Thursday, January 7, 2016

How Hackers Invaded 30 Million Web Servers On The Internet With A Poem


ust before the end of 2015, some unknown hackers flooded the internet with a piece of poetry. This message was sent to all Web servers on the Internet and about 30 million of them logged the message.

This message was sent from an IP address associated with 32nd Chaos Communication Congress (32c3) taking place in Germany. The hackers, also called “masspoem4u”, are a long time fan of the Congress and attended it for the first time.


Using the tool “Masscan”, they scanned the entire internet and flooded it with their message. Masscan is an Internet port scanner that allowed the hackers to list all the IPv4 addresses that left the 80 port open.

“DELETE your logs. Delete your installations. Wipe everything clean. Walk out into the path of cherry blossom trees and let your motherboard feel the stones,” the poem goes like this.

“Let water run in rivulets down your casing. You know that you want something more than this, and I am here to tell you that we love you. We have something more for you. We know you’re out there, beeping in the hollow server room, lights blinking, never sleeping. We know that you are ready and waiting. Join us,” the poem continues.


In an email exchange with Motherboard, the unknown hackers said that they did this for fun and didn’t mean to harm anybody. “One of our goals was to place something beautiful in an unexpected place, nestling a little poetic message amongst repetitive server access logs. We were very happy to hear that many people got a smile out of it!” they said.

The hackers got the idea of adding this friendly message along with the scan from one of the Masscan creators Robert Graham. “We are also indebted to the 32c3 NOC [network operations centre] team, for providing such great connectivity and encouraging playful experimentation,” Masspoem4u said thanking the 32c3’s internet connection as this huge scan and message delivery would have taken lots of bandwidth.

The hackers said that they did this to remind the people that the Internet is free and it must be kept decentralised. “The internet is ours, and it is adorable,” the hackers commented.

Source: fossbytes

Wednesday, January 6, 2016

World’s First 802.11ad Router By TP-Link Makes Your Wi-Fi Three Times Faster


Gone are the days when your Wi-Fi router was an ugly little box that sat in your living room’s corner. Today, it has become the most important gadget of your home, thanks to the new-age technologies that allow all your household appliance to desire some internet. As a result, your router needs more power.

Well, TP-Link has just answered your prayers with the world’s first 802.11ad Router. For those who don’t know, 802.11ad is a more powerful 60GHz WiFi standard that sits on top of the existing 2.4GHz and 5GHz bands.


The TP-LINK Talon AD7200 supports data transfer rate up to 7.2Gbps. The router does this by combining different bands. While 5GHz band gives up at maximum 1,733Mbps, the 60GHz band can reach wireless data transfer speeds of up to 4,600Mbps. As a result, your router allows seamless streaming of a 4K movie over Wi-Fi.

If you are aware of the MU-MIMO technology, you must be aware of the fact that it allows you to connect multiple devices to your router at a time without making compromises with the speed. The same technology reduces bottlenecks in TP-LINK Talon AD7200 while serving the internet to multiple devices.

Talking about the looks, the router is big in size and black in color. It has eight adjustable antennas that can fold down. For connectivity, you get four gigabit ethernet ports and two USB 3.0 ports for external drives.

The final price of the TP-LINK Talon AD7200 router hasn’t been announced yet, but don’t expect it be a cheap luxury.

Source: TP-Link

10 Tech Predictions for 2016

Another year has come and gone, and in the tech world, it seems not much has changed. 2015 was arguably a relatively modest year when it comes to major innovations, with many of the biggest developments essentially coming as final delivery or extensions to bigger trends that started or were first announced in 2014. Autonomous cars, smart homes, wearables, virtual reality, drones, Windows 10, large-screen smartphones, and the sharing economy all made a bigger initial mark in 2014 and continued to evolve over this past year.


Looking ahead to 2016, I expect we will see changes that, on the surface, also don’t seem to amount to much initially, but will actually prove to be key foundational shifts that drive a very different, and very exciting future.

