Friday, 1 July 2016

the-future-now: Your dental visits might get a lot less scary...



the-future-now:

Your dental visits might get a lot less scary thanks to new technology

For some, there is no activity more terrifying than a trip to the dentist. If you have cavities, you’re met by a drill-wielding dentist, endure some pain, and you can be left feeling sore, numb or just completely disoriented by anesthesia. But now, researchers from King’s College London have come up with a new method that is painless and quick.

Follow @the-future-now



from http://kianorshahmohammadi.com/post/146767165810

source http://dentaleconomicsus.tumblr.com/post/146767626058

mrscomo: What will you do different today to improve your...



mrscomo:

What will you do different today to improve your results?
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Inspiration form @mpsmotivation

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Share this account someone else so they can follow along to! #ScoMotivate

#Entrepreneur #motivation #lifestyle #success #advice #ceo #Entrepreneurship #business #greatness #dreams #goals #StriveForGreatness #hustle #grind #advicequotes #quote #mentorship #entrepreneursofinstagram #mentor #millionaire #inspire #EntrepreneurMindset



from http://kianorshahmohammadi.com/post/146766996500

source http://dentaleconomicsus.tumblr.com/post/146767625478

the-future-now: 4 images reveal how many potentially dangerous...









the-future-now:

4 images reveal how many potentially dangerous objects are whirling around Earth

Beyond those clear skies you see, there’s a giant swarm of satellites, space debris and asteroids whizzing around Earth, enshrouding us in a spherical haze of space objects. Astronomers are predicting that all of those objects floating around pose a big problem for the future of our planet.

Follow @the-future-now



from http://kianorshahmohammadi.com/post/146767100045

source http://dentaleconomicsus.tumblr.com/post/146767625773

start-up-dude: The myth of BIG data OR what makes us human Last...



start-up-dude:

The myth of BIG data OR what makes us human

Last week I attended the international ticketing conference INTIX in Denver. It’s the biggest entertainment ticketing conference in the world. I participated in a session that was all about the use of Big Data for the purpose of better running event ticketing operations and achieving overall better business results. At some point I asked the presenter if he had done any benchmarking of his predicative analysis comparing results in the US and Canada.  (One has to understand that privacy laws in Canada are much more stringent than in the US, giving a data mining company very little accuracy to work with). His answer was that there was only a marginal difference between the two countries in terms of predicative results.

Having looked at the value of BIG data for the last 10 years, I have grown very skeptical that consumers can be profiled to predict behavior. Big data works well to understand historical data. However there is no proof that big data actually works to predict the future buying behavior of a consumer. Take for example the effectiveness of online display advertising (this does NOT include search advertising). Google is reporting an average click-through-rate of 0.2% for their display network! With all the data and behavioral tracking this appears very low. Of course there is this fundamental misunderstanding that users are always looking to buy something. The fact of the matter is we don’t. In contrary the point of being bombarded with about 1,700 online ads every week has made us grow immune to any form of online ads – we just don’t see them anymore. Ask yourself how many ads do you remember over the last three days. None? Trust me you’re not alone.

Today we have access to so much data and so much cheap computing power that we should be able to predict anything that involves human behavior, if Big Data would allow us to – however the fact is we can’t. Stock markets keep on crashing, epidemics keep on forming and disappearing, city and infrastructure planning keeps on being wrong. It’s true that big data allows us to understand the past better but it does not give us anything to predict the future. Humans don’t just have physical properties, our brains don’t work like machines and we are highly influenced by our social environment. Remember the old saying that the flap of a butterfly wing in China can cause a hurricane to build in the Caribbean – and while this may not be completely true, the message is that our world is a world dominated by chaotic and therefore unpredictable reactions. Little unexpected events can have massive consequences – a terrorist attack cannot be predicted but can put the world at the brink of war and the stock markets to crash from one day to another. Falling in love with a stranger can change the path of one’s live forever. Our unpredictable nature is exactly what makes us human. Big data is not going to change that.



