Alle Artikel von Hannes Rothe

Schöne Idee

Wenn sich jemand aus meinen Kontakten bewirbt, nenne er_sie bitte seinen_ihren Namen. Ich gebe gerne 550 EUR von den 1000 EUR ab. 😉

Reshared post from +t3n Magazin

Wir suchen Verstärkung – Es gibt 1.000 Euro Finderlohn!

Alles was Du tun musst, ist uns den Kontakt zu einem passenden Kandidaten für die Stelle des Redakteurs Webentwicklung (m/w) herzustellen. Wenn dein Kontakt der neue Redakteur (m/w) wird, bekommst Du 1.000 Euro als Belohnung. (aka)

Folgendes Profil sollte dein Kontakt erfüllen: http://t3n.de/news/1000-belohnung-t3n-sucht-2-470003/

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awesome…I ask myself how long it would take for Google to make them an offer they…

awesome…I ask myself how long it would take for Google to make them an offer they cannot deny 😉

Reshared post from +Yuval Haimovits

For many people, the simple task of reading a street sign or a restaurant menu is impossible due to visual impairment. Israeli startup OrCam is using sophisticated artificial intelligence to give these people a solution.
http://nocamels.com/2013/06/orcam-will-help-the-visually-impaired-read-anywhere/

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I am not sure about his "rule of law" argument, but as a whole I agree…

I am not sure about his "rule of law" argument, but as a whole I agree with +Matt Cohler

concerning my difficulties about the "rule of law": Yes, Matt is right about the general perception and agreement of Germans with the law. Which gives a lot of security for investors. But sadly startups are rarely a key target for German law makers. 

Reshared post from +Factory

"Most crucially of all, Berlin is a place where there’s still no creative ecosystem holding the center stage. Berlin is one of the world’s great cities, but other than the German government Berlin isn’t really the global epicenter of anything…yet. And that’s the key reason I believe it’s the place in the Western world with the best shot at becoming a great new global tech startup ecosystem." – +Matt Cohler writing on +TechCrunch 

Berlin’s Network Effect Will Make It A Global Startup Center | TechCrunch
Editor’s note: Matt Cohler is a General Partner at Benchmark and was the lead investor in Asana, Instagram and Quora among others.

Throw a dart at a map. There’s a pretty good chance it’ll hit near someplace hoping to become the „next Silicon Valley.“ I’d bet on Berli..

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via +Liz Quilty 

via +Liz Quilty 

Reshared post from +Google Science Fair

Ever lose your keys or get locked out? (Don’t worry, we all have.) Fret no more! An electronic door lock and a pill can change all that. Swallow this vitamin authentication pill and turn yourself into an 18-bit authentication token.
Learn More: http://goo.gl/ntmnn

(Photo: http://www.theverge.com/)

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This is a great line of argument and boils the Google+ relevancy discussion down…

This is a great line of argument and boils the Google+ relevancy discussion down.

Reshared post from +Mike Elgan

Why the Guardian’s ‘Matrix’ analogy fails.

Nothing much happens in the UK and the country has very little impact on the outside world. 

At least, that’s the false belief you could come to if you never went to the UK and never learned anything about how the world works. 

Likewise, if you never visited Google+ and didn’t learn how it really works, you could conclude that the network has “little visible engagement, pretty much no impact on the outside world,” as Guardian writer +Charles Arthur has done in a misleading column recently. 

http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/blog/2013/jun/04/google-plus-the-matrix

There are two kinds of writers who comment on Google+’s “impact”: Those who use it and learn how massive its impact is and those who don’t use it and ignorantly conclude from their own non-use that nothing is going on. 

Arthur, who hasn’t posted anything on Google+ for two years, makes the classic Arthur Spooner error, which I described here. 

https://plus.google.com/113117251731252114390/posts/9LE3GM6sLBF

But that’s an old error hardly anyone is clueless enough to make anymore and it's not that interesting. 

The second problem I have with Arthur’s post is the whole ‘Matrix’ analogy, which doesn't work. 

His point is that Google+ isn’t a place you go, but rather like the Matrix is everywhere you go, it’s the synthetic world around us that exists not for our benefit but for the benefit of the machines, a.k.a. Google. 

He’s referring, of course, to the fact that Google uses Google+ and the Google+ Sign-In to harvest signals from users, and that’s the whole point of the ubiquitous Google social layer.

Arthur’s is a colorful analogy, but a false and misleading one. Not only is Google+ unlike the Matrix, it’s the opposite of the Matrix. 

The Matrix was created in order to pacify humans so their energy could be harvested to power the machine world. Every human was given a virtual reality life in exchange for being exploited by the machines. 

The artificial world of the Matrix was stuck in the past. The world of Google is doing the opposite — driving forward at a rapid clip. Instead of giving humans a fake version of the old world, Google makes its living by giving humans a better world, one that didn’t exist before. 

We can pay for and have this advancing technology, or we can not pay for it and not have it. 

If we pay for it, there are three basic models: 1) payment for service; 2) tax and spend; and 3) advertiser supported service. 

Advertiser-support for cloud services is morally superior to other means of monetization. The reason is that payment is voluntary and unevenly applied. 

The vast majority of Google users don’t pay for it in any way. They are simply the beneficiaries of empowering free services that are paid for by other people. 

A minority of wealthier users are paying for everything because we buy stuff and therefore advertisers pay Google to reach us. 

This represents a massive transfer of wealth from rich to poor, whereby a small number of people — by simply being served with ads that hawk things we want to buy — pay for services that are completely free to anyone in the world with an Internet connection. 

If Google charged, say, $20 per month to use all its services, the world’s poor would be left behind. No Google Search. No voice-based search for the blind or illiterate. No Google Books. No Google nothing. 

That’s the alternative to advertising. 

All those harvesting of signals simply drive better relevance in advertising — to show me ads for clothes and gadgets and services that I really want to know about, rather than advertising to me weight loss pills and tampons. 

All that harvesting of signals has no other purpose than to do a better job of helping me get what I want, both in better services and better advertising. And in the getting, I pay for Google to empower a billion people with free services. 

Does that sound like the Matrix to you? 

By slamming the concept of the signal-enhanced contextual advertising model, Arthur is implying that there’s a better way. So I would like to ask Arthur directly which is the better model: 

1. No improvements in cloud services because nobody pays for it. 

2. Government taxation and bureaucracy creating cloud services that would be as bleeding edge as the post office. 

3. Paid services, which would put the world's most powerful tools beyond the reach of the world's poor majority. 

4. Irrelevant advertising that shows people random products and services they don’t want. 

Arthur’s Matrix analogy is simply a bad one because it doesn't fit the facts. 

And besides, unlike the Matrix, Google+ is optional. 

You decide that ignorance is bliss, opt out and remain completely ignorant about it — like Arthur has done. 

http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/blog/2013/jun/04/google-plus-the-matrix

#googleplus   #thematrix  

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Tolle Idee

Multipliziert sich der Spaß/Nutzen durch die Verknüpfung von Ingress und Joggen? Sobald ich meine Grippe überstanden habe, finde ich es raus…

Reshared post from +Elfriede Nerdinger

Toller Artikel zu den sportlichen Ingress Aspekten von Ingress

Augmented Reality: Mit Ingress Kalorien verbrennen – shape-blog.de
Habt ihr schon von Ingress gehört, dem neuen Augmented Reality Game von Google? Seit kurzem habe ich für dieses Spiel eine Invite Code bekommen. Denn das…

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