Top 12 Social Technologies from MIT Media Lab and Beyond
Tag: innovation
Espresso machine can print text messages on coffee foam with edible ink | Springwise
Espresso Machine Prints Text Messages In Foam
Coolest New Businesses San Francisco – Business Insider
The 25 Coolest New Businesses In San Francisco
Klik App Does Mobile Facial Recognition in Real Time – Liz Gannes – Mobile – AllThingsD
Klik App Does Mobile Facial Recognition in Real Time
SortMyBox — Organize your Dropbox
Auto-sort Your Dropbox With Sortbox
Signal: the Instagram of Citizen Journalism?
Meet Signal, the Instagram of Citizen Journalism
‘Draw Something’ will start including brands among draw-able items | The Verge
‘Draw Something’ will start including brands among draw-able items
Disruptions: Innovations Like Instagram Are Tough for Large Companies – NYTimes.com
Disruptions: Innovation Isn’t Easy, Especially Midstream
Dollar Shave Club Enters Razor Wars – WSJ.com
The Dollar Shave Club
Reports of CES’ death greatly exaggerated
The techie masses at the 2011 Consumer Electronics Show seemed burdened by a general sense of disappointment. Minds were not blown. The digital firmament was not torn asunder. Wallets were not gripped tightly in fearful anticipation of the imminent need to drop a paycheck’s worth of earnings on the new must-have, show-stopping electronic object of lust.
Of course, there was still plenty to see and much technical wizardry on display, but we are a furiously jaded audience. The escalating pace of innovation has created an expectation that each new generation of products will create both terrified awe and wondrous delight. For example, it was a few short months ago that Microsoft started promising the future of gestural control via Kinect, a new peripheral for the Xbox 360. A completely new interface went from the pages of sci-fi to the pages of a Toys-R-Us sales circular overnight. Just four months after its release, few people seemed to crowd the Kinect booth. CES attendees don’t want amazing. We want new amazing.
Continue reading “Reports of CES’ death greatly exaggerated”