Control Factor

Very few people have ever seen what I am about to show you. I came across this development at the recent CE Week. This technology, from Force Innovations, will soon be incorporated into electronic gizmos for your lights, appliances, and other home furnishings. Force Innovations is a gesture and speech-enabled automation and integration company from Jacksonville, Florida.

Here is a demo that will show you how you will control your environment without traditional appliances. You are just going to wave your hands.

Click here to see the video I took.

Click here to see the corporate video.

Spider-Like iPhone 5 Design ????

The famous tech blog site, Mashable, gives us a glimpse into “possible” future iPhone (and other smartphones) designs. Instead of a touchscreen slab that’s held in the palm of your hand, imagine the “iPhone 5 with a new curved design that’s actually worn on the back of your hand.

To see more click here

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How To Shoot Fireworks

Eliot finally gave me some of the pictures of the fireworks that he took from our balcony on the 4th of July in Miami Beach, FL. While it is not very difficult to photograph fireworks, you have to know what you are doing in order to capture them without a blur. Sometimes you can get lucky and get great shots. Most of the time, your photos come out fuzzy or dark.

The most important thing you have to do is keep your camera steady. It is very difficult to take pictures holding your camera. The camera should be on a flat surface or preferably a tripod. Using a flash sometimes gives you good results but you have to be close enough to the action to make it work.

One more suggestion: adjust your camera shutter speed. Most digital cameras have this feature. All you have to do is set the exposure time between three and five seconds. This will capture more of the action and the results will look a whole lot better.

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I Want My Drafts Whenever, Wherever

Let me be the first to tell you the problem with certain applications. Unless you use them a lot you wouldn’t know this.

Your work in “draft form” does not transfer from app to app. For example, I was writing this post on the WordPress app on my iPad.

The iPad’s battery was running low so I switched to WordPress on my iPhone.

I couldn’t finish the post I was working on because it was saved in draft form on my iPad. Drafts only reside where you create them. If I had posted it, I would be able to view it from any of my devices: iPhone, iPad, iPod, and even my laptop.

This is going to be true for any app that allows you to create. A draft is a draft and it stays on the unit you are working on.

If you understand technology you would understand why this all makes sense. I am not a true techie. All I can say is that I want my drafts to transfer this way so I can work in stages from any device.

A girl can only dream.

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You’ve Gotta Have Heart

People ask me all the time to give them a good reason to buy an iPad. I am here to tell you that for medical reasons alone you should have one. I know of a dozen or more developers who are creating apps to specifically help us understand our body better.

Most of these developers select the iPad format first because if its popularity. I wish there was a way to release all of the app formats at the same time.

Check out the new heart app from Orca. Apple named Orca Health’s EyeDecide its best medical app of the year in 2011. Now there is one
called HealthDecide.

Users can view a pumping heart from all different angles, and modify it to fit their own demographic information.
Then they can see how the heart functions with various conditions, including rheumatic heart disease and mitral regurgitation. Or, they can see what various medical procedures look like, including percutaneous valve replacement and annuloplasty.

To learn more about this app click here.

Don’t Panic

I just wanted to pass this along to all my DigiDame friends.

Why a Quarter-Million People Around the World May Lose the Internet Monday – AllThingsD.com

Read the following story and follow the simple instructions.

http://allthingsd.com/20120705/why-a-quarter-million-people-around-the-world-may-lose-the-internet-monday/?mod=ATD_iphone

Photo Op

This post was created because of
an email I received from my girlfriend Andrea Hein.

Dear Lois,

We just returned from our trip to
Machu Picchu with my brother and sister-in-law. I think you should do a post about what to do with the photos in a digital camera. I know that may sound strange in this day and age but many seniors have misconceptions. Let me give you an example. Here is my conversation with them.

Me: “Can’t wait to see your pictures from our trip.”

Them: “Oh, we haven’t had the chance to get them printed yet.”

Me: “Can’t you just download them to a photo sharing site, like Picasa so I can look at them?

Them: “What’s that? We don’t have that and don’t know how to use it.”

