ON COMPUTERS

Crowdsourcing sites let developers skip big lenders to reach buyers

Crowdsourcing, also called crowdfunding, is like found money. Instead of one sponsor, you have hundreds, perhaps thousands of strangers donating to your cause, with few strings attached.

More than 120,000 projects have been funded by Kickstarter.com, one of several crowdsourcing services, since it began in 2009. We are talking big bucks here. About 3,900 Kickstarter projects have raised at least $100,000 -- and a couple hundred projects have raised at least $1 million. This has even drawn the attention of major corporations, like Samsung, General Electric and Hasbro. After all, there's no interest charge, unlike borrowing from a bank.

Sometimes there's also no accounting. When you kick in to finance some new product or project -- and we have kicked in -- you do not get stock or a share of the profits, if any. What you get is a reward -- sometimes just a thank-you, sometimes a product. Sometimes you can get your money back, sometimes not. We got our $150 back when the product we kicked in for hadn't appeared a year after the designers said it would. They were really angry at our lack of patience, and said so vigorously. (By the way, the product never appeared.)

Crowdsourcing websites vary. With Kickstarter, it's all or nothing. Set a goal to raise $50,000 and that's the floor; if you only raise $49,999, you get nothing. On Indiegogo.com, you keep whatever comes in. Those who kick in may get small extra rewards for their investment, like a T-shirt or an autographed book. If the company fails to produce, it must give a refund or is legally liable. Of course, if it can't make the product and goes belly up, being legally liable is sort of meaningless.

More information on crowdsourcing is available in a new book, The Crowdsourceress by Alex Daly, which sells for $17 at PublicAffairsBooks.com.

Hey Google, Delete That

Google Home, a speaker with a virtual assistant inside, records your every request. That's so it can get better and faster at understanding you, says Google. If you don't turn it off, it's still listening. But if you're paranoid, you can delete every request you ever made, along with additional comments you didn't know were being recorded.

Go to History.Google.com/history/audio. Click the three dots above a conversation and choose "delete." Our most recent requests were: "Play ukulele music," "When was the Federal Reserve created?" (1913) and "How long do giraffes sleep?" (About an hour.) We have wide-ranging interests.

Finding a Movie

We just had a lengthy conversation with Alexa, the voice inside Amazon's Echo Dot. It was all about movies. She would have gone on for hours if we'd wished.

This is a new trick. To use it, enable the "Valossa" skill by tapping the Alexa app on your phone and searching on "Valossa." Though it's called Valossa, you have to use the words "Ask Movie Finder." We started by saying, "Alexa, ask Movie Finder to find that movie about the smart girl." We were thinking of the movie Gifted; it's coming out this week.. She gave us Get Smart from 2008, School on Fire from 1988, and Three Smart Girls, a Deanna Durbin movie from 1936 about three girls who try to rescue their father from a gold digger.

This is just where the conversation begins. You can ask Alexa for more details about the first, second or third result. She'll give you the director and a synopsis. If one movie sounds good, ask for similar movies. Asking for movies similar to Get Smart led to Wanted, Harlem Nights and Love, Honor & Obey, none of which were like Get Smart, but, hey, it's a start. Get details on those, or ask for a longer list. She'll give you the genre too, like "action/comedy/thriller." This conversation can go on as long as you wish. It also works from a computer: Go to WhatIsMyMovie.com and type a query in the search box.

Cool Phone Tricks

We looked up "cool phone tricks" on the Web and found some fun ones:

Go to sleep with music. On the iPhone or iPad, first tap the clock app. Next tap "Timer," and then tap the musical note. Scroll to the bottom of the list of sounds and choose "stop playing." Now, whatever app you're using to play music or an audiobook, it will stop when you told it to stop. If you don't have any music in your iPhone's music library, get the free Pandora app, or iHeartRadio or Spotify. Or play something on YouTube. For Android phones, use a free app called "Sleep Timer." If you use Audible books, there's a sleep timer built in.

When you're out with binoculars, or have access to a telescope, you can take a picture of what your binoculars or telescope sees. Hold your phone up to the telescope or binoculars and press the camera icon to take a photo. Now you'll have a memento of something far, far away.

Turn Wi-Fi off with your voice. Works with Siri, Google, and Cortana. You might want to turn it off if you're away from home and the phone feels hot in your pocket because it's continually searching for a Wi-Fi connection.

Good Habyts

Our nephew teaches high school math, and the first thing he does when the kids come in is confiscate their cellphones. He prefers it to having the same "put away your phone" discussion a hundred times throughout the year. "They're addicts," he says.

For controlling younger kids, Habyts is a free-to-try app for iPhone, iPad, and Android devices. It goes beyond shutting off an app when it's study time; it also teaches good habits. You can get children to the dinner table promptly, since the parent's dashboard has a "pause everything" mode which shuts down all their activities. You can also encourage good study habits, assign chores and reward children with points. At certain hours, block recreational websites and leave educational ones open. Ditto for games and other apps. Let them use Microsoft Word during study time, but not Minecraft. After the 14-day free trial period is up, Habyts' plans start at $4 a month. Find it at Habyts.com.

Bob and Joy Schwabach can be reached by email at [email protected] and [email protected].

SundayMonday Business on 04/17/2017

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