Wednesday, December 28, 2016

Fact-Checking the President-Elect's Tweets

Fact-checking President-elect Donald Trump can be a chore, even for people paid to do it. The Washington Post wants to make it less so, with add-ons to the popular Chrome and Firefox browsers.

The browser extension, RealDonaldContext, is available from the Chrome Web Store or the Mozilla Foundation.

After installation, any time you click on a tweet on the @realdonaldtrump account, any fact-checking the Post may have done also will be displayed.

The fact-checking includes adding context. For instance, Trump posted this tweet on Dec. 12:

Even though I am not mandated by law to do so, I will be leaving my busineses before January 20th so that I can focus full time on the......

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) December 13, 2016

If you view that tweet with the Post extension active, you'll see this displayed:
"There's important context missing.

"Trump originally pledged to hold a press conference on Dec. 15 to explain how he would avoid conflicts of interest as president. That was canceled before it happened. There remain questions about how Trump will ensure that his presidential decisions don't unduly benefit his corporate interests, even if he's not the titular head of the Trump Organization."

At the end of the Post's comments is a link to a relevant story in the newspaper about the subject in the tweet.

In addition to adding context to what can be misleading information in Trump's tweets, the Post applet offers some kibbitzing.

For example, on Dec. 11, Trump delivered this tweet:

Just watched @NBCNightlyNews - So biased, inaccurate and bad, point after point. Just can't get much worse, although @CNN is right up there!

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) December 12, 2016

To which the Post software responded:
"Just so you know.

"Trump regularly watches -- and complains about -- television shows."

Preaching to the Choir?

The software is designed to share accurate information "even in the place that's most associated with Trump's free-flowing streams of consciousness," Philip Bump, the Post political reporter who authored the extension, told TechNewsWorld.

Not all of Trump's Twitter followers are likely to be interested in the applet, though, Bump acknowledged.

"I think I understand that people who are big fans of Trump and believe him to be robustly honest won't be inclined to download it," he said.

"The nice thing about these extensions is that they can work with any Web content," Bump explained, "but there aren't too many places where someone so important is making so many compact misstatements."

Two kinds of people will be interested in the add-on, noted Dan Kennedy, an associate professor at the school of journalism at Northeastern University.

People who trust The Washington Post and believe that there are some facts in Trump's tweets will be attracted to the app.

"Those people will find it to be useful," Kennedy told TechNewsWorld.

Folks with a more jaded view of Trump also may be interested in the add-on.

"Some people who already assume everything out of Trump's mouth is a lie will find the app amusing and entertaining," Kennedy observed.

On the other hand, "if you're a Trump fan, you're going to see it as just one more sign of The Washington Post out to get Trump," he said.

Limits of Extensions

While any effort to air facts is laudable, the potential of an add-on like the Post's is limited, noted Matt Waite, a professor in the College of Journalism and Mass Communications at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.

"I always caution people when they talk about making Chrome extensions that they're a great idea and they work really well, but the number of people who actually use them is pretty small and the number of people who will find yours is even smaller," he told TechNewsWorld.

"I'm of the mind that any fact-checking that goes into our politics is a good thing," Waite continued, "but let's not get ahead of ourselves on how much of an influence this is going to have."

There's a growing perception in the wake of the 2016 elections that we may be living in a post-fact world.

"It's the genius of the right," NU's Kennedy said, "that there are now a significant number of people who think The Washington Post and Breitbart are the same -- one is just liberal and other is just conservative."


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OPINION 2016: The Year That Was

2016 really was a year like no other. We had yet another election defined by the misuse of analytics -- and folks seem to be getting worse rather than better at this. We had a rush to robotics, particularly self-driving cars, and some firms even leaped ahead to self-flying, people-delivering drones (which we called "flying cars" just a few years back).

We had a wave of fake news, mostly paid for by Google, because that company, as always, has no compass. It appears to be shaming nations into regulating it, suggesting it has no sense, either. We also had a lot of interesting products, but I think one stood out as the next iPod, and it didn't come from Apple.

I'll go further into all of that this week, as you recover from what I hope was a wonderful Christmas day full of presents, family, and a sense of dread for January, when we all have to go back to work. Sorry, that was my inner Scrooge.

Analytics Miss

If one thing stood out for me this past year, it was the election. After two elections in which Obama, a Democrat, out-executed his Republican rivals with analytics, we had Trump do the same thing to Clinton in the last 10 days of the election. That was in spite of the fact that Clinton was the candidate tech loved, suggesting someone really missed a meeting.

This takes me back to the oft-heard criticisms of Clinton's opponents who maintained she showed bad judgment. The lesson here is that tech can't fix bad judgment, and it is a force multiplier. So, if you have bad judgment, it likely will make things worse. You know, it still strikes me that if folks spent more time understanding why someone screwed up so badly rather than just finding folks to blame and shoot, things might improve over time. Just saying...

Bad Judgment

Speaking of bad judgment, Meg Whitman likely takes the cake. She came out late against Donald Trump and for Hillary Clinton, even though she is tied at the hip to the Republican Party. Maybe it would have resulted in a minor cabinet post for Whitman had Clinton won, but getting this wrong made her look not only like a traitor to her party, but also like a foolish one.

This is the sad part: HPE sells analytics products, suggesting Whitman has no better handle on that technology -- even though her firm sells it -- than Clinton does. I guess this means she'll have to go back to executing a strategy that will make HPE small enough to fit in the garage it started from.

Good Judgment

Peter Thiel stands out as the tech executive of the year, largely because he was the only one who saw that there were enough people in both parties who were sick of politicians to get Trump elected.

Unlike virtually every other tech exec, he focused on tech, which is what he knows -- not politics. Thiel has had a material and largely positive impact on Trump's agenda, so much so that at a meeting earlier this month, Trump asked what he could do to help tech firms rather than yelling at them for their lack of support.

In the end, I think Thiel may showcase how tech and government should work together to make the U.S. a better place. It won't be by donating money, as tech leaders did with Clinton, but by sharing and using the very technology they sell to make the nation better -- and that should be a bipartisan goal. Sadly, Thiel is the exception and not the rule, but the industry learns from example and he is one hell of an example.

Fixing Judgment

That is a sharp contrast on judgment. Intel CEO Brian Krzanich, backed by my old friend Genevieve Bell, earlier this year made a timely announcement on focusing AI to help folks with their judgment. Both Clinton and Whitman should sign up for the alpha test.

This is really the eventual promise of analytics. It's not a tool that multiplies the impact of a decision, good or bad, but a tool that helps people ensure their decisions are good ones. I think we all could use a tool that would help us with our judgment from time to time.

Dell Technology

In 2016, we saw the birth of the new super-company in tech, Dell Technologies. Instead of mucking around with politics, Michael Dell buckled down and took EMC private, saving Joe Tucci's legacy and creating the most powerful hardware company in tech.

This is important in a market increasingly defined by cloud companies like Amazon, Google, and now even Microsoft. It still strikes me that Dell has the best acquisition and merger process, yet largely stands alone when using it. However, I did talk to an Intel exec who told me Intel recently adopted something similar, so that's good news for you folks in smaller tech firms. If this is a trend, you are less likely to get a surprise layoff in 2017 due to a bad acquisition.

Product of the Year Runners-Up

Dell's XPS 13: This was my go-to laptop for much of the year, though I actually came to prefer the XPS15, largely because it was better for playing Ashes of the Singularity, my new favorite strategy game. The XPS 13 is a nice balance of size, style, battery life and functionality, with the only downside being the lack of a good fingerprint reader.

Dell XPS 13
Dell XPS 13

Lenovo Yoga Book: At launch, this was a breakout product -- ultra-thin, ultra-portable and very reasonably priced. Artists raved over it. It reminds me a lot of the Courier tablet that Microsoft's advanced development team came up with, which effectively led to its being disbanded. Sadly, I'm not an artist -- it is best for those who are.

