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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: 2MAR$ who wrote (101688)6/28/2013 11:33:32 PM
From: carranza2  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217557
 
Deleted



To: 2MAR$ who wrote (101688)6/28/2013 11:33:44 PM
From: carranza2  Respond to of 217557
 
Extraordinary. Very, very good. Many congrats.



To: 2MAR$ who wrote (101688)6/29/2013 11:04:06 AM
From: SuperChief  Respond to of 217557
 
I know almost nothing about Puts/Calls but in looking at an option chain it would seem one would have to buy Calls at less than half a penny to make $260,000 on $1000. Is this correct?



To: 2MAR$ who wrote (101688)6/29/2013 1:06:23 PM
From: average joe  Respond to of 217557
 
Wearable computers: Fab or fashion faux pas?



A model displays a wristband device 'Fitbit Flex' and a smartphone as Japan's mobile operation giant Softbank (AFP PHOTO / Yoshikazu TSUNO)

Published Saturday, June 29, 2013 12:39PM EDT
Last Updated Saturday, June 29, 2013 12:41PM EDT
The notion of being fashionably smart is getting a makeover as Internet-linked computers get woven into formerly brainless attire such as glasses, bracelets and shoes.

A wearable computing trend is at the heart of the "quantified self" movement in which people track anything from how many calories they burn to how well they sleep or their moods at any given moment.

"We are heading for the wearable computing era," Gartner analyst Van Baker told AFP. "People are going to be walking around with personal area networks on their bodies and have multiple devices that talk to each other and the Web."

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Understandably, the trend has found traction in fitness with devices such as the Jawbone UP, Nike's FuelBand, and Fitbit keeping tabs on whether people are leading active, healthy lifestyles.

The devices use sensors to detect micro movements and then feed information to smartphones or tablets, where applications tap into processing power to analyze data and provide feedback to users.

San Francisco-based Jawbone jumped into wearable computing years ago, building electronic brains into stylish wireless earpieces and speakers for smartphones.

Jawbone recently added muscle to its lineup of fitness lifestyle devices with a deal to buy BodyMedia.

BodyMedia makes armbands used to track caloric burn of fat-shedding competitors on U.S. reality television show "The Biggest Loser."

"There's an enormous appetite for personal data and self-discovery among consumers that will only continue to grow," said Jawbone chief executive and founder Hosain Rahman.

A Forrester Research survey conducted early this year found that six per cent of U.S. adults wore a gadget to track performance in a sport, while five per cent used a gadget like UP or Fitbit to track daily activity or how well they sleep.

Worldwide shipments of wearable computing devices could climb as high as 30 million units this year, according to Forrester.

Interest goes beyond fitness to desire for things like a gadget that recommends films based on wearers' moods and one that replaces keys when it comes to unlocking cars or homes, the survey indicated.

"It is just amazing," said engineering professor Asim Smailagic, director of a wearable computer lab at Carnegie Mellon University in Pennsylvania. "We will see an exciting future ahead."

Smailagic began working on wearable computing at the university about 25 years ago, with projects including head worn displays that serve up technical information when needed during aircraft maintenance.

-- 'Wearable computing has to be unobtrusive' --

Sophisticated and inexpensive sensors for tracking movement, sound, GPS locations and more combined with "killer apps" in powerful smartphones have set the stage for wearable computing to be commonplace, according to the professor.

"Contextually aware computers will be hot topics for at least the next decade," Smailagic said. "They can help you when you need help, even to look smarter.

"Everybody likes to have the kind of help contextual computing can provide."

Contextual computing goes beyond recognizing where someone is to factoring in other information such as whether it's lunchtime or if someone has shown a preference for a nearby restaurant.

"When you combine wearable computing with sensors and machine learning algorithms then you get context, the computer knows your state and is able to help out clearly in the situation," Smailagic said.

He is confident Google Glass will be a hit despite privacy worries expressed about the yet-to-be-released Internet-linked eyewear with camera capabilities.

Google Glass connects to the Internet using Wi-Fi hot spots or, more typically, by being wirelessly tethered to mobile phones. Pictures or video are shared through the Google Plus social network.

"Wearable computing has to be unobtrusive, fit as a natural extension of your body, and not get in the way," Smailagic said. "Google Glass is on the right path to solve these problems."

The invention has been a hit with American tennis player Bethanie Mattek-Sands, who has been testing the special glasses as a training aid at this year's Wimbledon.

Apple chief Tim Cook last month said he sees promise in computers shrunk down and worn like watches.

He predicted there will be "tons of companies playing" in the wearable computing sector but sidestepped a question as to whether Apple would be among them with the creation of a rumored "iWatch" device to be worn on the wrist.

"The wrist is interesting," Cook did allow.

Pebble smart watches created by a startup that raised more than $10 million in funding at crowd-source investment website Kickstarter recently began shipping to buyers.

The wearable computing craze has already spread to dogs, with startup Whistle introducing a pendant that tracks canines.

Whistle devices attached to dog collars or harnesses use movement-sensing accelerometers to track activity and even how well a pet is sleeping, then relay the information wirelessly to smartphones or wi-fi hotspots.

An online database built in collaboration with researchers and veterinary groups allows individual dog activity patterns to be scrutinized for hints that something may be amiss.

"Traditional technology companies will have to start paying attention to how sensors are enabling us to live," said Ben Arnold, director of industry analysis for consumer technology at NPD.

"Consumers are ultimately going to become more aware of their data in the digital ether," he said. "I suspect wearables are going to disrupt the way tech firms are doing business now."

ctvnews.ca



To: 2MAR$ who wrote (101688)7/12/2013 6:55:39 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217557
 
! :0) sweet.

in the mean time our fund raise effort for the tub of gold and lake of silver is turning up an A-list who-is-who of family offices across the planet and interestingly, across n.america.

an observation: 'they' know

essentially the only preliminary question 'they' want answered is, "at recent low prices for gold and silver, what is the project irr?"

notice: they do not ask, "what is the investor irr?" as that is determined by bargaining.

answer, at recent lows for gold and silver, the project irr is 22%, and at 5% below recent lows, the project irr is 20%

neat thing about gold / silver project is that no one asks about r&d, marketing, distribution, after-sales services, etc etc

neat thing base metal tailings re-treatment for gold/silver initiative is that they really only want to know

(i) the assumptions backing the per equivalent gold troy oz cash (usd 590) cost and total cost (usd 670)

(ii) the metallurgy tests (95% Au recovery, and 85% Ag recovery)

(iii) the permitting and official attitude - the project in truth is environmental remediation / clean up, even if much cyanide is used, although our tech spec does call for cyanide recycling to be gentle to the environment and to save expensive cyanide

issue:

back in the mid-90s i had worked as a consultant to leading s.african mining company that wished to engage w/ china gold mining via licensing of s.african controlled bacterial leach know-how

the trigger was not pulled because the south africans were worried about IP loss

at the time i advised, cooperate and jointly prosper, or lose it anyway.

client did not listen.

now china teams are circling our tub of gold and lake of silver, wanting to tee-up their world-class, commercial scale, and allegedly really effective (97% recovery) bacterial leach know-how

as it turns out, while the aussies and south africans are good at digging, china may lead in metallurgy, that which enables the extraction of goodness out of dug up rocks

continuing to learn much

and, oh, yes, am beginning to understand why miners and geologists use much four-letters word, a single word, starting w/ f and ending w/ k