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Comcast to give Atlanta fastest Internet in the country

Written By limadu on Kamis, 02 April 2015 | 19.33

Comcast (CMCSA) said its new Gigabit Pro service will reach speeds of up to 2 Gigabits per second, which is twice as fast as what Google, AT&T and a handful of other broadband companies offer.

Atlanta residents will be the first customers to get the service. But unlike Google (GOOGL, Tech30) Fiber and AT&T (T, Tech30) U-Verse, which roll out their Gigabit Internet offerings to select communities within cities, Comcast promised that its service would be rolled out to 1.5 million residents of the Atlanta metro region.

Comcast didn't offer a timetable or price for the new service. It could take some time to launch -- Comcast will be deploying Gigabit Pro by bringing fiber optic cables into customers' homes.

That can be a painstaking and expensive process that involves replacing copper wire and, in some cases, digging up yards.

But, feeling the heat from faster competitors, Comcast says it is committed to the project.

Google has said it will bring its Fiber service to Atlanta, and AT&T has Atlanta on its list of proposed expansion cities for its Gigabit broadband service. The companies offer ultra-fast Internet service for between $70 and $110 a month for Internet, and TV options typically cost an extra $50 or $60 a month.

Gigabit broadband service is up to 100 times faster than a typical 10 Megabit per second broadband connection that most cable companies offer. But real-life speeds can be much slower. Just because Internet speeds are faster to the home doesn't mean that websites have sped up the delivery of their content.

For instance, Google Fiber offers the fastest Netflix speeds in the country, averaging 3.7 Megabits per second. But Verizon (VZ, Tech30) FiOS customers get 3.53 Mbps Netflix (NFLX, Tech30) speeds and Cablevision -- a regular, copper-wire broadband service -- gets 3.47 Mbps.

Google, AT&T and Comcast say that gigabit speeds are important for providing fast service to multiple devices that could be connected to the Internet at the same time. And they are making a long term bet that companies like Netflix will eventually boost speeds for customers with faster connections, perhaps offering higher-quality video.

Related: The next city to get Google Fiber is...

Related: Google is becoming a wireless carrier

CNNMoney (New York) April 2, 2015: 8:10 AM ET


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Teaching autistic kids to code

autism livecode indiegogo LiveCode launches Indiegogo campaign for program to teach people with autism to code apps.

The software development company has a goal to raise $350,000 through a 45-day crowdfunding campaign on Indiegogo. The money will pay for 3,000 young autistic adults to take a six-month online training course.

The program is a modified version of LiveCode's Create It product, which teaches people with no coding experience how to create basic apps like messaging, calculators, and clocks. LiveCode says the goal is to give people on the autism spectrum an opportunity to develop job skills.

Autism is a developmental disability caused by a neurological disorder that affects a person's social and communication skills. But most people with autism are highly skilled in other ways. Many are particularly adept at recognizing patterns and paying close attention to detail.

"That can make coding tasks ideal," LiveCode says.

The company launched its Indiegogo fundraiser on Thursday, to coincide with World Autism Awareness Day.

In 2008, by a unanimous vote, the United Nations General Assembly established April 2 as World Autism Awareness Day to "highlight the need to help improve the quality of life of children and adults, who are affected by autism, so they can lead full and meaningful lives."

Earlier this year U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called on businesses to make firm commitments to hire autistic people.

"[They] have enormous potential," the Secretary-General said in a statement. "Yet even where autism awareness is most advanced, more than 80% of adults with autism are unemployed."

LiveCode wants to help in this respect too. Part of the new campaign is dedicated to job placement.

The company plans to create an online job marketplace where trainees can advertise their skills as freelance app developers.

In addition, "a very small number" of people who finish the training will be hired by LiveCode for a project based in Edinburgh, Scotland, where the company is headquartered.

"The goal is to create a sustainable commercial venture to boost employment prospects for those on the autism spectrum," LiveCode says. "If successful we will look at expanding to other cities and/or hiring from our autism-friendly online marketplace to create content, in future years."

CNNMoney (New York) April 2, 2015: 7:51 AM ET


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Buffett: No stock market bubble, but few bargains

Buffett told CNN's Poppy Harlow that there are "very few" stocks he's looking to buy right now. He discussed his thoughts on the market and economy -- as well as the controversial religious freedom law in Indiana and his support for Hillary Clinton -- in a wide-ranging interview.

But most Wall Street observers pay attention to Buffett because he as an investing guru.

