A Night with Michele Lee

I am taking a night off from writing about tech because we were out pretty late with our good friends Chuck Steffan and Ron Abel. They are both major talents in the world of music. Ron was the musical director tonight for the cabaret act of actress Michele Lee at 54 Below. Her rare NYC appearance continues for the next two nights.

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TV and radio personality Joe Franklin stood in the way of my picture of the stage.

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Ron with Liza Minnelli, Michele Lee, and Sandra Bernhard

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Chuck and Liza

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Eliot, Sandra, and me

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Eliot entertaining the women

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Ace Young and me

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Ron and Liza

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Critic Rex Reed and me

Exploring the Ocean

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Here’s something for your bucket list. For the man or woman who has everything, you can ride on a personalized submarine that lets users “fly” underwater. The DeepFlight Super Falcon is a two-seater submarine that takes passengers on undersea joyrides.

The DeepFlight Super Falcon is designed to dive below the surface, allowing you to explore marine life, caves, hidden treasures, and vegetation. The submarine is 21 feet long and has a wingspan that stretches nearly 9 feet.

The Super Falcon currently retails for $1.7 million, and includes on-site pilot and operations training.

Last Deep Breath for the Stethoscope

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I suggest you make a quick trip to your doctor. I don’t think there is anything wrong with you, but you might want to say goodbye to an old friend, the stethoscope. Almost 200 years old, the stethoscope is slowly but surely going to be replaced by hand-held ultrasound devices.

Ultrasound devices are smaller, becoming increasingly accurate, and in a few years will be less expensive.

Medical officials are now declaring ultrasound devices to be the stethoscope of the 21st century. Many of the hand-held ultrasound machines are just slightly larger than a deck of cards, kind of like a smartphone.

As I sit here reporting on this story, I wonder how my doctors will react to giving up their lifelong neck accessories. It has long been the symbol of the medical profession.

Let us hear your comments on this subject.

Scary Being a Google Employee These Days

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Created by Pando.com

For the last few years, Google employees were the envy of seniors like me who had careers in very traditional offices. We never heard of companies that offered the benefits that Google provided: three free meals a day from an international cafe, meditation areas, a game room, TV viewing spaces, ping pong, a never ending list of perks.

All that envy went out the window recently when we heard that anti-Google activists were out in force in the Bay Area to protest the way rich Silicon Valley tech companies like Google have displaced low- and middle-income workers. Since 2011, rents in many Silicon Valley neighborhoods have increased by 40 percent thanks to the kids from tech companies who can afford the fancy new condos and homes real estate developers are building for them.

Not everyone who lives in Northern California makes the same salaries as those at Apple, Facebook, Twitter, Oracle, and scores of other tech companies. Calling themselves the Counterforce, the protestors are also against what the government is doing with our personal data, surveillance, control, and automation.

Google was one of the first to be targeted because the company just rolled out a bunch of new luxury, Wi-Fi enabled buses to shuttle workers from San Francisco to Mountain View, headquarters of Google. Activists claim Google buses are picking up workers at city bus stops, disrupting the already busy public transportation vehicles.

A group of protestors even showed up at the Berkeley home of Google developer Anthony Levandowski, preventing him for 45 minutes from getting to work. He is the engineer who is developing the self-driving car. Protestors held signs that said “Google’s Future Stops Here.”

Whose future are the protestors going to try to stop next and in what city? This could escalate.

Amazon’s Anticipatory Shipping

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In an effort to speed up deliveries, Amazon will be shipping products you haven’t even ordered yet. They will be placing bets on what you will want and when. How weird is that?

Amazon actually just received a patent for something called “anticipatory shipping.” It allows Amazon to predict your future purchases based on previous orders, site searches, and online window shopping.

Amazon is absolutely ecstatic about being psychic. They are going to fill warehouses nearby with items you may need in the future. All you have to do is click on “Buy.” The delivery will be made to you within an hour.

Bet You Didn’t Know

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In case you are wondering why your iPhone is running on empty after you just charged it or why it is not responding to your touch, check the weather in your local area.

Word has leaked out from Apple’s headquarters that extreme cold temperatures are paralyzing smartphone operating systems.

If the temperature goes below the freezing mark, your smartphone will probably start acting funky. Apple wants you to shut down your iPhone immediately and store it in a warmer spot.

Very few of us knew about this before. Huge temperature swings (below 32 degrees and higher than 95) can harm the intelligence of your smartphone. Everything can go blank. Apple said they never had to warn Americans before, but there have been too many customers complaints now to remain silent.

The smartphone hasn’t been the only danger areas for Apple these days. Surprise, surprise. The signature Apple store on Fifth Avenue suffered a severe blow today because of the snowstorm. Cleaning crews operating snowblowers shattered one of the fifteen monolithic glass panels that make up the exterior of the iconic 32-foot glass cube. The structure looks like it is weeping.

