Saturday, May 08, 2010
Friday, July 17, 2009

I just got my invite to Google Voice that I had registered for previously. This is a great service that I have been eagerly waiting for. Google has gotten it precisely right on this one, and it represents the future of VOIP as I see it.
Right now they have great integration in the offering. In short, Google Voice fits nicely with most users who have a limited need for a home phone, with their predominant needs met through a mobile phone. It allows for your calls to be simultaneously rung to any number of mobiles, and transcription of unanswered calls into text messages. Think "visual voicemail"-like messages you would see on the iPhone, except with the voice transcribed into text, with the option to download the audio. Plus, its got a neat feature that allows you to listen-in while a message is being left, and you can choose to pick up if you want. (Reminds me of old-school answering machines - remember those?)
I will spare the complete run down here, and instead direct you to www.google.com/voice where you can explore all the features.
You should all register, and hopefully you will get an invite soon. Best of all, it is free!
I have no doubt that this is merely the start of things to come, with Google commanding enough clout to finally drive adoption of open standard XMPP phones (a competing protocol to SIP/SIMPLE) - the details of this are not important, but suffice it to say that it will take the place of a traditional land line phones and will nicely augment Google's Android mobile phones. (Re: Android mobile phones, this is not sufficiently compelling to persuade any of you to buy an Android phone, you are still far better off with an iPhone!)
The only potential draw-back: now Google knows who you are talking to and, to some extent, the content of the voicemails that are transcribed or conversations that you choose to record. But, anyhow let's be honest - isn't it easier to cease resistance to Google as overlord and master, and just grin and bear it?
Saturday, May 30, 2009
Thursday, May 21, 2009
Can Clone/Grow Your Hair Back!
ICX-TRC is an autologous hair regeneration therapy, a suspension of human dermal papilla (DP) cells, for the treatment of male pattern baldness and female diffuse alopecia. DP cells stimulate the generation of new hairs when injected into the scalp in close proximity to the epithelial cells which generate new hair. It is intended that ICX-TRC will be used by specialists in hair transplant centres, dermatologists and plastic surgeons to treat patients with hair thinning or hair loss.
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Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Google Announces Google Squared
Apparently Squarely Aimed at Wolfram|Alpha
A beta/labs version of a new database type search was announced today, looks very interesting.
Movie here...
Full review here...
Sunday, May 10, 2009

Eagerly Awaiting the Launch of Wolfram|Alpha

I remember the first time I saw Google shortly after it's launch, and it seemed a little like magic. Google was far better than Altavista, or the slew of other early search engines or directories like Yahoo! around at the time. If Wolfram|Alpha is nearly at good at answering questions as Google is at finding relevant websites, it could be a big winner - effectively negating the need to traverse to another site. This is the latest offering from Stephen Wolfram, creator of software Mathematica, and generally really smart guy.
Thursday, April 02, 2009
From the Economist:
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The OECD issued a grim forecast for the economies of advanced industrialised countries. The organisation expects GDP among its 30 mainly rich member states to plummet by an average of 4.3% this year. America’s economy is projected to contract by 4%, the euro area’s by 4.1% and Japan’s by 6.6%. The World Bank updated its forecast for the world economy, which it now expects to shrink by 1.7% in 2009.
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