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December 17th, 2013 by
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Living with diabetes is no easy task, even with all the advances of medical technology in the last few decades. One of the most difficult aspects of living with the condition is the need to keep track of one’s body chemistry constantly. Cool person in technology Erez Raphael wants to make it easier and more convenient for diabetics to track their blood sugar and insulin. Raphael’s company, Dario, has developed a small mobile phone accessory and companion app that let diabetics check their blood with their smartphone. Usually, people require separate devices for checking their blood sugar and insulin levels. Even worse, these devices are often very expensive and invasive to the user. Dario is a very small device that plugs directly into a smartphone’s headphone jack. The device holds a number of strip cartridges that provide minimal discomfort when sampling blood. Users can easily insert and eject cartridges without expending much effort. The lightweight convenience of this device is certainly a preferable alternative to more complicated and painful dedicated devices for the same purpose. Any user who has a broken headphone jack on their smartphone will need smartphone PC repair in order to use Raphael’s device. Read more »
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December 16th, 2013 by
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Skateboarding has grown from a niche interest to a major aspect of pop culture over the last few decades. With the interest in skateboarding having increased so much for younger kids, there is a need for a stable source of skating instruction. Cool person in technology Rob Dunfey wants to fill this need with his company Go Skate. Go Skate is an online web portal that offers skateboard instruction in various formats to anyone who wants to learn. Dunfey’s company uses the web to offer those interested in skateboarding a convenient resource from which they can acquire lessons and help. The site has connections to instructors in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom and even Ireland. Users can book lessons on the site directly. People can search and filter by both price and location. Dunfey has even created a gift certificate program for his site. Gift cards sold in stores such as Wal-Mart and Target work universally as payment for skateboard instructing across continents. Anyone who has trouble booking a lesson on Dunfey’s website or needs help navigating the site in any way can get assistance from a remote tech support provider. Read more »
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December 16th, 2013 by
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Having a great idea is only ever the first step. Many inventors and entrepreneurs will tell you this is the truth. Once someone has a smart idea for a business or product, that person then has to spend long hours carefully developing and refining idea until it becomes something workable. This is true whether someone is developing a business strategy or a new piece of technology. Turning ideas into successes takes hard work, and people do a lot of that hard work alone, at least at first, in fear that someone will take their idea. Cool product AHHHA is aiming to create a space on the web where creators can safely post their ideas and discuss them, getting input and insights from fellow inventors and entrepreneurs to refine their concepts. The company derives its name from the epiphany moment in which an idea is born—when someone internally says “Ahh ha!” It’s an appropriate title for a company dedicated to helping others develop their ideas from infancy into maturity. Entrepreneurs who have an idea but who do not have backgrounds can contact home computer support if they need help using the website. Read more »
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December 15th, 2013 by
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ELearning and education technology are two of the hottest areas in the tech industry currently. Startups are attacking this area from many different angles. While some companies, such as Coursera, are trying to transplant the traditional experience of college-level education onto the Internet, many other companies are trying alternative methods to propagate learning on the web and through technology. One such cool person who is working to accomplish this is Emily Foote. Foote is the co-founder and vice president of curricular design at ApprenNet. ApprenNet is a web-based learning tool that Foote and her colleagues designed to promote educational discussion about a variety of topics. Foote is a co-founder of the company and an originator of the idea. She handles the curriculum and the application of it ApprenNet programs while her partners and other co-founders—Karl Okamoto and Paul Tzen—handle other aspects of the company. Okamoto works with business aspects as CEO and Tzen is the engineer who builds the backbone of ApprenNet’s software. Since Foote and her team designed the ApprenNet product for use in large institutions, organizations that want to use the product will need large-scale computer support help to integrate and maintain it. Read more »
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December 14th, 2013 by
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Few things are more disappointing than paying an expensive monthly fee for a gym membership and then spending your time waiting in line to use sweat-covered machines and dealing with immense amounts of background noise every time you decide to go. GymFlow is a cool product available for mobile devices that aims to help people avoid these frustrating circumstances. GymFlow is an app that users can download to their smartphone and it tracks the traffic levels at nearby gyms. Users can view traffic updates in real time to see how many people are working out at a given time compared to the gym’s maximum capacity. Based on this traffic, people can choose what times will be most convenient for them to visit and complete their own exercise routine. Rather than base their traffic statistics on social media check-ins, the team at GymFlow has opted to work directly with Gym owners to obtain data directly from membership card swipes and scans. This provides GymFlow users with a far more accurate idea of how crowded a particular gym is since many people don’t track when they go to work out with their social networking accounts. Many gym-goers don’t even have accounts for social media in the first place! Read more »
