Certain advertisements on Yahoo's European website may have helped infect thousands of computers with malware, according to Yahoo. A D...
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Certain advertisements on Yahoo's European website may have helped infect thousands of computers with malware, according to Yahoo. A D...
Here at CES 2014, Toshiba has just unveiled a new Chromebook, running Google’s Chrome OS on a 13.3-inch display for the first time, and priced below the $300 mark.
This is the company’s first step into Chrome territory, while competitors like Dell, Lenovo, HP, and Acer have been pumping out the light-as-air notebooks for a while now.
The Toshiba Chromebook is powered by an Intel Haswell chip, with a promised battery life of nine hours.
Meanwhile, the laptop sports a 13.3-inch 1366 x 768 display, with a .8-inch profile at 3.3 pounds.
On the inside, alongside that Haswell processor, you’ll find 16GB of SSD storage, 2GB of RAM, as well as dual-band 802.11 a/b/g/n Wifi. And once you have Wifi on a Chromebook, the magic really begins.
These devices run on a Chrome OS, which is essentially a beefed up Chrome browser. This means that access to various applications and programs is limited to web apps.
However, Google is working to make the browser experience as complete as possible with the help of Google Apps and Gchat + Hangouts.
Toshiba’s Chromebook is available for $279 starting on February 16.
Here at CES 2014, Toshiba has just unveiled a new Chromebook , running Google’s Chrome OS on a 13.3-inch display for the first time, and pri...
LG’s Life Band Touch is a fitness tracker that offers smartwatch features, including incoming call notifications and display. It uses Bluetooth LE, and works with both Android and iOS devices. There are controls on the device that let you switch tracks, play and pause music and more.
For fitness tracking, the Life Band Touch can report steps taken, distance travelled, pace and even calories burned. It has a built-in LED display to let you keep track of all that data without activating your phone, and it’s water resistant. It can work with existing fitness applications, too, so developers can integrate it into their own offering.
The Life Band Touch is launching this spring in the U.S., along with the Heart Rate Earphones, which use an optical sensor to measure the blood flow to your ears to determine your heart rate, and add that data to the information collected by the Life Band Touch itself.
LG’s Life Band Touch is a fitness tracker that offers smartwatch features, including incoming call notifications and display. It uses Blueto...
Heads-up, bibliophiles: social e-book retailer Zola Books has acquired curated book recommendation site Bookish. Terms of the deal were not disclosed, but a spokesperson for Zola Books confirmed that there were multiple bidders in the mix and that Zola was the smallest of the bunch.
In case you hadn’t heard of it, Bookish is a book discovery site founded by Simon & Schuster, Hachette, and Penguin Random House (then known as Penguin Group) to help users (what else?) find new books to lose themselves in. While Bookish itself sells books directly to consumers, Zola seems much more interested in its ability to recommend new books to readers based off of titles they’ve enjoyed in the past.
It’s still a relatively young venture — it originally launched back in February — and I haven’t been able to confirm why Bookish’s owners seemed to eager to sell it after less than a year. The party line is that they felt Bookish would be better off in the hands of a company that could operate with greater speed and flexibility, which I suspect isn’t the entire story.
And at first glance, Bookish seems like a pretty strange acquisition target for a company as new to the scene as Zola Books — the startup first launched its site last year with just north of $1 million in seed funding from a handful of big-name authors (like Audrey Niffenegger of The Time Traveler’s Wife fame) to take a social approach to selling ebooks. Sure, you can just putz around and shell out money for whatever titles catch your eye, but the site’s big draw is the ability for users to follow recommendations from friends, authors, publishers, and personalities. Since then the team has been fleshing out the site with new features and recently locked up another $3.9 million in seed money in a round led by HBO founder Charles Dolan. Regardless, once the ink is dry on those contracts, Bookish will be solely owned and operated by the Zola Books team.
These days I’m told that Zola sells “thousands” of its ebooks each month, though the company was very eager to point out its sales are more of a symptom of its community-building efforts than the result of a concerted commerce push. That said though, this is still a business, and on some level you’re only as valuable as the next book you buy. It’s not hard to see how Bookish’s recommendation smarts could come into play as a way to highlight more choices for Zola users to dive into (and hopefully pay for).
Meanwhile, Bookish will continue to operate as its own separate site “for the foreseeable future”, as will its recommendation API. At this point, there’s even talk of open-sourcing Bookish’s recommendation magic in a bid to get it in the hands of libraries and independent bookstores.
Heads-up, bibliophiles: social e-book retailer Zola Books has acquired curated book recommendation site Bookish . Terms of the deal were no...
LG’s CES press conference just kicked off here in Las Vegas, and the Korean tech giant always has already pulled an announcement out of the blue. In a bid to improve how people interact with the company’s vast smart home appliance portfolio, CTO Scott Ahn talked up LG HomeChat, a service that lets users essentially text message their appliances to issue commands and get status updates.
This is a developing story, please refresh for updates.
LG’s CES press conference just kicked off here in Las Vegas, and the Korean tech giant always has already pulled an announcement out of the ...
