The Daily Dose

laugh every day with cartoons jokes and humor
  • Home
  • About
    • Press
      • Press Release – Announcing Laughzilla the Third ebook
      • Press Release – The Daily Dose Kicks Off Its 16th Year with New Books and More Irreverent Laughter
      • Press Release – Themes Memes and Laser Beams Now Available in Paperback
      • Press Release – Announcing Themes Memes and Laser Beams
      • In The News
    • Privacy
  • Archive
  • Books
  • Shop
  • Collections
    • Galleries
      • Gallery
      • Captions
      • Flash Cartoons & Greeting Cards
        • Laughzilla’s Oska Flash Animation Cartoon Greeting Cards
        • Oska Cupid Love Humor
    • #OccupyWallStreet
    • cats
    • China
    • Food
      • Hors d’oeuvres
        • Ball of Cream Cheese
      • Entrees / Main Courses
        • Meatballs with Baked Beans and Celery
    • Gadaffy
    • Google
  • Links
  • Video
  • Submit a joke
DeviantART Facebook Twitter Flickr pinterest YouTube RSS

Subscribe for Free Laughs!


 

Latest Comics

  • This Memorial Day, Trump Meme Coin Congratulates Profit Takers
  • 25 Years of The Daily Dose
  • The Best Cartoons
  • Bitcoin sings “Fly Me To The Moon”
  • 22 years of The Daily Dose

Comic Archive

The Daily Dose is 18 years old and counting with this cartoon caricature of laughzilla and the artist
The Daily Dose is 18 years old

Daily Dose News Roundup

  • Google makes Gemini’s personalized image generation free for all US users
  • Baidu’s chip unit Kunlunxin is targeting a $50 billion Hong Kong IPO and asked investors to buy its semiconductors
  • Cloudflare cut 1,100 jobs and then grew its engineering team by 45 percent, and its CEO says the pattern will repeat everywhere
  • Ford had to rehire 350 engineers after its AI got vehicle quality wrong
  • The hidden cost of complacency and Jay Roland’s mission against corporate America’s technical debt crisis

Quotable

"Willie Nelson had a terrible Cyber Monday in 2010. He couldn't even buy his favorite plants online." ~ Yasha Harari

Fresh Baked Goods

Get The Daily Dose's ebook: Laughzilla the Third - A Funny Stuff Collection of 101 Cartoons from TheDailyDose. Click here to get the e-book on Amazon kdp. Laughzilla the Third (2012) The Third Volume in the Funny Stuff Cartoon Book Collection Available Now.

Click here for the Paperback edition


Support independent publishing: Buy The Daily Dose's book: Themes Memes and Laser Beams - A Funny Stuff Collection of 101 Cartoons by Laughzilla from TheDailyDose. Click here to get the book on Amazon. Themes Memes and Laser Beams - The Second Volume in the Funny Stuff Cartoon Book Collection.

Click Here to get the book in Paperback While Available on Amazon

Themes Memes and Laser Beams - 101 Cartoons by Laughzilla. Get the e-book on Lulu.

Click Here to get The Daily Dose Cartoon ebook on amazon kindle

Funny Stuff :
The First Cartoon Book
from The Daily Dose.
Available on Lulu.

a couple of laughzillas on a blue diamond background

Doctors Cautiously Optimistic About ‘Cure’ for HIV-Infected Babies

Mar08
by Sindy Cator on March 8, 2014 at 7:00 am
Posted In: Around the Web

Title: Doctors Cautiously Optimistic About ‘Cure’ for HIV-Infected Babies
Category: Health News
Created: 3/6/2014 2:36:00 PM
Last Editorial Review: 3/7/2014 12:00:00 AM

└ Tags: syndicated
a couple of laughzillas on a blue diamond background

Hospital Policy Spurs New Moms to Get Whooping Cough Shot

Mar08
by Sindy Cator on March 8, 2014 at 7:00 am
Posted In: Around the Web

Title: Hospital Policy Spurs New Moms to Get Whooping Cough Shot
Category: Health News
Created: 3/6/2014 12:36:00 PM
Last Editorial Review: 3/7/2014 12:00:00 AM

└ Tags: syndicated
a couple of laughzillas on a blue diamond background

Comic for March 8, 2014

Mar08
by Sindy Cator on March 8, 2014 at 6:00 am
Posted In: Around the Web

Dilbert readers – Please visit Dilbert.com to read this feature. Due to changes with our feeds, we are now making this RSS feed a link to Dilbert.com.

