Tag Archive for Dogs

National Dog Day

National Dog Day is Saturday, Aug. 26. Here are some deals to celebrate with your pooches.

National Dog Day

Sophie and Jessi watching doggo TV

Shake Shack treats for National Dog Day

Shake Shack’s dog menu is available year-round. Even better, on National Dog Day, you can treat yourself and Fido. Buy a shake and get a Pooch-ini for free. The Pooch-ini is a custom-made dessert consisting of dog biscuits, peanut butter sauce, and vanilla custard.

Shake Shack also offers a Bag o’ Bones, a doggie bag of five ShackBurger dog biscuits by Bocce’s Bakery. Prices vary by location, but you can purchase a Bag o’ Bones for around $8, shakes for humans for up to $6.19, and Pooch-inis for up to $4.49.

Starbucks

The Starbucks secret menu features a “Puppuccino.” The popular hidden item popularity is a small cup filled with whipped cream and is free. 

Dunkin’ celebrates National Dog Day

When you order an iced latte via the Dunkin’ mobile app on National Dog Day, the chain will donate $1 to the Joy in Childhood Foundation to support the Dogs for Joy Program. The program helps increase the number of dogs working full-time at children’s hospitals.

Krispy Kreme

krispykremeIt’s not only humans that love pumpkin spice but also pooches. Starting 26 August Krispy Kreme is offering Pup’kin Spice Doggie Doughnuts at participating shops. The limited-time offer will be available while supplies last.

Busch Light Pumpkin Spice Dog Brew

Now you can share a brew with your best bud. Thanks to Busch, dogs can get in on the pumpkin spice trend with Busch Light’s new limited edition Pumpkin Spice Busch Dog Brew can be ordered online ($15 for a 4). The non-alcoholic, all-natural drink is made with pumpkin, cinnamon, ginger, turmeric, and water to refresh your dog.

National Dog Day

Sir BarksalotNational Dog Day was created in 2004 to celebrate all dogs draw attention to the number of dogs in shelters and encourage the adoption of dogs who have yet to find a place to call home. Since the first day back in 2004, it is estimated that approximately one million dogs have been saved through adoption in the U.S.

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These treats should be safe for most dogs in moderation, as long as they don’t have any dairy allergies.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Does This Dog Exist

Jessie and Wiley resuce dogsDog rescue Wags & Walks wants to know if you can spot the real puppy in a pack of artificial intelligence (AI) generated dogs. The rescue with locations in Nashville and Los Angeles features the game This Dog Exists. This Dog Exists is designed to promote the adoption of homeless pooches.  The game is a clever use of artificial intelligence that serves the greater good. 

Wags & Walks
This Dog Exists was created by Matt Reed, the creative technologist at the ad agency Redpepper. The page aims to reduce the population in dog shelters. Mr. Reed told Fast Company

Every year we participate in an advertising industry event called Createathon where we donate work for nonprofits over the course of 24 hours … We stay up all night, and it is a blast. We also get very delirious, which is partly where this idea came from.

Mr. Reed says they also wanted to try and do something to bring some extra awareness to their cause.

We explored a few different ideas but kept coming back to doing something with [the open-source AI generative image algorithm] Stable Diffusion … Contrasting AI dogs versus real dogs seemed interesting.

Wags & WalksThis Dog Exists is designed to be simple. It displays a grid of four dogs; one of them is real, and the other three were created by the Stable Diffusion AI. FC reports that the team used Lexica.art—a generative image search engine—to find the perfect prompt for the cutest puppy creation. If you fail to guess the real dog 10 times, This Dog Exists displays a message that says,

Woof! It looks like you need a real dog because you don’t know what a real dog looks like 🙂

Good for dogs

While Stable Diffusion, DALL-E, and MidJourney still have problems creating believable human faces, Stable Diffusion seems to be pretty good at conjuring dogs. Except for a few imperfections, the fake dogs look pretty much like the real thing. 

This Dog Exists isn’t groundbreaking in its use of AI technology, but it is a cute and fun way to engage people. “Even if it only gets one extra dog adopted, I’ll consider it a success,” Mr. Reed concludes.

AI programs called generative adversarial networks, or GANs. GANs were designed by researcher Ian Goodfellow and his colleagues in the year 2014. They can learn to create fake images that are less and less distinguishable from real images, by pitting two neural networks against each other. Researchers says that artificial intelligence can create such realistic human faces that people can’t distinguish them from real faces – and they actually trust the fake faces more.