Me: “If you had it, you could post them to a web album.”

Them: Total silence.

Andrea concluded, “I don’t know if I will ever get to see their pictures.”

I have to admit that many people over 50 are not really familiar with image and video sharing sites. So my first step is to list the best that are available and what they do. I basically cut-and-pasted (copied) the info from various sites to explain each one.

Once again I am offering the services of Julie Lesser and other techie experts who would be more than willing to teach you the process of downloading pictures to a hosting site – you’ll find it is very easy to do. They would also be more than willing to answer questions on the spot.

Take advantage of this opportunity and start experiencing the joy of sharing digital pictures. It is one thing to take a picture and view it yourself. It is a totally different and rewarding experience when you get the reaction of others.

Flickr
http://www.flickr.com/

Flickr (stylized as flickr) is an image hosting and video hosting website, web services suite, and online community that was created by Ludicorp in 2004 and acquired by Yahoo! in 2005. In addition to being a popular website for users to share and embed personal photographs, the service is widely used by bloggers to host images that they embed in blogs and social media.[2] Yahoo reported in June 2011 that Flickr had a total of 51 million registered members and 80 million unique visitors.[3] In August 2011 the site reported that it was hosting more than 6 billion images and this number continues to grow steadily according to reporting sources.[4] Photos and videos can be accessed from Flickr without the need to register an account but an account must be made in order to upload content onto the website. Registering an account also allows users to create a profile page containing photos and videos that the user has uploaded and also grants the ability to add another Flickr user as a contact. For mobile users, Flickr has an official app for iOS,[5] Android, and Windows Phone 7 operating systems.[6]

Shutterfly
http://www.shutterfly.com

Shutterfly attempts to differentiate itself from other online photo services such as Flickr by allowing unlimited images at no cost. Shutterfly also claims that “they never delete a photo,”[1] although they have in the past deleted photos of customers obtained via acquisition, as with PhotoWorks.com. The service also keeps uploaded photos at their full resolution, rather than scaling down images or otherwise affecting the originals. But currently after uploading the full sized photo, there is no option to download it by any means; only downscaled photos are accessible even for the member. The only way to get the full resolution photos is to order on a CD. Like other socially-based online services, Shutterfly members can also visit a community section of the website to see others’ works and gain ideas and inspiration for new projects.

Snapfish
http://www.snapfish.com

Snapfish is a web-based photo sharing and photo printing service that is owned by Hewlett-Packard. Members can upload files for free, and are given unlimited photo storage.

Most Snapfish features are free. However, if members want to download high resolution or original copies of their own uploaded images, Snapfish charges a per-image fee for each download. From 26-Jan-2012 snapfish stopped charging the memeber for downloading their pictures.

Snapfish members can share photo albums, individual photos, animated Snapshows, Group Rooms or Snapfish products. Members can share via email, link URL, and to various other web services such as Facebook. Like Facebook and unlike Flickr, a Snapfish account is required to view shared photos. An invitation sent from a member to view their photos on Snapfish would require the recipient to create a Snapfish account before viewing.

Snapfish offers a service called Group rooms for sharing amongst many members.

Snapfish collects revenue from personalized photo products such as prints, photo books, cards and mugs. Snapfish members can personalize their products in several ways such as adding their photos and, in some cases, adding captions or designed templates. Depending on the product, Snapfish USA supports retail pickup at Meijer, Walgreens, Duane Reade and Walmart

Picasa
http://picasa.google.com

Picasa Web Albums (PWA) is a photo sharing web site from Google, often compared to Flickr and similar sites.

It allows users with accounts at Google to store and share 1 GB of large photos for free. Storage is unlimited for photos 2048×2048 pixels or smaller for Google+ users, and for photos 800×800 for everyone else. Videos less than 15 minutes long also don’t count towards the limit. After the limit is reached, photos are automatically resized.[17]

Users may upload pictures through a variety of ways: via the PWA web interface on supported browsers,[18] Picasa 2.5 or later[19] on Microsoft Windows, using the Exporter for iPhoto, the Aperture to Picasa Web Albums plug-in, Uploader on Mac OS X,[20] F-Spot on Linux, or through WAManager in the Amiga-like OS MorphOS. In both free and paid accounts, the actual resolution of the photo is maintained, even though a smaller resolution photo may be displayed by the web interface.

