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  • Cox-to-Time Warner Cable Firms Hit Phone Grip on Hospitals: Technology review by bally chohan

    Cox-to-Time Warner Cable Firms Hit Phone Grip on Hospitals: Technology review  by bally chohan
    Jack Sappenfield was driving in rural Oklahoma on Father’s Day 2009 when he lost control of the left side of his body. Alarmed and dizzy, he quickly turned back to a small local hospital.

    “The emergency room staff was actually really excited when I came in, and I didn’t know what to make of it,” said Sappenfield, 73. Here’s why: The clinic had just installed technology that allows specialists to remotely examine patients via videoconference, and Sappenfield became the first stroke victim to be treated using the system, running on Cox Communications Inc. (COX)’s cable network.

    He was examined remotely by a doctor in Oklahoma City, whose instructions helped him recover.

    “It was an amazing turnaround,” said Sappenfield.

    The technology that saved Sappenfield is becoming more mainstream and providing fresh vitality to Cox and other U.S. cable carriers, which are seeking new revenue sources as growth in TV customers slows. The companies are ramping up sales staffs to sell broadband access and related services to regional hospitals and doctors’ offices, trying to squeeze more money out of a network they used to use mainly for carrying TV signals.

    To do that, they need to loosen the grip phone companies such as AT&T Inc. (T) and Verizon Communications Inc. (VZ) have over health-care customers. That won’t be easy, as the rivals devote more resources to divisions dedicated to the sector, such as AT&T ForHealth and Verizon Connected Healthcare Solutions.
    Cutting the Cord

    Basic cable-TV subscribers have fallen every year since 2005, from 66 million to 59.3 million in 2010, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Video sales fell 1.1 percent in 2011 from a year earlier at Time Warner Cable Inc., the second-largest U.S. cable provider. Comcast Corp. (CMCSA), the largest cable carrier, reports earnings Feb. 15.

    While cable companies still rely on residential services for the majority of their revenue, the biggest growth in the industry is from connecting regional businesses with broadband and other services, particularly hospitals and schools.

    Time Warner Cable (TWC)’s sales to companies and organizations rose 37 percent to $409 million in the fourth quarter, leading Chief Executive Officer Glenn Britt to call business services “our biggest success story” on a conference call last month. The company projects 25 percent to 30 percent growth in 2012.

    Hospitals are prime candidates to upgrade their Internet networks from slower connections to cable broadband as the government mandates the digitization of medical records, said Phil Meeks, Cox’s senior vice president of business services.

    “Within our franchise area, about 80 percent of annual health-care revenue is still being captured by telecommunications companies,” said Meeks, who values the health-care market in Cox’s service regions at $460 million.
    Transmitting X-Rays

    Health care accounts for about 10 percent of Cox’s overall business services revenue, or about $100 million. That’s 20 percent higher than a year ago, and annual growth will probably accelerate as Cox boosts its sales efforts and improves its so- called telemedicine services, Meeks said.

    Satya Parimi, Time Warner Cable’s senior director of health-care solutions, said his division is one of the company’s fastest-growing sales channels. The New York-based company and Comcast don’t release health-care revenue separately from business services.

    Comcast, Time Warner Cable and Cox, the three largest U.S. cable companies, have a multifaceted approach to making money from the health-care industry. The first step is to connect facilities with broadband. Once connected, hospitals can link to satellite clinics and doctors’ offices with dedicated fiber lines, allowing for rapid and secure transport of high-bandwidth files such as X-rays and MRI results.
    Bundle Effect

    Comcast’s Metro Ethernet network, introduced in May 2011, is targeted to business customers, including hospitals. The company can transport data at faster speeds than traditional phone company Internet connection, said Kevin O’Toole, Comcast’s senior vice president of product management and strategy for business services. A hospital can download a 500 megabyte digital X-ray in 40 seconds with Metro Ethernet, a file that would take 44 minutes to download with a slower connection, said Jennifer Khoury, a Comcast spokeswoman.

