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Beyond Binary

Bill Gates: Politics can get you depressed

Bill Gates: Politics can get you depressed

TRUCKEE, Calif.--Bill Gates is a glass three-quarters-full kind of guy, but watching the U.S. political system fail to tackle big problems like health care is enough to get even him down.

"You can actually get depressed," he said, wrapping up a talk at the Techonomy conference here. Earlier, Gates talked about a variety of issues including how online courses will reshape higher education and the need for better software modeling for diseases and other complex systems.

Gates said that the political process hasn't shown itself to be very good at handling issues that "are … Read more

Bill Gates: Better software modeling is a key

Bill Gates: Better software modeling is a key

TRUCKEE, Calif.--A key to many hard problems, from using nuclear power to combating diseases, is better software modeling, Bill Gates said on Friday.

While it's not surprising that he's a fan of using software to help solve hard problems, it is somewhat surprising that there aren't already good models for some diseases.

"There's no disease-modeling software," he said, speaking at the end of the three-day Techonomy conference here. "There is none. Why is flu seasonal? We don't know."

Gates said he aims to make sure that gap is filled, supporting … Read more

Negroponte: You really can give a kid a laptop

Negroponte: You really can give a kid a laptop

TRUCKEE, Calif.--One Laptop Per Child founder Nicholas Negroponte said that in two years the company has managed to rebuff one of the biggest critiques of his effort--the idea that you can't just give a kid a laptop connected to the Internet and walk away.

"You can, you actually can," Negroponte said, speaking on a panel at the Techonomy conference here. "Kids in the remotest places," he said, "not only teach themselves how to read and write, but most importantly--and we found this in Peru--teach their parents to read or write."

Negroponte … Read more

EU's Kroes: 30 percent of Europeans are 'digital virgins'

EU's Kroes: 30 percent of Europeans are 'digital virgins'

TRUCKEE, Calif.--Privacy concerns need to be further addressed if Europe is to lure the 30 percent of its population that remain "digital virgins" onto the Internet.

"There are still digital virgins as I am always saying," European Commissioner Neelie Kroes said, speaking Friday at the Techonomy conference here. One of the big hurdles, she said, is trust. And while the elderly are the least likely to be online, she said that it is not strictly an age issue.

Kroes was blunt when asked if there were any downsides to Europe's comparatively stricter policies regarding … Read more

HP Labs imagines your computer watching you

HP Labs imagines your computer watching you

TRUCKEE, Calif.--Imagine your own PC watching your every click and reporting back every song you listen to, every movie you watch, or every book you read.

That may sound like a nightmare scenario to some, but that is exactly the reality that HP Labs director Prith Banerjee is preparing for.

In an interview Thursday, Banerjee told CNET that gathering that information--with a device owner's consent--has the potential to tailor devices to be much more useful.

"When you think about it, HP sells 75 million PCs per year," he said. "That is an incredible place through … Read more

HP aims to measure Twitter influence

TRUCKEE, Calif.--So what makes someone on Twitter influential?

My two cents is that it starts with not posting your every Foursquare check-in, obliquely mentioning meetings you can't talk about, or sharing your latest bodily function.

But a team at Hewlett-Packard Labs tried to find a more scientific answer by analyzing 22 million tweets published in a short span. It found that it's not the visible metrics that truly define the influentials.

Rather, influence is better measured by those whose tweets spread far and wide--something that is not so correlated as one might think to the number of followers that a particular person has.

"Most content goes very few hops," said HP Labs social-computing director Bernardo Huberman, in a meeting over lunch at the Techonomy conference here. It's the latest report from Huberman and team, who have also studied the best time to post on Digg and demonstrated how Twitter can be used to predict a film's box office success.

Huberman also has bad news for folks who think posting a lot is boosting their influence.

"I wouldn't call you influential, I would call you energetic," he said.

So, it seems the key is not just having followers, but having active ones that like to share your thoughts as opposed to those who just read. Having something worth saying probably helps, too, but that was not the subject of HP's study.

Why it matters, beyond perhaps helping me in my vain quest to crack 10,000 Twitter followers, is that the deluge of information means that there is fierce competition for issues seeking attention.

"We only talk about things that bubble to the top," he said.

Of course, identifying influential people also has other uses, such as telling companies which bloggers and tweeters to target or governments and nonprofits where their key audiences are.

The full research, conducted by Huberman and colleagues Daniel Romero, Wojciech Galuba, and Sitaram Asur is published on Scribd. You can read the whole thing after the break.

Read more

HP tech chief: WebOS central to many products

HP tech chief: WebOS central to many products

TRUCKEE, Calif.--HP Chief Technology Officer Shane Robison said that the company's acquisition of Palm will influence a range of products including slates and other computers, smartphones, as well as next-generation printers.

"What Palm gives us is a modern, Web-oriented, connected operating system," Robison said, speaking at the Techonomy conference here.

While HP has said that before, Robison suggested the degree to which WebOS will affect the product line is perhaps greater than some people think. For example, Robison said that most of the company's printers will soon be Web-connected and able to print without a … Read more

Schmidt: 200,000 Android devices sold each day

Schmidt: 200,000 Android devices sold each day

TRUCKEE, Calif.--Google CEO Eric Schmidt said on Wednesday that Google believes that some 200,000 new Android devices are being sold each day, leading to significant revenue in the form of increased mobile search traffic.

"People are finally beginning to figure out how successful Android is," Schmidt said at the inaugural Techonomy conference here, pointing to recent studies showing the growth of the mobile operating system outpacing even the popular iPhone.

"The number was about 100,000 (a day) about two months ago," Schmidt said. "It looks like Android is not just phenomenal but … Read more

Eric Schmidt on the demise of Google Wave

Eric Schmidt on the demise of Google Wave
TRUCKEE, Calif.--Eric Schmidt tried to paint the failure of Google Wave as a sign that the company's innovative culture continues to take risks and aim big.

"Our policy is we try things," the Google CEO said, hours after the company announced it was halting development of the complex real-time communication tool. "We celebrate our failures. This is a company where it is absolutely OK to try something that is very hard, have it not be successful, take the learning and apply it to something new."

Schmidt said Wave, despite its lack of market success, … Read more

Google's Schmidt on Verizon and Net neutrality

Google's Schmidt on Verizon and Net neutrality

TRUCKEE, Calif.--Google CEO Eric Schmidt declined to confirm a deal has been reached on Net neutrality between Google and Verizon but said his company is trying to bring together various factions.

"We're trying to find solutions that bridge between sort of the 'hard-core Net neutrality or else' view and the historic telecom view of no such agreement," Schmidt told reporters on the sidelines of the Techonomy conference following his appearance on a panel here.

Bloomberg and others reported earlier Wednesday that a deal was in the works.

Schmidt wouldn't say whether such a deal might … Read more

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