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June 13, 2023 |
In partnership with Kim Komando Today |
Itβs Tech Tuesday! Letβs start with our trivia. What was the worldβs first text message? Was it β¦ βHello world,β βDid you get this,β βLOLβ or βMerry Christmasβ? The answerβs at the end, friends! πͺ Weβre coming in heavy today, folks. Prepare to be tech-infused! β Kim π« First-time reader? Sign up here. (Itβs free!) IN THIS ISSUEποΈβπ¨οΈ 2023 or 1984?π¨ Car recall alertπ A killerβs search history? |
TODAY'S TOP STORYYour boss(βs robot) is watchingCompanies using tech to keep an eye on employees is nothing new. But the spyware that tallies productivity and ensures you're logged in on time is so last decade. Weβre living in an AI world, folks. Letβs look at what might be taking a close look at you or someone you know whoβs working remotely. It all started back in the good olβ days β¦β¦ when we were sitting on our couches, baking bread and hoarding toilet paper. Employee surveillance software exploded in 2020, when millions of workers went home during the COVID-19 lockdown. Employers wanted ways to check if their employees worked their hours, did their jobs and generally toed the line. Three years later, life has generally returned to normal. But many employees are pushing back, saying theyβre working at home and loving not commuting. There's a big push on why employers need software to track workers' productivity. They say this kind of surveillance is invasive and a sign of petty micromanaging, judging everything from time on work chat apps to employeesβ computer keystrokes. But 85% of leaders report remote work makes them worry employees are slacking on the job. Spoiler: Many are, and thatβs life. I can tell you Iβm not one of that 85% of leaders. My team busts their butts every single day. I donβt need to track anyone. What AI will trackAIβs marketing propaganda promises surveillance can lower stress and help employees feel better. Thatβs a lofty goal. So whatβs out there? Hereβs a short list: Listening to customer service reps to detect stress in tones of voice and remind them to take a break. Thatβs nice. Imagine, though, you get too many notifications. Let's say you're in a meeting. AI is analyzing your facial expressions to see if you're paying attention (you're probably not) or getting stressed asking for a pay raise (you probably are). All this tracking goes right into your employee file.How'd you like to wear wrist sensors on the job to track your heart rate, perspiration and movements throughout the day? When I worked at IBM, my manager told me I went to the bathroom too many times a day, as tracked by my badge that opened the door. I went three times, which she said was "excessive." And that wasn't anything close to AI.New AI sensors can assess your mood through recognition technology and automatically adjust your office, such as lowering the temperature and dimming the lights. Maybe youβre just hungover? I mean, even working on an elevator has its ups and downs.Remember, while AI is having a kumbaya moment with your feelings, itβs also tracking what youβre doing. This brings up a ton of HR and legal issues. What happens with all this data? Who has access to it? Where does it go? No good answers to any of these questions yet. Is this such a good idea?Hereβs the thing: Studies have shown AI can lower workplace stress, but only when itβs doing busy work for employees. Reducing stress is a noble goal, but adding AI eyes to the mix isnβt great for our at-work blood pressure. Required workplace surveillance can track what we're doing at home for hours β that's already approaching mother-in-law levels of stress. Now tech is promising to watch our facial expressions and listen to our tone of voice? No wonder workers are saying, βIβm sorry, HAL, Iβm afraid I canβt do that.β π¦ Maybe AI is best left to making Wes Anderson parodies. For now, I prefer people-based solutions to stress. |
DEAL OF THE DAY
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WEB WATERCOOLERRecall alert: Some Kia, Toyota and Land Rover vehicles are part of a new 247,000-car recall. Got a 2023 Kia Sportage? Your brakes could stop working. Toyota Corolla Cross? Your front passenger airbags might not deploy. Check to see if your car has been recalled. Console me: Microsoft announced the new Carbon Black Xbox Series S. Priced at $349, it has a terabyte of storage (double that of its predecessor) and a matte black finish β a salute to the Xbox One. Office freebie: Unless you absolutely need MS Office, donβt waste your money. Iβve recommended LibreOffice, the free office software suite, for years and it just got a major update. Works on Windows, Mac and Linux. βοΈ PTSD cure: You have to hear about how an Apple Watch is helping people suffering from PTSD. I spoke with a soldier whoβs using this solution, PTSD specialists and the app developer. Know someone with PTSD? Share this life-saving news and listen to the podcast here. Redditβs going black: Reddit communities are going dark to protest the companyβs new fees theyβre charging apps. Reddit plans to charge $12,000 for every 50 million data requests for third-party developers. Disney dance bot: A roving baby Groot robot is being tested at Disneyland in California. The little bot can walk, dance and say, βI am Groot,β to guests. Watch out, Pinocchio, thereβs a βreal boyβ in town. π Jog near home? Strava wearablesβ βheatmapsβ might broadcast your home address. This feature, which highlights popular exercise spots, could mark your home as a workout hotspot for others to see. Remove your personal deets from your profile to be safe. Starstruck: NASA's welcoming anyone to put their name on the Europa Clipper, bound for a 1.8 billion-mile journey to explore Jupiter's moon, Europa. Sign up here to make your cosmic mark. πΊ A great vid: How do noise-canceling earbuds β¦ cancel noise? It seems simple, but itβs super high-tech. Watch this video to see how layers upon layers of algorithms work together to figure out sounds that need to be dropped. Itβs fascinating! |
