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  • Everything You Need to Know About Google Glass – IGN (Half full?)

    Everything You Need to Know About Google Glass – IGN:

    Here’s everything you need to know about Google Glass (Glasses really).

    This article discusses if the Glass is half empty or half full.

    I think it will work in the same way as bluetooth. Once you have used it, it is hard to go back to holding a phone again.

    I think you will really need to quality of SIRI in order to make this work, otherwise it may simply be an inconvenient exercise. A bluetooth experience that doesn’t recognize voice commands well, is rather useless.

    Cool way to have a cam, though, no matter how long it takes to get it work well.

    It should add new options to the way we all communicate. GoToMeeting from Citrix would have to add in a new option of DontGoToMeeting.

    I like the idea of working it into street view from Google. That could be really, really cool.

    Now we’ll have no excuse for stopping to ask directions again.

    Price will be interesting. I will bet lots of money that it comes in under $1,000, certainly not the $1,500 that’s currently being tossed up to developers.

    In the end, the glass may be more than half full.

    But, we’ll have to wait and see!:-)

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  • 39 Most Tantalizing Business Cards

    39 Most Tantalizing Business Cards:

    Some really cool (and a couple rather obnoxious/risque) business card concepts.

    Thinking of being innovative???

    How about this.

    1. Come up with a cool design patent.
    2. Then come up with a way to represent that design on a business card.
    3. Then come up with a design patent on the business card.

    Hmmm…???

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  • Why Won't Yahoo! Let Employees Work From Home? – Businessweek

    Why Won’t Yahoo! Let Employees Work From Home? – Businessweek:

    Boy Mayer is gonna cause a lot of shake here with the everyone-has-to-travel-to-work policy.

    Apparently (Today Show) she now as a nursery set up next door to her office for her new convenience. That helps new parents, maybe, but not the ones with kids in school or those people who live a longer way from the office.

    But Mayer is shaking it up.

    There has long been the debate about the down side of work-at-home (WAH). And a tech leader like Yahoo  might just be a place to face-to-face interaction that is lost from WAH.

    But, I fear that making everyone drive to work is a major setback to telecommuting efforts that are so very beneficial to the efforts of sustainability.

    Studies show that the true costs of telecommuting are far closer to $40,000 per year than to the $5,000 cost of gas. Most of that savings goes to the employer. Closer to $45,000 if you want to include the less-tangible costs of externalities such as infrastructure and greenhouse gases (GHGs).

    Key words:  WAH, telecommuting. Work-at-home, sustainability, carbon footprint, GHG, teleworking, remote working, time shifting.
    First posted at www.SustainZine.com. Repeated here.
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  • Why Won’t Yahoo! Let Employees Work From Home? – Businessweek

    Why Won’t Yahoo! Let Employees Work From Home? – Businessweek:

    Oh boy, Mayer is gonna cause a lot of shake up  here with her everyone-has-to-travel-to-work policy.

    Apparently (Today Show) she now as a nursery set up next door to her office for her new convenience. That helps new parents, maybe, but not the ones with kids in school or those people who live a longer way from the office.

    But Mayer is shaking it up.

    There has long been the debate about the down side of work-at-home (WAH). And a tech leader like Yahoo  might just be a place to face-to-face interaction that is lost from WAH.

    But, I fear that making everyone drive to work is a major setback to telecommuting efforts that are so very beneficial to the efforts of sustainability.

    Studies show that the true costs of telecommuting are far closer to $40,000 per year than to the $5,000 cost of gas. Most of that savings goes to the employer. Closer to $45,000 if you want to include the less-tangible costs of externalities such as infrastructure and greenhouse gases (GHGs).

    ‘via Blog this’

  • Should Monsanto own patent rights on the elements of life? – Los Angeles Times:

    Should Monsanto own patent rights on the elements of life? – Los Angeles Times:

    Few people realize how patent intensive the food industry has become.

    The top 10 seed companies account for 2/3 of all seeds sold.

    A huge % of the seed sold are patented. Wow!

    Over an 11-year period, the cost per acre of planting soybeans has risen a dramatic 325%.” Ouch!…
    BUT if the yield is improved, then the added cost to sow is well justified.

    Remember that genetically modified  (GMO) can/possibly be patented, organic not.

    But owning a gene and the patent on all activity to monitor/manage/tread based on that gene has interesting implications.  You can expect the pharma industry to watch this law suit in plants very closely.

    Keywords: GMO, organic, plant patents, Monsanto, seeds, farming, law suit,  genes,
    First blogged at: SustainZine

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