There is no data available on the number of mall garages outfitted with sensors to help keep track of vacant spots, but analysts say the rate of adoption for mall infrastructure and the number of parking apps is doubling or tripling year over year.
Taubman Centers, which owns and manages 22 malls in the United States, installed sensors in the garages in two of its centers to show shoppers on which floors they could find open parking spots. Installation costs $50,000 to $100,000 per location.
But parking is only half the battle. When a customer is ready to leave, there is the matter of finding the car. Simon Property Group, the country’s largest mall owner and operator with more than 300 properties, said that use of its free app, which includes a feature that helps shoppers locate their parked car, had increased eightfold in the last two years.
FastCompany on the other hand talks about the rise of robo-parking
"Its automated parking-garage system (no searching, no attendants!) is already in use at three smaller New York locations, parking more than 350,000 cars with zero errors; it plans to open a 700-space car lot under a public park in Brooklyn, in 2016, which will house 250,000 cars a year. And because the cars idle less, lots of gas is saved."
I find Joaquin Phoenix creepy in most roles so did not enjoy the movie much but found the technology and setting fascinating.
There’s the LA of the future with and no cars (LA?!!! – it’s actually set in Shanghai). There’s evolved artificial intelligence – as in artificial feelings. No devices – desktop or mobile – have keyboards. Mono earpieces provide the UI to check email, get weather reports etc. The video games are holographic. The mobile devices are hinged and buck the larger, curved display trend of today. There’s no dropped anything even on elevators and trains – so the networks have clearly improved.
In quite a compliment, Wired says the movie will dominate UI design even more than Minority Report did. Go see it for that. If you like Amy Adams that’s another reason to go :)
WATER injected at high pressure into rock deep underground during the process of hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking”, often returns to the surface as brine, having picked up a lot of salt on its journey. It is also contaminated with chemicals from the fracking process itself. So a cheap and effective way of separating the salt and other chemicals from the water would be welcome. General Electric (GE), an American engineering conglomerate, is now putting one through its paces.
The system in question, developed by a firm called Memsys Clearwater, which is based in Germany and Singapore, is called vacuum multi-effect membrane distillation. It combines the two established ways of desalinating water: distillation and membrane separation. Already used to produce drinking water from seawater, it has not previously been applied to cleaning up water used in fracking. But recent trials of the system at a gas-fracking plant in Texas have been encouraging.
On Sunday you will chuckle when you see the GoDaddy commercial below about body builders who congregate at Selena’s tiny Spray Tan shop.
Watching the preview I wondered Danica how got so buff (a muscle suit), which town is so empty (Long Beach), whether bodybuilders actually tan this way (yes, plenty of orange chemicals in that world).
I was even more curious how a tiny business like Selena’s gets discovered by her unique demographic in the wide World Wide Web. So, I requested a call with Rene Reinsberg of Locu, which GoDaddy has acquired and is the basis of its Get Found offering.
Turns out the ex MIT folks at Locu had given plenty of thought to SME lack of IT resources and standards (GoDaddy is primarily focused on SMEs with less than 5 employees.) So, for example, how to get some semblance of consistency across unstructured menus across small restaurants and cafes? They have invested in a crawler, learning algorithms and some crowdsourcing. Given the mountain of data they have crawled through and classified, here is a helpful blog post - five suggestions for data teams
Depending on the type of business, they have also developed a wide portfolio of destination sites to propagate – they include Web, mobile sites and apps including Google, Yahoo, Bing, Yelp, Foursquare, YP (Yellowpages), Citysearch, TripAdvisor, OpenTable, Local.com, Judy’s Book, MerchantCircle and MojoPages.
So chuckle at the high chemical content, but also think of the high IQ behind discovery marketing as you watch this on Sunday
Another in a 2014 guest column series which builds on the one in 2009 where 50+ had written about how science/tech has evolved their hobby/interest.
This time it is David Deal who helps companies and people build their brands. I first met him in 1997 when he was at Accenture and knew him as a diehard baseball fan. Actually, as he writes here he is even more of a Rock ‘n’ Roll fanatic.
In the 1980s, savvy radio programmers created the "classic rock" format in order to pander to the increasingly affluent Baby Boomer demographic. But for me, classic rock is a passion, not a music format. And digital technology has helped me enjoy and share that passion in ways that were not available to me back in 1975,when I was bowled over by the power of Led Zeppelin's classic rock masterpiece Physical Graffiti.
My Journey
Classic rock generally refers to rock music created after the emergence of Bob Dylan in the early 1960s and before the second British invasion of 1983, when synth/pop and early forms of rap began diluting rock's influence. I cannot pinpoint the moment I became a classic rock fan any better than I can recall the first time I explored the Bible. "Stairway to Heaven," like the Sermon on the Mount, has always been in my life. Certainly some childhood memories stand out, like exploring the album cover for the beautifully ugly Through the Past, Darkly (Big Hits Vol. 2) by the Rolling Stones, an LP that belonged to one of my older sisters; or hearing Jim Morrison sing the "The End" during the opening credits of Apocalypse Now.
In 1979, as I sat in a dark theater watching Francis Ford Coppola's magnum opus about Vietnam,I didn't know I was listening to a form of music that would some day become content programmed for a demographic. I was lost in John Densmore's crisp percussion, Ray Manzarek's eerie organ tones, Morrison's mournful voice, and Robby Krieger's mystical guitar notes. I was having my mind blown.