└ Tags: syndicated
a couple of laughzillas on a blue diamond background

Pinterest’s first transparency report: 12 government requests for data on 13 accounts in second half of 2013

Mar07
by Sindy Cator on March 7, 2014 at 10:26 pm
Posted In: Around the Web, Insider, Social Media

141915688 520x245 Pinterests first transparency report: 12 government requests for data on 13 accounts in second half of 2013

Pinterest today published its first transparency report, with the promise to release a new edition every six months. The company revealed it only received seven warrants and five subpoenas for a total of 13 user accounts in the second half of 2013 (July through December).

Screen Shot 2014 02 25 at 10.55.11 AM Pinterests first transparency report: 12 government requests for data on 13 accounts in second half of 2013

Pinterest says all 12 of its law enforcement requests were from agencies in the US, and 11 came from state or local agencies. The breakdown was as follows: CA (4), FL (2), UT (2), NY (1), OR (1), and WI (1).

Pinterest gives notice to users whose information has been requested unless it is specifically prohibited to do so by the law. Of the 12 law enforcement requests it received, Pinterest was prohibited three times by the law from notifying users, and in one case it refused to provide information in the first place.

“Every company that stores information — from banks to phone companies to email providers — must respond to requests for that information from folks like law enforcement agencies, courts, and others,” Pinterest explains. “We think it’s important that you know about these requests.”

Ever since the NSA fiasco blew up, tech companies have been making an increased effort to be transparent about what law enforcement asks of them. Behemoths like Apple, Google, and Microsoft all share data, but even sites like Facebook, Twitter and Tumblr recently joined the fray.

Pinterest stands out in that its government data requests are orders of magnitude lower. Instead of being in the thousands or hundreds, it gets just a handful. Whether that changes over the years will largely depend on how quickly the service grows and whether it ever lets users post more than just basic pins.

See also – Facebook, LinkedIn, Yahoo, Google and Microsoft disclose new data about number of NSA requests received and Here’s the letter Apple, Google, Microsoft and others sent to the US government over data requests

Top Image Credit: Karen Bleier/Getty Images

└ Tags: syndicated
a couple of laughzillas on a blue diamond background

This is the future of retail: Robotic fitting rooms and magic augmented reality mirrors

Mar07
by Sindy Cator on March 7, 2014 at 9:47 pm
Posted In: Around the Web, Insider

Dx3 TheRetailCollective 520x245 This is the future of retail: Robotic fitting rooms and magic augmented reality mirrors

Brick and mortar retail businesses are under immense pressure to innovate now that ecommerce has become a normal part of consumer behavior. Thankfully for retailers, technology can be just as disruptive in a physical store as it can be online.

At the recent DX3 digital marketing conference, self-described ‘Retail Prophet’ Doug Stephens set up an installation to show off the various technologies that can help retail compete with online. Dubbed the ‘Retail Collective,’ the effort aimed to move beyond homogeneous single-brand demonstrations with a collaborative approach.

“I’ve been in the industry a long time, I’ve been to a lot of technology and retail shows, and I’ve never seen anyone put together a tech-agnostic, a brand-agnostic view of the future of retail from a technology standpoint,” Stephens told TNW in an interview. “We put together this elite team of technology companies with the mandate that they had to play nicely together and create an experience that was consistent and immersive.”

hointer2 220x251 This is the future of retail: Robotic fitting rooms and magic augmented reality mirrorsThe individual pieces of the concept store run the gambit of augmented reality mirrors, metrics and analytics, robotic inventory management, mobile payment and beacons.

The Retail Collective’s experiment approaches the shopping experience from both the consumer and the merchant perspective. Opt-in mobileID tracking, for instance, offers retailers a chance to see the types of data they can look forward to, while demonstrating to consumers the benefits of personalized shopping.

