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Tech-Trends-Final1.jpg 1,300×2,588 pixels. Product. Watch the Podio video You can work with everyone on Podio: with your co-workers or with your clients in dedicated work spaces. In your free Employee Network your entire company can communicate, anyone with a company email-address can join. Podio Apps add structure to your work, with a social activity stream featuring comments, likes and status updates. Get started for free Project ManagementDiscover the easy way to run projects.

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World's first robotic LEGO band makes its debut. An Italian music producer created the Toa Mata Band out of tiny robotic LEGO figures programmed to play a variety of instruments Image Gallery (10 images) We've seen some impressive creations that use LEGO pieces to make music in the past, from a drum machine sequencer to a Star Wars-themed barrel organ. More recently though, Italian music producer Giuseppe Acito decided to take the inevitable next step and build a fully working band using the little plastic bricks. The "Toa Mata Band" is made up of several tiny robotic LEGO figures programmed to play a variety of instruments. View all Each "member" of the band is constructed from LEGO Bionicle pieces rigged with rubber bands and pulleys. So far, Acito has used a range of different synthesizers and drum machines, including some vintage equipment. For now, Acito has made just this one prototype, but he hopes to expand the project much further in the future.

Source: Opificio Sonico About the Author Post a CommentRelated Articles. Social. The future of customer experience. ‎news.citrixonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/GoToAssist-Leading-Geeks-New-Client-Relationships.pdf. En ski à 60 km/h dans le centre-ville. Amethys - communication & graphic design // amethys 3D - technologic solutions.

Volvo - jagrullar.se - Sveriges Volvoforum. Europe’s luxury goods market feeding Asian appetites. The ever-expanding appetite of consumers in emerging countries for Prada shoes and Hermes bags will be the primary driver--and supporter-- of the European luxury goods sector, according to analyst report from research firm Sanford C. Bernstein. The European luxury goods sector is forecast to grow between 6 percent and 7 percent over the next five years, reported the Business of Fashion. Some 38 percent of that growth is expected to come from emerging markets, according to the report. When you include purchases made by consumers from these markets while traveling, that figure skyrockets to 60 percent of all projected European luxury sector growth.

The growth in Asia has already left a mark on high fashion manufacturers. That has prompted some businesses to raise their prices in Europe in hopes of bridging the price gap. Photo: Prada store in Hong Kong by Wikicommons. Kids top list for driver distractions according to new study. A new study that shows children cause 12 percent of the driver distraction on the road probably has a few carmakers scrambling to come up with some new technology to help address the issue.

Amid growing concerns over the danger of cell phone usage when driving, a group of Australian researchers found that children are 12 times more distracting to the driver than talking on a cell phone while at the wheel, as reported by ABC News. In what is believed to be the first study of its kind, the report found that the average parent takes their eyes off the road for three minutes and 22 seconds during a 16-minute trip, according to ABC.

The 2011 study, which recorded families with kids ages 1 to 8 in the car, found that the drivers did the following when kids were in the car as highlighted by Cars.Com: A spokesperson for VW said there are no plans for developing the technology in the near future. Farfetched? We’d be interested in hearing some of your thoughts on it all. Home - Opera Solutions. 94% of U.S. Wineries Are On Facebook, 73% on Twitter. 94% of American wineries surveyed by ABLE Social Media Marketing are on Facebook and 73% are on Twitter. The study, done in December 2011, shows that American wineries are active in social media and that it's producing results. 47% of US wineries said that Facebook helps them generate sales (72% sell wine on their website).

While this study focuses on wineries only, companies in other industries should take note of these results. The study by ABLE covered both American and French wineries, but the French statistics aren't as impressive. For example only 53% of French wineries surveyed are on Facebook, compared to 94% of US wineries. Facebook and/or Twitter? Drilling down into the Facebook statistics some more, 50% of American wineries (but only 18% of French wineries) have more than 500 fans on Facebook.

ABLE identified two reasons for the success of American wineries on Facebook: Aside: 3.8% of American wineries listed "my children" as their Facebook managers. Other Social Networks. Social Networks Reveal Structure (And Weaknesses) of Businesses. One of the unintended consequences of social networks is that they tend to reveal more about an individual than the information he or she has posted online. That’s because the structure of the network–the links set up between friends and acquaintances–is itself an important source of data.

For example, the principle that people are more likely to be friends with others who are like them immediately leads to a number of predictions that have been proven correct, such as the idea that if most of your friends have criminal records, you are more likely to have one too (or more likely to have one soon). Today, Michael Fire and pals at Ben Gurion University in Israel take this idea a step further. These guys have used publicly available information on social networks to reconstruct the management structure of entire companies and to identify shortcomings in the way these companies operate. The technique is straightforward. Of course, business intelligence has other potential users. No, this isn’t a scene from Minority Report. This trash can is stalking you. Thursday, when Ars detailed a distributed DIY Stalking network that spied on mobile Wi-Fi users, several readers—such as this one and this one—said the article overstated the real-world threat.

We disagreed then, but we're even more convinced of the potential for abuse following reports of the deployment in London of trash cans that track the unique hardware identifier of every Wi-Fi enabled smartphone that passes by. Renew, the London-based marketing firm behind the smart trash cans, bills the Wi-Fi tracking as being "like Internet cookies in the real world" (see the promotional video below). In a press release, it boasts of the data-collection prowess of the cans' embedded Renew "ORB" technology, which captures the unique media access control (MAC) address of smartphones that belong to passersby. "The consolidated data of the beta testing highlights the significance of the Renew ORB technology as a powerful tool for corporate clients and retailers," the Renew press release states.

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