π§ Want great content on the go?Sound like a tech pro, even if you're not one. Try my award-winning, daily podcast. Search for my last name with "K" wherever you get your podcasts and "Go Komando!" |
TRENDINGBe careful what you searchIβm sure youβve heard this story in the news. A Utah mom, Kouri Richins, was arrested last month. Police say she killed her husband by poisoning him with fentanyl β¦ before she wrote a childrenβs book about grief. Things don't look good for Richins. She took out a $2 million life insurance policy on the guy and then went to Google with some very pointed searches: Luxury prisons for the rich in America Utah prison informationWhether police can see deleted messagesHow long life insurance companies take to payWhat is considered non-natural manner of deathKouri Richins Kamas net worthShe had an interesting online reading list, too. Articles she browsed included βSigns of Being Under Federal Investigationβ and βDelay in Claim Payment for Death Certificate with Pending Cause of Death.β And, because, of course, there are some more mundane searches in there, too: "Lil Nas X married" and "What kind of doctor was Dr Pepper?" Everyone knows he was a Fizzician. Yes, Richinβs innocent until proven guilty. But it does make you wonder why she was looking up all these things online. β You may not know it but there are things you should never Google. Itβs dangerous! |
DEVICE ADVICESmart ways to get anyone to read your emailWork in sales? You know how tough cold-calling is β especially now that no one answers their phone and people are still working from home. Cold-emailing is easier, but how do you not end up in the trash folder? I know a thing or two about that. Five words β thatβs all you have. It all starts with the subject line. Get the recipientβs attention with the first five words. They may not see more than that on a smartphone. Make the subject personal. Try βReferred to you byβ or βQuick questionβ with the personβs name, like this: βQuick question, Kim.βIn the body of the email, get to the point. If you have a mutual acquaintance, include that personβs name in the first sentence. Write like youβre talking to the person. No dumb corporate-speak, like βsynergyβ or βparadigms.β Tell the person what you want, and be specific. They shouldnβt get done reading and wonder, βWait, what?βDonβt forget to proofread before you hit send. Yeah, we all make typos, but it doesnβt make the best impression. ChatGPT is good for this! Paste in your message and ask it to proofread for you.I got a bizarre email this morning explaining how to read maps backward. It was spam. β Oh, this is sneaky smart! Wondering whether someone read your email? Hereβs how to tell. |
Go Komando with my daily podcast!Take me on your walk, in the car, sitting at home or anywhere else with Kim Komando Today. Give me 30 minutes a day and youβll be the tech-smartest version of yourself. Tech news, tips, advice and lots of laughs. Donβt just take my word for it. Deb says: βI really love listening to Kimβs podcasts and programs. Iβve learned so much from her β¦ been a fan of the radio show since the 1990s and itβs so great to listen to her at my leisure.β Subscribe so you never miss an episode. Theyβll download right to your phone or device so you can listen anytime you want. Score. Find my podcast here or search Kim Komando wherever you listen. β |
BY THE NUMBERS17 The number of fatalities linked to Teslaβs Autopilot. Despite claims the self-driving mode is ready for prime time, an investigation shows itβs led to 736 crashes since 2019. The system costs $15,000. Worth it? Clearly not. This stuff shouldnβt be beta tested on public streets. 39% The percentage of household chores robots could help us with by 2035. Researchers say in the same timeframe, time spent grocery shopping will go down 60% and cooking and cleaning will take 46% less time. Bring on the bots! $70 million The value of PC gear Acer sent to Russia after suspending business there. After publicly declaring no more business there due to the Russia-Ukraine war, Acer continued to sell monitors and laptops. Makes me not want to buy Acer products. |
WHAT THE TECH?Dang, thatβs just nasty looking. Is that Cheez Whiz around the sides and top? |
UNTIL NEXT TIME ...π The answer: On Dec. 3, 1992, Neil Papworth sent the first text β βMerry Christmasβ β to Richard Jarvis, who was attending a Christmas party in Newbury, England. Fast forward: About 23 billion text messages are sent every day now! π Speaking of, why doesnβt Putin use his hands when he sends a text? βCause heβs more of a dictator. (That was a good one, ikr?) Hope you learned a few new things today. I will see you tomorrow morning with another issue of the best tech newsletter in the world! β Kim |
How'd we do?What did you think of today's issue? π Fantasticπ Just OKπ Waste of time |
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Photo credit(s): Β© Yuri Arcurs | Dreamstime.com, Facebook.com, Walker-Mortuary.com |
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