His company -- Berkshire Hathaway (BRKB) -- is one of the largest investors in Coca-Cola (KO), Wells Fargo (WFC), IBM (IBM, Tech30) and American Express (AXP). Berkshire's market value has enjoyed a compounded annual gain of 21.6% over the past 50 years, compared to 9.9% for the S&P 500.

Related: Buffett says discrimination for sexual orientation is 'wrong'

Berkshire owns auto insurance giant Geico, railroad Burlington Northern Santa Fe and well-known consumer brands like Fruit of the Loom and Dairy Queen.

It also agreed to acquire Duracell from Procter & Gamble (PG) last year. And just last week, Heinz (which is co-owned by Berkshire and private equity firm 3G Capital) announced it would merge with Kraft (KRFT).

Here are some of the most interesting things he had to say about stocks and the economy.

Market not overly expensive but not cheap either. Buffett said stocks "might be a little on the high side now, but they've not gone into bubble territory."

Buffett, who has shunned many high-growth tech stocks, also said he was not worried about the Nasdaq getting back near the all-time highs it hit in 2000.

He noted that the valuations of Apple (AAPL, Tech30) and many other tech companies are based on actual earnings instead of hype.

"They were eyeballs then, and they're profits now in many cases," he said.

Related: Heinz buys Kraft: Buffett must really love mac & cheese!

Still, Buffett isn't loading up the truck to make new investments.

"I don't find cheap stocks to buy either," he said, adding to follow-up questions that there were "very little" and "very few" bargains out there right now.

The economy is resilient. Buffett continues to think that the U.S. economy is on the right track.

"I don't see any real weakness in the economy. Home building has been slow and it continues slow, but the economy has been improving since the fall of 2009, and it continues to improve," he said.

Related: Stocks fumble: The risks are rising

Buffett added that this is even more impressive when you consider just how bad the economy and stock market were in 2008 and early 2009.

"It's quite a tribute actually to our policy makers all the way back to the fall of 2008 that we've recovered like we have from what was an incredible panic," he said,

Income inequality is still a concern. Buffett is one of the wealthiest men in the world. And he recognizes that his fortunes have risen at a much higher rate than average Americans.

"The extreme rich are clearly winning. If you look at the Forbes 400, they had an aggregate net worth of $92 billion in 1982. It's $2.3 trillion today," he said.

Related: Advice from Warren Buffett that could make you rich

He added that society needs to figure out ways for many people to be doing better than they are currently.

"We live in a country that has $54,000 GDP per capita and is the richest country in the world and a miracle in many ways. Real GDP is 6 times what it was per capita when I was born, but all kinds of people are left behind," he said.

Tax reform better than minimum wage increase. Several states and cities have enacted laws to raise the minimum wage -- even though the federal government hasn't.

Wal-Mart (WMT) and TJX (TJX) -- the owner of Marshalls and T.J. Maxx -- recently announced plans to boost wages to $9 an hour. Target (TGT) is reportedly considering a similar pay hike.

And McDonald's (MCD) just boosted pay for workers at its company-owned restaurants

Related: McDonald's is giving 90,000 workers a raise

Stagnant wage growth is viewed as one of the biggest problems in the economy right now. But Buffett said raising the minimum wage could have unintended consequences.

"I'd like to see everybody make $20 an hour at a minimum, but I know if you increase it $20 an hour, you'd have millions of people unemployed."

Related: Target could be next to hike minimum wage

Buffett thinks increasing the amount of money that lower-income workers get as a tax credit could do more for the economy.

"The earned income tax credit is a much better way of handling the problem of people who are really not paid enough to live decently," he said. "I would expand that a lot, and I would do it smarter too. That's more effective in helping the people who are really at the lower end than actually a change in the minimum wage."

Related: Treasury Secretary Jack Lew says higher minimum wage = stronger economy

Related: Warren Buffett knows who the next Berkshire CEO is

Related: 9 companies Warren Buffett should consider buying

CNNMoney (New York) April 2, 2015: 8:19 AM ET


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Smart chef invents recipes to suit your taste

Written By limadu on Rabu, 01 April 2015 | 21.29

chef computer

Watson, IBM (IBM, Tech30)'s artificially intelligent computer system that famously beat humans in the TV quiz show Jeopardy!, has taken up cooking.

The idea is simple. Users identify key ingredients and the type of dish they want, and Watson creates a recipe.

IBM is working on a phone app but for now struggling chefs can try out the service by registering at Chef Watson.

It scans thousands of known recipes to figure out patterns, using algorithms to pair ingredients and suggest which dishes would work.

