The Secret to Happiness

My friend Carlos Alayon recently shared this video with me. I am not sure why he sent it. Maybe he thinks I need to be reminded of what true happiness is. Regardless, I watched it. The video has a special message that is very appropriate on Christmas Day.

Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!

iPhone Panic Attacks

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I misplace my iPhone several times a day. This has been going on for years, but lately it has gotten much worse. Each time I lose it, I go into a complete panic attack. I start to imagine my immediate life without it. First, I have to admit to Eliot that I lost my cell. That turns into one of those “You need to get your eyes fixed” moments. The eye doctor told me that in the next few years I should plan on having a cataract operation. They are slowly getting worse. I plan on doing it in the Spring of next year.

My cataracts have nothing to do with my ability to find my iPhone. It’s not a sight thing. It’s a mental thing. I am so preoccupied with work that I am capable of leaving my cell in the console of my car, in a ladies restroom by the sink, or on the table at a restaurant. My girlfriend Mindi suggested I get some sort of a holster so my iPhone would have to be returned to the same place after each use. That might be a good solution for the infrequent user, but not for me. I look at my IPhone at least 40 times an hour (a job necessity), so the chances of me putting my iPhone back in the same place after each use is highly unlikely.

Most of the time, I place my iPhone in the side pocket of my handbag. One would think it would be secure there. Not true. The contents of my handbag shift around and my iPhone gets lost in the crease of the lining or it falls into the center area. In either case, it takes a minute or two to locate my cell. A full panic attack occurs when I think of all my personal information in the hands of someone else, even though my iPhone is password protected. I tell myself that most of the younger folks know how to decode digital locks.

I have been especially miserable thinking about the trouble I would cause myself if I lost my iPhone during the CES convention next month in Vegas. My friend Steve Greenberg suggested the Wallet TrackR as a possible solution. I just got my hands on one a few hours ago, so I don’t know if my troubles are totally gone, but I am cautiously optimistic.

The $29 Wallet TrackR is being billed as a leash between my handbag and my mobile phone. This may be just what I need. The Bluetooth-enabled wafer of plastic has already been stored in my handbag. Whenever the TrackR and my iPhone get separated, both the cell and the TrackR start beeping.

The companion TrackR app on my cell also takes a GPS snapshot of its location the moment of separation. That’s cool. I also have the option to tap a button within the app to make my handbag “ring” in case I’m looking for it around the house or in the dark. The technology works both ways. The TrackR works on iPhone 4s and later, iPad retina and Later, iTouch, Samsung Galaxy S3, Galaxy Note 2, Galaxy S4, and Android 4.3 Devices.

Marc de Hond’s Journey

Marc de Hond, my 35-year old Dutch friend, just sent me a 20-minute documentary that he wrote, produced and directed about a friend he met when they both were in a rehabilitation center in Amsterdam 11 years earlier. Marc is paralyzed from the chest down. Thanks to his very capable arms and hands, he now lives an independent life. His friend Hans is severely injured and cannot feel anything from his neck down. They hadn’t seen each other in over a decade. Marc had often thought of Hans. The short film is about their reunion.

English subtitles are available by just clicking the CC (closed caption) on the bottom righthand side of the screen. Marc recorded this on an iPhone 5, a Canon EOS 600D (DSLR) camera with sound, a Zoom H1, a Sennheiser MKE 400, and a Rode VC1.

Marc had been a deejay for an Amsterdam radio station, the goalkeeper of his soccer team, and one of the youngest Internet millionaires in Amsterdam as of the sale of his company, Hatchoo, when he was 22. A few months after the sale, a tumor was discovered on Marc’s spinal cord. Despite a risky operation, the mass was successfully removed. During the first few hours after the surgery, the night nurse failed to check the incision and a serious bleed was not picked up in time. The results were disastrous. When Marc woke up the following morning, he was paralyzed from the chest down. Doctors told him he would never walk again. In the rehabilitation center, the staff tried to prepare him for a new life in a wheelchair. He refused to accept that diagnosis and was determined to walk again at all costs. After months of meditation, training, and perseverance, there were some signs of improvement but not enough to make him walk again. Marc will fill you in on the rest in the video.