Lenovo Yoga Book
Lenovo Yoga Book

Varonis: As I noted last week, this product and its entire class of intrusion and behavior monitoring tools could have changed the U.S. election outcome, had both the U.S. government and DNC had used them. Varonis would have prevented the hack of the DNC (and other) email servers. However, it wasn't used and didn't have the impact it should have had (granted, if it had, we never would have known).

Varonis logo

(By the way, Varonis has posted a series of videos on how to secure your home for the holidays that is worth watching, and it's free.)

BlackBerry DTEK 60: This phone showcased that you actually could have a secure BlackBerry. Thin and with glass on both sides, a decent camera, a fingerprint sensor (sensibly placed on the back of the camera, not the front), and a full Android implementation, this is the phone that BlackBerry should have made a long time ago, and it has been serving me as my primary phone ever since I got it. In a world increasingly defined by breaches, this phone is a godsend because it is secure.

BlackBerry DTEK60
BlackBerry DTEK60

Qualcomm Snapdragon 835 Solution: This was big -- the only ARM solution that has been blessed by Microsoft for Windows. Microsoft hadn't considered another platform since the 1980s, and to make the jump to Snapdragon was a huge win for Qualcomm and for users who want laptops with battery life comparable to tablets.

It also suggests that Apple is likely close to a similar decision, since it's rumored that it has been exploring the same jump for MacBooks. However, products won't show up until 2017, suggesting we'll revisit this next year.

Mercedes GLA 45 AMG: I liked this car so much I bought it. The car has been a dream -- Mercedes not so much. First, we had a trip from hell to pick it up in Germany. Then, to make it up to me, the company put me through its advanced driver course. However, Mercedes so overburdened the instructors that the thing became unsafe as a consequence, and there was an accident. Finally, Mercedes actually configured my car wrong, making a last-minute change that eliminated one of the features I expressly had ordered and paid for. It's a great car, but I think I'm done with Mercedes.

AMD RX-460 Card: We are ramping to VR, but the best solutions are way too expensive as you jump from a US$100 dollar range headset for your smartphone to a $3,000 solution for a full PC with an HTC Vive or Oculus Rift solution. Well, AMD pushed back and brought out its Radeon 460 card, which dramatically lowered the cost of entry for those wanting to get in on VR.

Nvidia Drive PX2: Perhaps the greatest sleeper product in the market was the Nvidia Drive PX2. Basically it is an AI system in a box, and I'm convinced it is capable of much more than driving cars. This product and its predecessor vaulted Nvidia into the lead with autonomous cars, and likely will help move it into autonomous aircraft at some point. There no doubt will be other circumstances where having an AI in a box that can see and make decisions would be useful.

Rob Enderle

The Amazon Echo Dot is the product Apple should have built. The Dot and its siblings have everyone from Google to Microsoft and Intel, among others, looking to build similar offerings. It is the critical link between homeowners and their IoT future, and it has cut through the market like a hot knife through butter.

The Dot was my go-to gift to relatives this year, and at under $50. it remains one of the true bargains available. I think the Amazon Echo is this decade's iPod, and we'll soon see if Amazon can do as good a job locking everyone else out of the market as Apple did.

It is licensing the technology, suggesting that next year we could be up to our armpits in Echo clones and competitors. Overall, though, the Echo has become the core driver for in-home IoT. When a product spins a market on its head, that showcases true market power, and my product of the year needs to showcase leadership and power.

Amazon did that -- first with the Echo, and now with the Echo Dot, making the Echo Dot my product of the year. Congratulations, Amazon and thanks also for offering it in bundles of six, because I now have one in nearly every room of the house.


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Saturday, December 24, 2016

GADGET DREAMS AND NIGHTMARES Gadget Ogling: Heightened Hearing, Toasty Toes, and Glass Speakers

Welcome to another edition of Gadget Dreams and Nightmares, the column that breaks down the latest in gadget announcements to determine if they'd be naughty or nice additions to your stocking.

Hanging on the fireplace this time around are earbuds to improve your hearing, heated insoles, and a small transparent speaker, which is called "Small Transparent Speaker."

As always, these are not reviews, and you should place no stock into my ratings, beyond their denoting how much I'd like to try each item.

Ear Boost

Bose's latest earbuds (pictured above) are designed to help you tune in to the specific sounds you want to hear from the world around you. Hearphones are a sort of blend of noise-cancelling earbuds and hearing aids.

There are several presets in the app, with names like "focused conversation," "gym," "airplane" and "television." You can opt to crank up the volume on all sound from the world around you or turn it down. You can block out noise or amplify it from certain directions.

For instance, you might use it to help you better hear a specific person in a crowded place. Can't hear what your partner is yelling at a festival? You can temporarily turn up the Hearphones, and turn down the crowd and music (though why you'd have Hearphones in your ears at a live music event is a little beyond me).

It's not the first time we've seen earbuds pull off this sound-augmenting trick, but to my knowledge, it's the first time we've seen a pair like this from a manufacturer as well-known as Bose. The "Bose" name should help Hearphones gain more recognition than they otherwise might, normalizing the concept to a degree.

I like the idea, and there are a lot of practical applications for it. The option to stay laser-focused on listening to what my kid might be up to at a crowded playpark seems like it would be welcome in the alternate reality where I have children. My partner also might be less annoyed at my listening to podcasts while we're cleaning up if I can hear her over the top of the chatter.

Rating: 4 out of 5 Surround Sounds

Winter Warmers

I can't think of a better time to start a crowdfunding project for heated insoles than when the temperatures start to plummet and there's a very real chance of cold toes, even while wearing three pairs of socks.

We've seen other connected heated insoles in the past, but the +Winter models have some advantages over the competition. They pair with an app over Bluetooth to set the temperature and monitor battery level, and they can charge wirelessly.

Although I've been vocal about my dislike of wireless charging and its energy inefficiency, I'd absolutely make an exception here. I'd turn the charger on only when actually using it, and if it meant I could charge the insoles without having to remove them from my boots and carefully refit them afterward, I'd forego my principles for once.

There's a little more to them. +Winter's battery life lasts around five hours, and they're water resistant and lightweight. They won't light on fire (thankfully), and they include an accelerometer so they turn on when you start walking. Just about the only thing they don't do, aside from tucking you into bed at night, is track your activity.

I can't imagine any better gift for me this holiday season than +Winter, which makes it even more upsetting that they're not shipping until next December.

Rating: 5 out of 5 Toasty Toes

Full Transparency

As a teenager, my favorite band was Foo Fighters. It probably still is now, if I'm being honest. For one album and tour, singer Dave Grohl primarily used a transparent guitar that I thought was just the coolest thing. Seeing through to the internal wiring and systems of an item can be a gorgeous aesthetic if properly worked, and that's the case with Small Transparent Speaker.

Perhaps the most descriptive, accurate product name we've seen in some time, "Small Transparent Speaker" is a handsome little thing, with the glass enclosure housing dual speakers and only a few wires to connect them to the amplifier. It has a 3.5 mm aux input and Bluetooth connectivity, with WiFi connections to Airplay, Google Cast and Spotify Connect.

It's easy to disassemble, so it's supposedly a cinch to recycle or repair. The speaker will monitor itself for any problems and send you a notification if it needs attention. I hope the sound quality is solid, though the handsome design is the winning selling point here. It would look good on almost any shelf.

Rating: 4 out of 5 See-Through Songs


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Samsung May Unleash a Beast

Hot off the rumor mill on Wednesday is news of a new feature Samsung may include in its upcoming Galaxy S8. It's dubbed "Beast Mode," and that's just about all that is known about it so far.

Spotted in an EU trademark application, Beast Mode would apply to smartphones, mobile phones and application software for smartphones, noted Galaxy Club, a Netherlands-based blog.

The Galaxy S8 is expected to be the first smartphone built around Qualcomm's Snapdragon 835 processor. If true, that lines up with the notion that Beast Mode could allow super high performance.

