Print Directly from Your iPad or iPhone

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I just did the most awesome thing. I printed a document directly from my iPhone to our company printer. I am told I can also do this from my iPad mini. No special printer is needed nor any special software. All you need is a gizmo called the xPrintServer from Lantronix. There are other brands that offer the same functionality, but I want to tell you about this one because I just used it.

All I had to do was plug the xPrintServer into our network router (or switch with wireless access point) then plug my USB printer (the one we already own) into the xPrintServer. It took seconds for the xPrinterServer to auto-discover my printer. Then, like magic, I was able to print directly from my iPhone. This is all done wirelessly.

The xPrintServer eliminates the need to print through apps, install software, or email myself documents. The xPrintServer works with more than 4,000 top brand USB and network printers.

Okay, your next question is where do I find the print icon on my iPad or iPhone. Very simple. Just press the curved forward arrow on your document the same way you would transfer an email. Instead of email, Facebook, or Twitter options, you will see “Print.” Tap it and watch the wireless magic take place.

Rob Calem, a close industry friend, coincidentally just did a major blog post on wireless smartphone and tablet printing options. Click here to read how a pro explains it all. Or go to http://www.robcalem.com.

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Tech Titans Not So Proud of Dropping Out of School

A friend of mine asked me to counsel her grandson who doesn’t want to go to college. Instead, he would rather start his new Internet company that is going to focus on healthcare. He really has a good idea but I can’t spell it out. I signed a confidentiality agreement.

The 17-year-old has been talking about this since he was 13. He managed to write a business plan and convince enough angel investors to chip in a total of around $500,000. He is raring to go.

His parents have agreed to let him skip college for a year, but they are convinced that he will never finish his higher education. The grandfather said there is a lot of tension with graduation coming up, and he hates visiting his children and grandchildren while this is still unresolved.

I am meeting with the grandson soon. The date has not been set. I am not afraid of the conversation because I just want to give him my personal experience and that of Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg, and now David Karp. Karp is the founder of Tumblr who just sold his company to Yahoo for $1.1 billion dollars last Friday.

Coincidentally, I am came across a Forbes video interview that asked Karp if he was glad he dropped out of Bronx High School of Science to follow his dream. His answer is profound. I encourage you to watch the video to hear what Karp has to say. First of all, he is very articulate, poised, eloquent, and super cute. All the more reason to listen to his wisdom and be ready to answer any young person who may ask you for advice.

Karp’s answer is pretty much similar to those of the other names I mentioned above. I heard their answers many times over the years. File this for good measure.

If you Google Tumblr or Yahoo you can read all about the acquisition. Every media outlet covered it. Tumblr brings 50 billion blog posts (with 75 million more arriving each day) to Yahoo’s media network and search experiences. Tumblr has more than 300 million monthly unique visitors and 120,000 signups every day. The blogging and social media site is one of the fastest-growing media networks in the world, seeing 900 posts per second and 24 billion minutes spent on its site each month. More than half of Tumblr’s total users are using the mobile app and do an average of seven sessions per day. Its tremendous popularity and engagement among creators, curators, and audiences of all ages brings a significant new community of users to the Yahoo network.

The combination of Tumblr plus Yahoo is expected to grow Yahoo’s audience by 50 percent to more than a billion monthly visitors, and to grow traffic by approximately 20 percent.

I guess that is worth $1.1 billion.

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Isn’t David Karp a cutie?

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The Key to Our Future

Tom Kowalick
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From the minute I entered it 46 years ago, the world of technology has been one filled with amazing surprises, including one just the other day. Last Thursday, I received a call from a guy named Tom Kowalick, founder of AIRMIKA, Inc. of Southern Pines, N.C. He is also an author of seven books, including Fatal Exit: The Automotive Black Box Debate (John Wiley/IEEE Press).