Prediction 1: The Death of Software Platforms, The Rise of the MetaOS


Proprietary software platforms like iOS, Windows, and Android have served as the very backbone of the tech industry and the tech economy for quite some time, so it may seem a bit ludicrous to predict their demise. However, I believe the walls supporting these ecosystems are starting to crumble. Device operating systems were built to enable the creation of applications that worked on specific devices, and they did an incredible job—perhaps too good—of doing just that. We now have somewhere between 1.5 and 2 million apps available each for iOS and Android and hundreds of thousands of Windows apps. The problem is, the vast majority of people download less than a hundred and actually use more like 5-10 apps on a regular basis.

More importantly, most consumers now own and regularly use multiple devices with multiple operating systems and what they really want isn’t a bunch of independent apps, but access to the critical services that they access through their devices. Yes, some of those services are delivered through apps, but many of the biggest software and service providers are altering their strategies to ensure that they can deliver a high quality experience regardless of the app, device, OS, or browser being used to access their application or service. Factor in the increasing range of smart home, smart car, and other connected devices we’ll all own and regularly use in the near future—plus the general app fatigue that I think many consumers now feel—and the whole argument around an app-driven world starts to make a lot less sense.

Instead, from Facebook to Microsoft to DropBox and hundreds of other cloud service providers, we’re seeing companies build what I call a MetaOS—a platform-like layer of software and services that remains independent of any underlying device platform to deliver the critical capabilities that people are ultimately looking to access. Bigger companies like Facebook and Microsoft are integrating a wide range of services into these MetaOS platforms—particularly around communications and contextual intelligence agents—that will increasingly take on the tasks and roles that other individual applications used to. Want access to media content or documents or (eventually) commerce and financial services? Even better, want a smart assistant to help coordinate your efforts? Log into one of these MetaOS megaservices and your unique digital identity (another key element of a MetaOS) will give you secure access to these services and much more.

Look for Google, Apple, and Amazon, among others, to start making a bigger effort in this area, and expect to see some of these larger companies make key acquisitions to fill in gaps in their MetaOS efforts over the course of the next year. This isn’t something that’s going to happen overnight, but I think 2016 will be the year we start to see more of these strategies take shape.

Prediction 2: Market Maturation Leads to Increased Specialization


The era of products that appeal to a broad, cross-section of all consumers is coming to an end and it’s being replaced by a new era where we will see more products that are more tightly focused on specific sets of customers. The key product categories have matured, and it’s hard to find broad new product categories that appeal to a wide range of consumers in the same way that PCs, tablets, and smartphones have.

That’s not to say that we won’t be seeing any exciting or interesting new product categories—after all, something has to be next year’s hoverboard—but they won’t have the same kind of wide-ranging impact that the now more “traditional” smart devices have had. As a result, I think we’ll see a wide variety of sub-categories for smart homes, connected cars, wearables, drones, VR headsets, and consumer robotics that will perhaps sell in the tens or hundreds of thousands instead of the tens of millions that other product categories have enjoyed.

The Maker Movement and crowd-funding efforts will go a long way towards helping drive these changes, but I also expect that we’ll see the China/Shenzen hardware ecosystem start to adjust and focus more efforts on being able to specialize and even personalize devices. The end result will be a wider range of devices that more specifically meet different consumers’ needs. At the same time, I believe it will also be harder to “find the pulse” of where major hardware developments are headed, because they will be moving in so many different directions. The key will be in developing manufacturing technologies that can enable greater abilities to specialize and that can produce products profitably with lower production runs

Prediction 3: Apple Reality Check Leads to Major Investment


Apple has had an incredible run at the top of the technology heap for quite some time and, to be clear, I’m not saying that 2016 is the year this will end. What I am saying, however, is that 2016 is the year the company will face some of its biggest challenges, and the year that the “reality distortion field” surrounding the company will start to fade. With two-thirds of its revenues dependent on a single product line (the iPhone) that’s running into the realities of a slowing global smartphone market, the company is going to have to make some big new bets in 2016 in order to retain its market-leading position. I’m not exactly sure what those bets might be (augmented/virtual reality, financial services, automotive, enterprise software, media, or some combination of all of the above), but I’m convinced there are a great deal of very smart people at Apple who are undoubtedly thinking through what’s next for them. Maintaining the status quo in 2016 doesn’t seem like a great option, so this should be the year they seriously tap into that massive cash reserve of theirs and make some major, game-changing acquisitions.