Another rumor is that the Galaxy S8 will have an optical fingerprint scanner built into the display instead of the body.

Further, it's rumored that it will include Bluetooth 5.0, recently approved by the Bluetooth Special Interest Group -- and that idea seems to carry a fair amount of weight.

Countering Bad PR

"There's a strong possibility that Samsung will incorporate Bluetooth 5 into the Galaxy S8," said Ken Hyers, director of wireless device strategies at Strategy Analytics.

"With the cancellation of the Note7, the Galaxy S8 is now [Samsung's] premier device to showcase the latest and best smartphone technology," he told TechNewsWorld.

Samsung had to institute a global recall of millions of Galaxy Note7s after multiple instances in which the device spontaneously burst into flames. Some replacement devices also caught fire.

"Samsung has a PR problem," observed Michael Jude, a program manager at Stratecast/Frost & Sullivan. "Note7 is a disaster, and they need something with which to seize the technological high ground."

Putting cutting-edge technologies in the S8 "will help a lot," he told TechNewsWorld.

"Remember, practically nothing is Bluetooth 5-compliant," Jude noted. "As long as the S8 can talk to existing Bluetooth devices, it's golden. People will be drawn to the latest, greatest technology."

Bluetooth 5.0 doesn't replace 4.0, 4.1 or 4.2. It extends the functionality of these previous versions of the Bluetooth Core Specification.

Further, Bluetooth 5.0 lets manufacturers leverage interoperability and performance improvements incorporated in the core specs since 4.2 was released.

"From Bluetooth headsets and speakers to home control, personal robots and drones, Bluetooth is a default technology for connecting devices, with the smartphone as the hub of consumers' device universe," Strategy Analytics' Hyers remarked.

"We are rapidly moving into a more complex connected device world," he pointed out.

Samsung has focused heavily on the Internet of Things, offering smart TVs and smart appliances that can be tied to its smartphones.

Bluetooth 5 "is a huge advance over previous versions of Bluetooth from a connectivity speed and capacity standpoint," Hyers pointed out, noting that it's a natural fit for Samsung's next flagship device.

The S8 will "be both a mass market flagship and a showcase for Samsung's technological leadership" since the company has canceled its Note series of phablets, he said.

Therefore, Samsung "will be careful to only put technology and features in it that it's certain will not create issues," Hyers contended. As a relatively low-risk feature, Bluetooth 5 likely will appear in the S8 in Q1 2017.

Bluetooth 5.0 Specs

Bluetooth 5.0 offers 2Mbps of bandwidth, twice that of Bluetooth 4.2, with low energy.

The bandwidth can be decreased to achieve up to 4x the broadcast range of Bluetooth 4.2 with the same power requirement. That means home automation and security devices can cover entire homes, buildings or locations.

Developers can adjust the broadcast range, speed and security for different environments.

Bluetooth 5.0 delivers reliable Internet of Things connections, and it will increase the relevance of beacons and other location awareness technologies, which will enable a seamless IoT experience.

It also has ad extensions that enable more efficient use of broadcasting channels on the 2.4 GHz band.

Slot availability masks can detect and prevent interference on neighboring bands.

Keeping the Note7's Specter at Bay

Many consumers returned their Note7 phablets to purchase an older Galaxy S7, Hyers said. "Given that history, "I expect that the Galaxy S8 will be the most carefully tested and verified smartphone ever released."

Also, consumers in the know will see Bluetooth 5 as a future-proof technology, he suggested, while early adopters will see it as a useful item.


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Waymo Offers Glimpse of Autonomous Chrysler Minivans

Waymo, the standalone venture that emerged from Google's self-driving car project, on Monday unveiled a fleet of 100 Chrysler Pacifica hybrid minivans with the latest high-tech sensors, telematics, and other gear designed for fully autonomous operation.

Modifications were made to several parts of the Pacifica -- including its electrical, powertrain, chassis and structural systems -- to optimize it for fully autonomous driving.

With the additional computer equipment, the cars will undergo more challenging tests. They will be subjected to a broader variety of traffic and weather conditions, as well as other variables, with the goal of being ready for introduction by 2017.

"Waymo chose the Chrysler Pacifica Hybrid minivan, as its well-suited for Waymo's self-driving systems," said FCA spokesperson Berj M. Alexanian.

"As a plug-in hybrid electric vehicle, the Pacifica Hybrid is fuel-efficient, which is important to Waymo," he told TechNewsWorld. "Pacifica Hybrid offers a highly refined and comfortable ride experience. Using Pacifica Hybrid also gives Waymo a chance to test a different kind of passenger vehicle.

The Waymo Brand

The announcement comes just days after Waymo unveiled new branding and a new team of executives, amid increasing competition to bring autonomous vehicles to the U.S. market.

The joint program team has worked to integrate the self-driving computers and other systems into the Chrysler Pacifica minivans to get them ready for use, noted Waymo CEO John Krafcik. The work has included more than 200 hours of extreme-weather testing since the companies originally announced the partnership in June.

Waymo and Fiat Chrysler have co-located part of their engineering teams to a new facility in southeastern Michigan to speed development. The companies also have conducted extensive testing at FCA's Chelsea Proving Grounds in Chelsea, Michigan, and the Arizona Proving Grounds in Yucca, Arizona, as well as Waymo's test track in California.

FCA sells cars under the Chrysler, Jeep, Dodge, Ram and SRT performance vehicle brands. The firm also distributes under the Alfa Romeo and Topar brands.

Improved Safety

The introduction of the fully equipped Pacifica minivan is a signal that Waymo may be focusing on autonomous vehicle technology as a means of making driving more efficient and safer for families, suggested Michael Harley, an analyst at Kelley Blue Book.

"This is something deep in the heart of what a family would purchase," he told TechNewsWorld.

Waymo has emphasized its track record of operating test vehicles in a safe manner -- Krafcik last week posted a copy of Google's November self-driving report on Twitter.

During autonomous testing, 24 Lexus RX450 SUVs and 34 prototype vehicles navigated shared roads and successfully engaged in lane splitting -- accommodating motorcyclists that bobbed and weaved, making multiple lane changes, the report shows.

The rollout of the Chrysler Pacifica minivans puts Google well ahead of its direct technology industry competitors in the race to get autonomous vehicles in the hands of the public, said Egil Juliussen, principal analyst for automotive technology at IHS Markit.

"Basically Google needs more vehicles to test," he told TechNewsWorld. "They've advanced quite a lot."

The testing of such a minivan offers Waymo a more flexible set of options when considering the kind of vehicles it wants to deploy when it makes its first commercial introduction of fully autonomous vehicles.

It may be a bit early in terms of pinning down the use case or an autonomous version of the Chrysler Pacifica, however, noted Steven Polzin, director of mobility policy research at the Center for Urban Transportation Research.

"This general direction would be consistent with the thinking of folks who are very nervous that automated vehicles will induce additional travel or have significant 'empty' deadhead miles between trips," he told TechNewsWorld.

"The way to mitigate that consequence is to use automation and logistics to aggregate trips -- dynamic carpooling -- to increase vehicle occupancy so as to offset the empty miles or induced demand miles," he said.

Ride-Sharing Ambitions

Alphabet placed its secret autonomous vehicle development plans front and center with last week's announcement of Waymo.

"We believe that this technology can begin to reshape some of the 10 trillion miles that motor vehicles travel around the world every year, with safer, more efficient and more accessible forms of transport," Krafcik noted at the time.

Google has spent the equivalent of 300 years of driving time since 2009 testing various prototype vehicles on the roads over more than 2 million miles. It also has conducted roughly a billion miles of testing in simulated environments. Google developed the technology with an eye to a range of autonomous technologies, from ride-sharing fleets and personal vehicles to logistics and last-mile public transport.

The next step for Waymo will be to let real people test the technology to run errands, commute to work or get home after a night out, Krafcik said.