"You pick the kind of dish you like -- it could be a dumpling, a burrito, or you can remain vague and say you want it to be an appetizer," said Florian Pinel, a senior software engineer at IBM.

Related: The futuristic bed that locks the door, brews coffee

Say you want a burrito. Watson will figure out it needs a wrap, vegetables, grains, and so on.

The digital chef also takes into account information on taste and chemical compounds to find possible combinations that work well together.

"If you said you wanted an Indian burrito with eggplant, it will focus on Indian ingredients that go well with eggplants," said Pinel.

After creating thousands of recipes, Watson narrows the selection to 100, sorting them based on preferences, dietary constraints and other requirements defined by the user.

Related: The world wastes $400 billion in food every year

This kind of process is called "cognitive computing" -- meaning the computer is simulating human thought and gaining knowledge over time. Unlike humans, Watson can go through billions of pages in seconds.

Since winning Jeopardy!, Watson has shrunk from the size of a master bedroom to three stacked pizza boxes and it is now accessed through the cloud. It's also learning from its mistakes.

"Some foods have wedges, such as lemons. Raspberries, on the other hand, don't have wedges, and Watson had to learn you can't cut a raspberry into wedges," said Pinel.

Related: What's for dinner? Whatever your private chef whips up

So could Watson be the next Masterchef champion? Try a recipe and see what you think:

ibm watson burrito The recipe for this Austrian Chocolate Burrito was created by Watson.

Austrian Chocolate Burrito
1 pound of lean ground beef
the zest of one orange
pinch of ground cinnamon
2 ounces of dark chocolate
1/2 cup of apricot puree
1/2 of vanilla bean, split and scraped
1 1/2 cups of edamame
6 flour flour tortillas
1 cup of edam cheese
1/2 cup of crumbled queso fresco

Brown the beef and drain. While still warm, stir in the orange zest, cinnamon, and 1 ounce of chocolate. Season with salt.

In a saucepan, combine the apricot purée and vanilla and slowly reduce over medium heat. Remove from heat and stir in 1/2 ounce of chocolate.

Next, blanch the edamame in boiling salted water for about 1 minute, then drain and shock in ice water. Transfer the edamame to a food processor and pulse to achieve a rough textured paste. Season with salt.

Assemble the burritos by gently warming each tortilla. Put some of the beef mixture, mashed edamame, and edam cheese at the center and spoon over the apricot purée. Tightly roll and top with queso fresco and grated chocolate.

Related: Celebrity chef Wolfgang Puck entering Chinese market

CNNMoney (London) April 1, 2015: 10:00 AM ET


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Where the Getty family fortune came from

Forbes puts the family fortune at $5 billion, which makes it America's 54th richest family. Its richest member today is philanthropist Gordon Getty, 81, worth an estimated $2.1 billion. His son Andrew was discovered dead Tuesday in his Los Angeles home.

Gordon Getty was the son of the family's most famous member, J. Paul Getty, who had followed his father into the oil business.

Reports say that J. Paul Getty's first successful oil well in Oklahoma in 1916 made him a millionaire, and he moved to Los Angeles to live the life of a wealthy playboy. He eventually had five different wives and a private art collection that became the basis for the museum that bears his name.

J. Paul Getty took the reins of Getty Oil along with many other businesses that went with it when his father died in 1930. One of the most successful side businesses was Spartan Aircraft, which made an early version of executive aircraft in the 1930s, and aircraft parts during World War II. It shifted to making mobile homes after the war.

Related: Andrew Getty, grandson of J. Paul Getty, dies at 47

But it was still oil that produced most of the Getty fortune. J. Paul Getty became a billionaire after negotiating a series of oil leases with Saudi Arabia and Kuwait starting in 1949. He soon was being widely reported as the richest man alive.

J. Paul Getty died in 1976 and left an estimated $700 million to the Getty Museum, which at the time was the largest gift ever to the arts. Gordon Getty was left in charge of Getty Oil, but within a few years he started to battle with the company's board over the best way to increase the company's share value.

It sparked a fierce takeover fight for the company between Pennzoil and Texaco. Texaco bought the company for $10.1 billion in 1984.

The fight sent the price of Getty stock from $50 a share to $125 a share. The Getty family, which owned 40% of the stock, profited enormously from the boardroom battle.

CNNMoney (New York) April 1, 2015: 9:22 AM ET


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The safest way to make your retirement savings last

In theory, it should be pretty simple to do exactly what you describe. And there are plenty of financial advisers more than happy to carry out such a plan for people who don't like the idea of buying an annuity, but aren't confident enough about their investing skills to carry out your plan on their own.

