic will perform a hair transplant procedure on the person who comes closest to predicting the final score of NFL SuperBowl XLV.
Read more on PRWeb via Yahoo! News

Boca Raton Entrepreneur Marc Bell to Speak at the Boca Raton Executive Club at Woodfield Country Club
Marc Bell of Marc Bell Capital Partners & Adult FriendFinder Networks (PRWeb January 30, 2011) Read the full story at http://www.prweb.com/releases/boca-executive-club/marc-bell-to-speak/prweb5016404.htm
Read more on PRWeb

Obama: Innovation key to economic recovery
President Barack Obama is promoting business innovation as a building block to more jobs, part of a retooled economic message that aims to highlight advances in the private sector over expensive government programs.
Read more on AP via Yahoo! Finance

Tagged with:
 

For more on MedicsDocAssistant Electronic Health Records (EHR) visit www.adsc.com. In this video, see the use of voice recognition for automatic transcription, electronic patient consent and integrated digital imagery.

For more on MedicsDocAssistant Electronic Health Records (EHR) visit www.adsc.com. In this video, see the use of voice recognition for automatic transcription, electronic patient consent and integrated digital imagery.
Video Rating: 0 / 5

www.ibm.com As pencil and paper become inefficient means of capturing patient data, electronic medical records surface as a more integrated way to deliver healthcare. Patients, doctors, journalists and IBMers talk about the pivotal role of electronic medical records in creating a safer, smarter, more interconnected healthcare system.

Tagged with: