Personal Electronics to the Rescue

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Even though my entire life is immersed in electronics, I did have a digital awakening today that took me completely by surprise.

I am very much aware that many younger people own and are addicted to a smartphone or tablet. What I didn’t realize is how much people our age rely on them too.

I got a taste of it in the surgical waiting room today at Lenox Hill Hospital. Eliot had a hernia operation very early this morning, and I spent eight hours with the same group of people waiting for our loved ones to come out of surgery. Unlike other experiences like this when people were uptight and tense during “the wait” period, I noticed a strange calm and Zen-like atmosphere in the room.

Then I realized the difference. Everyone was glued to a mobile device. And I mean everyone. From children who came to Lenox Hill with their game devices to 90-year-olds who were reading a book on Kindle or Nook, everyone came armed with their favorite electronics to pass the time. It was interesting to see who was using what, and what programs captured their time.

I snuck around to see what was going on. Some were on Facebook while others were playing word games, reading online newspapers and magazines, sending emails, or yakking on their cells. Whatever it was, they were absorbed. Not a head bobbed up for hours. And when it did, it was to go to the bathroom or to get something to eat. Once that was done, straight back to the electronics.

I couldn’t help noticing the huge difference in the temperament of the crowd. Most of the usual pent-up anxiety was gone. They waited patiently for the surgeons to return from the operating room. I even witnessed something I never saw before. One gal was talking on the phone when the doctor who operated on her mother appeared. She actually kept him waiting while she finished her conversation. I thought to myself “Wow, what is that doctor thinking? Maybe he has seen this before.”

For better or worse, personal electronics have put many of us in our own zone. Like everything else in life, we have to find a balance that makes sense. I have a feeling it will take care of itself.

Eliot is feeling good tonight. I hope the rest of his post-op goes well. Thank you for all of your calls and good wishes.

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TV Audiences Now Get a Voice

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I just had a discussion with my girlfriend Marilyn about reading user reviews on the Internet. She advised me that she started writing reviews on Trip Advisor because she thought it was very important to share information. She also reads the reviews of others to get a realistic opinion of what to expect on future vacations.

I didn’t tell her at the time that I found her comment very timely because we got involved in another conversation, but I made a mental note of what she said. Marilyn’s remark represents a new trend in the 50-plus crowd. We are all reading and relying on reviews more then ever now that the Internet allows us to express ourselves more. I have friends who will not go to a restaurant, a show, a movie, or on a trip without reading all the reviews from people who went there first.

I used to hear people referring to Consumer Reports all the time because of their expertise. Now Internet users don’t want that. They want to hear from others like themselves. They don’t want anything colored. They want the pedestrian viewpoint.

The good news is that the review opportunity is being extended to television shows. While some sites may offer a taste of television reviews, the master of movie reviews, Rotten Tomatoes, just announced that its social movie site, Flixster, is launching TV Zone. The first reviews will be for prime time scripted TV series.

The official announcement says:

“The parameters for a good score will be similar to the site’s movie rules: to be “Certified Fresh” a series must have 60% positive reviews, and the same cutoffs apply. But film and TV are different and there will be growing pains on how to apply the site’s processes to the TV side.”

At launch, the site will provide both professional and Flixster-user coverage. I hope everyone takes advantage of this new opportunity. We can now all be TV reviewers at our age. Who ever thought?

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Extreme Staircases

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Just because we are a little older doesn’t mean we have to give up the adventure in our lives. In fact, this summer when Eliot and I found ourselves 2,000 feet above the Douro River amidst the most gorgeous winding vineyards in Portugal, I thought, I’m glad I didn’t miss this.

The more I travel, the more I feel like we have a lot of living left to do. It makes me feel as if life is going to go on forever. Yes, I know the realities of my day dreams, but as long as we are healthy enough, I want to go, go, go.

From time to time, I scour the Internet for places I would like to see. I have little interest in resort-time vacations. I want adventure. I am learning to use sites like Jetsetter (member discounts), Kayak (good airfares), Hotel.com (accommodations), Yapta (travel fares), Trip Advisor (hotel reservations and walking tours), and Home Exchange (home swapping).

I just came across several destinations that are so not me, but boy would l like to give them a chance. I love setting my eyes on something I have never seen before and looks like one of the wonders of the world. When I first saw this on The Huffington Post, I couldn’t wait to share with you.

These are destinations with extreme staircases. I don’t do well on stairs because I get a slight vertigo. If I can hold on to Eliot or someone else who volunteers a lending hand, I may be able to conquer. Take a look at the photos below. For the entire story, click here. All I want to do is pack my bag.

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Don’t stop now. See the other spots.

Every Airplane Ride Is Like a Maiden Voyage for Me

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I am usually on an airplane once a month, sometimes more often. I have been flying since I was eighteen years old. If you do the math, you’ll figure out I have flown hundreds of times.

Yet, each flight is as scary to me as my first flight in 1966 when my cousin Debbie had to fly across the United States from Los Angeles to get me so I could go back with her to spend time with my West Coast family. I refused to fly alone.

Now I prefer to fly alone so I can concentrate on every little detail. There have been times when I’ve thought the engines had stopped or I’ve smelled a fire. If the flight attendants congregate in one area, I want to eavesdrop to know what’s going on. I also examine every person who enters the plane. If a person looks suspicious to me, I watch their every move. The worst for me is when someone gets up in flight to get something from a piece of luggage from the overhead. I worry about what they are reaching for and does it have a trigger.

I was very surprised when I saw a recent article in The New York Times from columnist David Pogue that talked about the mysteries of air travel. At first I wondered why a personal tech writer was covering air travel, but then Pogue carefully explained that technology and the travel industry are getting more and more intertwined. Find out why air turbulence and lightening won’t crash a plane, and whether or not your mobile devices really interfere with navigation. There are lots of other areas covered. Here is your chance to learn more.

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Hanging with Hung Liu

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Over a decade ago, when our daughter Whitney was attending Carnegie Mellon University, she gave us a tour of the artsy side of Pittsburgh. We went to a glass blowing factory, the Andy Warhol Museum, the Pittsburgh Botanical Garden, and several contemporary art galleries. The minute Eliot and I walked into the Michael Berger Gallery, we saw a triptych that we fell in love with. It totally wasn’t the style we usually pick. There was just something about the colors on these paintings that were so brilliant, we just felt completely energized.

We bought them on the spot, shipped them home, hung them in our New York dining room, and went on with our lives. Two years ago, we were walking through Art Basel Miami and spotted a series of paintings in the Nancy Hoffman Gallery area that looked just like the one we had at home.

Nancy Hoffman told us that  Hung Liu was now considered the greatest Chinese painter in the United States because of her connection to the culture and history of China. While she was born in Changhun China in 1948, she spent most of her adult life in Oakland, California where she heads up the art department at Mills College. Her paintings are exhibited in the finest galleries all over the U.S., as well as the top museums in more than twenty cities.

Nancy has kept us up to date on Hung Liu’s progress through email blasts and Facebook. A few weeks ago, we received an email notification that the Nancy Hoffman Gallery was going to have a showing of Hung Liu’s new work. Eliot and I agreed we would go, hoping to meet the artist herself.

We did. We met Hung and her writer husband, Jeff Kelly. We found out that the paintings we own are some of the more important pieces that account for her notoriety. Liu is known for her large, drippy oil paintings of Chinese historical photographs, many of which are of young prostitutes or war refugees.

Thanks to Google, Facebook, and email, we will be closely watching the career of Hung Liu.

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Our posse with Hung’s husband Jeff Kelly.

Scoop Interview with First New iPhone Customer

Today marks one week and one day since the line started in front of the Apple store on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan. Enthusiasts from near and far wanted to be the first on line to buy the two new iPhone models being offered. That means there are human beings walking around this Earth who have the freedom to stop whatever they are doing on a day-to-day basis to stand in line for 15 days just so they can say they bought the first units sold at that particular location.

“You got that right,” said Brian from Brooklyn, who was actually napping when a group of us strolled by him this past Wednesday night around 11:30 pm. I thought he was sound asleep, but as we approached he quickly got himself assembled for a DigiDame interview.

Brian was very upfront. Part of this whole experience was to get interviewed. Sorry Brian, this interview is only for DigiDame. We are no Huff Post. He didn’t care. “I’m just getting warmed up,” he announced. I asked him every question a mother would want to know. He answered everything as if I were a close friend. As he spoke, I was once again reminded that most young people today are willing to share openly and don’t have the inhibitions of many of us older folks. “Take me like I am,” is his philosophy, even though he was polite as heck. When I asked what his mother thought about his escapade, he gleefully answered, “I am buying two iPhones, one for me and one for her.”

What a smart young man. Brian’s interview is above. Click here for more details on the wait.

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The Future of TV Viewing

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Here are three different wide angle views of sporting events that you may see on future TV sets. This panoramic angle is also perfect for concerts, musicals, stage productions, talk shows, you name it.

I just had to let you see this. I know some of you are going to say this is impossible. Save your breath on me. Tell Panasonic. That is the company that is developing a new type of TV set that is going to change TV viewing forever. They are going to provide a panoramic-type TV set. They have an eye-stretching video camera that is going to capture the wide-angle output.

Panasonic is using a combination of four high-definition lenses to capture a 160-degree field of vision. The picture quality produced is at 720p, and the cameras move simultaneously to pan and tilt. The Japanese TV manufacturer said the new TVs will be priced at half the cost of other options that provide so-called panoramic views. When Panasonic introduces its revolutionary unit, nothing will compare, according to our sources.

Panasonic explains “The unit divides its panoramic picture into four quadrants, with each camera capturing the action of one quadrant. Before the final picture can be realized, a computer stitches the four parts together to produce one video feed.” That makes sense.

The unnamed camera/TV system is just a prototype for now. Panasonic is thrilled to be first in providing entire football fields in full detail. Right now the system is on tour at Sydney’s Integrate 2013 electronics show. Can’t wait to read the reviews.

For a more technical explanation click here.

Tap, Tap, Save and Share the Last 60 Seconds

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Ever since I can remember, I have wanted to record everything I heard because there were gems that I wanted to save and share with others. Anything from someone giving me an idea to an inspirational quote, travel directions, phone numbers, addresses, email, a book recommendation, new business leads, a creative concept, a to-do list, blog subject reminders, and people to call.

You would think that I would carry around a recorder or a pen, pencil, and paper. It doesn’t work. Half the time I can’t find them in my handbag (I even tried a smaller bag), and by the time I do, I forgot what was said.

I am very excited about the Kapture always-on wristband. The website explains:

“The band records audio in a 60-second buffered loop. The buffered loop continuously overwrites itself until the user taps the device to save a clip of the previous 60 seconds. The saved file is downloaded to your smartphone where the duration can be shortened and you can name, tag, filter, and even share it.”

All you have to do is: Talk. Tap. Share. If you don’t tap, it won’t save.

A Kapture app has been designed to be the user interface (UI) for the wearable device.

I don’t know about you, but this is going to be my favorite piece of jewelry. I have so many uses for it my head is spinning. I hope it will help me be much more productive.

Synchronized Running


It’s amazing! The digital world thinks of everything. If there is a void, they fill it. Such is the case for those who love to read a book when they run on a treadmill. I tried to do it several times and immediately got nauseous.

That’s when I switched to audio books. It just made more sense. I found it very enjoyable. Much to my surprise, a lot of folks don’t agree with me. They want to read a book and see the text. That’s that. End of story.

Weartrons to the rescue. The young company has invented a gadget called Run-n-Read that miraculously allows you to read text on a tablet while you are running.

Picture this, the text bounces with you. It stays in sync with your eyes. I know this sounds impossible but it works. Watch the video above if you need proof.

A tiny clip-on device attaches to your headband, shirt, or wherever. The device works with an e-reader app on your tablet to track the movements of your head and shoulders. An explanation from the company says, “Keeping the text bouncing in sync with your eyes, the system essentially makes reading while running in a stationary position as easy as reading while standing motionless.”

I haven’t tried it but I am eager to. Testimonials on the video imply that it works. Turning pages is easy too. All you have to do is tap the device once for a forward page turn and twice to page backwards.

In addition to its reader features, the system also doubles as a fitness tracker. Basically, it counts steps and provides other fitness data.

Available on Android and iOS devices, the software is offered as a free tool to be used with the clip-on component. You can be one of the first to report back on it. The Run-n-Read is currently available to early adopters for $55 on the company’s fundraising website.

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All The Books You Can Read in a Month

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Eric Schneider and I met 47 years ago at Fairchild Publications where I worked for many years. September 9th is my work anniversary. Today, Eric and his wife Gail live a few blocks away from us in South Beach. He is a successful publisher. We continue pursuing our passions. Now for today’s post.
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It was just a matter of time before someone created the same kind of service for books as we have for movies. A new startup called Oyster Books, located steps away from the Ace Hotel in Manhattan, a huge gathering place for the digital community, has been created to offer owners of mobile devices the ability to access countless books on a monthly subscription basis.

As soon as you join the Oyster club, you have unlimited access to a library of 100,000 titles for $9.95 a month. Every genre is available, and the list of titles is growing rapidly. Most of the big name publishers have joined forces with Oyster: Harper Collins, Houghton Mifflin, Worman, Melville House, Rodale, Open Road Media, Rosetta Books, and F+W Media.

Oyster is being smart about its rollout. Instead of letting the company’s servers get overwhelmed with orders, Oyster is pacing itself. I signed up a few days ago and I am still waiting for my official acceptance.

Once I am in, I will be able to see what my friends are reading, unless they activate a privacy option. I look forward to having Oyster learn my likes and dislikes so I can receive recommendations on other books I might appreciate. It’s always rewarding to learn about a new book. I like that I’ll be in the know about certain titles and able to put them on my “to read” list. It ensures many hours of satisfying entertainment.

Oyster was co-founded by three self-proclaimed technologists and bookworms, Eric Stromberg, Andrew Brown, and Willem Van Lancker. Learn more about their passion for books here.

It looks like we all better get used to the idea of “access versus ownership” when it comes to music, reading, housing, and transportation. As successful business models like Spotify, Über, Airbnb, and Netflix have demonstrated, this is the wave of the future.