Decades later, the Millennial generation consumes music as little digital snacks on their smart phones instead of being overpowered by music as I was. I prefer to enjoy my classic rock (or any music,for that matter) by listening to albums played at home on a high-fidelity stereo, much as I like to read books in paper format. I am a digital junkie in many ways, but there's no way you're ever going to convince me that The Dark Side of the Moon can be experienced properly through a scattering of disjointed MP3 files on my iPhone.
And yet, even as many classic rock lovers like me cringe at the way digital has distorted the beauty of the music we love, digital has also deepened my appreciation for classic rock in two ways.
Experiencing
Classic rockers have not always warmed up easily to digital. The Beatles were not available on iTunes until 2010, and the Led Zeppelin catalog wasn't available on Spotify until 2013. But rock and roll is a visual as well as aural medium, and fortunately visual media like YouTube have unleashed a mother lode of memorable classic rock material to engage me, even if the legal status of the content is sometimes dubious. Even as I wrote this post, I got my creative energies flowing by hopping on to YouTube and watching John Lennon jam with Chuck Berry on the Mike Douglas show in the early 1970s:
Sometimes video makes it possible to replay history in near real-time. In 2013, I took my daughter and wife to see classic rock giants Black Sabbath blow away a horde of screaming fans at the Tinley Park First Midwest Bank Amphitheatre -- an experience akin to worshipping at the altar of the classic rock gods. Within hours I relived the experience thanks to amateur fan footage uploaded on YouTube, such as this.
Fortunately, even as some classic rock bands have faded, their histories are often well curated professionally, too. Led Zeppelin’s legacy has been well preserved by those who documented the band in its day, an example being the Live Dreams app created by photographer Laurance Ratner. And the Doors iPad app consists of a stunning treasure trove of images and notes about the making of the band's albums
Thanks to digital, Jim Morrison looks vibrant, sexy, and threatening today, even though he's been dead for 40 years. Maybe he'll visit us as a hologram,as Tupac Shakur did at Coachella in 2012.
Sharing
Digital also makes it possible for me to share my own passion -- to give something back for all the joy I've gained from classic rock. The opportunity (for which I am grateful) to contribute to this blog series is one obvious example. I also write often about classic rock on my own blog, Superhype, which is devoted to marketing, entertainment, and technology. Within the past few years, I've assessed the impact of the Eagles' Hotel California, pondered the meaning of Led Zeppelin's fourth album, and shared lessons of creativity gleaned from the making of L.A. Woman by the Doors. And since we live in a visual age, I increasingly rely on visual media like Instagram, Pinterest, and SlideShare to express my passion for all things musical, including classic rock.
But sharing matters little unless you have an audience who will listen, read, watch, and share with you. I often take for granted the availability of social media platforms like Facebook as much as I do my own phone or car -- which just goes to show how even a relatively young digital technology can embed itself in our lives with frightening speed. When I discovered the work of renowned rock journalist Mikal Gilmore years ago, I never dreamed some day I might actually become part of his extended circle of friends,much less that we would occasionally comment on each other's musings. But thanks to Facebook, and Gilmore’s acceptance of my friendship request a few years ago,I'm blessed by his peerless insights and musical tastes every day.
And social can create unexpected kindred spirits: it turns out that my Facebook friend Eduardo J. Lopez-Reyes, a research specialist at the University of Connecticut, also shares my passion for classic rock. In 2012, Eduardo interviewed me about the power of Pink Floyd for the popular Floyd fan site Brain Damage -- something like my Oprah confessional moment, as I related Pink Floyd to my childhood and present-day experiences.
Is Rock Dead?
Much has been said about the passing away of rock and roll as a musical format amid the rise of more diverse forms of pop, electronic dance music, and hip-hop. (I've questioned rock's future, too.) But occasionally I'm reminded that rock and roll remains a powerful force to be reckoned with, even as we worry about who will emerge to inherit the mantel from the young turks who are now quite senior (such as Green Day and U2). Just recently I posted on my Facebook wall a photo of myself visiting Jim Morrison's grave in 2000. I received more Likes and Comments than I have for any other piece of content I've ever posted,with the exception of family photos and milestones:
I'm also encouraged by the endurance of Classic Rock magazine, a British publication launched in 1998. At a time when the magazine industry has been buffeted by turmoil, Classic Rock carries on quite well thanks to innovations such as the release of a solo album by Slash inside a special issue of the magazine. The publication of the special hybrid album/magazine issue marked the first release of an album in exclusive partnership with a magazine ahead of general release -- and resulted in the first time a magazine publisher ranked at the top of online album chart.
To quote AC/DC, "Forget the hearse 'cause I'll never die." Thanks to digital, classic rock and roll will never die.
In 1837, President Jackson hosted an open house featuring a 1,400-pound block of cheese. Today as the White House showcases, President Obama is holding court on Twitter, Facebook, Google Hangouts and countless other “open houses”
“On this model, up to 1,359 cumecs of air is driven from the fans through flow-management devices, including vertical spires and rows of "roughness": floor-level triangles that create turbulence.
This is how the team simulates what happens in the atmospheric boundary layer of a hurricane, where the winds meet obstructions. In a typical wind tunnel, says Liu-Marques, the blockage percentage is kept at around five to six per cent, but at WOW, this can be as much as 30 per cent without affecting the quality of the simulation. This means that scale models of entire towns could be put in front of the fans.”
While Amazon spends hundreds of millions of dollars on new fulfillment centers to close the geographic gap between customer and inventory, eBay has decided to rely on a preexisting network to get the job done for its year-old eBay Now service.
Here's how it works. Customers place orders through eBay Now's mobile application or website for items from more than 30 retail partners, including Target, Toys "R" Us, and Urban Outfitters. Couriers visit the retailers' physical stores, assemble the orders, and drop them off in an hour or less.
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