Q 8 Blog Reviews » Posts for tag 'Business'

ReadWriteWeb Events Guide, 24 April 2010

Time is running out to register for the ReadWriteWeb Mobile Summit 2010 ! It's going to be the premier place to explore the latest mobile development trends - both the technology and the emerging business applications. And since it's an unconference, you'll be able to analyze, think and create the future of mobile with the brightest in the industry, your peers! Sign up now. How do you like your events guide? You can import individual events into Google Calendar using the link beside each entry, or download the entire thing as an iCal (and Google Calendar-importable) file, or even view it as a world map . Know of something cool taking place that should appear here? Let us know in the comments below or contact us . Sponsor 29 April 2010: San Francisco, California Green:Net 2010 Calling Internet entrepreneurs! A Greentech conference for you. From Vinod Khosla and Steve Jurvetson to Jerry Brown and Bill Gross, our speakers at Green:Net 2010 will be focused on one thing: how the Internet and IT can be leveraged to save the planet. Could this be the theme of your next startup? Attendees will gain insight into the huge new technology markets that are about to be unleashed. What is Green:Net ? Green:Net is where green and IT meet. While alternative energy gets a lot of attention at most green conferences, only the The GigaOM Network's Green:Net offers a specific point of view on how the computing and Internet technologies will provide the tools needed to fight climate change. Subscribers of ReadWriteWeb click here to buy your limited supply $150-off ticket. 26 April 2010: San Francisco, California Future of Money and Technology Summit The Future of Money & Technology Summit will bring together the best and brightest thinkers around money, including visionaries, entrepreneurial business people, developers, press, investors, authors, solution/service providers, and organizations who work where cash and commerce collide. We meet to discuss the evolving ecosystem around money in a proactive, conducive to dealmaking environment. Featured speakers include Jolie O'Dell, formerly of ReadWriteWeb, as well as representatives from Wells Fargo Bank, Kiva, SharesPost, Jambool, Founders Fund, Outright.com, SoftTech VC, and many more. Use discount code "rww" to get 10% off registration . 3 – 6 May 2010: San Francisco, California Web 2.0 Expo San Francisco Web 2.0 Expo San Francisco brings together the designers, developers, entrepreneurs, VCs, marketing professionals, product managers, and business strategists - from startups to enterprises - that are building the next-generation Web. Along with a vibrant Expo Hall and plenty of networking opportunities, four main conference tracks cover a spectrum of Web 2.0 topics from business strategy to Web design, user experience, developer hacks, community building, real-time, mobile, cloud computing, user-generated content, and more. Featured speakers include Chris Anderson, Ben Huh, Charlene Li, Kevin Lynch, Hilary Mason, and Brad Stone. Register today . 6 – 7 2010: San Francisco, California Social Gaming Summit

dfeb38b9a2guide.png ReadWriteWeb Events Guide, 24 April 2010

Visit link:
ReadWriteWeb Events Guide, 24 April 2010

Tags:Australia, Business, code, development, events guide, marketing, media, mobile, mobile-internet, prophet, south-africa, sports, technology

Weekly Wrap-up: Deleting FB Apps, Open Web vs. FB Connect, Adobe Gives up on Apple, And More…