    Hospitals are more likely to bundle services, including television and landline phone, if they buy broadband from cable companies, O’Toole said. Philadelphia-based Comcast’s business- services market opportunity is about $10 billion to $15 billion, and health care is a “large part” of that, he said.

    “The bundling of services allows cable to offer lower pricing to get into the market,” said David Joyce, an analyst at Miller Tabak & Co. in New York. “Now that cable companies have been focusing on the commercial market, they should be expected to take more share.”
    Incumbents’ Grip

    Displacing Verizon and AT&T is a challenge, Joyce said. They’re large enough to engage in a pricing war and they offer wireless access, which cable doesn’t have, he said. Verizon’s new network using so-called long-term evolution technology is available in most U.S. hospitals and can frequently achieve speeds faster than a cable modem, according to Peter Tippett, vice president of Verizon Connected Healthcare Solutions.

    Verizon is also touting data security as competitive advantage. The 1996 U.S. Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act set security standards for transferring data, making it illegal for doctors to e-mail health records without specific safeguards. Verizon’s acquisition of cloud provider Terremark Worldwide Inc. last year and Cybertrust in 2007 allows the company to provide the “most secure” network to send and store private health records, Tippett said.
    Not Just Speed

    AT&T’s longevity serving hospitals is an advantage over cable competitors, said Randall Porter, assistant vice president of AT&T ForHealth. The Dallas-based company can fortify an already existing network by adding mobile devices, sensors and software to enhance its service. AT&T has boosted health-care spending in recent years and gets about $5 billion a year in revenue from the industry, Porter said.

    “It’s not just about broadband speed,” Porter said. “You have to have the device, the application and the network to provide the experience.”

    To persuade businesses to switch from phone companies, Comcast, Time Warner Cable and Cox have partnered with technology companies to build more advanced applications on top of their cable networks as added enhancements.

    One example is home health monitoring. A Time Warner Cable service allows an individual’s vital statistics to be entered daily into an application that’s viewed by a physician. The information is stored on servers hosted by NaviSite Inc., a cloud storage company acquired by Time Warner Cable last year.
    Teledoctor’s Orders

    Having years of data on blood pressure, weight, insulin levels and other statistics allows doctors to make more accurate diagnoses, said Scott Patch, a family physician in Portland, Maine, who uses Time Warner Cable’s infrastructure.

    Patch is also using an application that allows him to videoconference with patients who also have Time Warner Cable’s broadband service at their home. The product is particularly useful for elderly patients who have trouble getting to the doctor’s office routinely.

    “I have one patient, a diabetic, and I was talking to his wife on videoconference, and I see him eating a bag of chips in the background,” Patch said. “I’m like, ‘Hey you, don’t eat that whole bag of chips!’ The televisits allow doctors to see how patients are doing away from the very sterile doctor’s office environment.”


  • by bally chohanNew Technology Can Read Your Mind

    bally chohan

     

    New Technology Can Read Your Mind
    Steven Spielberg’s 2002 science-fiction thriller Minority Report conjured a world where computers could read minds and predict the future. It seemed fanciful at the time, but fantasy is edging closer to fact.

    On Jan. 31, a team of scientists at the UC Berkeley, led by Robert Knight programmed computers to decode brain waves and replay them as words. Five months earlier, another group of Berkeley scientists showed their colleagues movie trailers and used computers to play back in color what people saw.
    brain-nb52

    Illustration by Kelsey Drake

    These experiments are a big leap forward from 2006, when a French scientist first replayed images from a human mind, a crude black-and-white checkerboard pattern. The possibilities are immense: a paralyzed person could “speak”; doctors could access the mind of a patient in a coma; you could rewatch your dreams on an iPad. There are, of course, equally dark prospects, such as the involuntary extraction of information from the brain.