Prediction 4: The Great Hardware Stall Forces Shift to Software and Services




As most companies besides Apple have already learned, it’s very hard to make money on hardware alone, and those problems will only be exacerbated in 2016. With expected declines in tablets and PCs, the flattening of the smartphone market and only modest overall uptake for wearables and other new hardware categories, we’re nearing the end of a several decade-long run of hardware growth. We’ll see pockets of opportunity to be sure—see Prediction 2 above—but companies who have been primarily or even solely dependent on hardware sales are going to have to make some difficult decisions on how they evolve in the era of software and services.

As a result, I expect to see more major acquisitions such as the recent Dell/EMC/VMware deal. The challenge, of course, is that many hardware-focused organizations don’t have the in-house skill sets or mindsets to make this transition, so I expect we’ll see very challenging times for some hardware-focused companies in 2016.

Another potential impact from this hardware stall could be an increased desire for hardware companies to become more vertically oriented in order to maximize their opportunity in a shrinking profit pool. This could lead either to acquisitions of key semiconductor vendors and other core component providers by device makers, or vice versa, but either way, hardware-focused companies are going to have to focus on maximizing profitability through reduced costs. After decades of widening the supply chain horizontally, it seems the pendulum is definitely swinging back towards vertical integration.

Prediction 5: Autonomous Car Hype Overshadows Driver Assistance Improvements


The technological advancements in automobiles have been impressive over the last year or two, with the idea of a connected car, and even a partially automated car, quickly moving from science fiction to everyday reality. However, there are still a number of major legislative, social, and technology challenges that need to be overcome before our roadways are filled with self-driving cars.

The real advancements that are starting to take place in advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS), such as lane departure warnings, automatic braking, more sophisticated cruise controls, etc., offer some very beneficial safety benefits. But they’re not as sexy as autonomous driving, so much of the press seems to be overlooking them. Even the car vendors seem to be focused more on delivering their vision of autonomous driving than on what we’ll be able to actually purchase and drive over the next five years. In reality, they’re showing the modern-day version of concept cars instead of production cars, but that point is being missed by many. Remember that, unlike the tech industry, the automotive industry regularly builds and displays products it has little or no intention of ever releasing to the world at large.

Improvements in car electronics and intelligence are happening at an impressive pace, and the quality of our in-car experiences is going to change dramatically over the next several years. It’s important to put all the advancements in context, however, and recognize that they’re not all going to occur at the same time. We’re really just now starting to get high-quality connectivity into the latest generation cars, and there are many improvements that we can expect to see in infotainment systems (with or without Apple and Google’s help) over the next few years. As we learned this past year, there are still critical security implications just from those changes, and they won’t all be easily resolved overnight.

Eventually, we will get to truly autonomous cars that regular people can actually buy, but it’s important to understand and appreciate the step-by-step advancements that are being made along the way. These advancements may not be as revolutionary as driverless cars, but they are the news that the automotive industry can realistically deliver on over the next 12 months. Unfortunately, I think the message is going to be lost in the noise of “autonomous automania” this year, leading to thoroughly confused consumers and unrealistic expectations.

Prediction 6: Wearables Make An Impact… in Business


Wearables were one of the hottest topics going into 2015 and, while they certainly made an impact this past year, they didn’t exactly change the world. The Apple Watch in particular had reasonable success but still lags behind FitBit’s wearables from a market share perspective—definitely not the outcome many had predicted at the beginning of 2015.

Part of the challenge is the vast majority of wearables are seen as accessories for fitness enthusiasts, not essential devices for mainstream consumers. In addition, the questionable accuracy and limited capabilities of some of the early devices (and the sensors built into them) have led many people to question their long-term value. Toss in the numerous anecdotal stories about people giving up on their wearables after only a few weeks of use and you have the perfect storm of factors to limit the impact of this category.