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Needless to say, the ability to generate realistic faces raises all kinds of ethical questions, even if they don’t belong to real humans. 

massive-scale machine learning systemsThese massive-scale machine learning systems can harm marginalized people through deeply embedded biases that can’t be easily engineered out. AI’s frequently create racist and sexist stereotypes.

While AI engineers say they’re doing their best to create safeguards that prevent abuse, it’s likely we’ve only just begun to see these large AI systems are capable of—and what types of harm they might cause.

 

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Does that Doggy E-Toy Protect Privacy?

Does that Doggy E-Toy Protect Privacy?Thanks to COVID it is the virtual silly season. No more jamming into malls it is online shopping now. Half of shoppers spend some of their money on pet treats and other supplies this holiday season. If your virtual gift list includes presents for your four-legged buddy – be careful, there are some puppy toys out there that can compromise your privacy while Fido is entertained. Mozilla’s “Privacy Not Included” project analyzed the security of pooch-gifts, and the results are not good for your privacy.

Internet of ThingsAll of these technologies can become part of the Internet of Things (IoT). IoT technology interconnects them. For example, IoT connects the camera in your living room with the smartphone on your desk, allowing you to monitor your pet while you’re at work. IoT enables the collection and interconnectivity of data, which is extremely important when considering your safety and privacy.

Dogness iPet Robot – This doggy toy costs $299.00 and has all the bells and whistles to keep Fido entertained. It moves and chases your pooch. It has an HD video camera with night vision to record your pup, two-way audio to talk to your doggo, a laser to chase, and the ability to toss treats to your buddy with the click of a button in the app. The iPet Robot connects over Wi-Fi so your home network better be secure – otherwise, somebody could take over the rolling spybot and catch your pooch – or you – in a compromising position.

Dogness iPet RobotThe Dogness iPet Robot also comes with Mozilla’s “*Privacy Not Included” warning. The bot can roll around your house with a night vision camera and microphone while connected to Wi-Fi. Mozilla says that both the Dogness device and app can snoop on you. The researchers report the device doesn’t encrypt your data. Dogness doesn’t state what information is collected from the robot, or what they do with it. Dogness uses artificial intelligence, but the reviewers could not determine how the firm uses AI.

If that is not scary enough, in March 2020, it was reported that Dogness left its Amazon ElasticSearch server exposed, containing the usernames, emails, clear-text passwords, and session cookies of its users. The unprotected information has led to the complete exposure of its production SQL database and application source code and the complete takeover and control of its pet feeding devices and associated accounts.

Mozilla could not determine if the Dogness iPet Robot meets its Minimum Security Standards.

Cheerble WickedboneCheerble Wickedbone Interactive Gaming Toy For DogsThis $78.99 interactive bone is next on the naughty list. You can control this interactive bone through an app on your phone that connects through Bluetooth. From the app you can make the bone roll around and change colors. When you get bored, a 20-minute interactive mode can entertain your pup without you.

The app requires access to your phone’s GPS location data—why? That’s a good question. Additionally, the reviews could not determine if the firm encrypted your data, required strong passwords, or used AI to make decisions about you. And like most IoT devices, it doesn’t seem to have a way to manage security vulnerabilities. Mozilla says this pet toy does not meet its Minimum Security Standards for these reasons.

Fitbark GPSFitbark– I first wrote about Fitbark back in 2013. The Fitbark GPS costs $99.95 + subscription + the costs of Verizon’s LTE-M cellular network coverage. It is a bone-shaped tracking device that goes on your dog’s collar and will track her just about anywhere in the U.S. It also connects to Wi-Fi.

The Fitbark monitors your dog’s activity, sleep habits, scratching habits, and stress 24/7. You can link it to your FitBit, Google Fit, or Apple HealthKit apps and you can stress about your doggo’s health too.

Mozilla reports that Fitbark tracks your dog’s movements and whereabouts with Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, and GPS. With all that tracking, an attacker could keep tabs on you or your pup. The app does collect personal data, including name, email, phone number, address, date of birth, profile photo, dog’s health, and biometric data.

Felik Pet CompanionThe Felik Pet Companion—This mouse-shaped bot costs $129.00. It has a camera and artificial intelligence that tracks your pet, learns from their movements, and reacts to how they hunt so it can simulate real prey. Felik connects to the Wi-Fi in your house and has an app where you can schedule play throughout the day.

