The Best Choice In Property Agent 2013 Awarded by Indonesian Government
New Products
Tampilkan postingan dengan label Las Vegas. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label Las Vegas. Tampilkan semua postingan

Minggu, 26 Januari 2014

Big Data Saves Lives

A map of New York City that displays the number of serious fire incidents.

from Greg
Big data is a common buzz word in tech. It simple means using fast computers to analyze HUGE databases to make predictions on future events. This week at the Big Data Innovation Summit in Las Vegas there was a presentation on how big data is helping big cities predict where fires will most likely breakout in the future. As more data becomes available we could see all sorts of innovation in predicting crime and disaster relief. Big data saves lives.


from The Verge

New York City is using big data to predict fires

There are certain factors that make buildings in New York City more likely to have a fire, including average neighborhood income, the age of the building, and whether it has electrical issues. The city's Fire Department has now cataloged 60 of these factors in a database that ranks buildings in order of their risk of fire, using the results to decide which ones get inspected first.

The new method aligns with a national trend toward using big data to make city services more efficient. Boston uses a similar system to identify which properties should get visits from the police, for example.

In the past, New York's firefighters made sure to hit high-priority buildings like schools and libraries more frequently. But other than that, inspections were almost random. The new system should reduce the number of fires and make fires less severe, according to the fire department.

----------

from The Wall Street Journal

New York City has about a million buildings, and each year 3,000 of them erupt in a major fire. Can officials predict which ones will go up in flames?

The New York City Fire Department thinks it can use data mining to do that. Analysts at the department say that some buildings are linked to characteristics that make them more likely to have a fire than others.

Poverty, for one.

Low-income neighborhoods are correlated with fires,” said Jeff Chen, the department’s Director of Analytics, at an industry conference in Las Vegas.

Other factors that correlate with deadly fires: the age of the building, whether it has electrical issues, the number and location of sprinklers and the presence of elevators. Buildings that are vacant or unguarded are twice as likely to have a fire, Chen says.

All this may sound obvious. But it is hard to absorb all the relevant factors at once.

So New York officials have taken roughly 60 different factors and built an algorithm that assigns each one of the city’s 330,000 inspectable buildings with a risk score (The Fire Department doesn’t inspect single and two-family homes).

When fire officers go on weekly inspections, the computer spits out a sheet with a list of buildings, ranked by their risk score, that they should visit first.

The data-mining program went into effect in July and will be expanded to 2400 categories in the coming months. Inspections before it was adopted were fairly random, Chen says.

Buildings considered to be safety priorities, like schools and libraries, were supposed to be inspected more frequently. But the city didn’t target specific buildings based on their risk.

What’s happening in New York City–which became more data-driven under former Mayor Michael Bloomberg–is an example of how many municipalities are trying to to use the data they routinely collect to improve services.

Boston uses big data in its Problem Properties program, which exploits information from different city sources–such as complaint calls, safety records, crimes and tax collections–to identify which properties should get visits by police.

While making investments in big data systems seems like common sense, cities have trouble measuring their success. Officials may be able to cite statistics showing the number of fires or crimes dropping, but demonstrating that big data tools were the reason may be difficult because it involves proving a negative–that something didn’t happen because of their efforts.

“Ultimately, we should see the number of fires go down,” says Jeff Roth, the Fire Department’s Assistant Commissioner for Management Initiatives. “And fires should become less severe.”

Add to Cart View detail

Minggu, 12 Januari 2014

Best CES 2014 Longreads

From Greg
CES 2014 is in the books. The buzz words this year were wearable and 3D printing. 5,000 tech journalist swarmed Las Vegas. Here are the best long read articles from the show.

Microsoft and the PC have seen better days
The PC isn't dead, but Microsoft will have to work hard to stay relevant in an increasingly mobile world in 2014.
by Brooke Crothers at CNET
Read the full story HERE

The Gear That Got Us Through CES
Any tech blogger will tell you CES can be fun, but it is a grind. They will tell you loudly, and insistently. You will not need to ask. But to get through that joyous slog, we had some helpful sidekick gadgets to get us through (mostly) unscathed. Here are the Gizmodo Strike Force favorites.
Read the full story HERE

Executive Insights & Innovation
Sensor-equipped objects and their networks -- what Cisco calls the Internet of Everything -- will reshape your life, Cisco CEO John Chambers says.
Read the full story HERE


Digital Trends Best of CES 2014 award winners
We came, we saw, we drank in the very best tech CES 2014 had to offer. After revealing our Best of CES 2014 nominees in 15 different categories on day one of the show, we slept (very little) on our decisions, roamed the show floor again, and now we’re back to reveal the hard-fought winners – including the coveted Best of Show award. It took some agonizing, nail biting and even a little arguing, but we managed to whittle our list of five nominees in every category down to just one. Except, of course, in the Home category, which has the distinction of claiming six winners this year to accommodate for its exceptionally broad scope. Without further ado, here are the products that defined CES 2014.
Read the full story HERE

Add to Cart View detail

Jumat, 10 Januari 2014

CES Booth Babes and Boys


Pictures follow the story below.