But creating income for life that's as reliable as what you would get from a pension or an annuity isn't as easy as it may seem. In fact, there are some elements of an immediate annuity -- aka an income annuity --that you simply can't duplicate. Which makes it virtually impossible to match an annuity's lifetime payments investing on your own, unless you take on more investing risk.

Here's an example.

Let's say you're a 65-old-man who has $100,000 from which you would like to draw a stable and reliable income for the rest of your life. If you go to an immediate annuity calculator, you'll find that at today's interest rates, forking over $100,000 to an insurer would provide guaranteed lifetime payments of about $540 a month for a man that age. (Payments would be a bit lower for a 65-year-old woman, as women generally live longer.)

So the question is, could you generate the same or higher monthly income investing on your own?

Since you don't want to run the risk of incurring investment losses that could deplete your savings too soon, you'll want to stick to a pretty secure investment, say, 10-year Treasury bonds, which recently yielded about 2% annually. If you put that $100,000 into 10-year Treasuries yielding 2% and withdraw $540 each month, your hundred grand would last about 18 years, which means you would go through your savings by age 83.

That's a problem, since the Society of Actuaries estimates that a 65-year-old man has a life expectancy of 86 to 87, while the life expectancy of a woman the same age is 88 to 89. And many people will live well beyond their life expectancy. In short, you have a very good chance of running out of money before you run out of time.

Related: Should I bet it all on Buffett?

So why not just invest for a higher return?

At a 4% annual return your dough would run out in 24 years, taking you to age 89. At 5%, it would last almost 29 years, taking you to age 94. But the higher the return you shoot for, the more risk you take and the more volatile your returns are likely to be. If you run into a market setback or string of subpar returns, your savings could run out years sooner than projected. You can see the probability that your money will last given different mixes of stocks and bonds by going to this retirement income calculator.

The reason it's so hard to duplicate an annuity's payments is that annuities have a unique feature that allows them to pay more income than you can generate by investing on your own. Insurers know that some annuity owners will die sooner than others. So in calculating the payments, insurers can factor in "mortality credits," which is insurance-speak for money that's effectively transferred from those annuity owners who die early to those who live a long life. So an annuity payment includes not just investment gains and the return of your original investment, but this additional "mortality credit" income as well.

Of course, if you die early, you're the one providing the mortality credit to others. But that doesn't mean buying an annuity was a lousy deal any more than buying homeowners insurance was a mistake because your house never burned down. Fundamentally, an annuity is an insurance policy, except that instead of insuring against an early death as life insurance does, an annuity is insurance against living so long that you run through your savings.

Related: 10 best states to retire in

Like any investment, immediate annuities have drawbacks. Typically you have little or no access to your money once you buy such an annuity. So investing all or even most of your money in one is generally a no-no, as doing so would leave you short of cash to meet emergencies and the like. You'll also want to have a sizeable chunk of your retirement savings invested in stock and bond mutual funds for growth so you can maintain your living standard in the face of rising prices (and, possibly, have something left over to leave to heirs, if you wish).

But if you want more assured income than Social Security alone can provide, then putting a portion of your savings into an immediate annuity may make sense.

Take some time to shop around, as payments can easily vary by 10% or so from one insurance company to another. You'll also want to consider different payment options. For example, by choosing a "joint-and-survivor option," you can assure that a spouse will continue to collect payments after your death.

Stick to annuities issued by insurers with high financial strength ratings from companies like A.M. Best and Standard & Poor's, and as a further safety precaution, diversify by splitting your investment between two or more highly rated insurers, taking care to limit the amount you invest with any single insurer to the maximum coverage offered by the state insurance guaranty association in your state.

Finally, to avoid committing all your funds when interest rates (and annuity payments) are at or near a low point, consider investing smaller amounts over the course of a few years rather than one large sum all at once.

Bottom line: An annuity certainly isn't for everyone. So if you decide that you're not a candidate, fine. But don't come to that conclusion in the mistaken belief that you can replicate an annuity's benefits on your own.

More from RealDealRetirement.com

Are You Paying Your Adviser Too Much?

The Single Best (And Easiest) Way To Boost Investing Returns

25 Ways To Get Smarter About Your Money Right Now

CNNMoney (New York) April 1, 2015: 10:09 AM ET


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You've never seen IRS penalties like these

taxes overseas accounts Taxpayers living in the United States may be hit with steep penalties if they've had a bank or investment account in another country that they never reported to the feds.

