In yesterday’s Apple keynote, one of the demos was for Anki Drive, an AI-driven toy car game:
While impressive, Google’s been hard at work on something even bigger for a while now. Here’s how they should respond:

I found the image here.
In yesterday’s Apple keynote, one of the demos was for Anki Drive, an AI-driven toy car game:
While impressive, Google’s been hard at work on something even bigger for a while now. Here’s how they should respond:

I found the image here.
CCS Insight’s infographic on the growth of mobile devices.
Click the infographic to see it at full size.
The market analyst firm CCS Insight says:
The Pew Internet and American Life Project reports that 34% of Americans age 18 and over own a tablet computer, such as an iPad, Samsung Galaxy Tab, Google Nexus Tablet or Kindle Fire. They report that this is almost double last year’s tablet ownership rate of 18%.
They report that the people most likely to be tablet owners fall into one or more of these categories:
They noted that there were no statistically significant difference in tablet ownership between men and women, or among different racial and ethnic groups.
The groups that saw the biggest increases in tablet ownership over the past year were:
The brand agency Digitas says that if you’re looking for a demographic that have really embraced their mobile devices, you want to reach the LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender) demographics. They’ve been using mobile devices twice as long as the general population, and spend twice as long on their mobile devices. Their numbers, based on a study of 1,595 LGBT adults in the U.S., is detailed in the infographic below:

Sony just expertly fired a shot across Microsoft’s bow with this video that explains how you share games or play used ones with the upcoming PlayStation 4. It’s incredibly simple.
The process won’t be as simple with the upcoming Xbox One, which seems to be a big maze of “it depends…”. Microsoft are doing to the Xbox One what Sony did to the PS3 in the beginning: badly hurt a platform with a great reputation through inept moves. Consider these factors:
| PlayStation 4 | Xbox One |
|---|---|
| Price: $399 | Price: $499 |
| No online check-in required | Console must perform an online check-in every 24 hours in order to play games |
| No restrictions on sharing disc-based games or using used ones | Restrictions on sharing disc-based games; it’s up to the publisher on whether used games are allowed |
| I’m thinking about getting one, and I’m a guy who went from the PS2 to the Xbox 360 | I’m thinking about not getting one, and I’m a guy who went from the PS2 to the Xbox 360 |
Watch the video below for their clever demo:
At this moment, the PS4 vs. Xbox One situation is best summarized with this animated GIF:

Found via Dan Ackerman. Click the photo to see the source.
Dan Ackerman tweeted the scene above, with the text “WWDC explained in one photo”. It probably should be “Tech in one photo”. We’ve got a way to go before women are better-represented in our field.
This article also appears in The Adventures of Accordion Guy in the 21st Century.

It’s that time of year again: Apple’s WWDC — the Worldwide Developer Conference — starts today! It kicks off with the keynote, which takes place at 1:00 p.m. Eastern (10:00 a.m. Pacific) at Moscone Center in San Francisco. Apple will be broadcasting the keynote over the web as well as via a WWDC app for Apple TVs that was pushed out last night.
If you want commentary or are in a low-bandwidth situation, the following outlets will be liveblogging the WWDC keynote:
If you’re looking for predictions of what will be announced at WWDC, I’ll direct you to John Gruber over at Daring Fireball’s WWDC 2013 Expectations post. He tends to be more right than wrong about this sort of thing, which is why I like to jokingly call him “Apple’s Freelance PR Guy”.

For those of you who want to check out some WWDC keynote history, this is for you. Here’s the keynote from WWDC 2005, which introduced the switch to Intel processors:
…the original iPhone announcement in 2007…
…the iPhone 3G and App Store announcement in 2008…
…the iPhone 3GS and Snow Leopard announcements in 2009…
…the iPhone 4 and iOS 4 in 2010…
…iOS 5 and Lion in 2011…
…and last year, there was iOS 6 and Mountain Lion:
At my consultancy, CTS, we sometimes use the term “SYOD” — short for “Smuggle Your Own Device” — to refer to situations where people bring in their smartphones and tablets to access corporate resources at work without their IT department’s knowledge or approval.
SYOD happens often enough that CTOs and CIOs should take notice. According to the results of IT-and-telecom analyst firm Ovum’s 2013 BYOX (Bring Your Own Anything) Employee Study:
The study makes use of the responses of 4,371 people coming from 19 countries and working in a “wide range of verticals and job roles” at organizations with over 50 employees.
Ovum’s recommendation (as well as mine) is to respond and adapt to this new behaviour. Ovum Analyst Richard Absalom is right when he says:
“Trying to stand in the path of consumerized mobility is likely to be a damaging and futile exercise. We believe businesses are better served by exploiting this behaviour to increase employee engagement and productivity, and promote the benefits of enterprise mobility.“
Click to see the graph at full size.
ZDNet reports that over the next few weeks, Cisco and BT will share the results of their survey of 2,200 office workers from 13 countries and 9 business verticals. Some interesting numbers from this survey include:
Click to see the graph at full size.