It took Sarah Perez's post How to Delete Facebook Applications (and Why You Should) a little more than 24 hours to become to the top-viewed post of this week. In a week filled with Facebook news, it certainly hit a nerve. We also continued our exploration of the significant Internet trends of 2010. We wrote about how the Internet of Things can be an Internet of Cows, new tools to visualize the real-time Web, and how augmented reality developers can win $5,000. Read on for more. Sponsor Story of the Week: Delete Those Facebook Apps How to Delete Facebook Applications (and Why You Should) This is What a Tweet Looks Like XAuth: The Open Web Fires a Shot Against Facebook Connect Adobe Gives up on Apple, Welcomes Android Is the New Facebook a Deal With the Devil? Top 10 Mobile Trends of 2010, Part 1: Design & Development More coverage and analysis from ReadWriteWeb ReadWriteWeb Mobile Summit Join us for the ReadWriteWeb Mobile Summit on May 7 in Mountain View, California as we explore the latest mobile development trends, both the technology and the emerging business applications. Be a part of the discussion on geo-location services , augmented reality , native app vs. browser-based , commerce and marketing , mobile social networking and the Internet of Things. Sponsorship enquiries: sales@readwriteweb.com . Mobile Web Top 10 Mobile Trends of 2010, Part 3: Emerging Markets Two-Thirds of iPhone Users Now Use Location-Based Services at Least Once a Week Top 10 YouTube Videos About Flash Mobs More Mobile Web coverage Augmented Reality Budding AR Developer? Put Your Creativity to Use and Win $5,000 Top 10 Mobile Trends of 2010, Part 2: Apps, Apps, Apps More Augmented Reality coverage Augmented Reality for Marketers and Developers: Our Newest Research Report We're pleased to announce ReadWriteWeb's latest premium report, Augmented Reality for Marketers and Developers: Analysis of the Leaders, the Challenges and the Future . This report will help you develop a sophisticated understanding of Augmented Reality (AR), the mobile and Web technology that places data on top of a user's view of the physical world. The research included will help you decrease your AR development time to market by learning from the first wave of early adopters. AR offers a new marketing and product paradigm for a high impact, high value customer experience. More than 1,000 AR campaigns were kicked-off last year and we expect to see many more in 2010. In this report, we profile key AR development companies, their campaigns as well as development lessons learned. For more information or to buy the report, visit here . Internet of Things Internet of Things Can Make Us Human Again As Cattle Rustling Increases, So Does the Need for RFID More Internet of Things coverage Real-Time Web PostRank Launches New Tools to Visualize the Real-Time Web YouTube Streams IPL Cricket Live In U.S. More Real-Time Web coverage . Don't miss the next wave of opportunity on the Web supported by real-time technology! Get ReadWriteWeb's report, The Real-Time Web and its Future . Check Out The ReadWriteWeb iPhone App We recently launched the official ReadWriteWeb iPhone app . As well as enabling you to read ReadWriteWeb while on the go or lying on the couch, we've made it easy to share ReadWriteWeb posts directly from your iPhone, on Twitter and Facebook. You can also follow the RWW team on Twitter, directly from the app. We invite you to download it now from iTunes . ReadWriteStart Our channel ReadWriteStart , sponsored by Microsoft BizSpark , is dedicated to profiling startups and entrepreneurs. The Art of the Email Pitch Tips for Networking (Beyond Just "Social Networking") Got an Exit Strategy? Lessons From Foursquare and Yahoo ReadWriteCloud Our channel ReadWriteCloud , sponsored by VMware and Intel, is dedicated to Virtualization and Cloud Computing. The Largest Cloud in the World is Owned By A Criminal Network Google's Eric Schmidt Gushes About HTML 5 Google's Vint Cerf on Private Clouds v. Public Clouds Enjoy your weekend everyone. Discuss

81067b2b16apup 1.png Weekly Wrap up: Deleting FB Apps, Open Web vs. FB Connect, Adobe Gives up on Apple, And More...

Originally posted here:
Weekly Wrap-up: Deleting FB Apps, Open Web vs. FB Connect, Adobe Gives up on Apple, And More...

Tags:Business, California, cricket, internet, iphone, mobile, networking, social-networking, technology, tools, weekly wrap-ups, yahoo