Waymo likely will make a major push into ride-sharing, which has a huge potential for seniors, the disabled and others who cannot access their own vehicles due to physical or mental challenges.

"Waymo stands for a new way forward for mobility, which is indicative that Google is not just pursuing private car ownership model for its autonomous platform," observed Praveen Chandrasekar, mobility research manager at Frost & Sullivan.

Rather, its focus is on the shared mobility market, told TechNewsWorld, "where Level 5 autonomous platform makes a lot of sense, especially in providing mobility for the physically challenged."

As a standalone company under Alphabet, Waymo can operate in a much more agile way than it could as a project within Google, said Kelley Blue Book's Harley.

Rival Pursuits

Despite safety concerns and a variety of setbacks, autonomous car development has been advancing steadily.

Uber has launched real-world testing in Pittsburgh and San Francisco, with self-driving test vehicles picking up and transporting passengers in live traffic conditions. A driver is on board to take over if warranted.

Still, watchdog groups remain vigilant in making sure the technology doesn't get ahead of public safety issues.

It is reassuring that Google abandoned plans to develop cars that lacked steering wheels and pedals, according to John Simpson, the privacy policy director at Consumer Watchdog.

However, Waymo needs to explain to the public how the cars would work and disclose what it has programmed into the secret algorithms it uses to run them, he said.

Google's last disengagement report filed with California regulators showed its self-driving technology failed 341 times over 425,000 miles, Simpson noted, including 272 times because the software could not cope. There were 69 times when the driver intervened for safety reasons. The next report is due on Jan. 1.


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Tuesday, December 20, 2016

OPINION Is Peter Thiel the Most Powerful Person in Tech?

There are generally two paths for dealing with someone in power when disagreements arise. One is to confront, and the other is to understand and influence. What is interesting is the most common path taken is the former while the most successful is the latter. I think the reason is that the former path is both the natural path for disagreement and the most visible. Confrontation is always more newsworthy than influence.

When done right, exerting influence has the odd result of not conveying credit while actually making far more progress. This suggests that one of the ways to determine whether someone is doing something because they believe in the outcome vs. doing it for fame and status is whether they move to influence or to confront.

The vast majority of tech executives and politicians confronted Trump, which had little impact on him, while Peter Thiel moved to influence. As a result, he now may be the most powerful person in tech, even though that didn't appear to be his goal.

I'll share some thoughts about that this week and close with my last product of the week, which has to be Varonis. It is the one product that could have prevented virtually all of the high-profile breaches that crippled both Yahoo and Hillary Clinton's campaign.

Confrontation and Backstabbing

One of the most common ways decisions are made in the tech industry is that the most outspoken and disagreeable person at the table wins, and the person who is better founded but isn't as focused on the status of winning often loses. I call this the "biggest assh*le at the table method," but there is a more technical term for this: argumentative theory. I've reviewed a lot of failed companies, and at the heart of most failures seems to be this process.

There is a second process that is equally common, in tech firms in particular, and it has a common name that I'll paraphrase because I can't use the actual name in mixed company. It is "kiss you screw you." This occurs after everyone at the table agrees, and then a bunch go out and do everything they can to cause the idea to fail in order to screw the poor person who is trying to execute.

If you've ever wondered why a lot of good ideas fail, it is largely because some group of folks inside companies secretly move to cause them to fail. Personally, I think people should be fired for doing that, but they often are rewarded instead, which suggests there are a lot of managers on the wrong side of this practice.

I personally think the Obama administration was defined by both practices. The Republicans largely practiced the "biggest assh*le at the table" method and were obstructionist, while the Democrats seemed to agree but acted against the president behind the scenes, which is why efforts like Obamacare were such a train wreck.

Collaboration and Influence

Compare the way much of the tech industry supported Clinton vs. how Peter Thiel supported Trump. Clinton got money and vocal support, and Thiel provided technical advice and focus. He advised and kept tightly to tech topics like cybersecurity, which are critical to the well being of the country. Clinton's massive support from the industry largely consisted of money, because most thought she was an idiot. That was thanks largely to the email thing, but I've seen notes going back years, suggesting that was hardly a new perception.

The right path for Clinton's supporters would have been to fix the "idiot" thing. Yet there is no evidence it was even attempted. Thiel, in contrast, worked to make Trump smarter, and the result was not only better execution in the final days of the campaign, but also last week's tech meeting, which focused on making tech companies more profitable.

Contrast this with Eric Schmidt's relationship with President Obama, which became an embarrassment for the president and didn't seem to result in anything but an unusual protection against antitrust charges for Google. As a result, it's arguable that tech actually appears weaker at the end of Obama's term than it did at the beginning. If the current trend holds, that shouldn't be the case with Trump, but that outcome will depend largely on Thiel's relationship with Trump.

Thiel vs. Gawker

Peter Thiel spent $10M taking out Gawker, which scared a lot of folks because it silenced a voice in media. Personally, I thought Gawker was an abomination -- largely because it focused on disclosing personal information about powerful people or celebrities, doing them harm for money.

Gawker had its roots in tech, and a tech service that monetizes hurting people tarnishes the entire industry and is counter to efforts that are working to eliminate bad behavior, like bullying, by making it appear like you can bully anyone. By the way, this doesn't mean that I agree with some of the behavior that Gawker called out -- I just don't think it is in the tech industry's best interest to validate the hostile use of personal information, given the critical need to protect everyone's individual privacy.

I'm kind of surprised more tech CEOs haven't backed Thiel's efforts, largely because having a "secret mistress" is an extremely common perk of the job. My guess is that most believe they are careful and that their clandestine relationships won't be reported. Sadly, many aren't as good at keeping this stuff secret as they think. Had Gawker not been killed, many of those delusional executives likely would have had some explaining to do to their wives, kids, employees, stockholders and boards. Such things rarely go well, so Thiel did them one hell of a favor that most may never appreciate fully.

Wrapping Up: Thiel vs. Whitman

Perhaps the biggest contrast was between Thiel and Whitman. Thiel focused on collaboration, while Whitman took the confrontational path to extremes, seemingly switching parties. Thiel will have a great deal of influence on the Trump administration, while Whitman will have zero influence on it and may find that HPE is blacklisted both by Trump's companies and the federal government -- or worse, be prioritized for contract audits.

One final thought: Because Thiel focused on talking about technology, he could have made the cut to influence Clinton. He didn't make the conflict personal, and he clearly had a strong grasp of what needed to be done by either administration. Whitman could have influenced only Clinton, because her contribution was personal and political.

Even with Clinton, her influence likely would have been insignificant, perhaps limited to getting a largely ceremonial cabinet post. Here is the important part: Given that she is the CEO of HPE, neither outcome would have benefited HPE significantly, and the Trump outcome may have hurt it materially.

I think this showcases a best practice that the tech industry should adapt broadly: Collaboration and focusing on what the industry knows -- tech -- is a far better way both to influence an administration and to make a real difference.

I think it also showcases a far better personal practice as well, because constant confrontation, particularly when it is only to appear superior, or backstabbing for any reason is counterproductive to the overall effort and makes a firm less successful.

So, for those of you who have made being an assh*le or backstabbing a defining skill, if you care about making a difference, then you should change your behavior. For those of you who like being assh*les and backstabbing, be aware that the identification and elimination of folks like you has become a major feature of the coming artificial intelligence-based human resources systems, so eventually you'll be fired. All I can say is, it will be about fricking time.

My last thought is this: Thiel suddenly has become the most powerful person in tech, not through the more typical process of backstabbing and self-aggrandizement, but because he focused like a laser on how to use tech to help the nation and Trump. I should point out something about Jobs, who clearly was the most powerful person in tech last decade. While certainly an assh*le interpersonally, he focused on making Apple great. He became famous not because he focused on gaining fame but largely because of Apple's success. In both cases, it is that focus we should remember as a best practice.