    Despite these breakthroughs, Jack Gallant, the neuroscientist who led the first Berkeley team, says current technology for decoding brain activity is still “relatively primitive.” The field is held back by its clunky machinery, in particular the fMRI.

    “Eventually,” says Gallant, “someone will invent a decoding machine you can wear as a hat.” Such leaps into the human mind, he says, might take 30 years.

    Still, the recent advances at Berkeley offer small answers, which scientists can use to begin unlocking the secrets of memory and consciousness.

    Like The Daily Beast on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for updates all day long.


  • Oscar organizers honor film science, technology by bally chohan

    Oscar organizers honor film science, technology
    (Reuters) – Hosting Oscar organizers’ Scientific and Technical Awards on Saturday night, actress Milla Jovovich, a veteran of effects-driven movies like the “Resident Evil” franchise, confessed she knew little about what actually goes on behind the cameras.

    “I’m not an expert in technology. However I will say that as an actor, I certainly benefited from the many innovations you bring to filmmaking,” she told a packed ballroom of technical wizards being honored by the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences in Beverly Hills.

    The annual awards event is typically overshadowed by the Academy Awards, or Oscars, which will be given out on February 26 for the best film, performances, directing, writing and other film work of the year.

    Saturday’s scientific and technical awards were reserved for honorees including Douglas Trumbull, recipient of the Gordon E. Sawyer Award for work that has “brought credit to the industry.”

    Trumbull has been at the forefront of visual effects for decades, working on classics like “2001: A Space Odyssey,” “Blade Runner” and more recently, “The Tree of Life,” a contender in this year’s best film race.

    He spoke to the audience about rapidly changing technology in cinema and challenges facing the industry as attendance dips.

    “I think we can make movies that make people say, ‘I’m going to go out to a movie tonight because it’s so cool, it’s so big, it’s so grand and it’s so spectacular and there’s so much showmanship,” said Trumbull. “I think we can bring movies to new heights.”

    Other scientific and technical winners included the late John D. Lowry, inventor of the Lowry technique that is used to enhance image quality. Lowry died in his sleep only three weeks ago on January 21. Upon accepting the honor in his absence, his widow kissed the plaque then held it to the heavens.

    Honorees also included achievements in lens development, high-speed digital camera systems, camera stabilization rigs and high-resolution stock used in archival preservation.

    Visual effects guru Jonathan Erland was awarded the John A. Bonner Medal for a lifetime of dedication to the academy. With a career spanning over 50 years, Erland joined legendary effects house Industrial Light & Magic in the 1970s and worked on such classics as “Star Wars.”

    The academy’s science and technical awards chairman, Erland holds a patent for the Blue-Max flux projector, a traveling matte process, and was instrumental in establishing visual effects as a separate branch of the Academy.

    “The real task before us is to manage the present so that motion pictures stay relevant to the academy’s mission and the ideals we espouse,” declared Erland. “When all motion pictures are excellent, then, perhaps, we can talk about a new vision for this body.

    (Editing by Jonathan Riefe, Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)


  • Review by bally chohan Foxconn Technology Cancels Convertibles Sale Amid Europe Crisis

    Foxconn Technology Cancels Convertibles Sale Amid Europe Crisis
    Feb. 13 (Bloomberg) — Foxconn Technology Co., a maker of metal casings for Apple Inc., canceled a plan to sell as much as NT$8 billion ($271 million) in convertible bonds, citing the effect of Europe’s debt crisis on debt markets.

    The application to the financial regulator to sell the securities was withdrawn, the Taipei-based company said in an exchange filing today. The company’s operations and outlook remain strong, it said. Spokesmen C.K. Liu and Jack Huang didn’t answer calls to their office today.

    Foxconn, which supplies the metal cases for Apple’s iPad and MacBooks, is looking to expand capacity and increase output for new products including ultrabooks, high-end notebook computers with thin metal shells, from Hewlett-Packard Co. and Acer Inc. The unit of Foxconn Technology Group, the world’s largest custom electronics maker, still needs cash, said Angela Hsiang, who rates the stock “outperform” at KGI Securities Co. in Taipei.