Developer Trends: Ruby in the Cloud with Enterprise Class SLAs

Heroku is a platform that offers an effective join of the best parts of scaling cloud infrastructure with simple but great tools for immediately provisioning Ruby applications. Last week, at the Under the Radar event, where Heroku is a alumni, the company announced that they are nearly at 60,000 applications - marking a growth rate of over 1,000 new applications hosted weekly. In this quick analysis, we'll review Heroku and New Relic as two pieces of cloud infrastructure that helps web sites perform to service level agreements even the developer can love. Sponsor $ sudo gem install heroku - or - Getting Started is Easy Feeling like impressing the boss? Tell 'em you can transform that whiteboard sketch into an working web application in two weeks. That is what some inspired Ruby developers are doing. Some significant enterprises are giving it a shot. We found this list of enterprises that are known to have a Ruby application in production. So, the boss says " do it " What do you do next? If the answer needs to be "now", Heroku can fit in nicely as a place to launch your application without having to bring new technology or skills into the organization. Heroku's ruby platform lives on top of Amazon Web Services. The company sells a unit of computing called a Dyno, and bundles packages like the Ronin that are comprised of compute plus storage packages. All of Heroku's offerings come with infrastructure curation build ton top of EC2, S3 and a host of Amazon Web Services. Shown here is a snapshot of the Heroku Add-ons , partners the company offers to developers. It offers simplicity to the developer in the way the platform is bundled into Ruby. It has simple documentation that almost makes it fun to flip through architecture diagrams. And, it uses a model for add-ons that both promote the partner and make it easy to on-board. For example, when buying the popular Ruby application performance tool, New Relic for use in Heroku, the billing comes directly through Heroku's console and process. Recently, Heroku teamed up with NorthScale to introduce a memcache implementation to Heroku customers. Now, memcache is a command away, provisioned in your Amazon infrastructure cloud, all tuned and orchestrated by Heroku. All of the sudden, the cloud looks even smarter for developers scaling Ruby. New Relic Saves the SLA So, your app is ready, it looks exactly like your team wants it to. Is it ready for production launch? This can be an important time, and more and more often, developers are turning to tools like New Relic to test for application bottlenecks as part of the acceptance process. Sometimes, however, something is missed, and an application starts getting reports of "slowness", perceived or real. New Relic is ready to offer help, where you can tune your application, or do a quick two-minute install and troubleshoot. Here is a demonstration application company hosts with a sample application. New Relic has become a dominant application performance management tool. Its services provide a way to tune Ruby (and now Java) applications and report on a number of factors such as application performance satisfaction. The company has chosen to guide users towards simplifying the way SLAs are defined by implementing Apdex (Application Performance Index) which buckets application SLAs into three buckets, "satisfying" "tolerable", and "frustrating". By taking this approach to judging performance, the company moves users to the true experience of the web application instead of the raw metrics. What this boils down to is business owners being able to pinpoint where they need to be satisfied with the overall application performance. Ruby hosting in the cloud is catching on. With cloud offerings for real-time performance tuning and scaling up in the cloud a whole new door for growth with the language and adoption for the enterprise. Platforms like Heroku and tools like New Relic are bending the time-honored boundaries of Information Technology. The old joke "quality, time, cost - pick any two" is about meeting reality face-to-face. Yet, we wonder if Ruby in the cloud will offer the opportunity to break the rules of reality and let developers have it all. With commands such as "heroku scale memcache" directly near our fingertips, it may be time to claim a future where quality, time, and cost are joined as one. Discuss

ruby Developer Trends: Ruby in the Cloud with Enterprise Class SLAs

Originally posted here:
Developer Trends: Ruby in the Cloud with Enterprise Class SLAs

Tags:amazon web, analysis, application, Business, cloud, developer, enterprise, getting-started, great tools, Heroku, heroku-add-ons, performance tool, relic, Ruby, time, web-sites

SBA Finds Entrepreneurs Aren’t Saving for Retirement

While creating a profitable company may provide for a comfortable retirement, that's no way to plan. And many entrepreneurs, perhaps believing their businesses will be their retirement, don't plan sufficiently for their retirement. That's the finding of two reports recently released by the Small Business Administration. Saving for Retirement: A Look at Small Business Owners , written by SBA economist Jules Lichtenstein, finds that entrepreneurs' retirement account ownership, contribution, and participation rates are low. Among his key findings: Sponsor Just 36% of business owners have individual retirement accounts (IRAs), and only one-third of business owners with an IRA contributed to one during the 2005 tax year. Only 18% of business owners have a 401(k) plan, and less than 2% have a Keogh plan. Business owners are more likely to own tax-deferred individually based IRAs if they are older, female, white, non-Hispanic, citizens, better educated, and married. Entrepreneurs who own homes and have other retirement accounts are most likely to have IRA, Keogh or 401(k) participation. A second SBA study, Small Business Retirement Plan Availability and Worker Participation , surveyed the participation in retirement plans by employees of small businesses. Among the results: Approximately 72% of employees working for small businesses (almost 41 million workers) do not have a company-sponsored retirement plan available where they work. This contrasts with those who work for businesses with over 100 employees. 78% of employees for large firms have retirement plans available at their work. Of the employees at small businesses who do have company-sponsored retirement plans, 9% do not participate. Only 19.5 percent of workers in small private sector companies report participating in a retirement plan. Lichtenstein suggests the findings in his study point to the need to develop ways to help owners of small businesses, especially home-based sole proprietorships and minority-run businesses, increase their retirement savings. "There is a need to better coordinate employer-based retirement accounts with individual-based accounts like IRAs and make plans less complex and burdensome on business owners, especially for owners of micro-businesses." Are you saving for retirement? Do you even have a plan? Let us know in the comments. Discuss

retirement april10 SBA Finds Entrepreneurs Arent Saving for Retirement

Follow this link:
SBA Finds Entrepreneurs Aren't Saving for Retirement

Tags:better-educated, Business, business-owners, businesses, contrasts, during-the-2005, million-workers, participation, retirement, retirement-plan, small-business, Startups, study, work, worker