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December 13th, 2013 by
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The majority of travel sites essentially handle their business in similar ways. They focus on specific partners, book through agents that work for the site rather than the transit provider themselves, focus on flights over other forms of travel, and charge convenience fees for booking through the site in the first place. Cool product FromAtoB is a travel site that doesn’t follow these conventions and attempts to give customers a different, more pure experience. Rather than have customers book their transit through the site itself as a surrogate, FromAtoB acts more like a search engine. It connects users directly to travel providers themselves. This difference means that customers avoid unnecessary middlemen, and even potentially avoid unwanted “convenience fees” or extra charges incurred by booking through a surrogate. FromAtoB lets users search through hundreds or providers and then links customers to those sites so they can purchase their transit and accommodations directly from the source. FromAtoB wants to de-complicate the process of using a travel website, and this feature is one of its main tools in doing so. Read more »
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December 13th, 2013 by
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Battery life is always a key issue whenever reviews for a new model of cell phone come out on the web. Smartphones become more demanding and power intensive as time passes, and while battery technology continues to improve, many of us still find ourselves charging our phones once or twice a day just to keep them running. Cool person in technology Tibor Fabian founded Ardica to tackle this problem and find new ways to improve mobile battery life with his startup Ardica. Ardica researches, develops and sells new mobile battery technology, and Fabian directs his company away from just improving the standard lithium-based batteries that are most common today. He wants to find innovative solutions that surpass what is expected and put out more power for longer periods of time. That’s why Fabian and his team develop batteries based on fuel cells and chemical hydride technology rather than using conventional techniques. Fabian believes this technology will produce more efficient batteries that last longer and have greater overall lifespans. Mobile device users who have needed smartphone computer repair for battery issues know all too well that current technology can be quite frustrating. Read more »
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December 12th, 2013 by
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A company’s logo is integral to its identity. It’s the first point of interaction between a business and its customers in most cases. It is the symbol of a company and is what comes to mind for most people when that business comes up in real world conversation. However, for all of its importance, a logo is just a static image. Even the best-designed logos can only engage so much with their audiences. Cool product LogoGrab wants to change that fact. LogoGrab is a tech startup that has developed a technology that links logos to digital content on the web. When LogoGrab applies its technology to a design, the logo can then work the same way as a QR code might with a smartphone. People in the physical world can scan the logo and it will take them directly to any web content of the company’s choosing. LogoGrab adds a layer of interactivity to a company’s logo, making it more than simply a symbol to a business’s customer base. In a way, LogoGrab makes designs that act as an ambassador to a company’s audience, since the interactive logos connect users to more content from that company. Any company who wants to use LogoGrab and integrate it with an existing mobile app and mobile site will need sufficient mobile IT support resources. Read more »
Posted on
December 12th, 2013 by
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Customers are the most important aspect of any business that revolves around a product or service. Companies must be on the pulse of customers’ needs and desires at all times if they want their product to thrive in the marketplace. However, it’s hard for a business to be customer centric if it does not communicate with its clientele efficiently. Converser CTO and cool person in technology Oisin Hurley wants to help mobile app developers connect and engage with their user base. Hurley has developed messaging and communication technology that is installable in any mobile application. This two-way messaging system gives app users a direct connection to the developers so the users can voice opinions, make suggestions and get problems addressed. Just as many remote tech support computers connect directly to their customers’ computers to provide service, Converser allows mobile app companies to connect directly to the people using their product. Hurley’s company also keeps app users engaged with actionable in-app messages that prompt users to try new features or functionality. With Converser, Hurley helps both app users and app developers stay informed. Read more »
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December 11th, 2013 by
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When traveling, it’s easy to feel overwhelmed by the choice of places to eat, stay, or spend time. This is especially true if you’re particularly unfamiliar with a certain city or area. Cool product Locish helps tourists deal with this common problem by requesting the direct help of local experts. Locish is an iPhone application that connects travelers with local residents to ensure the travelers make good decisions about what to do in a certain city. Users ask for recommendations directly in the app, uploading their specific questions to the Locish database. The company’s recruited team of local experts then go through questions and provide recommendations on what to do. Locish’s network of locals can help users choose restaurants, bars, clubs, tourist attractions, museums, hotels or any place at all that you might find yourself in while on vacation. Locish uses interactions with real people to get its customers recommendations rather than rely on a mathematical or computational solution. While this means users won’t always get responses immediately, the responses they do get will be more personal and likely more helpful. Anyone who has trouble posting questions on the app can get help from a smartphone tech support company. Read more »