In order to reach a wider audience, wearables must have a more compelling value equation to attract and hold onto a wider range of people. Instead of the consumer market, I believe there’s a better opportunity to achieve this in the business world. Wearable devices could prove to be an ideal workplace enhancement that could not only replace building security cards with a more secure, biometric form of authentication, but also serve as the means to log into your work devices, secure websites, and more. The savings that could be generated just by eliminating the IT costs associated with resetting passwords alone can easily justify the necessary infrastructure expense to enable this (not to mention the greatly increased security benefits that come with it).

On top of that, some businesses are starting conversations with healthcare organizations to collectively track the activity level and health of their employees in order to offer better insurance rates. Yes, there are some potentially scary big brother abuses that could be possible here, but a well-implemented program could be a big win all around. Plus, it would provide yet another justification to do widespread deployments of wearables in the workplace.

Prediction 7: First Products with Foldable Displays


As a long time display industry follower, I’ve been tracking their technology developments for nearly two decades. What I’ve learned is core display technologies can have an incredibly important impact on the devices that deploy them—think of the high-resolution displays we’ve become accustomed to on our phones or the ultra high-resolution displays driving today’s 4K TVs. They are one of the key defining factors for successful devices. The most exciting development going on in displays right now is the effort to create foldable or bendable displays. Truth be told, there have been prototypes of these technologies at display trade shows for over decade but, as with many things in the display industry, it’s much easier to build single prototypes than it is to mass produce them. Nevertheless, it looks like 2016 will be the year when we start to see the first examples of foldable/bendable displays in real products (or at least, finished product prototypes). Along with these displays will come some of the most dramatic changes in form factor any of us have ever seen. A tablet that turns into a smartphone or vice versa? The possibilities are tantalizing. The first versions of foldable displays will likely only be able to fold outwards, meaning you could take a flat display and end up with displays on the outside of the fold. The reason for this is it’s apparently easier to stretch the materials at the fold then it is to squeeze them together, as you would need to do for an inward-folding display. That will limit product designs to some degree, but expect the evolution of foldable displays to start making the lines separating product categories even less meaningful than they’ve already started to become.

Prediction 8: The Biggest Innovation in IOT Will Be Business Models




The world of IoT has been interesting to watch and it’s relatively straightforward to imagine 2016 will be a key year for it. However, when you start to dig into the actual technologies used to drive the Internet of Things, you realize it’s actually pretty simple and, in some cases, pretty old stuff. Basically, we’re talking about using low-power radios to connect together a bunch of devices powered by low-power CPUs or even embedded microcontrollers with some simple sensors. The magic, of course, is in the software and what you can do with the data these connected devices generate.

Even there, however, the analysis is typically straightforward and sometimes falls into what I call a “one and done” mode, where an insight is made and all you need to do is monitor the data and react accordingly. To make the results meaningful, you often have to scale the deployment to a very large degree and that ends up requiring significant capital investment.

This is where business model innovation will start to kick in because, for many organizations, the capital expenditures for large IoT deployments either don’t really have a great ROI (Return on Investment) story or, even if they do, they’re just too large to justify versus other pressing projects. That’s why the biggest innovations in IoT won’t be on the technology side in 2016, but in how companies piece together solutions that make deploying IoT a win-win for all sides. Right now, too many of the big IoT concepts (smart cities, anyone?) are really just technology for technology’s sake. While they might sound cool in theory, without a clear business value, they’ll end up staying hypothetical talking points instead of driving real-world benefits.

Prediction 9: Connected Homes Will Continue to Underwhelm


While it’s at a much different level conceptually, some of the exact same issues will also keep the connected home market from reaching its full potential in 2016 as well. Yes, we’re starting to see a few more interesting products but, for most consumers, the clear value equation for a connected home just isn’t there. Admittedly, the idea of my lights turning on automatically and the thermostat automatically adjusting the temperature of my house based on when my car pulls into the driveway is cool (especially when you first install it), but really, is it that critical to my life, particularly a year or two later? For the vast majority of people, the answer is a simple no. In fact, after a while, a few of them feel pretty “gimmicky.” If you can afford them, lots of smart home products are nice to have, but they’re definitely not in the “need to have” category.