E-commerce startup Beauty Army is moving beyond its subscription commerce offering and opening up a full-fledged store for health and beauty products. And it’s doing so in a big way, with more than 200 brands and 20,000 products available for sale through its online catalog.
Beauty Army launched two years ago (on January 1st!) with a Birchbox-like subscription commerce platform for beauty products. But unlike Birchbox, which generally sends many of the same samples to its users, Beauty Army was built to give its users personalized recommendations for the products that they received.
It does that thanks to a huge data set on the back end that enables users to easily find products that are suited to their skin color and their personal style. When you first sign up for Beauty Army, you take a survey and create a profile that matches you up with products enjoyed by other users like you.
When Beauty Army was mainly doing this as a subscription commerce offering, the website would offer up a choice of nine products each month, of which users would pick six. It then used the data collected to better refine results over time. Now that it has all that data, it will be applying what it knows to full-sized products that can be ordered from its site.
When logging into Beauty Army, you still need to create a profile to get started, but once that’s done, you’re no longer limited to a certain number of sample items each month. Instead you can choose from any number of products available on the site.
But to get there, it still asks you a series of questions to help you find just the right product. Customers choose which category of product they’re looking for — either makeup, skin care, hair care, nail care, or fragrance — and then follow a series of questions to narrow down the results and provide a group of products that fits their preferences.
CEO Lindsey Guest compared that level of personalization to what you might find on other e-commerce sites, where it’s more or less impossible to find what you’re looking for — at least from a health and beauty standpoint. (Try shopping for ‘red lipstick on Walmart.com, for instance.) While there’s a bit more work involved in getting to a refined search page on Beauty Army, the company thinks the results that come in will be a lot better overall.
From a business standpoint, the e-commerce platform also makes a bit of sense in that it will open up a much bigger opportunity for Beauty Army. The platform was built by partnering with major online retailers, which actually hold the inventory and handle fulfillment.
In that way, Beauty Army doesn’t have to work directly with brands, and it carries none of the inventory risk of other e-commerce providers. The startup will continue to offer subscriptions for those who like that sort of thing, but with a full-fledged story, Beauty Army customers are no longer limited to six samples a month.
E-commerce startup Beauty Army is moving beyond its subscription commerce offering and opening up a full-fledged store for health and beaut...
Sequoia-backed video ad company Innovid is announcing that it’s working with Cisco to bring a new kind of ad targeting to second-screen apps (specifically, the smartphone and tablet apps of cable providers).
The idea is to target those ads based on what you’re watching — not just based on the show, but what’s actually being discussed on-screen at that moment. To do that, Cisco works with the cable operator to analyze the TV content in real time, identify relevant keywords in that content (as well as the context of those keywords), and then serve ads targeted at that those keywords.
For example, the companies say that if you’re watching a talk show and the host starts talking about tablets, they can serve you a tablet-related ad. Or if you’re watching a commercial for a tablet, the app might actually bring up a page where you can learn more and order the device in question.
Delivering these kinds of ads may become increasingly important as second-screen activity increases, because if you’re fiddling with your phone or your tablet while you’re watching TV, you’re probably not paying much attention to traditional commercials.
Other experiments in this area include Shazam’s ability to identify TV ads and deliver related content. The problem with these early efforts, argued Innovid co-founder and CTO Tal Chalozin, is that the individual apps in question don’t have the broad reach that TV advertisers are looking for, and advertisers are expected to create many different ads to accommodate different formats.
With Innovid and Cisco’s approach of working with cable operators, on the other hand, Chalozin said advertisers can run large-scale campaigns. Even if someone doesn’t have, say, the Comcast or Time Warner app open, it could still send them a push notification about an exclusive offer or exclusive content. (To be clear, the companies aren’t announcing any partners yet, so Cisco and Time Warner are just examples of the types of apps that might be involved.)
Plus, working with the cable companies means that you don’t have to manually “check in” to the show for the app to know what you’re watching. And Chalozin said that with Innovid’s tools, a single ad will work across multiple apps and devices.
The companies are showing the technology at the Consumer Electronics Show this week, and Chalozin gave me a quick demo before the conference. Basically, he brought talk show footage up on his screen, and as it played, a different keyword was being identified every few seconds. Once in a while one of those keywords would be highlighted, signaling that an advertiser is targeting that keyword.
I’m guessing that speed will be an important factor here — if an ad comes up right when a related topic is being discussed, it might feel relevant, but if it comes up a minute or two later, it’s probably confusing or weird. Chalozin agreed, and he noted that Cisco’s technology only takes about two seconds to generate keywords, though he admitted, “Clearly that needs to be tested at full scale.”
As I noted above, the companies are only demonstrating the technology this week, not announcing partners or availability, but Chalozin said, “The intention is to launch it at the end of the first half of the year or the beginning of Q3.”
Sequoia-backed video ad company Innovid is announcing that it’s working with Cisco to bring a new kind of ad targeting to second-screen ap...