In Picasa 3 versions of the software, using the ‘original size’ upload option, pixel size remains the same, but JPEG compression is increased significantly during upload to PWA. As JPEG is a “lossy” format, some picture information (and quality) is lost. Picasa 3.6 added an option to preserve original JPEG quality.[21]

PWA uses an “unlisted number” approach for URLs for private photo albums. This enables a user to email a private album’s URL to anyone, and the recipient can view the album without having to create a user account. This is done via an “authentication key” that must be appended to the URL for the album to be shown. The Picasa Help files say that private albums are not searchable by anyone except the user. Another visibility option named “sign-in required to view” is available. This makes the album viewable only to those with whom the album is explicitly shared.

Ads are shown on the free Picasa Web Albums accounts. The Terms of Service[22] permit Google to use the uploaded photos to display on their website or via RSS feeds, and also for promoting Google services royalty-free. Additionally, the terms permit Google to allow other companies with which they are affiliated to use the uploaded pictures to provide syndicated services. This allowance is perpetual and cannot be revoked by the owner of the photos.

Picasa Web Albums was first leaked on June 6, 2006.[23] When introduced, it came with 250 MB free space. On March 7, 2007, that was upgraded to 1 GB. As stated above, storage is now unlimited for small and resized photos. Users can also rent additional storage space (shared between Google services such as Gmail, Google Drive and Picasa Web Albums) from 25 GB to 16 TB.[24]

Fixing Facebook Typos

I had to share this with you. So many people have asked me about this.

GADGETWISE BLOG: Q&A: Fixing Typos in Facebook Comments

A new Facebook feature lets you correct mistakes in your posted comments.

Please cut and paste the URL to get to the story.

This Could Be You

I have another bike story. The other day I told you about my friend Neal Weinstock who was in horrible bike accident in Brooklyn, NY. He survived because he was wearing a helmet.

Now I have a bike story from Apachie Junction, Arizona. This is my beautiful friend Edie Cutrell who was riding her bike with her husband Spence. They are both 72 and very athletic.

One slip and Edie fell over the handle bars on her bike landing flat on her face–all her teeth knocked out. Thank goodness she was wearing a helmet. She is bruised and swollen but lived to tell the story.

To all my DigiDame friends. Wear a helmet !!

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I Am In Bed, Where Are You?

I told Eliot the other day never to tell anyone where I write my DigiDame posts from. Now I am about to spill my guts out. I am still in bed, reading stories from about 20 different newspapers, magazines, websites, blog posts, and broadcast services. I am doing this all on my iPhone.

Yes, I own an iPad but I find it too heavy to hold when I am still flat on my back. I will use the iPad when I am ready to sit up and officially admit I am working. As long as I am lying down, I still feel relaxed and at ease.

Right now I am writing this post on my iPhone. I can’t write this way all the time because some of my posts require more research and funky layouts. Most of the time, I wake up and start reading the many periodicals I rely on everyday. Then I start my writing. I don’t know why some people find it amazing that I can write and read on the iPhone. Many people do it. I even have a friend who reads novels on both Android and iOS smartphones.

Mobile technology has allowed me to play and work hard. Tonight we are expecting around 50-plus people for a 4th of July party in our condo in South Beach, Fl. Desserts, wine and champagne. In the old days, I would have been frantically thinking about how to squeeze all of my responsibilities into the day before the guests arrive?

Today, I take my smartphone with me everywhere. I handle things on the fly.

Read this story from AllThingsD that gives you a deeper report into the lifestyle of the upwardly mobile.

Mobile Technology Frees Workers to Work Any 20 Hours a Day They Choose – Ina Fried – Mobile – AllThingsD

http://allthingsd.com/20120702/mobile-technology-frees-workers-to-work-any-20-hours-a-day-they-choose/?mod=ATD_iphone

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