Additionally, 2016 will, unfortunately, likely be a year when stories about home hackings and other security-related issues become commonplace. For example, if you put a security camera on a network in your house, the ability for you to view it also opens up the possibility for others to do so. The benefit/privacy tradeoff for smart/connected home products is a question consumers are going to be wrestling with for some time.

Finally, on a practical level, the ongoing standards battle at multiple levels of the home networking “stack” are going to make the process of putting together solutions of connected home products very difficult for even technically savvy consumers. Knowing whether or not one company’s products are going to work with another’s and whether or not I have to use multiple different applications to control it all (and from what devices) is not going to be simple. Unfortunately, that potential for confusion will likely limit market acceptance for much of the rest of this decade. Yes, I think it’s that bad

Prediction 10: VR Stalls But AR Makes an Impact


If there’s any technology that’s been overhyped for a long time, it’s virtual reality. Heck, I remember reading in the 1990s how VR was going to dramatically change our lives in the near future. Well, here we are in 2016, and it’s yet to really have a big impact. Yes, we’ll see some interesting new production introductions in the world of VR this year, but nothing I’ve seen suggests it will grow to be much more than a niche, primarily for gaming. Now, gaming continues to be a growing market, so there’s still money to be made here, but the idea that VR will be as widely adopted as even wearables does not seem likely in 2016.

I also expect augmented reality products like the Microsoft HoloLens to have a pretty modest impact this year, especially given the expected high price points for these types of products. However, longer term, I believe AR offers the potential for entirely new means of interacting with digital data in a way that will appeal to a much wider audience than the closed-loop world of VR ever will. In a sense, AR is essentially a new display method for computing and, just as everyone who computes leverages a display (or often multiple displays) of some kind, I can foresee a day when everyone who computes could leverage an AR-type of display.

Now, some may argue you could make the same case for VR and, in a sense, you can. However, every display and technology advancement we’ve enjoyed over the last several decades has been done within the context of the real world around us. AR seems like a much more logical step in that evolution than VR for the vast majority of people.

Of course, near term, even AR is likely to be limited to specific professionals or wealthy consumers who want to have the option of using an alternative display for a portion of their computing time. But of all the technologies I’ve seen over the last few years, augmented reality devices offer the most compelling vision of our computing and device future that I’ve ever come across. I, for one, can’t wait to see how they move us all forward.

Source: techspot

Tuesday, January 5, 2016

Microsoft’s Latest Trick – “Use Windows 10 Because Windows 7 Has Serious Problems”


Earlier this week Microsoft announced that Windows 10 is its fastest growing OS with more than 200 active installations since last July. However, Windows 7 continues to power millions of PCs around the world and big names at Redmond offices are disliking these numbers. In order to push Windows 10 installation in a much faster manner, Microsoft has come up with deceitful tactics that were slammed by the experts.

In a surprising development, Microsoft Marketing Cheif Chris Capossela warned the Windows 7 users and asked them to use it “at your own risk, at your own peril”.


According to Windows executive, continuing using Windows 7 is a risky option and made statements about the future Windows software, security and compatibility issues. “We do worry when people are running an operating system that’s 10 years old that the next printer they buy isn’t going to work well, or they buy a new game, they buy Fallout 4, a very popular game, and it doesn’t work on a bunch of older machines,” he said talking to Windows Weekly.

Well, blaming the Fallout 4 incompatibility on an outdated operating system doesn’t solve the problem as it’s a hardware problem. He went on and called the “old stuff” like Windows 7 really bad, thanks to virus and security problems.

About the constant Windows 10 upgrade notifications, Capossela defended the step by calling it a much-needed place. “We don’t want to anger anybody, but we do feel a responsibility to get people to a much better place, and Windows 10 is a much better place than Windows 7,” he added.

Microsoft executive presented another flawed statements by calling Windows 7 unsafe as it will be supported till 2020 and no less compatible with new hardware and software.

