Month: July 2016

How my Apple Watch saved my life

AppleWatch-2“I’ll begin this story the same way I began the phone call to my wife: “I’m OK, but…,” Chuck La Tournous writes for Macworld.

“The ‘but’ began on a Tuesday morning, after I started walking from the parking lot to the front door of my office building. I began feeling short of breath. No matter how deeply I inhaled, it felt like my lungs weren’t filling up completely. At first, the feeling just seemed odd—nothing serious, just…weird,” La Tournous writes. “By the time I climbed the flight of stairs to my floor, the feeling had grown worse. Along with the shortness of breath, I could feel my heart racing in my chest. Stopping to talk to a colleague on the way to my office, the mere act of speaking left me practically gasping for air. I cut the conversation short and continued to my office. Sitting still made me feel better, but not great.”

“It was then I thought about the heart rate sensor on my Apple Watch,” La Tournous writes. “I opened the Heart Rate app, curious to see if my heart rate was actually elevated or if it was just my imagination.”

Read the full story here.

Are you for Hillary Clinton? There’s an app for that!

With all of the apps in the world, you knew this one would be coming up.

Now Hillary Clinton supporters can download the official app for the Hillary Clinton campaign.

App users can answer daily quizzes, get exclusive perks, and more according to the description:

The only thing standing between Donald Trump and the presidency is us. Download the new Hillary 2016 app to take small actions every day that’ll add up to helping win this election—and make history. Test your knowledge, get special access, and compete against your friends (and Hillary supporters across the country!) to do the most good.

You can download the app by clicking here.

Verizon is buying Yahoo for 4.8 Billion

YahooLogoIt's a done deal.  After weeks of speculations, Verizon is buying Yahoo for a whopping 4.8 billion dollars.

Verizon has agreed to pay $4.83 billion for Yahoo (YHOOTech30), the companies said before markets opened Monday.

The sale completes Yahoo's evolution from influential search pioneer and web portal juggernaut to, in the end, a once-dominant brand that lost its way.

Parties as diverse as Warren Buffett and The Daily Mail were interested in buying Yahoo. But after a sale process that dragged on for months, Verizon (VZTech30), long viewed as the frontrunner, is walking away with Yahoo's more than one billion monthly active users.

Current Yahoo shareholders will keep the company's lucrative investments in Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba and Yahoo Japan. They will be spun into a separate, yet-to-be-named, publicly traded company.

The Verizon deal must be approved by regulators and is expected to be finalized early next year.

The sale puts an end to Yahoo's 21-year history as an independent company. Yahoo will now be integrated with Verizon-owned AOL under Marni Walden, an executive vice president at the telecom company.

It also ends a turnaround effort by Marissa Mayer, who joined Yahoo four years ago and promised to revitalize the company. Verizon and Yahoo did not immediately comment on who will lead Yahoo once the deal is complete.

It's unclear what Mayer will do after the deal closes. A spokesman for Yahoo said it's "too early to say" whether she will stay on as CEO, accept a new role at Verizon, or step aside. Meanwhile, Mayer says she will stay on to see Yahoo through its transition.

"For me personally, I'm planning to stay," Mayer wrote Monday in a memo to employees posted on Tumblr. "I love Yahoo, and I believe in all of you. It's important to me to see Yahoo into its next chapter."

Tim Armstrong, the CEO of Verizon-owned AOL, said he has "enormous respect for what Yahoo has accomplished" and that integrating the two former internet powerhouses will "create a new powerful competitive rival in mobile media, and an open, scaled alternative offering for advertisers and publishers."

Mayer, like Armstrong, previously worked at Google (GOOG) before taking over the top spot at Yahoo in 2012. She invested heavily in improving Yahoo's mobile products, expanding its audience through the acquisition of Tumblr and doubling down on premium media content. She brought in TV journalist Katie Couric as Yahoo's "global anchor."

But Mayer struggled to slow Yahoo's overall ad sales decline.

On a conference call with shareholders last week after reporting earnings, Mayer made what may have been her final case to investors and the public that she worked to "create a better Yahoo."

But the sale price suggests that Yahoo's glory days ended long ago. In 2008, for example, Microsoft was willing to pay more than $45 billion for Yahoo, an offer that was rebuffed by co-founder Jerry Yang.

Yahoo was synonymous with the Internet itself in the late '90s. But for Verizon, the deal is about more than just nostalgia. The telecom company has invested in digital content and advertising in recent years, buying AOL and the Huffington Post.

Need someone to pick up your dog’s poop? There’s an app for that!

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eC14Ohz5h4Q]

(Yes, this is real folks!)

“What do you get when you combine a population too busy to look up from its smartphones, a ‘one-tap economy’ and 78 million pet dogs?” Karin Brulliard reports for The Washington Post. “You get Pooper, an app that summons someone to scoop your pooch’s waste off the sidewalk or neighbor’s lawn.”

“Perhaps you have enough time to own a dog, feed a dog and take it on walks, but you are just too darn busy to reach down to pick up its poop,” Brulliard reports. “You are Pooper’s target customer.”

“Once your dog does its job, you open the app, pinpoint the excrement on a digital map and order a scoop,” Brulliard reports. “You are then free to leave; a scooper comes to do the clean up.”

For more information on becoming a scooper, click here.

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