Rob Enderle

Yahoo last week disclosed that it had experienced a breach that occurred prior to its previously disclosed mega breach and that it was much bigger, impacting 1 billion people -- that is billion with a B. It means that the odds favor the fact that you have been compromised and harmed, and that it clearly wasn't reported in a timely way so you could have protected yourself.

This is on top of indications that both the Democrats and Republicans were hacked, and that those hacks likely did have a material impact on the election, even if it was just the uneven release of compromising emails.

In virtually all cases, the hacks were not discovered until well after they had occurred, and many only when what was stolen was disclosed. Claims that emails were not hacked -- like Clinton's emails or the RNC's emails -- largely coincide with no tracking in place. That is like saying no trees fall in areas where there are no people to observe them falling. Just because you didn't see something doesn't mean it didn't occur.

What makes products like Varonis different is that they monitor behavior and activity. If someone either inside the company or outside has gained access to something they either don't have rights to or that they've never been interested in before, then Varonis sends an alert. These hacks can range from people pulling information to share illicitly to hacking individuals to get access in order to misuse it to download sensitive information.

Varonis logo

What concerns me is that this class of solution seems to be avoided, because people would rather not know they have been hacked so they can claim they are secure. For some, that's preferable to finding out they aren't -- and let's be clear, no one is absolutely secure. Pretending otherwise is just stupid.

Some nimrod earlier this month boasted on Twitter of having my personal information, along with a password I was using back in 2013, suggesting I'm one of the folks who was hacked. Because Varonis could have prevented this, it is my product of the week, and it is a contender for my product of the year, which I'll announce next week.


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Uber Staff Still Stalking Customers, Claims Suit

The controversy over Uber staff using the company's tech to track people's movements was reignited this week when information in a pending lawsuit began circulating in the tech press.

Uber employees can pull customer data at will, alleged Ward Spangenberg, the company's former forensic investigator, in a court declaration filed earlier this fall as part of his bid to prevent the firm from forcing his case into arbitration.

Uber staffers have been able to track high-profile politicians, celebrities and ex-significant others, Spangenberg said.

His original complaint, filed in the Superior Court of California in San Francisco, centers on his dismissal from the company.

Uber continues to allow broad access to users' trip information, five security professionals formerly employed at the company told Reveal.

That has been going on, they said, in spite of Uber's assertions two years ago that it had policies prohibiting such actions, following news that executives were taking advantage of its "God View" feature to track customers in real time without their permission.

Uber's Side of the Story

"It's absolutely untrue that 'all' or 'nearly all' employees have access to customer data, with or without approval," maintained Uber spokesperson Sophie Schmidt.

"We have built entire systems to implement technical and administrative controls to limit access to customer data to employees who require it to perform their jobs," she told TechNewsWorld. "This could include multiple steps of approval -- by managers and the legal team -- to ensure there is a legitimate business case for providing access."

Access is granted "to specific types of data based on an employee's role," Schmidt asserted. All data access is logged and routinely audited, and all potential violators are "quickly and thoroughly investigated."

Uber employees must acknowledge and agree to the company's data access policy, CIO John Flynn emphasized in a memo sent earlier this week.

Violators have been terminated, he reminded them.

"We want our security and privacy practices and technology to be world-class, and we're moving quickly toward that goal," Flynn said. It's "the responsibility of each and every one of us to protect" customer and driver data.

However, Uber's defense in the Spangenberg case relies mainly on procedural issues.

"It's not logical for any company to proclaim that they are secure because they sent an email telling employees what to do," remarked John Gunn, VP of communications at Vasco Data Security.

"In the real IT world you don't need these types of emails, because you've implemented limitations on access to sensitive data [that] you monitor and enforce," he told TechNewsWorld.

The Need for Privacy

The latest revelation follows news that Uber has tracked customers even after they left its vehicles.

Uber "needs to come clean on whether [the privacy violations] occurred ... and needs to have full disclosure of how it uses customer data," said Michael Jude, a program manager at Stratecast/Frost & Sullivan.

Frost's research "indicates that people take personal security very seriously," he told TechNewsWorld.

On the other hand, "consumers are becoming less concerned about exposing details about their personal information," noted Michael Patterson, CEO of Plixer.

"They don't like the invasion, but they like the services and appear to be willing to compromise," he told TechNewsWorld.

Still, high-profile Uber customers, including celebrities, could be at risk, suggested Csaba Krasznay, product manager at Balabit, pointing to Kim Kardashian's robbery in Paris in October as an example.

"We can protect ourselves by not letting Uber and other apps use our smartphone's GPS data," Krasznay told TechNewsWorld. "It only takes one click."

Or consumers can decline to install the Uber app, use a VPN from their smartphone to a company in-house phone system to call Uber, or use a company credit card under someone else's name, Plixer's Patterson suggested.

Ultimately, responsibility for this problem rests on the CEO's shoulders," said Frost's Jude, and the CEO "should take personal responsibility for fixing it."


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Saturday, December 17, 2016

CrateDB Launches Machine Data Innovations

Crate.io on Wednesday announced the general availability of the first non-beta release of CrateDB 1.0, an open source SQL database that enables real-time analytics for machine data applications. This release is an upgrade from version 0.57.

CrateDB is an SQL database alternative to NOSQL machine data management solutions. It gives mainstream SQL developers access to machine data applications that previously were available only using NoSQL solutions.

"CrateDB is one of the few systems in the space that can enable JOIN to handle a large amount of machine data," said Christian Lutz, CEO of Crate.io.

Founded in 2014, the company's goal was to reinvent SQL for the machine data era, he told LinuxInsider. Today, 75 percent of its customers use CrateDB to manage machine and Internet of Things data because of its ease of use, performance and versatility.

CrateDB provides an alternative to existing analytic data stores, combining the familiarity of SQL with the versatility of search and the ease of scalability of containers.

"The growth of machine data and the opportunities that businesses have to capitalize on it are outstripping the ability of their data management infrastructure to act on it," said Jason Stamper, an analyst for data platforms and analytics at 451 Research.

CrateDB's power lies in its ability "to enable users to collect and analyze vast amounts of data in real time, using SQL commands they already know," he said.

Driving Factors

Several factors recently have been driving interest in more effective management of machine data, and CrateDB is tapping into this growth, observed Charles King, principal analyst at Pund-IT.

"First and foremost, as companies utilize cloud services and infrastructures, getting the most from those investments requires automating related processes and services," he told LinuxInsider. "That demands the efficient gathering of machine data automatically generated by systems applications, transaction applications, customers and users which has resulted in success for machine data players like Splunk."

In addition, the anticipated rise of IoT devices and deployments will increase the volume of machine data by orders of magnitude, he said, so the efforts that companies make today around managing machine data should pay significant dividends in the future.

CrateDB is the first open source SQL database that enables real-time analytics for machine data applications, according to Crate.io.

If that is indeed the case, that would make it superior to previous applications based on NoSQL technologies.

"That should make CrateDB easier to use for developers familiar and comfortable with SQL databases," King said. "If the company can deliver on its promises, it should become a significant player in this space."

CrateDB Primer

Crate.io focused on developing a database for the billion-dollar machine data market, Lutz said. "This market is very broad with very special characteristics. It involves more than just industrial machines."

The machine data management market involves IoT sensors, wearables, industrial IoT, network monitoring, IT/cloud infrastructure monitoring, security audit monitoring and machine learning.

CrateDB manages the unique challenges of machine data management and analysis. It makes possible the handling of millions of data points per second, structured and unstructured data diversity with real-time query performance, and complex queries of big data volumes.

As part of a new machine data stack, CrateDB sits in the stack between input software and specialized apps, Lutz said.

"It should work well in cloud environments. In fact, one of the customer testimonials for CrateDB came from Skyhigh Networks, a successful cloud access security broker," Pund-IT's King pointed out.

New Features

CrateDB 1.0 has Postgres wire protocol, which enables easier access and integration. It also allows Outer JOINs and Sub-queries.