Meryl Streep Can Do Anything

The minute I saw this TV segment on the Ellen Show I knew I had to post it on DigiDame. Most people believe that Meryl Streep is one of the best actresses of all time. To prove it, Ellen had Meryl audition for different character roles. Don’t miss the video. One day it will be legendary.

Love in the Age of the Internet

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Joaquin Phoenix

Many of my friends who have computer-related jobs are talking about Spike Jonze’s movie, “Her”. Most of them really enjoyed the movie because they can relate to having a personal relationship with a computer. Those folks who didn’t like the movie, in my opinion, probably resent the way computers have taken over our lives.

The movie explores the relationship between a male writer, Theodore, played by Joaquin Phoenix, and a “female” advanced operating system, Samantha, purchased and installed by Theodore on his computer. Samantha is voiced by Scarlett Johansson.

Eliot liked the movie a lot but felt it wasn’t cinematic enough. He said it would have made a great play. I don’t necessarily agree, but I was more focused on the dynamics of the relationship. Heartbroken after the end of his marriage, the writer becomes intrigued with the engaging female voice on his computer. She is bright, insightful, sensitive, and funny.

I didn’t see much difference between a man and a digital woman versus a man and a human woman. At first, everything is very passionate. Then the realities of life set in. That’s when the value of a relationship is truly measured.

While the Internet has provided all of us with a wealth of information and accessibility, I believe it has also made us much more selfish and self absorbed. “Her” touches on love in the digital arena where everyone’s favorite pastime is taking selfie photos.

However, you can’t convince me that the Internet is destroying the relationships of today. There are plenty of other distraction causing splits. Those who want to stay together make it work.

My favorite line from the movie is “Something happens every moment that changes us every moment.” That might not be the exact words but you get the drift. In the age of the Internet, we all are having difficulty identifying who we are. The world is changing way too fast.

New Opportunity for Writers

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Michael Connolly greeting a fan

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Lisa Unger and me

So here I am in Key West, Florida at a four-day literary seminar featuring some of the most famous and respected mystery writers in America. We are hanging with Michael Connelly, Lee ChildTess GerritsenThomas Cook, James Hall, Alafair Burke, and Lisa Unger. We even met the former U.S. poet laureate Billy Collins whom we now will follow. The only guy missing is Neil Plakcy, a personal friend who writes gay- or dog-oriented mystery novels. The theme of the Key West Literary Seminar is “The Dark Side” because most of the authors like to write about murder, hideous crimes, and troubled folks. Even Billy Collins has poems from the grave.

Eliot is one of the largest mystery book collectors in the country. We have books everywhere. He treats his books like he would a mistress. He puts them on display and stares at them every chance he gets. He also reads at least a book a week, sometimes two or three. That is why our daughter Whitney gifted the seminar to us. She knew Eliot would love meeting all of his favorite authors and I would pick up writing tips.

It was totally weird to meet 200 folks just like Eliot. They all live for the mystery, some fiction, some the real deal. While many people in the audience read e-books, they tend to prefer the paper kind. These are the folks who traveled from all over the country to be in attendance. I was really amazed how many single women in their 50s and 60s showed up on their own. Most of the audience was 50-plus. The real shocker was how many folks who are successful doctors, lawyers, teachers, and general business people want to be writers. Many have written unpublished books; others needed guidance. It was really inspiring to meet so many senior folks who still feel like they have a chance at a second career.

They are also the ones who feel that future generations will be just as interested in writing and reading as they are today. They don’t feel short forms of communication like texting and Twitter will kill the art of writing. They said that was the same question posed with the arrival of television, movies, video games, and iTunes.

There will always be many who want to read and write. Hopefully, with the advent of new delivery systems such as smartphones, tablets, and other portable devices, future writers will have greater opportunity to be published then ever before.

Google Contact Lens

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I still feel that Google is one of the most remarkable companies ever. Our lives have changed drastically because of the algorithm the company created. There is nothing you can’t look up in five seconds. In fact, there are certain folks who enjoy being fast-draw researchers. If someone in a crowd brings up a topic or a name that needs clarification, they have to be the first to retrieve the Google explanation. Okay by me.

Google is busy working on many other innovations that are going to be game changers. The self-driving Google automobile and Google Glasses are two inventions that we know about. Just yesterday I learned of one that will help save lives.

Google is testing a prototype constant lens that will help people manage their diabetes. Google said that the contact lens would measure glucose in tears continuously using a wireless chip and miniaturized glucose sensor. That would be a major breakthrough compared to current random tests.

The company explained how it would work: a chip and sensor would be embedded between two layers of soft contact lens material. A pinhole in the lens would allow fluid from the surface of the eye to seep into the sensor.

The company admitted that the development of this product is still in its very early stages, but they have every reason to believe that it will come to full fruition in a few years.

They never cease to amaze.