Chủ Nhật, 1 tháng 7, 2018

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In the middle of 2013, Adobe went through a huge security breach in their systems with

huge bits of their software code stolen and posted online.

The hack was inevitable as Adobe had been criticized for its pricing practices among

its user base for a very long time.

My very first memory of using an Adobe product is a bit vague, but the feeling it gave me,

is still very vivid in my mind.

I was confused, amazed, inspired, jaw-dropped, all at the same time.

Photoshop was the first Adobe product that I used and I didn't know what to think of

it except that now I can manipulate digital memories however I want.

Photoshop was then of course just the beginning of what would lead me into a never ending

curiosity of exploring other Adobe products like Premiere Pro and After Effects which

then led me into digging deep into the past of two businessmen, John Warnock and Charles

Geschke, the guys who found Adobe in the December of 1982.

Initially being a math failure in his ninth grade, Warnock went on to grab a Bachelor's

degree in mathematics followed by a PhD in computer science.

Warnock's genius in mathematics was at full on display in the form of his 1964 master's

thesis where he solved the Jacobson radical row-finite matrices which was originally theorized

by a leading algebraist in 1956.

Warnock took his understanding of math and computer science to the next level when he

wrote the Warnock Algorithm designed to render a complicated image of a scene.

If the image is simple, it's immediately rendered, but if it's a complicated piece

of pixels, then it's divided into smaller parts and the rendering process repeats itself.

On the other hand, although he never came up with a unique invention, Charles Geschke,

Adobe's co-founder was on a parallel level to John Warnock with his MS in mathematics

and a PhD in computer science.

He went on from a teaching job to working at Xerox where he formed and headed an image

science laboratory, directing research activities notably in image processing.

This is where the two masterminds crossed paths when Charles hired Warnock at his lab

and the two came up with the idea to commercialize InterPress graphics language for controlling

printing.

But Xerox remained unconvinced and the two along with a third collaborator, Dan Putman

left their jobs at Xerox to build Adobe.

The company found in Warnock's garage, went on to the level where Steve Jobs once negotiated

to buy it for five million dollars, but to Warnock and Charles' credit, they refused

and instead sold him 19 percent of the shares for five times more of what the company was

evaluated at the time.

Reaching the mid-1980s, the company launched Adobe Illustrator that would change the face

of how people would draw in the future to come followed by Photoshop nine years later

that would become its flagship product.

Two years later down the road, the world was introduced to Premiere Pro and After Effects

that would redefine how movies would be made.

Fast forward to the Summer of 1993 and the company finally came up with the PDF format

that would allow us to send electronic documents anywhere, view and print them on any machine.

In Warnock's own words "Imagine a digital document viewer equipped with text searching

capabilities.

You can find all documents that contain a certain word or phrase, then view that word

in context within the document.

Entire libraries could be archived in electronic form."

Being incredibly successful with all of its products, it's quite astonishing that Adobe

flash was met with a lot of backlash most notably from Steve Jobs who opted not to support

Adobe Flash on iPhones claiming unreliability and security flaws with the software.

Jobs even posted an article online expressing his thoughts on Flash and the rise of HTML

5.

Adobe eventually went on to discontinue Flash in the December of 2011 and refocusing all

efforts on HTML 5 for mobile devices.

With its share of success, Adobe has faced continuous criticism due to its security designs.

Hackers have been successfully able to breach it to gain access to computers worldwide.

The vulnerabilities became so bad that the company itself revealed in 2013 that about

2.9million customer data had been stolen including encrypted credit card information along with

bits and pieces of Photoshop's source code that allowed programmers to duplicate its

engineering techniques and making it incredibly easy to pirate Adobe's product.

Back in 1994, Adobe bought Aldus Corp., the manufacturer of Free Hand that was a direct

competitor to Adobe Illustrator.

But Adobe was forced by the Federal Trade Commission to sell the software to Altsys,

the company which was then bought by Macromedia, the organization which was then bought by

Adobe in 2005.

Adobe bounced over and took back control of the only two leading illustration programs

in the world.

What's more mind twisting is that Adobe is now diving into the AI industry collaborating

with NVIDIA to speed up its Adobe Sensei AI which is going to deliver some very powerful

features like auto lip sync in Adobe Animator CC and face aware editing in Photoshop CC.

I'm an Adobe user and I'll always be an Adobe user, because I can never really be

sure what amazing new mind twisting direction Adobe's going to be moving in, but whenever

I finally see the end results, I'm confused, amazed, inspired, jaw-dropped, all at the

same time.

For more infomation >> I can manipulate digital memories however I want - Adobe - Duration: 7:00.

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Lil Pump Type Beat | "Digital Thug" [prod by STICKUPBEATZ] Smokepurpp Type Beat 2018 - Duration: 2:41.

For more infomation >> Lil Pump Type Beat | "Digital Thug" [prod by STICKUPBEATZ] Smokepurpp Type Beat 2018 - Duration: 2:41.

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The Digital Workplace is better for your Well-being - Duration: 4:29.