New operations include Trigonometric, Percentile, Conditional: IF, CASE and Schema, as well as metadata discovery functions. Version 1.0 also has performance and quality improvements.

"The Query engine is the secret sauce," Lutz said.

Crate.io built something that lets you choose between trade-offs and analysis without waiting. You can do this at scale with simplicity, said George Gilbert, big data and machine learning analyst at Wikibon.

"I haven't seen others do it with the same flexibility and simplicity. It can do more of the traditional in-warehouse style analysis at the same time, ingesting data at almost the speed of a transactional database," he told LinuxInsider.

Key Differentiators

CrateDB has advantages over other products, according to Jodok Batlogg, COO at Crate.io. It is easy to integrate in any enterprise activity. Only one configuration is necessary for the entire cluster -- no special nodes are needed. It is very easy to run in a containerized environment. It supports all types of data.

Columnar field caches and a fully distributed query planner enable CrateDB to perform complex queries in real time and overcome many of the performance and flexibility limitations of first-generation distributed SQL databases.

CrateDB also provides SQL with integrated search for data and query versatility. This innovation enables a wide range of analytics, including machine learning and predictive analytics, on time series, full text, JSON, geospatial, and other structured and unstructured data. It does this without having to use different database engines to do so.

Innovative Release

This release supports container architecture and automatic data sharding for simple scaling. Database scalability is vital for handling variations in machine data volume, but this is normally difficult to do, according to Lutz.

CrateDB can run as a cluster of containers, which enables it to be scaled easily with Docker, Kubernetes or Mesos container platforms. In addition, CrateDB automatically shards and redistributes data across the cluster as it changes size to optimize performance and high availability.

CrateDB is available immediately from Crate.io and the Docker Store and is open source under the Apache 2.0 license.


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Nvidia Takes Self-Driving Journey to California Roads

Nvidia last week began test-driving autonomous cars on California roads, after the state's Department of Motor Vehicles gave it the green light, according to The Verge.

Nvidia Takes Self-Driving Journey to California Roads

The company is testing its Drive PX2 autonomous driving platform, said Rob Enderle, principal analyst at the Enderle Group.

Nvidia recently has made several well publicized moves in the autonomous car arena. It forged a partnership with Baidu this summer to build a cloud-to-car platform for semiautonomous cars. Its Drive PX2 technology will be used in vehicles participating in the upcoming Roborace autonomous car race. Nvidia this fall rolled out Xavier, a system on chip for autonomous cars, which it described as an "artificial intelligence supercomputer."

Nvidia has been testing cars for well over a year -- on public and private roads and in parking lots -- in order to train its PX2 systems, Enderle told TechNewsWorld.

Where Nvidia Is Going

Nvidia's focus is "on bringing high-level artificial intelligence into the autonomous driving game, especially supporting SAE Level 4 and 5," noted Praveen Chandrasekar, mobility research manager at Frost & Sullivan.

Tesla now uses the Drive PX2 on the self-driving hardware available in the new Model S, he told TechNewsWorld.

Thrashing the Competition

Nvidia is competing with Qualcomm and Intel for the autonomous car industry's business.

Intel, the 800-pound gorilla in the chip market, has been busy:

  • It secured US$1 billion in design wins with its software-defined automotive cockpit platform;
  • It set aside $250 million to invest in autonomous driving startups;
  • It partnered with BMW and MobilEye to establish an open development platform initiative for autonomous driving;
  • It introduced the Atom 3900 processor for autonomous cars; and
  • It reorganized its autonomous car efforts into a new unit, the Automated Driving Group.

Still, Nvidia is the farthest along with a solution independent of automakers, said Enderle, and it has the inside track to becoming a standard.

BMW also is partnering with Nvidia, which is "likely to create competition and ensure it isn't held captive by any one vendor," Enderle pointed out.

Baidu Collaboration

Nvidia will use the Drive PX2 in conjunction with Baidu's mapping platform for Level 3 SAE automated driving and above to "create a complete cloud-based platform to support automated driving," Frost's Chandrasekar said. The partnership is will encompass both the United States and China.

AI, supplied by Nvidia, and mapping are "highly crucial for OEMs who are serious about Level 4 SAE and above, such as Ford, Tesla and BMW," Chandrasekar pointed out.

Further, the partnership gives Nvidia tried and tested technology, along with an entry into the China market.

Baidu "is one of the companies that is likely to become a power in self-driving car services," Enderle predicted. "Testing is currently going on broadly all over the world, and even Ford and GM are currently working on this."

However, the cost of the Nvidia-Baidu solution at entry "may be prohibitive for many of the volume OEMs," Chandrasekar pointed out.

Also, OEMs considering the cloud technology "need their vehicles to be equipped with high speed real-time connectivity, which is not a given in the market today" he said.

In addition to its Tesla and BMW partnerships, Nvidia currently has teamed with Daimler, Audi and Ford on autonomous driving, Chandrasekar said, noting that "the risk is that OEMs might simply view it as a technology and solutions provider for autonomous driving."

On the other hand, Enderle said, Nvidia "is the only company that has a packaged solution that works at this time."


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Apple AirPods Finally Good to Go

Apple's new wireless AirPods are finally available.

The company on Tuesday began taking orders for AirPods at its online store, and said it would start delivering the US$159 earphones to customers, Apple Stores, resellers and carriers next week.

At the iPhone 7 launch in September, Apple Senior Vice President of Worldwide Marketing Phil Schiller said the AirPods would be available in October, but the company missed that target time frame due to unexplained delays.

Missing the deadline for release of any hot product is bad news for a company, but what made the AirPods miss worse was that the they were supposed to offset some of the sting consumers felt over Apple's decision to omit the traditional headphone jack in the iPhone 7.

"Someone clearly dropped the ball, because without something like this with the iPhone 7 the attached sales for the earbuds were stalled, and it made it harder to sell iPhone 7s," noted Rob Enderle, principal analyst at the Enderle Group.

"Both products should have shown up at the same time," he told TechNewsWorld.

Missed Opportunity

However, the absence of AirPods doesn't seem to have affected iPhone 7 sales that much.

"Sales of the iPhone 7 seem to be doing well," said Ross Rubin, principal analyst at Reticle Research.

"The absence of AirPods hasn't been a deal breaker for consumers interested in the phone," he told TechNewsWorld.

On the other hand, the late release certainly will impact sales of the AirPods.

"Apple missed an attractive cross-sell opportunity when the new iPhones were released," Rubin noted, "and they missed the Black Friday opportunity, when there would have been increased traffic going through stores."

AirPods still could be a popular item this Christmas, though.

"It's a relatively small product, easy to pick up online, easy to ship," Rubin pointed out. "It could still wind up in stockings or under trees."

Chip Trouble

Apple is being mum about what caused the delay in bringing the AirPods to market, but several reports link it to the new W1 wireless chip in the headphones.

"There's definitely been a problem with the supply chain, and the best I can figure it was related to the custom Apple W1," said Kevin Krewell, a principal analyst at Tirias Research.

If that's the case, though, it wouldn't explain why Apple could ship the Beats Solo 3 and Powerbeat 3 headphones, which also use the chip. Another Beats model, however, the X BT, also is experiencing delays and may not reach retail shelves until next year.

"It could be that Apple needed more time fine-tuning the chip for rated battery life," Krewell told TechNewsWorld.

Battery life is one of several drawbacks that have dampened demand for products similar to the AirPods.

"There aren't a lot of products like this in this segment, largely because they are expensive, easy to lose, have poor battery life, and the sound quality isn't in line with their cost," Enderle said. "Most folks in this price band prefer headphones, because they provide a much better experience at the same price and they are harder to lose."

Sync Challenges

Some reports have blamed sync problems for the delay.

"It's rumored that the AirPods were receiving signals slightly out of sync," said Jeff Orr, senior practice director for mobile devices at ABI Research. "The stereo effect was not working right."