    “They’ve been riding on Apple’s growth trend to move into Ultrabook cases, and they need this cash to expand their capacity,” Hsiang said. The company also assembles games consoles for Nintendo Co., she said.

    Foxconn Technology has NT$2.2 billion of bond payments due this year, according to Bloomberg data. The company had NT$24.5 billion in cash and equivalents at the end of September, with NT$18 billion in short-term borrowings and other short-term liabilities, excluding accounts payable, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

    The company gained 0.4 percent to NT$131.5 as of 12:38 p.m. in Taipei trading, reversing a decline of as much as 3.4 percent. The benchmark Taiex index added 0.7 percent.

    Foxconn, 10 percent directly owned by iPhone and iPad maker Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., supplies around 95 percent of its metal casings output to Apple, said Allen Chang, who rates the stock “neutral” at Barclays Capital Inc.

    A cancellation of a convertible bond sale may result in the company switching to a straight bond offering, a move which could be positive for the shares because a convertibles issuance may dilute the stock, Chang said.

    Nine of 16 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg recommend investors “buy” the stock while two say “sell” and five have a “hold” recommendation.

    The European Union financial markets have been pummeled by concern that Greece may default on its sovereign debt and pull out of the euro pact.

    Countries including Greece, Portugal, Spain and Ireland have all been straining to meet sovereign debt payments because of budget deficits that widened after the last recession crimped tax receipts. Portugal, Ireland and Greece received EU bailouts in exchange for pledges to slash spending.

    –Editor: Dave McCombs

    To contact the reporter on this story: Tim Culpan in Taipei at tculpan1@bloomberg.net.

    To contact the editor responsible for this story: Michael Tighe at mtighe4@bloomberg.net.


  • Never alone with mobile technologies

    Bally chohan Reviews

    best Bally chohan Reviews

    As William Powers writes in his book Hamlet’s BlackBerry: A Practical Philosophy for Building a Good Life in the Digital Age, we live in a world where everyone is connected to everyone else all the time.

    I believe that being connected in whatever form is important in this day and age although my friends have sarcastically reminded me that I have hardly done any calling or texting.

    In fact, I was the last among my friends to embrace mobile technology back in the late 1980s.

    As a mobile phone user, there will never be a time when you’re not alone.  Even if  your phone may be switched off at certain times, you are still considered connected somewhat!


  • Intel SSD 520 Series 120GB review

    bally chohan reviews

    bally chohan experts in technolozy

    The 120GB could be the SSD sweet-spot, but can Intel’s SSD 520 Series 120GB drive hit that head-on?

    Intel has done the obvious thing and stuck a SandForce controller in its desktop SSDs.

    If the larger members of the new 520 Series, like the Intel SSD 520 240GB, are a little punitive on pricing, what about the Intel SSD 520 Series 120GB, could it offer the best compromise between price, performance and capacity?

    One thing it certainly shares with the larger 520 Series solid state drive is Intel’s SSD firmware development and validation regime.


  • Facebook applications has created 466,000 US jobs since 2007

    Posted on by admin

    Looking for a promising career in a lousy economy? A new study suggests you’re apt to find it in apps — the services and tools built to run on smartphones, computer tablets and Facebook’s online social network.

    The demand for applications for everything ranging from games to quantum physics has created 466,000 jobs in the U.S. since 2007, according to an analysis released Tuesday by technology trade group TechNet.

    bally chohan reviews

    bally chohan experts in technolozy

    The estimate counts 311,000 jobs at companies making the apps and another 155,000 at local merchants who have expanded their payrolls in an economic ripple effect caused by increased spending at their businesses.