Welcome to BareTalk TV, I'm Dunia Tozy and today we're talking about technology

and well-being. So there's a study that was published by a company called Aruba,

saying that digital workplaces or people employees who work for digital

workplaces are happier, more satisfied, and they're more productive and is

better for their well-being. So what do you guys think about that? -

I can totally agree. - Can we define digital workplace first though? Because I

have so many things floating through my head when you talk about digital

workplace. - So I guess you have more gadgets that help you be more productive

so you know computers or whatever else that you know that helps you, video

conferencing things like that. - So no more blackboards. - No, no blackboards, no

cubicles. - okay I guess you work in a place that's very - I do I work at a very

digital telecom environment, and it's a very open concept space so, like we don't

sit in like cubicles we don't have these digital dinosaur or non digital dinosaur

monitors and we have a lot of board rooms that actually have like kind of

Skyping services you dial in, someone's there from Winnipeg, and you can have a

conference call with in like seconds and I'm at my computer I have two monitors

where I sit and I love it you love it! - Yes, do you miss a human interaction

though, or? - Well because we don't have like barriers or like you know so you

actually have more human interaction we have a lot of human interaction yeah

like I said next time I sit across from someone but we still kind of have our

own space and everything is accessible we have the tools and resources to do

our job, or our job and digitally it can be. - I come from a health care environment

and like your doctor's office is probably one of those places where it's

been very cottage industry very paper-based for a long time, and when I

built my clinic the whole goal was to be completely paperless and I think it

really helps both the physician and the provider because everything's on

electronic medical records the physicians can have tablets and they can

just find information faster so I know in terms of healthcare the digital world

and the technological advances have really helped for both the patient and

physician - but do you think there's any threat in terms of security though?

Privacy and security? - Well anything for healthcare is like super secure, like it

needs to be it needs to follow I think it's like HIPAA and PIPA and all these

like different acronyms, like it's not just

we're not just googling things and like putting patient charts on Word documents,

like because electronic medical records are very secure, and the cool thing is is

that once they all start to talk to each other which they're not doing yet, then

you could go from my clinic, to another clinic, to another clinic in like New

Brunswick, or Vancouver, or Toronto and your doctor will know everything about

you - It makes the world smaller. - Yeah, because like right now if

you go from your family doctor to a walk-in clinic, they don't know anything

about you, yeah the efficiency I mean over compensates for any

potential - I think so for sure. - to such a low low risk as you were saying so. - Yeah I'm

totally all for it anything digital like, I'm - But what about like, the

opposite side of it, so do you find that because we're so digital now, like I know

with me I can text my assistant at like 11 o'clock at night, she's three hours

ahead when I'm in Vancouver and she'll respond to me, and sometimes that kind of

scares me because, I'm like, I don't know like she should be sleeping, but we're so

connected. It's a two edged sword, right? - Yeah - That is the world we working though, I

mean that's how we connect, that's how we do our day to day job, that's how

everything you know, works essentially it's just so easy, it's accessible and

it's efficient. - It's efficient but do you think that there's a threat of

automating everything, job security itself, I mean aren't you afraid to lose

your job once everything becomes automated. - Well Jack Ma, the guy who founded Alibaba,

actually there's something a few days ago where he said if we don't change the

structure of education and how education is happening, then robots are gonna

replace everything, which I think although no one knows

what I do so, it's gonna be hard to replace me. - There are some specific fields

that's gonna be really difficult to automate or build a digital doctor robot,

kind of like - No, we're there! We're not a digital doctor, but like if you're in a nursing home

they set up like almost like a robot with this tablet and the doctor can be

anywhere, in the world and there's a nurse taking your vitals, so while we're

not replacing doctors they are talking about chat box, and all sorts of things yeah

just finding more efficient ways and it's saving money, so from business

standpoint. - You can even do counseling sessions over like the computer, now

there's actually doctors who have their own counseling services, over just

computer, you don't have to go into a doctor's office now. None of us

want to actually see people anymore. - Who wants to talk to people, I mean what's that about. So what do you guys think, do

you enjoy working in a digital environment or is it threat to your job

security? Let us know, comment below and subscribe, make sure you check us out on

social media, thanks so much for watching. I'm Danny Tozy, for BareTalk TV.

For more infomation >> The Digital Workplace is better for your Well-being - Duration: 4:29.

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Recepción de los paquetes será digital - Duration: 2:45.

Entre las novedades que tendrá esta elección en Torreón, está la digitalización de la recepción de los paquetes electorales por medio de urnas electrónicas

   En el Comité Municipal Electoral de Torreón, son 12 máquinas las que se pondrán en marcha con la recepción del primer paquete

   "La función es la recepción del paquete a través del código, tipo de casilla, la casilla que es y el ingreso del paquete, para darle celeridad al funcionario, ahí van a ingresar con mayor rapidez los paquetes, en lugar de hacer la recepción de manera manual", explicó Georgina Aguirre, presidenta del Comité Municipal Electoral

   Las máquinas estarán enlazadas en un sistema para que a través de la captura, el Instituto Electoral de Coahuila (IEC) esté enterado de la llegada del paquete y las condiciones en las que se recibió

   También se capturará si el paquete cuenta con las actas de escrutinio y cómputo que deberán estar por fuera y que facilitarán el proceso para la captura de los resultados en el PREP (Programa de Resultados Electorales Preliminares)

Georgina Aguirre, aclaró que estas urnas no tienen relación con el conteo de votos, pues únicamente se captura la llegada de los paquetes electorales y sus características

Dijo que el resultado del PREP, dependerá de la celeridad con lo que se haga la captura de las actas en el sistema, por lo que no se tiene una hora determinada para conocer una tendencia clara

    SE ALISTAN  PREP    En la elección pasada donde se renovó la gubernatura del Estado y las alcaldías, el PREP se detuvo al 71 por ciento en la primera elección por la captura de las actas

  12     MáQUINAS  Estarán capturando la llegada de paquetes electorales y las condiciones en las que están

   Fotos:La i    Tel.- 7166012     NúMERO - IMP </form>

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