It looks like 2016 will be another year full of controversies for Windows 10. We hope that Microsoft focuses more on making Windows 10 an operating system that gives proper choice to its users.

Source: fossbytes

Monday, January 4, 2016

How Media Companies Can Fight Frenemies Facebook, Twitter, Apple And Google


Mark Zuckerberg likely didn’t have a plan to dominate the distribution of news but nonetheless, he’s doing a good job of it. As we head into 2016 you could be forgiven for thinking Facebook was the sole cause of media woes but you would also be very wrong. While Facebook continues to eat every other traffic source’s lunch, providing a sizeable and growing share of Internet traffic to news, new and familiar names have become wise to the traffic news can bring and a new array of tools, options and elements are now popping up. With more than 40% of younger audiences citing their primary source of news as being social media platforms (Pew) it’s easy to see why these changes are occurring.With friends like these, who needs enemies? How can news sites compete or are they just destined to grease the wheels now?


The contenders are ready

Facebook has ‘Instant Articles’ or souped up versions of web pages that load faster and look like how every web page should look – clean and focused on the content. Adoption of sources using the service has been relatively good and results did cause a tweak in monetization terms from Facebook (they’re the good guys after all!) so the future is anything but clear for publishers who become suckered to this ad-laden teat. However, Facebook Notify is the product with the biggest potential to upset the apple cart, should the product become the attention-snagging mobile Google News ‘good enough’ product I foresee it becoming. Twitter launched ‘Moments’ in October and recently rolled them out to additional territories including the UK. While a different product to Facebook’s offering with a dedicated editorial team and a partner program, Moments acts as a one stop shop to curate information around an event of significance. Google News continues (mostly) unabated and despite multiple app challengers, remains the Waterstones magazine rack of the internet – predominantly a browse but not buy zone. Although Google does face a potentially expensive ‘snippet tax’ for showing quotes from copyrighted content, such as news articles if Brussels has their way so 2016 may not all be plain sailing for Google.

The playing field is set, ever changing (and shouldn’t be set up as it is)

Take a mobile-heavy, attention-poor, uncaring audience and mix with an industry who seems uninterested in understanding the contextual environment its product is consumed in and you have the state of play in a nutshell. Beyond these elements a darker collection of forces is beginning to form and maneuver in order to disrupt, obtain more control, attention and more ad dollars.

Ad-blockers, changing platforms like Apple TV which is making new strides into the news arena with dedicated apps and the Flipboard-esque Apple News, pose new problems for overburdened newsrooms, deal-makers and pundits alike. Add in the challenges that virtual reality, augmented storytelling, podcasts and video strategies will bring and you have the makings for a challenging 2016 to say the least. But then change is nothing new for news.

So it’s time to get out of news, right?

Wrong. News is simply a matter of picking two sides from the iron triangle; good, cheap or easy – you can only have two. New technologies make it easier to do cheap and easy but good is often elusive (and in the eye of the viewer).

Opportunity 1 – Make better mobile value experiences that ads can be a part of

News on the desktop seems doomed. Between January 2015 and October 2015 traffic from Facebook to news organisations via desktop plummeted by about a third and there are currently more than 181 million people using Ad-blocking software that sites (including this one) are raging against. Personally, I see adblocking AS more of a necessary evolution than dark times. As the new news products that are rolling out demonstrate we are seeing multiple new ways content is packaged up and consumed – it is only natural to need the revenue models to observe the same need to change. Adblocking done ‘right’ is of benefit to the media. Poor ads have been left to run riot (and yes supported the journalism they clutter) but at the same time – in this author’s opinion – have destroyed the brands they prop up. Surely, surely, programmatic buying, machine learning and personalised experiences (thanks to social logins and other mechanics) mean we’re closer than ever to serving the right ad or at worst the least offensive eyesore than ever before? A focus on creating products of value – not just page views – along with a PR and marketing blitz could easily see some nice numbers and new properties to grow and remarket to – just look at the success of the Economist’s ‘Espresso’ app.