As Cattle Rustling Increases, So Does the Need for RFID

To most people, cattle rustling is a crime that happens only in old movies. But to cattlemen and ranchers in the United States, it is has always been part of real life. With an enduring economic recession, and cattle going for about $1,000 a head, rustling has experienced a renaissance. From Arkansas to Missouri to Oklahoma to Oregon , rustling is on the increase and the criminals involved are rarely caught. Brands can be manipulated and back roads are poorly patrolled by law enforcement. One possible deterrent is tagging. Sponsor Stealing cattle is not like shoving a handful of gold coins in your pocket. But knowledgeable thieves can put together a horse, dog and trailer and walk away with $10,000 or more at a time. Overtaxed local law enforcement, whose ranks have all too often been depleted by decreases in the taxes that fund them, can only do so much. Technology can do more. But only if it is used, and it will only be used if it is accepted by the men and women who are losing the cattle. Tagging and Tracking A vet can inject an RFID, or radio frequency identification, tag about the size of a grain of rice into an animal in seconds. When the tagged cow is shipped out, an inspector can use a hand-held scanner to retrieve the cow's information. If the registered owner and the brand diverge, the inspector knows something is wrong. Not only could tracking technology help against theft, but it could also streamline inventory control for ranchers, and restrict health-related recalls to meat that is likely to have been infected. But adoption of technology in ranching is slow. Cattle have not been turned into nodes in an information network for a reason. That reason is not technical. The technology is there and it works. It's behavioral, both on the federal side and on the ranchers'. Federal Indifference and Rancher's Suspicions In order to be of any real use, the information attached to a tag must be uploaded to some kind of central database. There is no such database nor any plans to create one. Even when the U.S. government was flush, it was not a priority. The more rural and the more Western a concern is, the less importance it has to those who control the disbursement of federal funds. Ranchers are also highly suspicious of centralized federal authority over their business. Federal directives that saved a lot of land for future generations also wound up limiting feeding areas for livestock. Sometimes that's been good, but many times it has turned a remote location that only ever saw cowboys into a small city, with concrete, powerlines and plumbing to serve the city-bred visitors. There have been many changes in the livestock industry in the preceding decades. To many of the remaining independent ranchers, the ones most likely to get rustled, those changes have been bad ones. Factory-raised beef defies both the historical spirit of ranching and makes it harder to make a living. Why should they agree to use a new technology, something that stinks of big ag? Entrepreneurs are the Ranchers of Tech I believe the key to any future adoption of tag-based livestock control, the kind of control that would have rustlers where they belong - running in place at the end of a spar - will require the participation of independent entrepreneurs and developers. A rancher is a lot more likely to trust an indie dev than a government rep, a federal investigator or a salesman from some software chaebol . Perhaps kids that were raised in the sticks and still have an affection for it, who do not want to see this way of life dead and who don't want to see either the rustlers or the agricultural conglomerates determine how we eat, will apply some of their unique technological know-how - and a little of their grandparents' elbow grease to the problem and come up with a way to read, record and retrieve information that ranchers could get behind. Maybe they could create a nation-wide, but decentralized and privately-held national cattle ID database, utilizing cloud computing and available to law enforcement as a tool that the ranchers themselves, and their indie tech partners, hold and control. Anything that doesn't have their brand on it, they won't touch. Amen to that. In the coming week I will be working with Kin Lane , a Web application and database programmer, to create a blueprint for the implementation of just such a system as I advocate here. We will post the blueprint in ReadWriteWeb next Friday. Further steps may include a survey of ranchers, to ascertain whether our plan would be accepted by the people it is designed for, and a case study using a set of half a dozen small ranches in southeastern Oregon. Discuss

c2bf22cda9ID TAG.jpg 150x95 As Cattle Rustling Increases, So Does the Need for RFID

Read the original post:
As Cattle Rustling Increases, So Does the Need for RFID

Tags:Business, disbursement, friday-further, implementation, internet of things, participation, people, rancher, tracking
© 2010 Q 8 Blog Reviews