Monday 5 November 2018

Editor's Pick: It Is Well Past Time for Elections to Be Online


Rob Enderle
Nov 5, 2018 8:51 AM PT
Tomorrow a minority of those who are eligible will take time off, drive through traffic, and wait in lines to take part in one of the most artificially annoying obligations of United States citizenship: voting. Many who make that inconvenient trek will treat the process like a multiple choice test they haven't studied for, either voting the party line or guessing at the right answers. [More...]

More Picks:
Former White House CIO Theresa Payton: 'There Are Grave Concerns About Election Interference'
Theresa Payton, CEO of Fortalice Solutions, is one of the most influential experts on cybersecurity and IT strategy in the United States. She is an authority on Internet security, data breaches and fraud mitigation. She served as the first female chief information officer at the White House, overseeing IT operations for President George W. Bush and his staff. [More...]
The Resurrection of SoLoMo for Today's Brick-and-Click Shoppers
In the last decade or so, the inability or unwillingness to adapt has caused many businesses to succumb to a newer, more innovative company, or one that has re-thought how to do business in the digital age. For example, people who can remember browsing the aisles of Borders likely understand the irony of one of Amazon's first moves into the brick-and-mortar realm: book stores. [More...]
Feren OS Delivers Richer Cinnamon Flavor
Feren OS is a nice alternative to Linux Mint and an easy stepping stone to transition to Linux from Microsoft Windows or macOS. I am a long-time user of Linux Mint, but I am falling out of love with it. Mint is getting stale. That diagnosis started me thinking about a suitable replacement distro that runs the Cinnamon desktop with a bit more innovation and flare. [More...]
Digital Disruption Pathways
Digital transformation means a lot of things to different people, but if you do it right it should be virtually unique to your circumstance. The other day I caught up with Rip Gerber, CMO at Vlocity, the Salesforce partner that specializes in vertical industries like telecommunications and insurance. Of digital disruption, Gerber told me, "Nobody changes anything without a strong business case." [More...]
IT Resume Dos and Don'ts: Formatting for Readability
I'd like to share some common of the most common formatting problems that I see regularly. Of course, an IT resume requires more than great formatting. It requires well-written, targeted content, and a clear story of career progression. It needs to communicate your unique brand and value proposition. Still, if the formatting is off, that can derail the rest of the document. [More...]
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Tech News Flash


Tech News Flash: Monday -- November 5, 2018

TechNewsWorld -- All Tech - All The Time
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Headline Scan
It Is Well Past Time for Elections to Be Online
The Blurry Line Between Journalism and PR
IT Resume Dos and Don'ts: Formatting for Readability
Oracle, the Hardware Company
Changing Up Your Linux Distro
Human Knowledge to Escape Earth's Boundaries
Crisis in Tech: Who Can Save Companies When Execs Go Off the Rails?
Open Source Software: 20-Plus Years of Innovation
Former White House CIO Theresa Payton: There Are Grave Concerns About Election Interference
What Can We Expect From AI?

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Today's Story Highlights

It Is Well Past Time for Elections to Be Online
Tomorrow a minority of those who are eligible will take time off, drive
through traffic, and wait in lines to take part in one of the most
artificially annoying obligations of United States citizenship: voting.
Many who make that inconvenient trek will treat the process like a
multiple choice test they haven't studied for, either voting the party
line or guessing at the right answers.
http://www.technewsworld.com/story/85657.html

The Blurry Line Between Journalism and PR
The line between journalism and public relations can be fuzzy, and news
organizations have wrestled with that problem for some time. However,
that line recently has become more blurred than ever, with some
publications enlisting armies of nonprofessional scribes to satisfy an
insatiable appetite for content. It's easy to understand why the problem
has mushroomed.
http://www.technewsworld.com/story/85658.html

IT Resume Dos and Don'ts: Formatting for Readability
I'd like to share some common of the most common formatting problems
that I see regularly. Of course, an IT resume requires more than great
formatting. It requires well-written, targeted content, and a clear
story of career progression. It needs to communicate your unique brand
and value proposition. Still, if the formatting is off, that can derail
the rest of the document.
http://www.technewsworld.com/story/85655.html

Oracle, the Hardware Company
For all of the dazzle of its rapidly evolving software portfolio, which
includes a self-monitoring and self-patching database that also
configures itself, as well as numerous cloud applications, Oracle has
begun showing its credibility as a hardware vendor. Hardware has
commoditized and will not return to the prominence it had in the early
days of the tech era.
http://www.technewsworld.com/story/85650.html