He was answering an email blast I sent out several weeks ago offering the services of HWH PR to many of the exhibitors attending CE Week, the tech trade show that will take place late next month. Tom, a North Carolina community college professor who taught the history of the Holocaust, is also an inventor. He had to explain his invention to me several times because I had no idea that for the last 10 years automobiles have had black boxes installed in them under the hood. Similar to black boxes on airplanes, the devices record data that tell police or insurance companies what they need to know in case of accidents or other mishaps. This information can potentially be used against you in a civil or criminal proceeding, or even by your insurers to determine rates.

Tom’s invention is called the AUTOcyb™, a mechanical lock-and-key that allows the owner to determine who sees the data in the black box and when they see it. AIRMIKA, Inc. makes the AUTOcyb, which Tom hopes to begin marketing nationwide. That is where HWH enters. He wants us to help him get exposure for the key and introduce him to a strategic partner for marketing and sales. Just like most other inventors, he is a one-man show.

What makes Tom so special is that he is the Chairman of Global Standards for Motor Vehicle Event Data Recorders (MVEDRs) at the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Standards Association (IEEE/SA). The IEEE is the world’s leading professional association for the advancement of technology. He basically wrote the first universal standard for motor vehicle event data recorders.

The AUTOcyb helps to provide greater consumer protection lockout functionality, which prevents data tampering and fraud. It also addresses concerns over privacy rights, protecting data from misuse. Motorists are very vulnerable. Investigators could possibly download data right at a crash scene after which they can do whatever they want to with it. Tom’s key secures that data.

I am not sure if HWH PR will do work for Tom, but one thing is for sure: his key is going to protect us from ourselves and from those who want to know more about us. Go Tom!

Just for the Record

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I just received notification that a very large senior citizen group in one of the most famous churches in New York City has accepted my offer to give a talk on embracing personal technology.

The reason I don’t want to mention the name of the church that has accepted my offer is because, until a date is set, it is not a done deal. This is my second initiative to spread the word to seniors that they shouldn’t miss out on the wonderment of personal technology. We are living in a time of tremendous innovation that we all can share in. I am bothered whenever I see people around my age resist.

That is why I started DigiDame. I am happy with the results so far, but I am not yet reaching a broad enough audience. I can only do that by offering other services. Speaking engagements are just one on a list of options.

The group that said yes has 3,000 members. Maybe only five will show up. That’s okay. I have a lot to learn. I know that some of the people in the audience will be a lot smarter than I am, even about technology. I am no technologist. I do, however, have an important message to deliver about which I am very passionate.

NOTE: Before I end, I just want to set the record straight about a quip I made yesterday about Anthony Weiner, the former Congressman. It was obviously a joke. I wasn’t expressing any negativity about him as a politician. I was more interested in writing something I thought was funny. Twenty-four hours later, though, and in this age of touchy political sensitivities, I want to make it clear that my brief reference was not intended as a reflection on his run for Mayor.

Classified Information

The Hummingbird aircraft is something out of science fiction. In fact, I even remember seeing a “Twilight Zone” episode about some kind of a flying object with gigantic cameras that record the moves of everyone on Earth. I am pretty sure we are about to see that fantasy become a reality.

I just learned that the U.S. Army, along with Boeing, is about to deploy a new unmanned aircraft called the Hummingbird. It’s a VTOL-UAS (vertical take-off and landing unmanned aerial system). Three Hummingbirds are being deployed for a full year to survey and spy on Afghanistan from an altitude of 20,000 feet with the ability to scan 25 square miles of ground surface.

Wait until this comes to Manhattan. These cameras are so powerful they will be able to spot a great sale at Bloomingdale’s, Donald Trump’s ridiculous tweets, or Anthony’s Weiner. Seriously, the government will be watching us from above in order to avoid further terrorist attacks, street crimes, and wild fires.

Watch the video above to see how the Hummingbird works. This is fascinating stuff.

Jane and Warren Zorek

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Jane Zorek

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Warren Zorek addressing a Red Cross Group.

Today, Eliot and I attended the funeral of 81-year old Jane Zorek. She was a descendant of the Bloomingdale’s family and wife of a very close friend of mine, Warren Zorek, the long time consumer electronics buyer at Bloomingdale’s. You may not remember, but Bloomingdale’s sold CE products for many years.

