Five years ago, when I started this blog, I wasn't sure what to expect. I love writing and sharing my thoughts with family, friends and talking to associates and customers. So I figured, well I guess so, why not?
While it is unclear to what degree Waze's turn-by-turn navigation technology will be incorporated into the iOS 6 Maps app, the company today debuts a new feature that should appeal to many of us this summer -- a cheap gas locator.
Here are 10 tips for hiring the right technology consultant.
Fans shouldn't have to compete against robots to get good tickets for face value. Bots (and the shady characters deploying them) are preventing real fans from seeing the teams and artists they love.
Physicians should not be fearful or threatened by the emerging smartphone-centric revolution of health care.
Entire new sectors like social networking, cloud plays, game apps, have already become hard to read even by on-site veterans. The investment scene is weird, wild and warped.
Here's a question for President Barack Obama's re-election team. It could influence the outcome of this year's election: How do they get the "we" back?
There is nothing wrong with services like Skout as long as they're used with appropriate safeguards, and Skout does offer safety tips for meeting people offline. But there have been three reported cases of teenage users being raped by adults -- posing online as teenagers -- who found them on Skout.
To the surprise of many readers, public library e-book "shelves" now sport gaping holes. The Witness by Nora Roberts? Unseen. The Lost Years by Mary Higgins Clark? Missing. Drop Dead Healthy by A.J. Jacobs? DOA.
They don't call it a "smartphone" for nothing. Your phone is the perfect tool to keep you mentally sharp both in the short term and in the long run. Get smart by downloading these apps today.
The state of the technological field is so demanding that they seem to treat their employees as products rather than human beings.
PBS News Hour recently had a special on the main topic I've been writing about here on The Huffington Post and elsewhere: unemployment and inequality caused by technology and, in particular, automation.
How is your business doing on Twitter? Many companies invest significant amounts of time and money in their social programs without knowing the answer to this question.
This month, we look at a couple of interesting products from one of the leading companies in this kind of technology, Hauppauge, that have helped re-define that TV world.
It's a pretty safe bet there's information about virtually any area of interest somewhere on the Internet. The question now is not what you can learn online, it's how well you can learn it.
The framers of our Constitution, who of course could not have anticipated social media, were nonetheless worried about the tyranny of the majority that social media enables.
A new sector and catchphrase has emerged that indicates a major new spur in our country's growth: Big Data.
We're back with Rich Brooks of Flyte New Media to continue our discussion.
Why women technologists are so invisible is a mystery to me. While I can't lay the blame entirely on the comic books of my day, I can say that luckily today's kids have more choices of heroes who are strong female protagonists.
Jon Potter, 2012.20.06