GE’s Made a Microwave That Can Measure the Calories on Your Plate

Health and fitness monitoring is helping us all look after ourselves a little better, but there’s one stumbling block: calorie intake is still self-reported, making it laborious and often inaccurate. GE, however, thinks it has a way to change that. Read more…

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GE’s Made a Microwave That Can Measure the Calories on Your Plate

Blue Shield Leaks 18,000 Doctors’ Social Security Numbers

itwbennett (1594911) writes “The Social Security numbers of roughly 18, 000 California physicians and health-care providers were inadvertently made public after a slip-up at health insurance provider Blue Shield of California, the organization said Monday. The numbers were included in monthly filings on medical providers that Blue Shield is required to make to the state’s Department of Managed Health Care (DMHC). The provider rosters for February, March and April 2013 included the SSNs and other sensitive information and were available under the state’s public records law.” Ten copies were requested under the public records law. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Blue Shield Leaks 18,000 Doctors’ Social Security Numbers

iPhone Lost by Oklahoma Farmer Resurfaces Nine Months Later in Japan

Kevin Whitney loved his iPhone. Or at least he loved the countless, priceless family photos stored on it. So when the phone slipped out of his pocket and into 140 tons of grain on his farm in Oklahoma, he was understandably distraught. Luckily, people are nice in Japan . Read more…

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iPhone Lost by Oklahoma Farmer Resurfaces Nine Months Later in Japan

How to Ditch Google Voice (and Keep All the Best Features)

Google Voice is a service we’ve loved for a long time , but any Voice user that’s honest with themselves knows the service has been a second-class citizen for a while now. If you’re feeling like it’s time to move on, here’s how to ease the transition (and even keep most of your favorite features in the process). Read more…

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How to Ditch Google Voice (and Keep All the Best Features)

Google lawsuit highlights the danger of not managing your online presence

Hey small-business owner, you’re pretty savvy. I know you’re pretty savvy because you’re reading this website on the internet, like the savvy small-business owner above. But some of your colleagues aren’t quite as connected as you are. And sometimes that disconnected crowd faces serious real-world implications as a result: Take former restaurant owner Rene Bertagna for instance. His long-standing Virginia restaurant, Serbian Crown , closed last year “after nearly 40 years” due to, he believes, an error in Serbian Crown’s Google Maps listing. The error was grievous, he tells Wired , and he’s now suing Google in a Virginia court. The restaurant’s listing on Google Maps, Bertagna says, indicated that it wasn’t open on weekends. Given the restaurant’s location (nowhere near foot traffic), Bertagna and his lawyer posit, “Unless you know that the place is going to be open, you’re probably not going to drag yourself out.” And given the way Google Maps listings work, anyone can submit information for any place, which Google moderates before publishing. Bertagna’s lawyer believes another restaurant in the area “sabotaged” Serbian Crown’s listing. For its part, Google says in a legal filing, “The Serbian Crown should not be permitted to vex Google or this court with such meritless claims.” Of course, what’s unclear is how much accountability here rests on the false listing; Bertagna says that neither he nor his employees maintained the Serbian Crown’s online presence, which left it susceptible to tampering and misinformation. Wired ‘s piece highlights several other examples where small-business owners were, like you, savvy enough to maintain their online presence and cut off any issues before they affected the bottom line. [Image: Shutterstock] Filed under: Internet , Google Comments Source: Wired

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Google lawsuit highlights the danger of not managing your online presence

Vials Full of Smallpox Were Just Found In an Unapproved Lab

Well, this is disconcerting. According to an announcement today from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), vials of the smallpox virus were found in a lab in Maryland that was not only unapproved to be handling the live pathogens—it was unequipped . Read more…

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Vials Full of Smallpox Were Just Found In an Unapproved Lab

How Will the iPhone 6’s Sapphire Screen Hold Up to Abuse? Watch and See

Tech reviewer Marques Brownlee somehow got a hold of what is purportedly the screen for Apple’s forthcoming iPhone 6. Made of sapphire rather than Gorilla Glass, the screen has been rumored to be a big step up in durability. The material-minded will recall that Apple’s current iPhone features sapphire covers for both the camera and the home button/fingerprint sensor, and in those roles it is crucial the material not be scratchable, otherwise the functionality would be compromised. But how will it hold up with a much larger surface area, comprising the entire 4.7″ screen of the 6? On his YouTube channel MKBHD, Brownlee puts it to the test by working it over with a knife and a set of keys, before finally attempting to bend and break it. Have a look: (more…)

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How Will the iPhone 6’s Sapphire Screen Hold Up to Abuse? Watch and See

Apple has added on-device step counting to its iOS 8 beta’s Health app–though it almost certainly u

Apple has added on-device step counting to its iOS 8 beta’s Health app—though it almost certainly uses the M7 motion tracking hardware of the iPhone 5S to work. Read more…

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Apple has added on-device step counting to its iOS 8 beta’s Health app–though it almost certainly u

Foxconn Beings Replacing Workers With Robots

redletterdave (2493036) writes The largest private employer in all of China and one of the biggest supply chain manufacturers in the world, Foxconn announced it will soon start using robots to help assemble devices at its several sprawling factories across China. Apple, one of Foxconn’s biggest partners to help assemble its iPhones, iPads, will be the first company to use the new service. Foxconn said its new “Foxbots” will cost roughly $20, 000 to $25, 000 to make, but individually be able to build an average of 30, 000 devices. According to Foxconn CEO Terry Gou, the company will deploy 10, 000 robots to its factories before expanding the rollout any further. He said the robots are currently in their “final testing phase.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Foxconn Beings Replacing Workers With Robots