Mozilla says the firm seems to take privacy and security seriously. They built security and privacy-aware features into the dog toy, like the ability to toggle Wi-Fi on and off with a physical button, an indicator light when the camera is streaming, and even an on-device firewall.

Since it has a camera and a microphone, it could be sued to snoop on you. The app tracks your location. The product uses AI to analyze your personal data to make decisions about you. However, users can request an explanation about any decisions taken as a result of automated decision-making by contacting Felix.

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The Felik Pet Companion is the only online dog-toy that I would allow in my home.  

The Mozilla *Privacy Not Included buyer’s guide investigates the privacy and security of connected toys, gadgets, and smart home products. They flag products they think consumers should think twice about before buying. Mozilla looks at how well they can confirm a product meets a Minimum Security Standard.

 

Stay safe out there!

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

The Healing Power of Dogs

The Healing Power of DogsIt is well-known that dogs can lower blood pressure, but they can have more positive impacts on their owners. NerdGraph shared an infographic from medical appointment startup, ZocDoc that talks about the Healing Power of Dogs. The infographic explores the idea that dogs improve the physical and mental health of their Owners. The article concludes that living with a dog can reduce the number of required doctors visits and cut the cost of prescriptions.

The Healing Ppowers of Dogs

The Healing Power Of Dogs – An infographic by the team at ZocDoc

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Activity Tracker For Dogs

Activity Tracker For DogsFitbark is one of a small number of startups working to support and even improve the health of dogs. Business Insider reports that Fitbark just raised $80,000 on Kickstarter from 697 backers — more than double the amount it was seeking to support its product and mission of fun and responsible dog parenting.

Fitbark logoWe looked around and realized there’s a black hole in the way we track the health and activity of our dogs throughout time,” Fitbark co-founder Davide Rossi tells Business Insider. “If you cannot measure it, you can’t improve it.”

Daily goals dogs

New York-based FitBark recommends daily goals for your dog based on breed, weight, size, and age. From there, a dog owner can tweak those recommendations. The article says FitBark aims to provide rich information with actionable insights for dog owners. That way, owners can quickly gauge what kind of day their dog is having, even if they’re away from him or her. They can also use that data to share with the veterinarian at their dog’s next check-up.

Kickstarter logoFitBark’s “Bark charts” let owners know if their dog is moving less than normal, which could mean the dog is sick. Owners can also gain better insight into how their dog acts around different people. The author says the data can be used to suggest that their dog is more active with one pet sitter than the other. Or maybe one boarding home makes their dog exercise more than the other.

BI reports that if FitBark notices that a dog is nowhere close to hitting his or her daily goal, the owner may get a notification suggesting to take their dog on a walk. But if the dog is with a pet sitter, the owner could call and check-in.

How it works

collects data on the dog's activity levels 24/7The FitBark device attaches to a collar and collects data on the dog’s activity levels 24/7 and sends the information it collects to FitBark servers when the wearable device is within range of an authorized smartphone or a FitBark base station. Once this occurs, the dog’s data is analyzed and sent back to the owner’s phone. Owners can then compare his or her dog’s actual activities levels to the dog’s daily fitness goals.

Down the road, Fitbark envisions trainers or even veterinarians tapping into its API to help carry out a custom exercise plan. “Trainers will complain that they prescribe or recommend a program for dogs and owners, but there’s no way to monitor compliance,” Rossi says.

lifestyle recommendations for your dogAnother application could be for lifestyle recommendations. So a developer could make an app to suggest certain types of pet foods, sync that up with Fitbark, and see if there are any noticeable changes in activity.

GigaOm points out that Fitbark pulled an earlier attempt at crowdfunding the device to rethink the business model, scrapping the monthly subscription fee and opting for a fixed price tag of $69 via Kickstarter or $99 for general retail.

Wearable tech market

Broadcom (AVGO) CEO Scott McGregor has announced its entry into the wearable tech market with the company’s low-cost, low-power Wireless Internet Connectivity for Embedded Devices (WICED) hardware platform for connected mobile devices. PCMag reports that Broadcom sees a lot of potential for simple, inexpensive, purpose-built products that use one or more connectivity technologies like FitBark.

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Ithe NSA can spy on U.S. dogs covered a similar product called Tagg back in 2012 here. A lot of things have changed since then. Machine to Machine communications and the Internet of Things is all the rage. The Cloud is a viable business model. Big-data analytics is allowing the NSA to spy on the world. And now all of that has come together, M2M dog tags run thru big-data analytics stored in the public cloud so the NSA can spy on U.S. dogs. What a country!

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.