Computers

Saving a destination in Google Maps makes it easier to navigate to and also lessens the chance for error when entering or trying to remember an address.To see a step-by-step guide of this Tech Tip, watch a video on YouTube.Destinations c...
Saving a destination in Google Maps makes it easier to navigate to and also lessens the chance for error when entering or trying to remember an address.To see a step-by-step guide of this Tech Tip, watch a video on YouTube.Destinations can be starred from a mobile device running Google Maps or from the Web. After searching for an address or location, click on the pin for the destination and switch on the star icon. Starred destinations will be synched across all Google accounts and devices. Starred destinations are easier to find and will type ahead on both mobile and desktop versions of Google Maps. Starring locations is a good idea for local errands and for vacations and business trips to other states and countries.When traveling to a place with unreliable mobile data reception or expensive data rates, it's also a good idea to save an offline version of Google Maps. Once in the application on a mobile device, press the options button and select "make available offline." Pan and zoom the map until the area to be downloaded is highlighted. Click "done" and the map will be downloaded to the mobile device and be able to be used when mobile data isn't available.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here
about 1 hour ago
Today the popular on-demand grocery delivery service Instacart announced that it is bringing its service to two new cities: Oakland and Berkely. The two cities join its other active locations, all of which fall inside of the Bay Area. In...
Today the popular on-demand grocery delivery service Instacart announced that it is bringing its service to two new cities: Oakland and Berkely. The two cities join its other active locations, all of which fall inside of the Bay Area. Instacart appears to be succeeding where other firms have failed; it appears to have made grocery delivery economically viable. The service earns its keep by charging a fee for delivery – it costs more to get your goods sooner, and you tip delivery people on top of that – and by charging small markup on items sold. The combination, of fees, a cut, and tips appears to work. According to the firm, the decision to add new cities to its service area came “[a]fter proving out and perfecting the customer and personal shopper economics in San Francisco.” Where might Instacart be headed next? I mentioned Seattle and Portland as potential likely next locations for the service to expand to. The company’s own Apoorva Mehta demured, calling them too small for their current model. He did note instead that the company has year-long plans to add new cities to its list of supported markets. The company will, however, follow demand; where folks that want to become its users are the loudest, may get what they want. Apoorva, in a statement provided to TNW, stated that its decision to launch in Oakland and Berkeley was “based on the phenomenal inbound customer demand that we have seen from those areas.” If you want Instacart in your neck of the trees, make noise. Instacart has evolved since its launch, including adding new stores to its roster – Costco, Whole Foods, Trader Joe’s. The pace of its geographical expansion will be interesting to watch, as the company enters markets with demographics that are economically different from the affluent San Francisco. Top Image Credit: lord enfield
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Following the first wave of its “Explorer Program,” Google has shared that winning #ifihadglass applicants will start receiving invitations to try Glass “over the next few weeks.” Sadly, if you are not among the l...
Following the first wave of its “Explorer Program,” Google has shared that winning #ifihadglass applicants will start receiving invitations to try Glass “over the next few weeks.” Sadly, if you are not among the lucky few selected by Google, it doesn’t look like you’ll get your hands on Glass any time soon — the company has shared that it isn’t “ taking any more applications right now.” For successful #ifihadglass applicants, this announcement should be satisfying to read; Google had previously been unclear as to when the winners would receive their Glass. Last we heard, the company simply said “we’ll start reaching out to [winners] later on” back in April. Google ambiguously stated that it is “thrilled to be moving into the next phase of our Explorer Program and we hope to expand in the future.” Now over a year old, the Explorer Program is still limited to a very small group of users. Whether you’re excited to try Google Glass or can’t help but rip on them, it looks like these futuristic specs are rather far from being ready for a public release. For more on Google Glass, you can read about the product’s new software update cycle and Google’s vision of its mainstream potential.
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The use of shadow IT — storing and sharing files on non-sanctioned clouds from Box, Dropbox and others, partly propelled by the bring-your-own-device trend — is not news, because it’s been going on for years despite the compliance and se...
The use of shadow IT — storing and sharing files on non-sanctioned clouds from Box, Dropbox and others, partly propelled by the bring-your-own-device trend — is not news, because it’s been going on for years despite the compliance and security problems it can pose. But IT leaders are fighting back, and new investment in security startup Skyhigh Networks suggests that they’re hungry for tools that reveal the use of cloud services and quantify the potential for data breaches and other risks. The company announced a $20 million Series B venture funding on Wednesday, bringing the total raised to more than $26 million. Sequoia Capital led the new round, which also contains a contribution from Greylock Partners. Along with highlighting problematic use across multiple cloud services, the Skyhigh software also lets IT administrators take steps to minimize impact of the rogue behavior by controlling access to certain clouds and encrypting data, which could make activity more secure. Cisco and Equinix use the Skyhigh product. Skyhigh wants to add more customers and also invest in marketing and engineering with the new funding. The news falls in line with an increase in investments in security recently. In addition to the Skyhigh investment, Blue Coat Systems has announced plans to acquire Solera Networks, and McAfee said it would buy Stonesoft. But shadow IT is just one challenge facing CIOs these days, along with the push to try cloud services and implement big data projects. My colleague Barb Darrow will discuss challenges like these with the CIOs of the Clorox Co. and the Pabst Brewing Co. at GigaOM’s Structure conference in San Francisco on June 19. Feature image courtesy of Shutterstock user alexmillos. Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.New challenges for the IT organizationA near-term outlook for big dataDissecting the data: 5 issues for our digital future
about 1 hour ago
The PlayStation Network by itself has a better lineup than certain consoles out right now, but a lot of people out there don't quite trust digital distribution. It's refreshing to see then that Sony has started a new line of reta...