You can imagine having intelligent notifications about products you might like as you wander through a store. When you’re ready to try something on, you can head to the Magic Mirror to have it show you how the clothes will fit. When you enter the fitting room, a robotic compartment whisks the items over. When you’re ready to pay, you can just use your phone to accept the charges and walk out with your new stuff.

“We’re not trying to put together something that’s just cool for the sake of it,” Stephens continued. “We’re trying to put something together that an executive can walk through and say, ‘Okay, I think I get this now.’”

Stephens created his Retail Prophet consultancy after noticing a lack of foresight in the retail industry. Five years later, many of his initial predictions are beginning to come true. For instance, Stephens projected the unraveling of the big box model of retailing.

“That idea of the whole retail market shifting and the balance of power moving back to the smaller niche and speciality retailers and the internet of course has unfolded and will continue to unfold,” he said.

iqmetrix2 730x485 This is the future of retail: Robotic fitting rooms and magic augmented reality mirrors

The end of big box may seem obvious now, but Stephens said that many observers called the idea rubbish when he posed it in 2009.

Looking ahead to the future, Stephens believes retail stores are turning into media outlets. As more consumers browse goods at shops and then go online to buy them, it’s becoming more difficult for stores to directly measure their sales impact.

“We’re going to have to start treating the store experience as a media experience and measure it on the basis of the impressions it generates and how engaging and compelling those experiences were,” he noted.

Stephens believes stores could transition to charging brands an ad rate for displaying their items. Rather than just taking a cut of sales, retailers will serve as ambassadors that participate in a sale even if takes place when the customer gets online back at home. Convincing customers to buy a product in store is no longer just about coupons and foot traffic.

While some have predicted the downfall of retail in general, Stephens remains positive about the industry.

“Software eats retail? I don’t believe that. Software hunts for average experiences in the marketplace and annihilates them,” he said. “It’s a matter of retailers ramping up that experience so that it becomes valuable.”

To get an outside view of the collective’s endeavors, we spoke to FK Funderburke, Acquity Group’s Senior Director of Omnichannel Experiences.

Funderburke agreed that, based on what he’s seen, the installation is “right at the front” of where the future of retail is heading.

“Look at things like the Magic Mirror…You’re giving them a concierge like experience,” he said. “What you’ve done is you’ve taken something that used to be routinized and mundane. You’ve brought the power of a digital online experience right into the dressing room.”

Funderburke said he’s “cautiously optimistic” about retail’s future.

“Most people say this is a hard time to figure out what to do. I look at it where this is a place where the future is so wide open that there are a tons of things to do,” he said. “It’s much more of a fun place to be than it is a scary place.”

Similar to Stephens, Funderburke asserted that retailers that don’t innovate and embrace changing consumer behavior will go out of business. However, retailers that can bring together the online and home components in-store will thrive.

“The new reality is customers are always connected. The barrier between physical and digital is gone. With the new innovations coming, you have mass customization. I only have to build one Magic Mirror but it is a unique, personalized experience for every single person that walks in there.”

As merchants achieve a seamlessness between the physical and digital worlds, they’ll be able to create a more powerful relationship with their customers by using data to make content and offers more relevant.

For retailers who balk at the hardware and software costs of integrating new technology into their stores, Funderburke believes “the cost of not doing these things is much higher than the cost of doing these sorts of in-store experiences.”

Considering some of the poor shopping experiences I’ve had at big-box retailers lately – mismanaged inventory, apathetic employees, long  lines and unkept shelves, to name a few – it’s tempting to declare retail as doomed to die at the hands of Amazon’s coming drone army. Still, I fully expect to be walking into stores and buying stuff for many years to come, especially if retailers can see fit to incorporate some of these new technologies.

└ Tags: syndicated
  • Page 14,337 of 14,652
  • « First
  • «
  • 14,335
  • 14,336
  • 14,337
  • 14,338
  • 14,339
  • »
  • Last »
The Daily Dose, The Daily Dose © 1996 - Present. All Rights Reserved.
  • Home
  • About
  • Archive
  • Books
  • Collections
  • Links
  • Shop
  • Submit a joke
  • Video
  • Privacy Policy