In his book Perseverance (“Kracht in Dutch), Marc writes candidly about the impact of his paralysis, including on love, sex, and his sense of self-worth. Marc is a frequent TED speaker. I’ve known Marc for almost 30 years. His father Maurice was a client for many years and today remains a close friend.

Boogie Your Way to Paper Free

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I love making “to do” lists. Day after day, I write down all the things I have to do. I usually write them in a spiral notebook because I can quickly jot them down. If I tried to create a list on my iPhone or iPad Mini, it would take me forever. Simply put, writing a list by hand is just faster for me than trying to create it digitally.

One would think that there would be an app that would allow you to write notes by hand and then somehow have them digitally filed in iTunes, Evernote, and even email. As far as we are concerned, having good files is the first step to great success.

A company called ImprovElectronics understands the need to hand write notes but is a strong advocate of a no-paper society. That’s why they developed the Boogie Board Sync, a tablet that accepts handwritten notes and then automatically converts them to digital files.

The Boogie Board is a 9.7-inch LCD eWriter that comes in a variety of models. None of the Boogie Boards use paper or pens. You can even use your finger to write and draw. The Boogie Board Sync 9.7 eWriter saves or transfers written files to a computer, tablet, smartphone, or other mobile device wirelessly via Bluetooth.

The company claims that one Boogie Board eWriter will save over 50,000 sheets of paper. Not bad!

The Earthquake App

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Every time I visit my family in Los Angeles, I think about earthquakes. When they hear my concerns, they say they fear the streets of New York City with the murders, muggings, and, the latest rage, the knockout game. For those of you who don’t know what the knockout game is, let me explain. For the last year or so, gangs of teens have been roaming the streets looking for older people (that’s us) to hit in the head. The goal of the game is to knock someone over. If a person goes down, you win. Lovely isn’t it?

Regardless of the crime challenges in NYC, I still find the potential of an earthquake very overwhelming. That’s why I became very interested in any kind of app for my iPhone that would notify me or act as advisor during an earthquake.

While there are a number of options, I found the earthquake notification app from the Red Cross to be very appealing. You can receive alerts and notifications, learn how to prepare your family and home, and let others know you are safe, even if the power and cell connections are out.

I’m getting this app on my next trip to an earthquake zone. All you have to do is access the Red Cross from a mobile phone. Call REDCROSS or (**73327677) for the link to download the quake alert app to your iPhone or Android device. You can also download directly from the iTunes or Google Play app stores.

I think for peace of mind this app is good because it lets you know what to do before, during, and after an earthquake, even if there is no data connectivity. I would also want to know immediately what the shaking impact was in my area and that of my loved ones. With the Red Cross app, you can let family and friends know you are okay via Facebook, Twitter, email, and text.

The app also gives you updates on the nearest Red Cross shelters in your area and provides a Toolkit with a strobe light, flashlight, and audible alert functions.

Life is strange. Some people probably think I am being overdramatic with my earthquake thoughts, while others simply like the idea of being prepared. It is your choice.

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Manual versus Digital

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One of the hottest tech items for this holiday season is something that I can’t imagine anyone would want. First of all, I have little interest in anything that is related to the kitchen. Secondly, who would spend $150 for a gadget that does something you can easily do by hand?

Nevertheless, many tech writers, including Dain Binder, have cited the new SmartShopper Grocery List Organizer as a very popular Christmas item this year. The SmartShopper has an intuitive interface so all you have to do is push the record button, say the name of the item you want, and then all items get placed into categories. The SmartShopper has 2,500 items in its library.

The voice-activated SmartShopper is being touted as a tremendous time saver. I don’t understand how, but it must be the case. Writers and reviewers claim that if you use the SmartShopper you don’t forget a thing! If that is worth $150, then this gadget is for you.

Rosetta Stone Never Worked for Me

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I am desperate to learn how to speak Spanish. A lot of my friends in Miami speak Spanish because their parents and grandparents come from South America, Cuba, and Puerto Rico. I get so envious when I hear them switch from English to Spanish and back again.