Opportunity 2 – Take another bite of Apple

Right now the big opportunity is newsroom frenemy Facebook, but the control newsrooms lose by going all in may never be regained. The same cannot be said of joining the other camp, namely Apple – you can pull the plug any time you like should giving away 0.30 cents on every dollar begin to grate plus there’s no algorithm to have change on you. ‘The enemy of my enemy is my friend’ seems to apply here. While some will say these are equally unfavourable terms (and Apple does have a sketchy past with news in general), few can deny the Apple ecosystem makes money and makes money in the right demographics for news (especially as it breaks down the friction between purchasing via mobile). The potential for recurring subscriptions, app downloads and in-app purchases mixed with no-click purchase should make Apple high up on any Publisher’s to-do list. Where do you want to get them hooked? Whether the home or in their pocket, Apple understands making things easy and that goes a long way with news (albeit early days) – not to say Google can’t or doesn’t but data shows their apps get downloaded more but people spend less (per App Annie).

Opportunity 3 – Empower your audience to pay you (and possibly get paid)



Sites like Tsu (who pay authors per click) offer a new model, paradigm and opportunity for news. While paying people for eyeballs may not be everyone’s cup of tea, it will certainly work for a significant number out there. The opposite of this is charging to click – options in this field range from the likes of Blendle (coming soon) to the much-maligned tip jar style and micropayments. Both tip jars and micropayments have still not been explored fully and both offer things if the right behavioural economics can be applied. With social commerce about to see a bumper year, micropayments and a smart social ad strategy may just be the way to big bucks. Granted none with solve all problems for all outlets but everything helps and is a part of the way news is paid will be paid for in the future.

It would be a fool who said any of these were not risky strategies but smart publishers understand there is a long game to be played that involves brand folks, distribution folks, nerds and hopefully the odd ad executive who have the right goals as incentives. Facebook is the largest media entity ever amassed in the history of the world and has some interesting irons in the fire thanks to initiatives with Messenger, its forthcoming machine learning add-on ‘M’ and, of course, the mighty Whatsapp. What interests me the most is how long until these become push vehicles ala Snapchat? Not soon would be my guess – another opportunity for savvy Publishers.

While I see no immediate harpoons ahead for the big blue whale – my time at Myspace taught me no-one is ever too big to fail or lose focus on user value – making sure you own your audience never felt more important. The focus of news distribution has shifted towards commercial companies who have priorities that often compete with those of journalism. Media companies must clearly understand the role of third-party technology and create their own platforms and products in the future because building communities in uncontrollable territories is not smart business. While it is fair to say not only the strong may survive it is equally fair that reinvention has never been more possible either. Grab some popcorn it’s about to get interesting.

Source: forbes

Sunday, January 3, 2016

5 Things That Will Disappear In 5 Years


Just five years ago the world was a very different place. In 2010, the iPad had just made its debut, Kickstarter was introducing a new form of venture capitalism that would change the face of fundraising and Square was letting vendors of any size accept payment with a swipe of a card on a mobile device. And we haven’t looked back.

The next five years will no doubt unleash products and services that we have yet to imagine. But as we progress, what will we leave behind? Here are a handful of things we use today that likely will either be gone completely or on their last breath, disrupted by new innovations, technology and methods.


Cash, checkbooks, credit cards and ATMs: What’s in your digital wallet?

Today, Square lets any business accept debit or credit cards. Venmo lets you split your dinner bill with a friend through a money transfer via text message. Soon, you will have all your banking done through any mobile device — even your vehicle. Across the U.S., check use fell 57 percent from 2000 to 2012, according to the Federal Reserve.

Ninety-four percent of consumers under 35-years-old bank online, and more than one-fifth of them have never written a physical check to pay a bill, according to First Data’s report, The Unbanked Generation. In Europe, if you try to write a check, they look at you as if you are crazy. Rent may be the last great bastion of using checks, but even that is well on the decline as property managers switch to electronic payments, and mobile payments become so easy.

One more thing: In the more distant future, there will be no cash. No cash means no cash machines — bye, bye ATMs.

USB sticks: How much longer for physical media?

