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About Brian Jarvis

Digital Storyteller | Air Force Veteran

Five Car Apps That Can Save You Bucks

With $3-plus gas prices as the new normal, traffic showing no signs of slowing while parking shortages are on the rise, driving can be as expensive and stressful as ever. Fortunately a number of handy car apps can save you time, money and maintenance. And they’re all free. Here are the top five: 

UnknownGasBuddy: True to its name, GasBuddy searches out the cheapest gas stations in your vicinity based on your location or by plugging in city/zip/postal code. This app relies on its user community to chime in on discrepancies and station details, all in the spirit of banding together to combat high gas prices. As with airline miles and credit cards, you can earn points and awards by participating (read: win free gas). The app cannot always distinguish between cash and credit prices, however, as many gas stations charge additional fees if you use a credit card. 

MetroMile: MetroMile monitors your driving stats in order to make better road decisions. You can figure out the best times for the fastest commutes and plan gas-efficient routes, check engine status, and receive reminders of where you parked. For this app to work, however, you’ll have to order a Metronome, a gizmo that plugs into your car’s diagnostic port under the dashboard (available in California, Oregon, and Washington to drivers of post-1996 vehicles, free of charge). Some reviews claim the stats are unreliable, so this app may be a work in progress. On its site, MetroMile sells insurance based on the number of miles driven, aimed at drivers who log in less than 10,000 miles a year. The app is available only on iPhone, iPad and iPod touch.

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Four Ways it’s Good to Be Old School

Ol' SkoolI love technology. In fact, I own at least three “i’s”—as in iPhone, iPad and iMac (and before those, an iPod)—and I belong to the über-geeky minority that actually watches online tutorials with great interest. My 2014 goal is to become an expert coder.

But for every gadget on which my sanity now depends, there’s another one that I refuse to use when possible. Here’s why—and why sometimes, it’s good to be old school.

1) Unplug the microwave. I haven’t nuked a meal in years and never liked them in the first place. I’m no scientist, but radiation on any wavelength is something I prefer not to emit on the daily. Microwaves turn pizza crusts into cardboard, and warm up coffee cups to a higher temperature than a volcano at its peak. Food just tastes better when it’s in its natural heating element; plus it takes only a few minutes to reheat on a stovetop or in the oven. Just say no to nukes.

2) Embrace the landline. Speaking of radiation, the potential for health problems due to excessive cell phone usage is not a conspiracy theory: Apple itself advises users to keep iPhones at least 15 mm (5/8 inch) away from their bodies, which is also why men who plan to have children are advised to put smartphones inside their jacket pocket instead of scrunched down their front jean pocket next to the baby-making materials. Sometimes talking on a smartphone can’t be avoided, but if you’re at home and need to chat for a stretch of time, invest in a landline. Not to mention, it’s a great back up if your smartphone decides to die spontaneously.

3) Stop hiding behind headphones. Never mind the fact that future generations will likely be partially deaf by age 60. Headphones drown out the sounds of life hazards, from a bus turning the corner to a friend down the street urgently calling your name. And if the great outdoors is not enough inspiration for a 30-minute jog without tunes, I get that, but headphones while kicking a punching bag? Headphones while sitting at a work cubicle all day? To me that looks about as cool as a Bluedouche (thank God those contraptions are out of chic). I’m not saying I tossed my headphones in the trash; they just aren’t an extension of my ears.

Side note: I blame headphones for the fact that most gyms, once bastions of sports talk and flirtatious banter, are now dead zones populated by buffed-out zombies. Gymgoers nowadays rarely ask to work in sets on equipment, much less aspire to any social interaction because doing so means having to sufficiently annoy someone into removing their headphones.

4) Read real books. No matter how many times over they update the Kindle or the Nook, they are still computer screens. And I spend enough daylight hours already staring at one screen or another. Save the tablet books for trips and travel. On your home turf visit a long-lost neighborhood library, or buy those cheapo used copies from Amazon or Craigslist. Many a random convo at a coffee shop or bookstore has been initiated thanks to a print-and-paper book. You can bet your future partner will never approach to ask what you’re “reading” on a tablet.

In short: Munch on a microwaved meal once a blue moon, press your phone to your ear when the boss calls, and crack open a tablet on a beach vacay, but don’t forget to kick it old school sometimes. Your friends, family and the bus driver that barely missed the guy with headphones will thank you.

Yammer Envy and the San Francisco Startup Dream

Yammer's new digs in downtown San Francisco are the epitome of startup chic

Yammer’s new digs in downtown San Francisco are the epitome of startup chic.

Visiting a colleague at the plush 80,000 square feet that enterprise social network provider Yammer now calls home, I felt pleasantly barraged by sensory stimuli. The foodie in me wanted to gobble down the complimentary baked salmon with cucumber dill sauce and garlic-encrusted green beans; the man-child wanted to beeline to the full-size Street Fighter II machine; the photographer wanted to shoot away at the industrial-themed backdrop, silhouetted by a windowed city skyline. And the consultant wanted to start handing out business cards—or, better yet, shut down my freelance operation and apply for a full-time position.