Warren died almost seven years ago at, coincidentally, the same age as his beloved, 81. Warren and I were very close for decades. We met when I was in my 20s reporting on electronics and appliances for a trade publication called Home Furnishings Daily. I don’t remember how we met. I must have called him for some information and we met at his office.

What I didn’t know at the time was that most of the manufacturer sales reps in the business feared him. He was one of the most powerful buyers (if he bought your goods, you had it made for the year) and also one of the toughest. Rumor had it that reps would pop Valium or take a drink before their presentations. By the time he got finished quizzing them, they were drenched.

He was a pussycat to me. He was also a pussycat to anyone I asked him to see. My cousin Marilyn went to work for another good friend of mine, Ed Stravitz, the JVC rep. When I asked Warren to grant Marilyn an audience, he was as gracious as gracious could be. They became good friends too.

I went to many industry events and walked around CES with Warren. Being with him gave me an upgraded cachet. Warren was also very involved in the Red Cross, and his office was decorated with Red Cross clothes and rescue/emergency equipment, whatever tools he needed to respond immediately to natural disasters. Everyone knew that if there was some sort of an event anywhere in the country, Warren was there as a high ranking volunteer. In the early days, Jane went with him. He was constantly in the news disseminating information about what happened and who had survived. He also organized Blood Drives and was one of several people featured in a book about the most devoted Red Cross volunteers.

Our lives with Jane and Warren were intertwined. One of the reasons Whitney went to Hebrew School at the legendary Temple Emanu-El was because Jane’s grandfather was a founding member. Both Jane and Warren devoted many hours a week to fundraisers and clubs. They also were the ones who got us into the very famous Harmonie Club, a private establishment, for Whitney’s Bas Mitzvah reception. The family ties extended even further. Their son Michael, an actor, worked at HWH for many years and their daughter Jennifer babysat for Whitney when we went out at night. They both have families of their own now.

Why am I telling you all this? At age 65, I feel very sad that there are chapters of my life that are gone forever. While I was listening to the Temple Emanu-El Rabbi speak about Jane and all those who loved her, I started to reminisce about the deep relationships I have had over the years and how many of the industry men who became personal friends have died or moved far away. These were my buddies, my connections, my roots to a life that was much simpler then.

None of these guys had any notion of the Internet and all the innovation that has come along with it. In the early days, they were the ones who introduced quad sound or fought the VHS versus Betamax battle. It hurts me that the kids in the business today have no idea who these people were and couldn’t care less. While my everyday life is all about change and evolution, I can’t help but see my old friends around me like the faces in a cloud of a Woody Allen movie.

Jane died on Mother’s Day. She wanted to make sure no one would forget her. We never could!

Perfect Father’s Day Gift for Eliot

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Eliot’s mother, the late, beautiful, wonderful Rhoda Hess, had him potty trained by nine months. At least that’s the story Eliot tells. Ever since then, Eliot has had great respect for the time he spends on the throne.

He doesn’t understand why everyone is not as disciplined as he is. This is all well and good except his bathroom looks like a magazine store. There are times the magazines are stacked so high that visitors question how many folks really use that room.

From time to time I say, “Time to clean your magazine shelf.” This usually happens when I know we are getting company. I have a new remedy for all this. It is a bathroom stand that replaces a traditional basket of magazines by accommodating both an iPad and a roll of toilet paper.

Available from Hammacher Schlemmer, the iPad Commode Caddy is ideal for browsing one’s digital reading materials while indisposed. The stand places the iPad at the best eye level height if you are sitting down. At 32″ from the floor on top of a flexible 10″ gooseneck, the unit provides the best positioning for reading in either portrait or landscape mode.The paper roll tube snaps/unsnaps easily for replacement.

Let the good times roll for $99.95.

Interns Are Not for Sissies

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If you meet a student in college who tells you he or she has an internship with a company in the digital business, you should have a new, profound respect for this kid. Today’s internships are not about the old grind of filing, reception work, or getting coffee for the staff. Today’s internships bring a whole new meaning to survival of the fittest.