from http://kianorshahmohammadi.com/post/146766959435

source http://dentaleconomicsus.tumblr.com/post/146767625098

Thursday, 30 June 2016

unprojects-blog: Cool idea! diy: Introducing DIY We started...



unprojects-blog:

Cool idea!

diy:

Introducing DIY

We started building DIY a few months ago and now we’re sharing the first thing we’ve made. This is a company that we hope to spend decades crafting, but it’s important for us to build it out in the open, bit by bit, to encourage our community of kids and parents to share feedback with us continuously. From Zach’s experience making Vimeo, we understand that this sort of culture fosters collaboration and admiration between a company and its community, and ultimately leads to something that is loved.

Our ambition is for DIY to be first app and community in every kid’s life.  It’s  what we wish we had when we were young, and what we’ll give to our kids. Today we’re releasing a portfolio tool to let kids collect everything they make as they grow up.

We’ve all seen how kids can be like little MacGyvers. They’re able to take anything apart, recycle what you’ve thrown away – or if they’re Caine, build their own cardboard arcade. This is play, but it’s also creativity and it’s a valuable skill. Our idea is to encourage it by giving kids a place online to show it off, so family, friends and grandparents can see it and easily respond. Recognition makes a kid feel great, and motivates them to keep going. We want them to keep making, and by doing so learn new skills, use technology constructively, begin a lifelong adventure of curiosity, and hopefully spend time offline, too.

We’re looking to you parents as partners to make it all work. It used to be that you hang your kids’ work on the fridge to let them know you’re proud. Now the Web is becoming a part of their life at home and school — and there’s a new opportunity to connect you to their creations and cheer them on.

When you get your kid to join DIY early, you’re helping to recognize creativity as an essential part of every kid’s education, and possibly a requirement for their satisfaction as an adult. Sadly, most adults don’t believe they’re creative although we’re all capable of it at any age! We believe that to accept yourself as a creative adult you must start as a kid who is fearless of learning new skills and doing it yourself. Encouraging your kids to be inventive and self-reliant now will better prepare them to participate in a world that keeps changing.

Here’s how it works today:

  1. DIY kids sign up and get their own Portfolio, a public web page to show off what they make.
  2. They upload pictures of their projects using diy.org or our iOS app.
  3. Kids’ projects are online for everyone to see, you can add Stickers to show support.
  4. You also have your own dashboard to follow their activity and to make sure they’re not sharing anything that should be private.

Kids are ready for this. They’re instinctively scientists and explorers. They’re quick to build using anything at their disposal. They transform their amazement of the world into games. They’re often drawn to learning that’s indistinguishable from play (think about bug collecting!). And, most important, they embrace technology.

We’re grateful for your help to make this company, and grow the next — hopefully larger — generation of creative kids.

- Zach Klein, Isaiah Saxon, Andrew Sliwinski, Daren Rabinovitch
(and Dave, Brian, Mike, Courtney, David, Lucas, Shawn, and Sean!)

PS. See our Parents page for more information. Or you can follow @DIY to see important updates.



from http://kianorshahmohammadi.com/post/146721363770

source http://dentaleconomicsus.tumblr.com/post/146722700343

"You build something remarkable because of the boundaries, not without them."

“You build something remarkable because of the boundaries, not without them.”

- Seth Godin, Seth’s Blog (via whyentrepreneurship)

from http://kianorshahmohammadi.com/post/146721389405



source http://dentaleconomicsus.tumblr.com/post/146722700693

BofA starts pre-selecting customers for Visa Checkout from online banking

fintechbot:

In the latest step at simplifying consumer payments, Bank of America announced today that it will pre-select customers’ eligible Visa cards for … http://bit.ly/1VbzKzq by @Finextra



from http://kianorshahmohammadi.com/post/146721283525

source http://dentaleconomicsus.tumblr.com/post/146722699563