Amazon AI generates medical records from patient-doctor conversations

Amazon believes its latest Web Services tool will help doctors spend more time with their patients. The tool, called Amazon Transcribe Medical, allows doctors to easily transcribe patient conversations and add those interactions to someone's medical...

Deal Of The Day: 79% Off On IDrive 1TB Hard Drive & 10TB Cloud Backup Bundle

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Backing your files up is important, this much we’re sure you know. How you go about it is another question, with a ton of options available to you. iDrive has an offer that’s hard to pass up on. You’re looking at a 1TB external hard drive that you can send files to through WiFi. It’s easy and convenient, and your data will be secured with 256-bit encryption. But on top of the external drive, today’s deal gives you access to a 1 year subscription to their cloud-based backup service, which gives you an additional 10TB of storage. That’s 11TB for your stuff, in a hardware/cloud combination that’s both quick and flexible. You’d normally have been expected to pay $475 for this, but today’s deal prices it at $97.

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The post Deal Of The Day: 79% Off On IDrive 1TB Hard Drive & 10TB Cloud Backup Bundle appeared first on OhGizmo!.

You Don’t Need Magic, Just CloudMagic: Find Stuff in Multiple Cloud Services in a Snap

CloudMagic

A lot of people resisted the cloud when it first came to be. However, you’re probably already using cloud a lot these days, from your email storage and notes apps to file storage and archiving. Eventually, there will come a time where you’ll forget where you stored a certain file or which email inbox a certain message was sent to. You could search all of your apps and accounts manually–which is task that’s infinitely harder when you’re working from your mobile–or you could just fire up CloudMagic.

CloudMagic lets you search for whatever it is you’re looking through all of your cloud-hosted data. Some features include: multiple accounts searching, singular view of all data, rich previews and actions, partial word search, search multiple devices, and search result filters.

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The app is compatible with Gmail, Dropbox, Drive, Hotmail, Exchange, SkyDrive, Yahoo! Mail, Box, Outlook.com, Evernote, Office 365, Windows Live, and more, so it’s highly likely that you can use CloudMagic with your existing accounts. It’s pretty easy to get on your Android device: just head to the Google Play store, search for “CloudMagic,” and tap the app to install.

If you’re still on the fence about the cloud, don’t be. For one, the prices being charged by providers don’t cost a premium anymore. Developers and service providers are also more conscientious about virtual security and getting it right, so there’s little to worry about on that end as well. A lot of major companies have already adopted and moved to the cloud, so that should appease your doubts as well.

There are two versions of CloudMagic that are available. The first one is the free version, which will give you up to 50 free previews every month. If you don’t foresee yourself using it a lot, then you’ll be fine with this version. However, if you need more than the 50-limit preview, then there’s CloudMagic Pro which gives you unlimited previews for $4.99 a month.

VIA [ Tech Republic ]

Boxee TV Lets You DVR With No Limits

The Boxee Box brought with it lots of hype, but it’s a hard world out there for a media streamer. So the company is switching tacks and trying to enter the DVR market with an interesting offering: unlimited storage on the cloud. Most DVRs come with hard drives and after a few months of rigorous recording, you’re likely to start feeling a little squeezed. Not so with Boxee TV, which uploads everything you decide to keep, so you can pretty much record it all! And you’re then free to watch it back from any device that has access to the Internet. It has a dual tuner that allows it to display TV from over-the-air signals and basic unencrypted cable, and you’re able to record one show while watching another.

The service costs $15 a month, and will be “rolling out to 8 of the top TV markets in the US: New York City, Los Angeles, Chicago, Dallas, Houston, Atlanta, Philadelphia and D.C. Additional markets later in 2013.”

[ Product Page ] VIA [ Werd ]


Adobe announces Acrobat XI with tablet-friendly touchability, cloud services

Adobe Acrobat XI with tablet-friendly touchability, cloud services

Adobe has just updated its Acrobat lineup, including Pro, Standard and Reader to version 11 -- and thrown in two new programs, FormsCentral and EchoSign, to boot. The latter two are cloud-enabled services which permit "web contracting, forms creation, data collection and analysis" according to Adobe, which didn't yet specify exactly how that works. The company has also added improved tablet capability, and portable versions of Adobe Reader will now let you sign and save forms, as well as annotate and add comments. You'll also be able to modify paragraphs, images and objects by dragging them around; save PDFs as PowerPoint, Word or Excel files; and add extra security measures to documents. The upgrades will ship within 30 days and cost $449 and $299 for the Pro and Standard versions, respectively -- so if you've no time for frivolity on that new slate, check the PR for more info.

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Adobe announces Acrobat XI with tablet-friendly touchability, cloud services originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 01 Oct 2012 13:24:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Amazon reportedly adding music rights to Cloud Player, could close gap with iCloud

Amazon reportedly adding music rights to Cloud Player, could close gap with iCloud

Amazon's Cloud Player app just made its way to the iPhone and iPod touch, but the company's web-based music service still lacks the license deals that make Apple's iCloud a more seamless experience. While iCloud scans a user's hard drive to match songs and stream them from iTunes, Cloud Player requires listeners to manually upload copies of their music to the cloud. According to CNET's "industry sources," Amazon is looking to close that gap by inking agreements with major labels and has already made deals with EMI and Universal Music Group. This story is still very much in the rumor phase, but obtaining those licenses certainly sounds like a logical step for a service meant to make enjoying files across several devices easier.

Amazon reportedly adding music rights to Cloud Player, could close gap with iCloud originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 13 Jun 2012 12:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung’s S-Cloud tipped to arrive alongside the Galaxy S III next month

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Korean newspaper Maeil Business believes that Samsung's finally ironed out the kinks in its S-Cloud service and will unveil it alongside the Galaxy S III at next month's event. The Korean giant will reportedly offer an "unlimited service" with less of the content or storage restrictions imposed by iCloud. It'll also apparently come with a VOD-store, offering up audio and video content for a fee, presumably beside what's available in Google Play. It's also reporting that the company's Media Solution Center has asked Microsoft to join KT and Amazon in developing the infrastructure to ensure a smooth launch. Either way, it's not long now until we know for certain, so be sure to join us on May 3rd for the whole story.

Samsung's S-Cloud tipped to arrive alongside the Galaxy S III next month originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 20 Apr 2012 11:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink CNET, The Verge  |  sourceMaeil Business (Translated)  | Email this | Comments