Yammer relocated to the Twitter office building on Market Street earlier this month, adding to the starring role of tech in downtown San Francisco. Thank the City for its revised tax code aimed to lure star tenants to run-down areas, not to mention its confluence of social and cultural offerings, from Burmese food trucks to Opera in the Park, that’s tough to match. To hip newcomers, San Jose just ain’t that hip.

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New Media Expo 2013: Four Quotes to Remember

Aside

NMXNow in its seventh year, the annual New Media Expo (formerly Blogworld  & New Media Expo) convened in Las Vegas last week for another of round of socializing on social media, where clever takeaways and pithy bullet points were posted, tweeted, liked and Google+’d at rapid-fire. For those not in attendance, here are four quotes to remember, lightly paraphrased:

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Best Way to Enjoy Las Vegas is Via Conference, not Decadence

No bucket list of U.S. cities is complete without Sin City. Its infamous strip of colorfully themed hotels that double as casino mega malls are, depending on your point of view, either an iconic row of breathtaking splendor or the ultimate symbol of Western excess.

Trade shows are a great way to make friends AND soak up the sights.

Trade shows are a great way to make friends AND soak up the sights. From left: NMX attendees Brian Jarvis, Jen Lee Reeves, Tinu Abayomi-Paul and Mona Holmes.

But there’s a reason The Hangover was set in Las Vegas, and even the most disciplined among us can fall prey to its temptations in a state where gambling and prostitution are both legal and aggressively solicited. Want to see Vegas without flattening your pocketbook or your self-respect? Try seeing it during a convention or trade show. Here are four reasons why:

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Nostalgic on Newsweek: My last words to the #LASTPRINTISSUE

I owe my career to Newsweek magazine. Long before it launched a tablet format—or any online format for that matter—the iconic news magazine published on its “My Turn” page an essay I wrote when I was 16.

I was 16 when publishing an essay in Newsweek magazine landed me an appearance on "Good Morning America" with Dana King.

I was 16 when publishing an essay in Newsweek magazine landed me an appearance on “Good Morning America” with Dana King.

When that issue hit the stands in May 1993, my entire high school suddenly knew my name—and face, as the article included my picture. The essay centered on the fact that students at my ethnically mixed campus self-segregated themselves by race as they got older, and offered ideas of what schools could do to improve race relations. Teachers across the country assigned the essay to their classes and debated its merits. Two local TV stations interviewed me on campus. Next thing I knew, Good Morning America flew me to New York to discuss racial issues with then-Senator Julian Bond. I came home to find hundreds of letters sent from around the world. I was never popular in school, but for a week I came close. That was the same week I knew I wanted to earn a living as a writer.

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Worried Your Phone May Get Stolen or Go Screwy? Take These 4 Precautions Now

Posted @ Funny-Picks.comWhile traveling on business recently, my iPhone suddenly went blank. Pressing the touch screen produced only blurry lines. Facing a full schedule of meetings the next day, I had no laptop, no car, and no Apple Store within 100 miles. Epic fail, anyone?

Let’s face it. Sooner or later your smartphone may go kaput. You might drop it one too many times, or leave it on the floor of a cab. Or it could be snatched out of your hands, as happened to my former roommate while on a bus. Cell phone theft is on the rise; so is nomophobia.

The only thing worse than losing your smartphone is being unprepared. Consider the following four steps to save yourself a coronary if it does happen:

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Publications Going Digital Equals Progress, Not Regress

Newsweek’s iconic covers will become a relic of the past as the magazine switches to a digital-only format in 2013.

The last time I read a print newspaper, it was not a pleasant experience. Sitting in a cramped diner booth, I had to keep folding it like a paper airplane to fit around my food, nearly knocking over my water glass. The newsprint blackened my fingers, which then blackened my shirt. Flipping back and forth between pages quickly became work. I spent years reporting for newspapers, and still the temptation to whip out my iPhone was overwhelming. Finally I gave in and used my mobile device to pull up the same story I was reading, which now had several updates plus more info in the reader comments below. The coffee-stained paper, on the other hand, was both figuratively and literally old news.

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Becoming Master of Your Domain: How Small Businesses Can Secure Their Pixel of Cyberspace

Illustration by Matt Davidson.

When I first branded my consulting business “Jailbreak Media”, I didn’t think much of the fact that there was another Jailbreak Media out there. I owned the URL jailbreak-media.com and mapped it to WordPress; a Dallas-based marketer owned jailbreakmedia.com without the hyphen, which led to a site under construction. Barely a month after I registered the name, however, he contacted me. Turned out he was a consultant too. Unsurprisingly, he—and his attorney—asked that I stop using Jailbreak Media to avoid confusing our identities.

What to do?

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Four Hours With Tony Robbins! Takeaways From the Maestro of Motivation

Tony Robbins brings his spectacle of self-help to a tech-savvy audience of thousands at Dreamforce 2012 in San Francisco.

At Dreamforce 2012, a four-day ode to cloud computing held annually in San Francisco, the highlight was not the myriad keynote sessions, many of which incessantly plugged products from eponymous sponsor Salesforce. Instead the highlight—for me anyway—was a free seminar with motivational guru Tony Robbins. For those not in the know, here’s a primer on his multimillion-dollar brand of self-help in the 21st Century:

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