  • Down Child Porn Users New Technology Takes

    New Technology Takes Down Child Porn Users

    FDLE has a new weapon in the fight against child porn. A high tech bus will pull up to the suspected offender’s home and confiscate their computer. (CBS4)
    Carey Codd
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    MIAMI (CBS4) – The state’s latest tool to clamp down on child pornographers might not look like much from the outside – a plain-looking white van.

    But investigators say the van has enhanced their operations by allowing them to put handcuffs on suspects much more quickly.

    One morning in mid-January — after a pre-dawn planning session — investigators from the Internet Crimes Against Children, or ICAC, task force drove the van into a quiet, working class Margate neighborhood.

    Their target was a man suspected of downloading and sharing explicit images of “very young children under the age of 12 engaging in various sex acts” with adults and children, according to an arrest report.

    The suspect, George Baram, emerged from his house wearing a shirt that read, “It’s your lucky day.” For Baram, it turned out to be anything but lucky.

    As agents from the ICAC carried computers, hard drives and compact discs out of Baram’s home, technicians began sifting through the computer hardware in the van.

    Within a short time, they discovered the videos.

    An arrest report shows that Baram confessed, saying he downloaded the videos then deleted them. Baram told investigators, “that he has never touched a child in a sexual manner.”

    Mike Phillips, FDLE’s Chief of the Computer Crimes Center, said the van enables agents to do time-consuming forensic examinations on the spot, which is a major change.

    “Before we were having to leave suspects out on the streets until we could fully look at all the evidence,” Phillips explained. “We can now conduct a search warrant and make a decision and take the predator off the street so they can now longer prey on children and exploit them.”

    Phillips said there is a “significant increase” in child pornography cases statewide and because of the heavy caseload, Phillips said that in the past it could take up to a year to examine a suspect’s computer.

    Stats from FDLE show that in 2011, the agency made 1,076 arrests in child pornography cases statewide. In 2008, that number was 749.

    The van is assisting agents to deal with the caseload, Phillips said. He added that it also encourages confessions. While agents in one section of the van are examining the computer equipment, they can confront the suspect, who is seated in another section, with the images of child pornography found on his computer.

    “We have had suspects break down and cry,” Phillips said. “We’ve had suspects that become defiant, that want us to learn why this is ok. Because in their minds they truly believe that abusing children sexually is normal.”

    FDLE also has more agents at its’ disposal in their fight against child pornography.

    Last summer, agents from the state attorney general’s office joined forces with FDLE. The agents were spread across the state and it resulted in an increase of 6 officers fighting crimes against children in South Florida.
    “It allows us to share intelligence, share training, share information much more quickly than when we were having to be in separate offices,” Phillips said.

    The ICAC is comprised of agents from 57 agents across South Florida and into Naples. The task force is federally funded and is headed by the Broward Sheriff’s Office.

    The van has been a welcome addition to the efforts to curtail the downloading and sharing of child pornography. With all the latest technology inside, the van’s cost about $100,000 and there are three of them operating statewide.

    The van sat quietly outside George Baram’s home in Margate as cyber detectives built their case against him.

    We spoke to George Baram briefly after he was handcuffed and led to a waiting unmarked police car. When asked why he was being arrested, Baram initially denied downloading child pornography. Then he said, “You download stuff, music, sometimes file names are mislabeled.”

    When asked if he watched the videos of child pornography that investigators say they found on his children he told CBS 4 News, “I delete them.”

    FDLE, meanwhile, said they expect more arrests as they use this van to continue the task force’s crackdown on child pornography.

    “For some of these people they may be on the verge of actually molesting a child,” said Bob Brenden, FDLE Assistant Special Agent in Charge. “For every person that we can take off the street that’s involved in child pornography that may be one child that doesn’t get victimized.”

