Insights For Success

Strategy, Innovation, Leadership and Security

Internet

Internet Explorer 6 is dead. Long live IE.

Browsers, Chrome, Firefox, Google, Internet, Internet Explorer, Microsoft, USA, WindowsEdward Kiledjian

Many of us thought IE 6 was already dead but it seems we were wrong. As its share of the web browser market fell to below 1%, Redmond finally gave it a one-two sucker punch. IE6 is now officially down for the count. Roger Capriotti , the Microsoft director in charge of IE marketing said : “IE6 has been the punch line of browser jokes for a while, and we’ve been as eager as anyone to see it go away.”

StatCounter’s latest report shows that Chrome 15 is now the most popular single version browser in the world (surpassing IE8). Combining all versions of all browsers, Internet Explorer is still king of the browser hill.

Read More: Link

Skype offers free WIFI access in 50 US Airports

Airport, Apple, IOS, Internet, MAC, Skype, Travelling, WIFI, WindowsEdward Kiledjian

Make travelling less stressful with free WIFI from Skype. Until December 27 2011, The fine folks at Skype are offering you an hour of FREE WIFI internet at more than 50 US Airports. All you need is a free Skype account and a Windows, Mac Skype application (or IOS Skype WIFI App).

You can read the Skype blog posts and get a list of participating sites here.

In years past, we have seen Google offer similar gifts (but alas, not this year).

 

Apple's SIRI comes from a 10 year military research project

Apple, IOS, Internet, iPhone, technologyEdward Kiledjian

When talking about Apple’s new iPhone 4s, most users immediately think about the Apple Siri Assitant and the new 8 megapixel camera. Siri is a cool feature but did you know it comes from a DARPA military project called COLO?

The lineage

Although we only heard about Siri a couple of years ago (as a stand-alone iphone app), it is actually research that started 10 years ago in a DARPA funded project called Personalized Assistant that Learns.  DARPA awarded the contract to a company called SRI, who dubbed their internal project Cognitive Agent that Learns and Organizes (CALO).

The purpose of CALO was to develop a cognitive system (Adaptive Artificial Intelligence) that could learn from experience, reason, and adapt to ever changing realities. To be clear, CALO learns what information you want, how you want it and what you do with it. With each interaction, it becomes better at meeting your requirements. ”The goal of the project is to create cognitive software systems,” SRI explained, “that is, systems that can reason, learn from experience, be told what to do, explain what they are doing, reflect on their experience, and respond robustly to surprise.”

The switch to civilian use

In 2008 DARPA gave up on the project and SRI decided to commercialize it via a spin-off called SIRI. Seeing the huge potential, Apple scooped it up for an undisclosed amount and the rest is history.

Changing our interface

Siri is different than most competitive solutions because it can understand and respond to natural speech [not just canned command syntax]. Years ago, Apple revolutionized the PC world with its mouse based graphical interface, now it has the opportunity to change our interaction with Siri. Siri may be the first major step towards voice interactive devices that are intelligent.

What do you think?

Check out your site in different screen sizes

Internet, websitesEdward Kiledjian

You spent all that time and money to build your website. It's a work of art. A monument to your awesomeness... Then why are some of your contacts (with smaller screen devices) complaining that it looks weird? Are you still sure the site is awesome?

There is a cool free service called Screenfly that will show you how your site looks on different devices with different screen sizes (think desktop, tablet, mobile, etc).

I decided to give it a whirl with my blog:

On the bottom of the next page, you see the control menu:

By clicking on any of the options (except desktop) give you a choice of devices it can emulate.

I clicked on Mobile and was presented with these options:

If I click the Google Nexus S, it displays my site as:

Take the site for a spin and let me know what you think.