It sounds unbelievable.

But such a gobsmacking penalty is possible if your account has been held overseas at a non-U.S. financial institution for years and you knowingly never disclosed it to the U.S. government.

You could be subject to lesser penalties if you voluntarily disclose the account or can prove you weren't being "willful" by not disclosing it.

But make no mistake: You will likely pay penalties, and -- if your foreign account generated income -- back taxes and interest as well.

Why?

For starters, the United States has a worldwide tax system, meaning every U.S. taxpayer must report all his income regardless of where it was earned.

Second, laws designed to discourage the wealthy from hiding money offshore are also going to snare a lot of other folks -- especially immigrants who are legal U.S. residents or citizens who may be sending money to family abroad, may have inherited money from a relative or simply have accounts left over from the days before they emigrated.

"Virtually everybody who came here from somewhere else has an account somewhere else," said Los Angeles-based tax lawyer Dennis Brager, who is a former IRS trial attorney.

Why bring this up now? Disclosure requirements aren't new, but starting this year the IRS will have enhanced capacity to enforce them, thanks to the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA).

Under FATCA, the U.S. Treasury has struck agreements with more than 100 countries that require those countries' financial institutions to report back to the IRS on any accounts held by U.S. taxpayers, which include U.S. citizens, people with green cards and U.S. ex-pats.

Related: Don't want to file your taxes? Get ready to pay ... a lot

If the IRS finds out about your account before you disclose it, your options for negotiating a lesser penalty will be greatly reduced, said Dallas-based tax lawyer Garrett Gregory, also a former IRS attorney.

How do I disclose the money? If you have foreign accounts in your name or simply have "signature authority" on them, and combined they're worth at least $10,000, you're supposed to electronically file what's known as an FBAR form by June 30 every year. You have to do it even if the accounts don't generate taxable income.

If your foreign accounts and assets combined are worth at least $50,000, you may have to disclose them on Form 8938 and file it with your federal tax return.

While there's some overlap in the assets that must be reported on each form, there are some notable differences.

How was I supposed to know that? Well, one way is if you fill out Schedule B for interests and dividends on your 1040. It has a section asking if you have any foreign accounts and directs you to read more about FBAR. Tax preparation software also asks whether you have foreign accounts.

A lot of folks in the soup on this say they checked "no" because their foreign account didn't earn any interest, or because the account was in their home country, so it wasn't foreign to them, Gregory said.

But checking "no" when the answer is "yes" makes it harder to prove you weren't being "willful," which carries a much bigger penalty.

Okay, so what are the penalties? There are a ton. Here's a sampling.

If the IRS finds that you willfully failed to disclose overseas accounts, you could owe a penalty of 50% of your total balance or $100,000, whichever is greater, for every year you failed to file an FBAR form. But that's capped at 6 years.

So if you didn't disclose foreign accounts totaling $20,000 -- or a $200,000 account -- for six or more years, you potentially could be fined $600,000. You may also be subject to criminal penalties.

If your failure is deemed non-willful, then the IRS can impose a penalty of $10,000 a year for every year you didn't disclose up to 6 years.

Related: Uncle Sam says my Swedish kid is American

A similar penalty could apply for failing to file Form 8938.

It gets worse. The IRS is interpreting the penalty to be per account, Brager said. So if you have four accounts totaling $20,000 that you didn't disclose for six years, that could mean a minimum penalty of $40,000 for each year of non disclosure, up to $240,000.

On the bright side, the IRS has some discretion to come down on these penalties.

There are so-called "mitigation guidelines" that the IRS may use for accounts under $250,000, especially in non-willful cases. So on a $20,000 account, Brager said the penalty might only be $500 per account per year, not to exceed $5,000 in total. On a $200,000 account, the penalty could be $5,000 a year.

It's unlikely, but they could even eliminate penalties altogether if you can show you're a true lamb lost in the woods -- e.g., you just learned of an account your childless Lithuanian great-aunt left you years ago. You will still have to pay back taxes and interest, however.

Whatever the end result, if you've hired an experienced tax lawyer -- which is advisable -- you'll also be out thousands of dollars in attorney fees.

What's the hit if I voluntarily come forward? Tough, but better.

Under the Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Program (OVDP), you would pay 27.5% of your highest combined balance over the past 8 years -- or 50% in some cases -- plus any unpaid taxes and interest penalties on your account for each of those 8 years. And you'll be filing 8 amended returns.