Changing Up Your Linux Distro
It's common for Linux users to hop between distributions and survey the
field, and I recently reached a point where I had to seriously rethink
the one I was using most of the time. Between hardware compatibility
issues with my old standby and some discouraging missteps with other go-
to choices, I felt the time had come to reassess my pool of preferred
distributions and repopulate it from scratch.
http://www.technewsworld.com/story/85652.html

Human Knowledge to Escape Earth's Boundaries
SpaceChain has teamed with the Arch Mission Foundation to use open
source technology to launch an ambitious project involving the storage
of large data sets in spacecraft and on other planets. Arch Mission will
load large quantities of data onto SpaceChain's satellite vehicles with
the eventual aim of storing data on other planets. The joint effort will
help launch the Earth Library.
http://www.technewsworld.com/story/85648.html

Crisis in Tech: Who Can Save Companies When Execs Go Off the Rails?
"Too many digital leaders have lost their minds," Kara Swisher recently
wrote, citing some frightening examples of poor leadership. She pointed
to the solution adopted by Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff, who hired a
chief ethical officer -- but I think that would just repeat the mistake
we made with chief risk officers around a decade ago. The risk managers
had responsibility but no real authority.
http://www.technewsworld.com/story/85644.html

Open Source Software: 20-Plus Years of Innovation
Open source led to a new software development and distribution model
that offered an alternative to proprietary software. No single event
takes the prize for starting the technology revolution. However, Feb. 3,
1998, is one of the more significant dates. On that day, Christine
Peterson, a futurist and lecturer in the field of nanotechnology, coined
the "open source" term.
http://www.technewsworld.com/story/85646.html

Former White House CIO Theresa Payton: There Are Grave Concerns About Election Interference
Theresa Payton, CEO of Fortalice Solutions, is one of the most
influential experts on cybersecurity and IT strategy in the United
States. She is an authority on Internet security, data breaches and
fraud mitigation. She served as the first female chief information
officer at the White House, overseeing IT operations for President
George W. Bush and his staff.
http://www.technewsworld.com/story/85641.html

What Can We Expect From AI?
Fear mongering about killer robots and the recent deaths connected with
Uber and Tesla autonomous vehicles have rekindled concerns about AI in
the machines around us. We are well beyond answering Alan Turing's
question, "can machines think?" There is now good reason to ask how we
should think of AI, and what we should expect from it. There have been
phenomenal advances in just the past few years.
http://www.technewsworld.com/story/85640.html

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The Morning After: 5G iPhones?

Engadget Email Newsletter

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It's Monday, November 05, 2018.

Hey, good morning! You look fabulous.

Good morning! Your 5G iPhone is unlikely to appear until 2020, an asteroid mining company gets some help from a new Blockchain owner, and drones get smarter at search and rescue.

It's a match made in 2018.
 

Blockchain company buys asteroid mining firm Planetary Resources
 

Blockchain company buys asteroid mining firm Planetary Resources<br />   

Planetary Resources just took an unusual turn on its path to asteroid mining -- selling itself to a blockchain company founded by Ethereum’s Joe Lubin. Planetary Resources' Brian Israel said that Blockchain was a "natural solution" for commerce in space and an ideal way for people from various countries to coordinate efforts. It also adds some crucial funding to the space mining company, which had recently laid off employees. 

Intel's 2019 hardware supposedly runs too hot.
 

Apple’s first 5G iPhone will reportedly be ready by 2020
 

Apple’s first 5G iPhone will reportedly be ready by 2020<br />   

A Fast Company source claims Apple intends to use an Intel 5G modem in its 2020 batch of iPhones. Apple apparently had issues with older Intel hardware, but it’s not turning back to Qualcomm any time soon. The takeaway is that the newest iPhones may not be ready for 5G when it launches soon on major carriers globally. But given that coverage is going to be modest at the start, iPhone owners might not be missing out on too much.
 

They'd use the same technology that guides self-driving cars.
 

Drone fleets could find lost hikers in forests without using GPS
 

Drone fleets could find lost hikers in forests without using GPS<br />   

Drones can be put to work as some very effective search-and-rescue tools, but forests are hard as they interfere with GPS. MIT has a clever solution: use the same technology that guides self-driving cars. The drones use LIDAR to map forests without any use of GPS, then create a 2D map that also includes the orientations of trees, making it easy to tell where the robotic aircraft have already been as they search through a specified area. Search-and-rescue teams could then merge maps from an entire drone fleet and comb large swaths of forest in record time. There are limitations. The current system still needs an external ground station to merge maps, and it would need an object recognition system to identify people. MIT envisions future versions sharing maps when they come in contact, though, and object recognition is entirely realistic. 
 

But wait, there's more...

1. YouTube might come to Nintendo Switch this week

2. 'Fortnite' ends Halloween event with an in-game bang

3. Sears hopes to sell its home improvement business to Service.com

4. The best vacuum cleaners

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