In most Bluetooth earbuds, the signal from a device is transmitted to one of the buds and transmitted to the other via some kind of wired connection between them.

AirPods don't have any wires so the signal is sent to each bud separately and must be received by them simultaneously. If not, the signal is out of sync, which scotches the audio experience.

If there were sync problems with the AirPods, though, those problems didn't appear in the demo units, noted Orr, who attended the Apple event when the earphones were announced.

"It's hard to know what caused the delay, and I don't know if we'll ever know what the cause was," he told TechNewsWorld.

More Than Music Buds

The AirPods offer more than just a new way to listen to music, which is why Apple had to make sure it made the product right from the time it left the starting gate, observed Ian Fogg, a senior director at IHS Markit.

"AirPods is part of Apple's vision for mobile," he told TechNewsWorld.

"It isn't just a Bluetooth headset that you listen to music on or answer phone calls. It's a voice interface for not only listening but for also speaking so you can interact with your watch or phone seamlessly without having to pair or reconnect them," Fogg explained. "It's an extension of the Apple Watch and iPhone experience."

One of Apple's historic strengths has been perceiving when and how to nudge the consumer market to accept new user interfaces, said Brad Russell, a research analyst at Parks Associates.

"AirPods are major move forward for hearables, wireless audio technology and voice control interfaces," he told TechNewsWorld.

"They don't have to be great -- just good enough to add value to the smartphone," Russell continued. "Apple EarPods were never the best earbud on the market, but their stylish design, comfortable fit and inline remote added significant value at the time to become an iconic symbol of the iPhone brand."


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Wednesday, December 14, 2016

Torvalds Releases Hefty Linux Kernel Update

Linus Torvalds this weekend announced Linux 4.9, which offers a number of significant upgrades to the kernel.

Torvalds Releases Hefty Linux Kernel Update

"I'm pretty sure this is the biggest release we've ever had, at least in terms of commits," Torvalds wrote. "If you look at the number of lines changed, we've had bigger releases in the past but they've tended to be due to specific issues."

A chunk of the upgrade is the new greybus staging support, and other than size, the release looks fairly normal, he noted. Staging, GPU and networking are the bulk of the drivers.

Version 4.2 got a lot of lines from the AMD GPU register definition files, Torvalds noted. Version 3.2 was due to staging, version 3.7 was due to the automated uapi header file disintegration.

Final Weeks

The merge window for 4.10 is now open, Torvalds said, adding that the timing might be a bit awkward as it technically closes on Christmas Day.

That is a "pure technicality," though, and he said he would stop pulling on the 23rd of December at the latest -- adding that if he should get roped into Christmas food prep, even the Dec. 23rd date might be called into question.

"I could extend the merge window rather than cut it short, but I'm not going to," Torvalds said.

"I suspect we all want a nice calm winter break, so if your stuff isn't ready to be merged early, the solution is just not merge it yet at all and wait for 4.11," he suggested.

"The release is a fairly standard update with some improvements in file system, security and hardware support, including ARM devices and GPUs," noted Jay Lyman, a senior research analyst at 451 Research.

"The size and weight of Linux 4.9 may be an issue for some developers and end users, particularly as containers and lightweight container-specific operating systems -- many of which are based on Linux -- gain more attention and use," he told LinuxInsider.

Kernel Tune-up

Overall, the new Linux kernel represents "a lot of performance tuning and streamlining," said Paul Teich, principal analyst at Tirias Research.

Despite its size, it's not a hugely significant upgrade, he said, but it reflects a maturing kernel that addresses a wide range of markets.

"The biggest single feature that stood out to me is virtual display and reset support for AMD GPUs," Teich told LinuxInsider. "This is a big deal for folks who want to use AMD GPUs for compute acceleration, or even to deliver virtual desktops from Linux servers."

There are a lot more updates for 29 more AMD SoCs, including a wave of 64-bit ARM mobile and embedded SoCs, he noted.

"Google's canned project Ara's 'greybus' got some time," Teich said, "and some of that might show up in a future Moto phone."

Intel got fixes for its integrated sensor hub, DRM, and some performance improvements for Atom, he also noted.

Lastly, a few MIPS, POWER and SPARC architecture commits also were snuck in, showing just how strong Android and Linux have become, said Teich. "It's not just about x86 vs. ARM.


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GADGET DREAMS AND NIGHTMARES Gadget Ogling: Rolling Records, Designing Lawns, and Placated Phones

Welcome to Gadget Dreams and Nightmares, the column that's stopped shaking its head in disbelief that it's actually December long enough to cast an analytical gaze over the latest gadget announcements.

On the last page of the calendar are a portable record player, a device to craft designs into lawns, and a bed for your phone. Yes, you read that last part correctly.

As ever, these are not reviews, partly because I'm not so sure a delivery truck can make it through the snow we're already getting in my part of the world. The ratings relate only to how much I'd like to try each item.

Vinyl Vehicle

RokBlok is a portable record player without a turntable. It's a block that dashes around the top of your records, and uses both its needle and built-in speaker to soundtrack your day.

All you need to operate it are your records and a flat surface. If you'd like higher quality audio, you can connect it to your Bluetooth speaker or headphones.

It's designed with protecting your records in mind, as it has rubber wheels and the center of gravity isn't on the needle itself. That should help prevent RokBlok from widening the grooves and help you enjoy your records for years to come. Still, I'd be reluctant to trust it completely with the rarer, more expensive records in my collection.

RokBlok is expected to retail at US$99, though its crowdfunding backers can get one for $59 as a campaign reward. That seems a fair price for something you're unlikely to use as your main record player, especially if you're a conscientious audiophile.

That you'd need to cart along a Bluetooth speaker to make it more useful -- unless you're wearing headphones -- means it's a little less portable than I'd like.

I can't imagine that I'd use RokBlok outside of my home in any case, but it seems like it'd be a fun little party trick. Just make sure to ask your host's permission before you run RokBlok over the top of their prized first-run Japanese copy of Thriller.

Rating: 3 out of 5 Into the Grooves

Y-art Work

What better way to add a little temporary flair to the facade of your home and grounds than with a design of your choosing on your lawn?

Grassffiti, which is clearly not a name its creators came up with while inebriated (try saying it out loud after a few tipples), is the brainchild of University of Tokyo researchers. It's a lawnmower that brushes blades of grass in different directions to create a visible image. It's a similar technique to the one used on sports fields to give a striped effect to the grass, but it's a little more refined and detailed.

The effect is neat -- temporary artwork that washes away as soon as you roll the grass back into place. The demo video for Grassffiti doesn't make it seem like the device leaves the clearest or most detailed images, so I imagine it would leave a stronger impact when creating larger-scale images, which are created by breaking them down into smaller sections.

Grassffiti is not available to the public, which is a shame, as it could provide some additional color to homes everywhere without having to annoy landlords or neighbors with drastic landscaping changes.

Rating: 4 out of 5 Turf Techniques

Smartphone Slumber

I probably should give more care to my phone than I do. I've no idea how the screen's still intact, because I've dropped it at least once a week in the year I've owned it. The least I can do is make sure my gateway to the world gets a good night's rest, especially since it's the first thing I reach for in the morning.

To that end, I am ever-so-slightly considering bringing the Phone Bed into my home. It's a little silly, all things considered, but I wonder if making sure our phones are well protected before putting ourselves to sleep is such a bad thing.

I can picture doing so and feeling a mite more relaxed. It's from Arianna Huffington's new company, Thrive Global, which promotes well-being and healthy sleep, so it's certainly on brand.

The bed's surface has room for multiple phones, and two spaces inside the frame for tablets. It can charge up to 10 devices at once, so it's designed for the whole family to make use of. However, to get the full restfulness effect, you'll need to leave the Phone Bed outside of your bedroom and turn off your devices, which might prove complicated if you use them as alarm clocks.

At the very least, the Phone Bed would prove a good way to make sure I always leave my phone in the same place when not in use. Better that than having to scramble through the sheets of my own bed trying to find it.