I often think to myself that those who speak several languages are really smarter than everyone else. Of course that is not true; it just feels that way. People who only speak one language sometimes make up the excuse that everyone speaks English so what is the point of learning a second one. I think it is more about the difficulty of learning and retaining.

People swear by Rosetta Stone. It never worked for me. Now Apple has recognized Duolingo as their favorite free iPhone App of the Year. The app is also available on Android. I am going to give this one a whirl. The app has been around 12 months and already has received 10 million downloads. That is huge.

The app was developed at Carnegie Mellon University where computer science teacher Luis von Ahn and student Severin Hacker thought there should be a way to use smartphones to learn new languages.

Duolingo offers six languages: Spanish, French, German, Italian, English, and Portuguese. Pictures and videos are used for association purposes. The app is like a game so it’s fun. That should do it. I am starting today. I will report back.

Your Body Will Be Looking for New Surfaces

Remember the name Pranav Mistry. He is a 31-year-old Indian computer scientist who is leading the world in gestural interaction. To learn more about gestural interaction, please watch the video above that was taped a few years ago. You will think it is all science fiction. That couldn’t be further from the truth. Mistry’s “SixthSense” wearable technology is going to allow you to use natural hand gestures to project digital content onto other surfaces, like walls and physical objects around you. “SixthSense” frees information from the confines of digital devices by seamlessly projecting onto your physical environment.

Mistry is the head of the Think Tank Team and Director of Research at Samsung where he works on a wide variety of topics including wearable computing, augmented reality, ubiquitous computing, gestural interaction, artificial intelligence, machine vision, collective intelligence, and robotics. He is best known for his work on SixthSense and Samsung Galaxy Gear.

Everyone is waiting for the next big thing. This could be it. Did you ever see anything so remarkable? Okay, maybe a baby being born, but that’s it!

Un-Appy Habits

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I’m not going to chew gum anymore.
I’m not going to chew gum anymore.
I’m not going to chew gum anymore.

I can’t break the habit of chewing gum. It makes me feel productive. This is a big stretch but I guess you can compare it to someone who runs. Many people run because they expel a lot of pent-up energy and they get a great sense of accomplishment. Every time I chew gum, I feel like I am making my motor run. I like the feeling of biting down on something that needs to be kneaded.

I know I sound like a crazy person. Do crazy people chew gum? I need to break this habit. I had been telling my friends about my dilemma and one of them recommended the app called Lift. The app helps you accomplish changes in your life.

Lift is designed to solve tough problems, keep you motivated, and develop new positive habits while ditching old bad ones. The app explains itself this way:

Lift tracks and display graphs to show users how many times the habit was performed, over the past weeks / months. To gain ‘Momentum’ on the app, you need to perform and check-in a habit at least 3 times a week. ‘Momentum’ is used as a yardstick to measure how near you are from making the habit your habit.

 

Additionally, the app comes with a support system, in the form of users community. The community provides encouragement (or a healthy level of peer pressure), as they can give you ‘props’ (likes) for your check ins. Props, as a form of peer recognition, can fuel motivation. Lift users are encouraged to join a challenge. The challenge is led by a “Lift coach.” Other like-minded individuals also join the challenge. Then you check in every day and you all create the new habit, or stop the old habit, together.

It’s as simple as that. I will let you know if I ever stop chewing gum.

Early Adopters

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The digital market has a brand new audience and many grandparents are pretty upset about it. Infants are expected be the next big target for iPads. Fisher-Price has just introduced the “Newborn-to-Toddler Apptivity Seat for iPad®.” It will retail for $80.

Please don’t throw a hissy fit. No one is suggesting that you give a baby an iPad instead of quality time with the family. All this product is supposed to be is a sensible alternative to a TV set where you don’t necessarily control the content.

You can’t negate the fact that children today are growing up in a digital world. A Fisher-Price spokeswoman told me an iPad should be no different than a toy. Everything in moderation.