    FDLE agents say parents need to pay close and constant attention to the online activities of their children. FDLE recommends a website — secularization.org — which has safety tips and important information for keeping track of the websites your child visits and their passwords.
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    http://miami.cbslocal.com/2012/02/02/new-technology-takes-down-child-porn-users/


  • Reviewed by bally chohanTechnology Helps Sundance Films Capture the Moment

    Bally chohan  — If the Sundance Film Festival is a mirror of America, this year’s installment depicts an unusually stark image of a broken place filled with broken people.

    Documentaries examine the nation’s collapsed manufacturing base, its damaged health care system, a looming hunger crisis among the American poor, an epidemic of rape in the United States military, the American dream turned nightmare and the disastrous state of the government’s war on drugs.

     

    Narrative entries look at financial fraud and corporate greed, unhappy young adults trying to push the reboot button on their lives and the broader theme of moral decay. “A midlife crisis as a country” is how Trevor Groth, director of programming for Sundance, sums up the dominant thematic current of this year’s festival, which starts on Thursday in Park City, Utah.

     

    Independent film has always had a bleak streak: a desire to tell complicated stories that don’t end with everyone smiling is part of what sparked the indie movement (now pushing 40) in the first place. Perhaps the abnormally uniform mood of this year’s lineup is simply a reflection of how difficult the last few years have been, with two wars and a brutal recession representing just the most obvious aspects of the problem.

     

    But festival organizers, including Robert Redford, Sundance’s founder, wonder if other forces are at play here, namely technology and a faster pace of filmmaking.

     

    Yes, Sundance has always reflected contemporary society, but the view is usually blurrier than people (especially reporters looking for trends) want to admit, or at least more outdated. Historically, because Sundance films have roughly had a gestation time of three to five years, chances were high that the cultural moment they were examining had already faded.

     

    That has now changed. Because of advances in digital moviemaking, a notable number of this year’s selections took less than a year and a half to come together. Some of the entries this year, using the latest gadgets and stripped of studio bureaucracy and complex scheduling requirements, took only four months or so to be made.

     

    “If ever there was a crucial time for a hard, honest look at our country, it’s now — it’s no secret that we’re at the bottom of a very dark barrel — and the speed with which films can now be made is greatly helping artists to do just that,” Mr. Redford said.

     

    John Cooper, Sundance’s director, also pointed to the speed of digital filmmaking tools, particularly home editing equipment, as having noticeably changed the festival.

     

    “After 9/11 we didn’t start seeing films reacting to it until a few years later,” he said. “But even when the recession hit a few years after that, you felt the impact of it more quickly. From a programming perspective, we feel more tuned in to how people are feeling right now than we ever have before.”

     

    Mr. Groth and Mr. Cooper both say that no efforts are made to mold the festival around certain themes; whatever emerges emerges. Both also insist that there is no political agenda at work in this election year (although critics of the left-leaning festival probably believe otherwise). But they do see Sundance’s role as cultural examiner as extremely important.

     

    “Part of the reason that independent film is so important as an art form involves the special insight it gives us into America,” Mr. Cooper said. “Who are we? The honest answers are certainly not coming from television or mainstream movies.”

     

    Sundance, which runs through Jan. 29 and showcases more than 100 feature films, sets the tone for this corner of cinema for the year to come because it functions as a bazaar for distribution companies. Last year more than 40 films were purchased, among the most ever (official records don’t exist), some of which are still unspooling in theaters. “Sing Your Song,” a documentary about Harry Belafonte shown at last year’s festival, was released only last weekend.

     

    There is, of course, a wide variety of films at this year’s festival that center on subjects that are happy, or at least less sobering. Julie Delpy’s “2 Days in New York,” a follow-up to her 2007 critical hit “2 Days in Paris,” is a witty romp co-starring Chris Rock. “The First Time” is a funny story of two teenagers falling in love. (It is being shopped by John Sloss, the New York-based sales agent who sold “Little Miss Sunshine” to Fox Searchlight for $10.5 million in 2006, still the festival record.)

