Driverless cars now a reality in USA
What can I say about this?
Well, firstly, what starts over the pond often makes its way here and secondly, the way some people drive perhaps it is a magnificent innovation.
Read BBC view here
What can I say about this?
Well, firstly, what starts over the pond often makes its way here and secondly, the way some people drive perhaps it is a magnificent innovation.
Read BBC view here
This is just amazing!
Legendary athlete Daley Thompson has launched a lightshow on the London Eye which will be driven by Twitter users’ enthusiasm for the Olympics.
We all love our smartphones and tablets. And we all love those little mobile apps that make our devices so unique, useful, and fun. But have you ever thought about how safe they are? Should you trust your smartphone to shop online? Is it safe to access you bank account from your tablet? Is it ok to check your corporate email from your mobile phone? Should you trust the device manufacturer? Should you trust the app developer? Do you need mobile security software – as you know you do for your PC?
Some important issues are aired here
A convoy of self-driven cars has completed a 200km (125-mile) journey on a Spanish motorway, in the first public test of such vehicles.
The cars were wirelessly linked to each other and “mimicked” a lead vehicle, driven by a professional driver.
The government risks “sleepwalking into another monopoly” in the way it is allocating funds for rural broadband, shadow business minister Chi Onwurah has warned.
Do I need a social media strategy for my small business?
The short answer is no.
There are on average 14 tracking tools per webpage on the UK’s most popular sites, according to a study.
Privacy solutions provider Truste suggests that means a user typically encounters up to 140 cookies and other trackers while browsing a single site.
More than half a million Apple computers have been infected with the Flashback Trojan, according to a Russian anti-virus firm.
Its report claims that about 600,000 Macs have installed the malware – potentially allowing them to be hijacked and used as a “botnet”.
Lose your broadband connection or give up sex for a year. “No contest,” says the UK public!
How we cheered when we read this series of articles from the BBC. The articles reiterate our vision for the future of SMEs. Through cheap online technology, SMEs can use their advantages of being small, responsive and alert. Small is beautiful.