Rating: 3 out of 5 Sleep Tights


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OPINION What Trump Should Do With Air Force One

I'm starting to get the idea that for the next eight or so years, a lot of what many of us are going to write will have something to do with what Donald Trump tweeted. Granted, since that has been the cahttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3As for much of the last year, we have gotten comfortable with it.

However, when Trump said he would kill the deal for an updated Air Force One -- which would cost billions and still be bahttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3Asd on the now-obsolete 747 -- it hit me that we've completely lost track of what Air Force One should be. It should be a physical reprehttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3Asntation of the United States' capability as it exists today -- not a homage to the Ronald Reagan White Houhttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3As, which first introduced the 747 as the plane of presidents.

I'll share my thoughts on why the next Air Force One should showcahttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3As innovation, agility and technology, rather than how the U.S. can't spend taxpayer money wihttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3Asly, and how incredibly long it takes the U.S. bureaucracy to get anything done. I'll clohttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3As with my product of the week, the Lenovo Book, which is likely the most innovative laptop in the world. It's an innovation showcahttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3As ithttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3Aslf and breaks the mold on notebook design.

Air Force One

Air Force One today is a bit of a disappointment. Donald Trump's own plane is more distinctive, more advanced, more efficient, and likely far more comfortable to fly in. It's newer, so it likely is also a better reprehttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3Asntation of what the U.S. can do than the official presidential plane.

The plane is hardened against nuclear attack -- something very likely in Reagan's time but not at all very likely now -- but it is not hardened well against cyberattack. Given that it uhttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3Ass really old tech, that currently may not be a huge problem.

When it was created, it needed to defend against a variety of state-bahttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3Asd attacks, becauhttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3As small groups couldn't afford jet fighters or good ground-to-air missiles. Now it needs to defend against weaponized drones and lots of relatively current generation U.S. ordnance that has found its way into the hands of relatively small and independent anti-U.S. Organizations, thanks to the mess the Middle East has become.

Back in Reagan's time, there was a relatively low likelihood that an airport rapidly could fall to a hostile mob, blocking and holding a plane and its occupants hostage. Now, with social media, huge numbers of people can be mobilized very quickly, both domestically and abroad. The president-elect has a tendency to offend large numbers of people, suddenly making such an event almost certain. This means the plane needs capabilities like vertical take-off and landing, so it can get out of Dodge even if the runway is compromihttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3Asd.

Add this up, and the result is that a big, slow-moving, largely obsolete plane would http://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3Asem to be the last kind of plane you'd want to give a current-generation president. The 747 was advanced in the 1960s, and the new plane is expected to remain in http://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3Asrvice till the 2050s. Can you imagine even flying yourhttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3Aslf in a plane with technology 90 years old, let alone putting the most powerful leader in the world in one?

What Air Force One Should Be

Air Force One should be a symbol of U.S. capability. Rather than lagging the U.S. aerospace industry by more than 50 years, it should lead it -- or at least be up to date. In effect, it is the flying brand for the company, and it currently can't even drop off the president without help, which China showcahttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3Asd by embarrassing President Obama a few weeks back.

It should be designed to protect the president from today's threats, not the threats of the cold war. It needs to be fast, agile, and better able to elude attacks than anything conceived 50 years ago. It needs to be a showcahttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3As for U.S. technology that helps http://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3Asll the idea of buying from the U.S. In other words, rather than using a largely obsolete airframe, it should uhttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3As one that a U.S. plane builder would be proud to http://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3Asll -- more a flagship product and less an obsolete one.

Aerospace companies should compete to build the plane, and at least create the possibility of someone providing it for free or below cost just for the related publicity, rather than running up massive bills retrofitting an ancient design. Wouldn't it be great if companies like SpaceX were bidding for the new plane rather than just Boeing and Airbus? (And why would we even consider a European company to build the president's plane?)

Specs for a 2025 Air Force One

Given how rapidly technology is changing, the plan to a design that is 50 years old, take more than a decade to build the plane, and then keep the design in place for 25 years is just insane. We should start with military specification that is designed to deploy in 2025 and expected to have a http://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3Asrvice life of something clohttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3Asr to a decade.

The world is changing too quickly, and the loss of a president would be so disruptive we should place protecting against it as a vastly higher priority than we clearly do. (I still can't get over putting the leader of the free world in a plane that was designed in the 1960s). So, the plane not only should start out being more current -- so it is designed to defend against the threats we will have in 2025 rather than the threats we had in the 1970s -- but also should be replaced more aggressively.

It should be able to take off and land vertically in an emergency, so it would be harder to capture. It should be transonic so it would be harder to catch and shoot down. That would allow it to land at places that would be harder to anticipate and be able to take off if the airfield were compromihttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3Asd.

It should be a showcahttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3As for military technology that speaks to the need to put forces quickly anywhere in the world. For instance, if there were another Benghazi, a plane like that could get a defensive force to an embassy in minutes rather than days.

Wrapping Up: A Showcahttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3As for the US

In the end, I agree that the current plan for Air Force One is stupid. The plane was outdated last century, and it doesn't address the threats and needs of today -- let alone the ones in 2025, when it will be deployed. Also, its expenhttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3As is insane.

Instead, it should be a forward-looking design that is a showcahttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3As for U.S. technology (which could help drive U.S. plane sales). It should be bahttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3Asd on a military plane designed for current threats -- not a vulnerable civilian design.

In short, the next time a foreign government decides not to provide a stairway for the plane, it would be incredibly cool for its officials to be left standing while the plane flew right to the venue and dropped off the president at the front door.

Rob Enderle

I was trying to think of a tech product that would go with this column, something that was forward-looking, something that rethought an aging design, and something reprehttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3Asntative of what the leader of the free world might be proud to carry. What came to mind was the Lenovo Yoga Book.

Lenovo Yoga Book
Lenovo Yoga Book

This 2-in-1 computer reprehttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3Asnts more of what I think the iPad Pro should have been, in that it morphs from notebook to tablet form factor more elegantly. It has a tablet size and weight, and it has a tablet battery life, but it still runs a full desktop operating system rather than a mobile phone OS.

It anticipates the ARM-bahttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3Asd Windows products next year, so it is forward-looking rather than bahttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3Asd on designs of the past. It has what is basically a large touchpad for a keyboard, coupled with a touchscreen, so it is perfect for the Windows 10 Creators Update, becauhttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3As it is perfect for thohttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3As who like to draw. In fact, people who like to draw rave about this thing becauhttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3As you can uhttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3As a stylus on the keyboard and http://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3Ase the result unobstructed on the screen in real time (check out this video).

My mother was an artist, and were she still alive, she would have loved this thing (the art gene didn't pass to me, unfortunately). I should point out that this product http://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3Asems to work best with thohttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3As who grew up with smartphones and screen keyboards. It takes us older folks a bit longer to get uhttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3Asd to keys that don't move.

At US$550 for Windows, it doesn't break the bank, and the product is gorgeous with the signature Lenovo watch band hinge. (There is an Android version, but that really doesn't make much http://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3Asnhttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3As for a notebook configuration, given that Google likes Chrome for notebooks.)

Becauhttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3As this thing is http://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3Asxy, thin, light, has great battery life, and reprehttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3Asnts more of the future of notebooks than the past -- and also becauhttp://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-book/?cid=us%3Asem%7Cse%7Cmsn%7C21357603520%7CLenovo%2BYoga%2BBook%7CIIP_NX_Lenovo_Yoga%2BBook%7C62101428&s_kwcid=AL%214030%2110%2115901410822%2121357603520&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=%5bcampain-name%5d&utm_term=%5bkeyword%5d&ef_id=V6z2xQAABYEcuy5s%3A20161208225853%3As my mother would have loved this for Christmas -- the Lenovo Yoga Book is my product of the week.


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