Many digital companies use the internship program as a research lab for discovering new genius talent. Finding the next Bill Gates, Sergey Brin, or Steve Jobs doesn’t happen in a job interview. It is more of a scouting process, similar to sports.

Digital interns are under tremendous scrutiny by those who are responsible for hiring the best of breed. Interns are given daily challenges that only can be compared to the endurance of pledging for a sorority or fraternity. The tasks are so daunting that less than half of the interns last the full semester.

Not every young person is prepared to travel to foreign countries for research, play mind games that test for confidence, or have the skills to lead a new business pursuit.

These kind of skills are usually cultivated after years of experience. However, digital companies look for clues that certain students possess that show signs of what they characterize as unique qualities.

Being a digital intern also comes with major perks: high-end bicycles, free meals from nations around the world, weekend retreats, and premium housing.

I am reminded of all the stories I’ve heard over the years from young friends by the new movie, “The Internship.” Starring Vince Vaughn and Owen Wilson, the hilarious duo from “The Wedding Crashers,” this brilliant comedy illustrates the daily, mind-blowing challenges facing interns in the digital industry today. The script was surprisingly written by Vaughn and former New York Post entertainment writer Jared Paul Stern. It was produced by Vaughn and Shawn Levy.

After you see this movie, you will be very happy to be an older person away from the maddening competition.

Tech Support for Older People

There was a time when children thought their parents were the smartest people on Earth. Thank you technology for changing all of that.

Now we have to beg our adult children to help us when we get stuck trying out new smartphone apps, software programs, and gadgets. On our trip to see Whitney this weekend we brought along our new GoPro Video camera because it was stuck in a position that would only record our feet. Instantly, Fredrick, Whitney’s boyfriend, adjusted it for us. Then I had Whitney show me for the fifth time how to save changes from an Excel chart on my iPad mini, and finally we discussed the value of printing from your iPhone.

I thought it was a very productive trip. Whitney wonders if I was always slow to learn. I find that I am no different than most folks my age even though I am involved in the tech world. Unless we constantly use a piece of technology, we forget how it works.

A group of Google techies has come to the rescue. They launched TeachParentsTech.org, a “tech support care package” that’s meant to teach parents about computer basics. There are 50 basic how-to videos that cover topics from copying-and-pasting to sharing large files.

Click here to see the 50 videos that can help you with tech support.

Thank you Max Kahn for letting me know about this.

Mother’s Day in Key West

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If you ever would have told us that our baby girl would be living in the heart of Key West, we would have told you you’re nuts. My baby, who is now approaching 31, says that she has found paradise. She is also with the man she deeply loves. While they plan to live in many different places, Whitney and Fredrick are committed to stay in Key West until January, 2014 while he becomes certified as a Coast Guard Captain.

Both Whitney and Fredrick lived the corporate life for a few years in high powered jobs. Then, after months of discussions, they decided to sell everything they own and move to where they are surrounded by water and the sun shines all the time. They didn’t want the Internet to be the center of their lives day in, day out.

Whitney can do her UX job anywhere there is cell and Internet coverage. Fredrick bikes to work. They said most weeks they don’t move their cars. Duval Street, the main drag, is one block away.

Their move here is not that unique. Millions came before them. Built in the late 1800s, the house is surround by stunning tropical foliage and looks like a bed and breakfast inside. It is quite large. French doors lead to the backyard which has an in-ground pool. Whitney has a separate room for her office that looks on to the front porch. The setting should provoke great creativity.

And surprise, surprise! Whitney gave Eliot and me a Mother’s Day / Father’s Day double whammy gift tonight. She has enrolled us in the 32nd annual Key West Literary Seminar. At a four-day event that takes place in January 2014, we will attend seminars plus a party with some of the greatest mystery writers in the country. Eliot has already read most of their work, so this is going to be a star-studded event for him. I get to learn about their lives and perhaps pick up interesting writing skills. In any case, we get to live like locals and make a lot of new friends.

We had a very thrilling day. Tomorrow we get up at 5 am and hit the road to Miami. I hope Mother’s Day was a good and healthy one for all.

Sights from Key West

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