博文

Office workers find it more important to use a printer than to use a PC-EBY

图片
If you ask me what is the most commonly used device in my office, I might tell you to be a water dispenser. However, according to the latest research, the most important device is the printer. Yes, the printer is more important than the computer. We conducted the above research and interviewed 1000 office workers. Among them, 81% of the respondents regard the printer as the most important device, followed by the pen (73%), the stapler (71%) and the PC (70%). Nearly half of surveyed workers (46%) said they print documents on a daily basis, and 80% of workers said they need the printed documents to get their job done. The survey revealed that reviewing, posting, presenting presentations, applying and auditing, and labeling are key factors driving print behavior. According to the data survey, printers have an irreplaceable importance to human life. The number of EBY-branded products we purchase each year is also on the rise, which means everyone trusts and supports the brand. Over the...

Hello,dear friend~ If you have any demand for toner cartridges, you can contact us EBY to answer your questions and provide better and cheaper products. http://www.officeeby.com/

图片
http://www.officeeby.com/

SXSW Tech Preview: Snooping, Wearables And More 3-D Printing

图片
South by Southwest Interactive is the technology-driven part of the annual Austin-based festival for digital, film and music and it starts on Friday. An expected 30,000 people will take part in the interactive and film week that precedes music, and they love it for the spontaneity and the chaos. They also hate it because of the chaos — parties on every corner, marketing handouts at every turn and a sprawling program of panels, screenings and speakers that span at least a dozen city blocks in the heart of Texas. Even Hugh Forrest, the director of the interactive portion of the fest, says he wishes he had some sort of predictive computing personal assistant to help him make sense of the startup-saturated ideas festival where the lineup includes Edward Snowden, Neil deGrasse Tyson and a repeat appearance by Internet-famous Grumpy Cat. Before I and my tech reporting counterpart, Laura Sydell, head down to Austin again, I spoke with Forrest for a preview of the sprawling festival ...

To Predict Nobel Winners, Skip Vegas And Check The Fine Print

图片
Some people like to bet on horses. Others wager on football games. And while there may not be any money in picking the next Nobel Prize winner, that's no reason not to have a little fun trying. On Monday Oct. 6, a scientist or two, or maybe even three, will get called from Sweden with good news about the  Nobel Prize for physiology or medicine . Who will it be? Some folks at Thomson Reuters  have some ideas . They've essentially pored over the footnotes in scientific papers to figure out whose work has been referenced the most often in influential journals. The analysis was a little bit more complicated than that. They crunched the numbers in databases of citations to figure out how many times possible winners got their papers cited. They also compared that number with how many times average scientists in the field got their papers cited. The analysts, working in Thomson Reuters' intellectual property and science unit, went beyond these numbers: They handicapped ...

First, Personalized Pez Dispensers. Next, Printed Food?

图片
The Pez dispenser is a cultural icon that has withstood the test of time, with Mickey Mouse, Yoda, even George Washington doling out little candy bricks through their plastic necks. So applying the hot new technology of 3-D printing to make personalized Pez dispensers makes sense, in a weird way. It's just one of a growing number of efforts under way to print customized food products. When Matt Compeau and Bi-Ying Mao founded the small Toronto jewelry company Hot Pop Factory last year, they were already familiar with 3-D printing, thanks to their backgrounds in architecture — a field where the technology is frequently used to build prototypes. Compeau says that when they bought their own printer as a creative outlet, they realized "that the technology didn't really need to be relegated to making prototypes, but that you could actually make products with it." So when an architecture firm was looking for a novel holiday gift to give to all of its employees, ...

Mike McCue: Flipboard Brings Beauty Of Print Onto The Web

图片
If you haven't caught up, Flipboard is a new iPad app that has the geek crowd raving. Michele Norris spoke to Flipboard CEO Mike McCue. The app brings the beauty of print, as McCue puts it, to the social content of the Web. McCue, a Silicon Valley veteran, was one of the founders of Tellme, a company that specializes in voice-based programs like the ones used for directory assistance services. The company was sold to Microsoft for $800 million. Now, he has great expectations for his "social magazine." And he talks a little a bit about the business model for Flipboard, which, he says, will likely look a lot like that of an old school business — the publishing world. Listen to the whole interview above. This, by the way, is the first in a series of conversations with tech CEOs. Who would you like to hear from next?

Morriston Hospital rebuilds cancerous jaws with 3D printing

图片
A surgical team at Swansea's Morriston Hospital has created a technique to reconstruct jaws affected by cancer using 3D printing, said to be one of the first of its kind in the world. The method uses 3D printed titanium implants that are anatomically specific to the patient. Store worker Debbie Hawkins from Swansea was the first patient to have the "amazing" procedure. Surgeons rebuilt a section of her jawbone after she developed a tumour. The technique combines traditional bone grafts with 3D printed titanium implants that can be created to fit an individual patient's anatomy. Ms Hawkins said: "When they told me what the procedure involved I was scared at first. I really didn't know what to expect. But what they have done, and the aftercare I have received, has been absolutely amazing". She was in hospital for just two weeks after her operation in August last year, which also used 3D technology to plan the operation in advance. She was able to ...