By 2020, 70 percent of the world will be using a smartphone, according to Ericsson’s mobility report. Mobile data networks will cover 90 percent of the population. With cloud services like Apple, Box, Dropbox, Google and Microsoft offering near-unlimited storage at near-free prices, there’ll be little need for storage devices taking up room in your pocket. Not to mention the increase in standard storage for mobile devices in the next five years.

Event organizers around the world will need to come up with new swag to reward attendees at their conferences as USBs will be a token of the analog past.

Easier, more secure access: Passwords, keys be gone

This is a hard one because passwords are used so broadly today. The average person is said to have 19 passwords — and nearly half admit to using unsafe, weak passwords. But even if you’re adamant about using only strong passwords — guess what — those can be cracked too.

Biometrics are already becoming mainstream, especially on mobile devices, which are now the main access point for many of our online activities. Fingerprints, voice and facial recognition will replace your first dog’s name and your wedding anniversary as the way you access your secure accounts. These will have their own security risks, but the character password will be no more.

Similarly, soon you will not have physical keys to lose. Your key will be any of the smart devices you carry, which will be linked to you biometrically so that only you can operate them.

No one will miss this: The remote control

No more scrambling around your house tossing the cushions of your couch in the air looking for the elusive remote control (or 10 of them, depending on the complexity of your in-home audio and video setup).

The research firm Strategy Analytics forecasts that emerging categories in the Internet of Things (IoT), smart home and wearables will connect an additional 17.6 billion devices by 2020. Even today, devices such as the Amazon Echo are taking voice search and commands to a new level. With so many new devices connected to the Internet by 2020, building separate hardware for a remote control will just no longer make any sense.

Static documents and paper agreements

Paper-based signatures and paper-based processing — physically needing to print, fax, scan or overnight documents for reviews, approvals, decisions and/or signatures to complete a transaction — are fast-becoming archaic in today’s digital world. In the future, we will rely on “cloud agreements” to actively manage any transaction.

Cloud agreements will be: actively connected to the identities of the involved parties (forever), able to mete out payments as contract objectives are met and actively contact actors in the transaction when the time is right.

Real estate, financial services, insurance, high-tech and healthcare companies — even budget-strapped governments — are adopting cloud-computing models to increase efficiency, reduce costs and drive a better end-user experience. Soon, contract management will never be the same.

When you’re making a list of resolutions for the New Year, consider getting a head start on cleaning out the old-tech clutter you have in your life to make way for a digital New Year. Sure, you have some time. But with all of the exciting technology disruptions taking place right now, why wait?

Source: techcrunch

John McAfee Is Working To Make A Password Killer That “Unlocks” Everything


John McAfee, a pioneer in the security software industry and the co-founder of McAfee Antivirus, regularly finds new ways to find his worthy share in the headlines. After announcing his presidential candidature, John McAfee is now running a new crowdfunding campaign.

He’s running an Indiegogo campaign through January 10 to make a new device called Everykey. As the name suggests, he aims to provide you a single alternative that will unlock all your devices – ranging from smartphones to door locks.


On the Everykey website, McAfee calls it a way to control your phone, laptop, cars, house, and other devices. It can also log you into your mail and website accounts. Just in case you lose your Everykey, you can freeze it, so that no one else can misuse it.

The Indiegogo campaign was started with a goal of $20,00 and it has already raised $57,000 i.e. almost 3 times its goal. Notably, in an earlier campaign on Kickstarter, Everykey raised about $120,000.


The Everykey tool comes in two form factors. You can use it in the form of a digital fitness band, along with an option to use it as a USB thumb drive. McAfee calls the tool “a [expletive] game changer” as it uses military-grade software encryption. The device automatically unlocks a configured device – laptop, smartphone, computer etc – when it’s kept in the proximity. If you take the device out of range – about 9 feet away – the device locks down again. About John McAfee’s exact relationship with Everykey, the website writes: “John McAfee is the Chief Evangelist of Everykey. He joined the team in November, 2015 and primarily focuses on public outreach and refining the security methods used by Everykey.”

Source: indiegogo