The PlayStation Network by itself has a better lineup than certain consoles out right now, but a lot of people out there don't quite trust digital distribution. It's refreshing to see then that Sony has started a new line of retail releases to get some of these game some fresh air. Introducing the Best of PlayStation Network series. Volume 1 hits store shelves this June, packaging four games in one box for $39.99 Here are the four titles included in Best of PlayStation Network Vol. 1: When Vikings Attack! Sound Shapes Tokyo Jungle Fat Princess We actually heard rumor of this release not so long ago, but oddly enough it disappeared for a while. Thanks for the leak, ESRB! Unfortunately, no leaks have come through on a second volume to be released in the future. Let's just trust that Sony does the right thing and packages up some of the other great games available on PSN for us to pick up at the local GameStop. Check out Best of PlayStation Network: Vol. 1 starting June 25 for $39.99, which is about $15 cheaper than what the games would cost individually on PSN. And of course, PlayStation 3 exclusive.Comment on this article (1)
about 1 hour ago
Ethernet is 40 today: on 22 May 1973, Xerox PARC's Robert Metcalfe documented a new way to communicate, which he dubbed Ethernet. The birthday is rather arbitrary - Metcalfe later admitted that he needed to pick a birthday for marketing ...
Ethernet is 40 today: on 22 May 1973, Xerox PARC's Robert Metcalfe documented a new way to communicate, which he dubbed Ethernet. The birthday is rather arbitrary - Metcalfe later admitted that he needed to pick a birthday for marketing reasons, and the memo's publication date was as good as anything else - but there's plenty of reason to celebrate it anyway. What started off as a way to connect a few computers to a printer became a way to connect the entire planet.Getting connected: a history of modemsEthernet got its name from "luminiferous ether", which 19th century scientists believed was an invisible medium that transmitted electromagnetic waves. Metcalfe's system used a cable rather than a magical invisible cloud, but it was no less magical: it would form what Metcalfe would later describe as "plumbing for the Internet, which is in turn plumbing for the World Wide Web, which is plumbing for Google."From humble beginningsIt would be a few more years before Ethernet networking was actually deployed - PARC rolled it out in 1976, it was made commercially available in 1980 and became an official IEEE standard in 1985 - but it's been in constant evolution: even 10Mbps seemed impossibly fast in 1976, when 2.96Mbps seemed pretty speedy, but today 100 gigabit Ethernet exists and terabit Ethernet is on the horizon.What made - and makes - Ethernet special is that it wasn't designed to handle very simple networks but much more complicated ones. Metcalfe set out to connect more than 100 computers to a printer, and to each other, and to the precursor of today's internet, ARPAnet. The answer? Packets. As Metcalfe told CNet on the eve of Ethernet's 30th birthday, "Ethernet was based on packets. Data was to be delivered in packets, and the Ethernet was to be decentralized so there could be nothing in the middle that could break or be unscalable. It lay within a hierarchy of protocols, so it only had to do what it needed to do, not things that would be handled elsewhere in the protocol stack, which was a relatively new idea at the time. It was so simple, and that's one of its advantages." If packets collided, they'd be retransmitted until they reached their destination.Better cabling, better speedEthernet has changed somewhat since Metcalfe's original design. Early, thick coaxial cables were superseded by thin co-ax cabling that was joined with BNC and T connectors, and in the 1980s thin coax was in turn superseded by phone-style twisted pair cabling. Those cables got the now-familiar RJ45 connector which, unlike some more modern connection types - *cough* USB! *cough* - don't waste entire days as you try and fail to get your cables the right way round. Ethernet became Fast Ethernet, which in turn became Gigabit Ethernet, which has evolved from single figures to three figures and will no doubt get faster still.Today, Ethernet remains the dominant networking protocol, but it isn't quite as obvious as it used to be: our laptops are more likely to be connecting over the ether than over Ethernet, and there isn't room for an RJ45 in an HTC One. But the networks our wireless hubs connect to, the backhaul for the cell towers our phones seek out and the data centres that share our statuses, push our photos and stream our songs? There, Ethernet's doing what it's always done: getting the job done.
about 1 hour ago
SanDisk is now sampling flash memory products based on the company's second-generation 19-nm process tech.
SanDisk is now sampling flash memory products based on the company's second-generation 19-nm process tech.
about 1 hour ago
Looks like Kinect 2.0 won't be an Xbox One exclusive.
Looks like Kinect 2.0 won't be an Xbox One exclusive.
about 1 hour ago
Yahoo has announced the overhaul of Flickr, its photo and video sharing site, after purchasing social microblogging website Tumblr. The new Flickr has "a beautiful, completely reimagined experience that puts photos front and center," Yah...
Yahoo has announced the overhaul of Flickr, its photo and video sharing site, after purchasing social microblogging website Tumblr. The new Flickr has "a beautiful, completely reimagined experience that puts photos front and center," Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer wrote in a blog post that is reminiscent of what her Facebook counterpart, Mark Zuckerberg, said when announcing his company's overhaul of NewsFeed in March. Flickr has also increased the amount of free storage space for users to 1 TB.
about 1 hour ago
Here's a rundown of what we know about the Microsoft Xbox One, so far.
Here's a rundown of what we know about the Microsoft Xbox One, so far.
about 1 hour ago