Slate ran a story about CES Booth Babes so I thought I would put together a montage. Read the full story HERE

By Alicia Fremling
Little is more off-putting than being hit on by a married man, yet as I helped adjust for a potential customer the newly designed earphones—guaranteed not to fall out while providing a superior sound experience—he leaned in and whispered, “You smell nice.” My paid response was to smile sweetly and squeak “Thank you!” in an overly excited voice. It's simply part of the job as a brand representative (aka booth babe).

With the excitement of the new products from the annual CES in Las Vegas comes the perennial debate over booth babes. Is the role truly degrading to the women working the booths? What about the women attending the show? Do booth babes really help drive quality foot traffic? Or simply awkward gawkers and sex-crazed bloggers who publish annual galleries of the booth babes?

Throughout college, I held many part-time jobs, but few were as lucrative and easy as a brand representative at conferences and trade shows. These gigs paid a good hourly rate ($25-$50 per hour) and were not nearly as demeaning as other high-paid, low-barrier jobs such as shot girl or go-go dancer. At trade shows, generally the bastards weren't that drunk.

What defines a particular trade show experience is not necessarily the politeness or vulgarity of the trade show attendees, but rather the company's expectations of the brand representative. If the hiring company simply expects eye candy, it leaves the “booth babe” with little to cultivate potential customers besides looking pretty and small talk. We're left objectified at the same level as the other booth props and displays.

However, if the company expects these women to be additional marketing representatives and provides adequate training and education on the product(s) and company represented, it becomes a more empowering experience. It allows us to have a voice to educate and engage potential customers.

Coming into any given brand representative gig, it is usually evident what type of experience to expect based on the job description and application process. If a job posting requests three full-body photos, it’s clearly a booth babe gig. However, if a description expects previous sales experience or the ability to learn quickly and requires some training (even a 30-minute crash course helps), it's likely to be a genuine brand representative experience. A rep can be sexy by being smart and knowledgeable about a product.

My brand representative experiences exposed me to industries I wouldn't have otherwise encountered. For example, I once represented a cybersecurity training product and learned about the challenges that major corporations face in educating employees about cybersecurity standards. It was valuable training and could help me in my career one day. More of the companies at shows like CES should realize that some of the young women they employ as “booth babes” could actually be valuable assets to their companies.

I learned a lot, good and bad, during my tenure as a brand representative. But when I think back about my time, I realize that the most degrading part of my experience was the infantilizing title “booth babe” itself.

Photo Gallery
Justin Bieber unveils toy for Hanoi company

CBOSS girls. I'm not usually the kind of a per...
 Russian CBOSS girls in Barcelona, February 2006.
Computex 2009
Computex 2009
Computex 2010
CeBIT 2011
2011 CES Las Vegas
A model stands next to Samsung Ultra HD TV at CES 2013.
(AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)
3M shows off Multi-Touch technology in their booth at CES 2012
UPI/Terry Schmitt
Rapper 50 Cent signs autographs in the SMS Audio booth at CES 2012
UPI/Terry Schmitt

Model at CES 2012
CES 2013 Booth Babes
CES 2013 Booth Babes (Photo credit: james | studiosushi™)
CES 2013 Booth Babes
CES 2013 Booth Babes (Photo credit: james | studiosushi™)

CES 2013 Booth Babes
CES 2013 Booth Babes (Photo credit: james | studiosushi™)
CES 2013 - Hyper's Body-Painted Models
CES 2013 - Hyper's Body-Painted Models (Photo credit: nodomain1)
CES 2013 Booth Babes
CES 2013 Booth Boy and Babes (Photo credit: james | studiosushi™)
Add to Cart View detail

Selasa, 07 Januari 2014

CES 2014 Photos

Can't afford to go to CES 2014 in Las Vegas? Neither can we so here is a gallery of images we found online from the show.


Director Michael Bay talks on the UHD 105 INCH screen television 
Front Row Joe At @Toyota FCV Hydrogen Electric Vehicle At CES 2014.
Preview of Intels #CES booth before opening to the public.

#ces2014 #sonykeynote
Tin man came to hang out #vegas #ces2014
Our suite set up with tons of products. Tweet us! #LVH #CES2014 
CES technology in @unioncy team bag…all ready to go! #CESgear #CES2014
I'm in Vegas for CES and i have to say, Macklemore puts on a good show. 
Shaq said he like my headphones! Swoon... #ces2014
Gabe Newell just took the stage at Valve's CES 2014 event

Parrot’s New Minidrone


An LG Electronic G Flex phone is on display Monday for journalists covering the International CES
Add to Cart View detail

Most View Product

Contact Online

Support : Copyright © 2011. Demo Template AGC - All Rights Reserved
Template Clone Script ID