     

    Sales agents like happy themes, which are generally more palatable to a broad audience. But sellers are also optimistic about some of this year’s grittier selections because they are so topical.

     

    “Moviegoers can really identify with these problems,” said Jay Cohen, a partner at the Gersh Agency. “Everybody in the world is trying to figure out who they are right now.”

     

    Going by Sundance’s official program, which includes detailed summaries of the selected films, at least eight fall squarely into the category of “America is broken.” The most high-profile may be “The Queen of Versailles,” a documentary directed by Lauren Greenfield that looks at a Florida developer’s attempt to build a 90,000-square-foot home. (It has already spawned a defamation lawsuit.) “The House I Live In,” directed by Eugene Jarecki, who won Sundance’s grand jury prize in 2005 for his military documentary “Why We Fight,” tackles the failed war on drugs.

     

    “I see a lot of movies in this year’s festival that aren’t made to be crowd pleasers but are instead made to say something about the moment,” said Tom Bernard, the co-president of Sony Pictures Classics and a longtime festival attendee.

     

    Four films gaze intensely at corporate greed, including “Arbitrage,” a thriller directed by Nicholas Jarecki (brother of Eugene) that stars Richard Gere as a billionaire hedge fund manager whose empire collapses because of fraud. At least 14 selections look at moral decay, among them “The Comedy,” directed by Rick Alverson, a tale of hipsters who act like spoiled children. Mr. Groth described it as “a camouflaged assault on contemporary culture” and “a carefully rendered cautionary fable for the autumn of America.”

     

    Many movies, about 25, look at 30-somethings whose lives have come apart for one reason or another — divorce, drugs, depression — and who are trying to get back on track. Many are not as depressing as they might have been, with filmmakers tackling the topic through comedy and warm drama.

     

    “Smashed,” directed by James Ponsoldt, stars Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Aaron Paul and Octavia Spencer in a story about what happens to a marriage of two alcoholics when one tries to get sober. The drama “Nobody Walks,” directed by Ry Russo-Young, stars John Krasinski, Olivia Thirlby and Rosemarie DeWitt and looks at a liberal Los Angeles family’s unraveling.

     

    Super Crispy Entertainment, a production company backed by Zygmunt Wilf, the principal owner of the Minnesota Vikings, and his wife, Audrey, produced both of those films, along with “Like Crazy,” a darling of last year’s festival. “Smashed” had roughly a four-month turnaround from when the money started flowing and the film was completed, according to Jonathan Schwartz, one of Super Crispy’s principals. “Nobody Walks” also came together in a matter of months.

     

    “That kind of timeline is outrageous,” he said, “but we were able to do it because editing software lets us work at home and around the clock.

     

    Bally chohan he is expert in technology expert he is technology guru if you have any query than contact to Mr. Bally chohan


  • Reviewed by bally chohan HzO’s WaterBlock technology could make it to Apple products

    Bally chohan sad While our very own Victor Agreda, Jr. checked out the Liquipel waterproofing technology at CES last week, others were checking out competitor HzO’s WaterBlock technology. The Utah company told the Pocket-lint blog that they’ve been talking to both Samsung and Apple about applying the nanoscale waterproofing technology to upcoming phones.

     

    A spokesman for the company told the blog that they’re “in the process of signing up a major smartphone partner” and a headphone manufacturer. Headphones manufactured with the process would be impervious to sweat or rain damage, and could be used while swimming or taking a shower.

     

    Having this technology applied to a next-generation iPhone would make waterproof cases like those from Lifeproof obsolete, although you’d probably still want to keep your baby safe from drops. For those who want existing devices to be protected from the ravages of liquids, it appears that ZAGG is planning on distributing the technology and hopefully providing aftermarket application of the invisible vapor coating. Check out the video below for an explanation of how HzO’s nanotechnology works.

    Bally chohan he is expert in technology expert he is technology guru if you have any query than contact to Mr. Bally chohan



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