Google’s Android: First open and free mobile platform June 26, 2008
Posted by Cobus in Innovation, Technology, Trends.Tags: Android, Google, mobile phone
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I came across Wired’s article “Google’s Open Source Android OS Will Free the Wireless Web” today that provides an expose of the birth of the project through to its current status. Google is positioning itself with the increasing demand of people’s preference to connect with each other and everything else via their mobile phones. Hence Google wants to bring the coolest bits of the Web to people’s cell phones through Android’s Killer Apps. Android is the first complete, open, and free mobile platform.
Nearly any new mobile phone will be able to run Android (HTC, LG, and Motorola have dedicated models on the way). But the Operating System is just the start; the phone evolves as users add apps from developers to take advantage of the seamless Web access. Cool apps that surprise and delight mobile users, built by developers are a huge part of the Android vision. To support developer efforts, Google has launched the Android Developer Challenge, which will provide $10 million in awards for great mobile apps built on the Android platform. For more information on the project, visit the official Android website.
To wet your appetite, here’s a video clip on Android…
Future View: The Age of Distraction December 6, 2007
Posted by Cobus in Future, Trends.add a comment
Michael Bugeja, director of the Greenlee School of Journalism at Iowa State University argues that academia is failing to inform future generations about social problems that require critical thinking and interpersonal intelligence because of its reliance on technology and the media’s overemphasis on trivia.
In his article “The Age of Distraction: The Professor or the Processor,” Bugeja says that the new technologies that now keep people constantly connected also keep them constantly distracted. Educators know that wireless technology has disrupted the classroom, with students browsing (and even buying) online during lectures.
However, Bugeja argues, the new challenge is the pervasive unwillingness to do anything about it. Digital distractions now keep us from addressing the real issues of the day. Each of us daily consumes an average of nine hours of media through myriad technological platforms.
As a journalism professor, he is especially sensitive to this emerging state of constant distraction and its effects on what people watch and read. This is not the Age of Information, he says, but rather the Age of Distraction. And distraction in academia is deadly because it undermines critical thinking. Something that impacts all of us — and the future.
Bugeja states that without critical thinking, we create trivia. We dismantle scientific models and replace them with trendy or wishful ones that are neither transferable nor testable. We have witnessed this with such issues as global warming, worldwide pandemics, and natural selection. Thus, he theorizes that standards of higher education have been lowered, not raised, because of new information and consumer technology.
He believes that if we do not recommit to critical thinking in the classroom, the future is in jeopardy. Moreover, if we don’t practice interpersonal intelligence at home, school, and work, we cannot set the standards for the emerging generation…
Makes you think, doesn’t it?…
Read the full article “The Age of Disctraction: The Professor or the Processor?” by Michael Bugeja at The Futurist.
Top 10 Google searches in 2007 December 5, 2007
Posted by Cobus in Internet, Technology, Trends.add a comment
Technology and entertainment topped Google’s searches in 2007, with the iPhone grabbing the No. 1 slot on a list of the fastest-rising search terms in the United States.
The Google top 10 search list for 2007 is:
- Iphone (Mobile phone, music and video player and Internet browser device)
- Webkinz (Online virtual pets for kids)
- TMZ (Celebrity news)
- Transformer toys (From the popular movie “Transformers”)
- YouTube (Online video sharing)
- Club Penguin (Networking site for children)
- MySpace (Social networking)
- Heroes (Popular TV series)
- Facebook (Social networking)
- Anna Nicole Smith (Late reality TV star)
Interesting to see what’s front & centre in the minds of people ;-) You can read more on Google Trends at http://www.google.com/trends.
Source: http://uk.reuters.com/article/technologyNews/idUKN0455323020071205