In return, however, you'll no longer be subject to criminal and civil penalties for willful non-disclosure, Gregory noted.

Another option is the Streamlined Disclosure Program, which only assesses a 5% penalty on the highest balance of your foreign accounts over the past 6 years. But the risk is that you still could be subject to willful non-disclosure penalties, Gregory said.

CNNMoney (New York) April 1, 2015: 7:59 AM ET


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$30 bar tab could turn into $1,000 fine

The man in Post Falls, Idaho, ordered 10 beers at a local bar called Club Tequila late Sunday night and early Monday morning, Spokane TV station KXLY reported. When the bartender kicked him out for being intoxicated, a police officer offered him a courtesy ride home.

That's when the 911 calls started.

After arriving at his house, he dialed 911, requesting that the police officer return to his home to talk about his bar tab. He called again seven minutes later asking when the officer would arrive.

He then called 911 ten more times, including two hang-ups and three times in which he held the phone up to his radio. One time, he called to tell the dispatcher that she reminded him of his ex-wife.

Now he faces a misdemeanor charge for misusing 911.

Related: LA residents call 911 when Facebook goes down

Related: 911 abuse -- Calling with the sniffles

CNNMoney (New York) April 1, 2015: 7:37 AM ET


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These tiny homes are full of big ideas

tiny homes interior

But small square footage doesn't have to mean missing out on comforts typical of larger homes, like storage and guest space. You just just have to be a little more creative.

"If you don't have a good design with a tiny home, it's not going to be possible," said Ryan Mitchell, who writes The Tiny Life and lives in a 150-square foot home. "They have to be well-designed and customized to the person living in them."

Tiny homes, which are often described as 400 square feet or less, have become a popular housing option for people looking to downsize -- whether it's their budgets, belongings or both.

Here are some cool space-saving features found in some tiny homes:

Storage everywhere, but you can't always see it

tiny home drawer staircase

Tiny homes often have a lofted bedroom and the stairs to the space can serve double duty.

Annelise Hagedorn, co-founder of tiny home builder Brevard Tiny House, has built staircases into homes where each step pulls out as a drawer. She's also built stairs that hide a hot water heater.

Underfloor storage is also common. "We've done underfloor storage for the entire living space," said Hagedorn, whose company launched in 2014 and has completed three tiny homes and has two more in the works. The storage can be about a foot or deeper and the handles to open the space can be covered with rugs or furniture.

tiny home floor storage

The space between ceiling rafters can be used for storage, and even the kick plates at the bottom of kitchen cabinets can pull double duty. "Where your feet scoot under the cabinets, that is wasted space," said Mitchell, "They turn that [space] into a drawer."

Related: Look what these homes are hiding

Fold down porches

tiny home fold down porch

Alex Gore, co-founder of tiny home builder Atlas, is getting ready to start construction on a 196-square foot portable tiny house, and the design takes the concept of "bringing the outdoors in" to a new level.

One of the home's walls will be glass and include a sliding door. The glass wall will be covered by an outside wall that folds down. The bottom part of the wall folds down into a patio for the home, while the top part of the wall can be propped up with motors to create an awning to the patio.

Related: Low down payments make a comeback

Pull-out dining space

tiny home wall kitchen table

The concept of a Murphy wall bed isn't constrained to the bedroom.

Hagedorn created a home where part of a wall that divides the kitchen and living area slides to create a private space if guests are staying over, but it also has a hidden table that folds out from the wall and seats four.

Only the part of the wall with the fold-down table moves.

Gore and his team's kitchen design also includes a pop-up window bar. "You can open it and there will be a piece of wood that slides and hooks into the window."

CNNMoney (New York) April 1, 2015: 8:14 AM ET


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Meet Microsoft's Jony Ive

Written By limadu on Selasa, 31 Maret 2015 | 21.30

Microsoft (MSFT, Tech30) has Panos Panay -- and he still has a lot to prove.

But there's no question: Microsoft's products keep getting better.

The latest example is Surface 3, the tablet/laptop hybrid.

In an exclusive interview with CNNMoney, Panay says his team has grown obsessed with the "third look." When you pick up a new gadget the first time, you might think it looks pretty. But when you look a little closer, you'll likely start to find some imperfections that you didn't initially see. By the third time you look at it -- if you even manage to get that far -- you're either sold or you'll move on.

For the Surface 3 to stand out, it has to make it past the third look, thinks Panay. It has to be "perfect."

surface 3 panos panay

So how much is Panay like Ive?

Both have the same passion for the manufacturing process, flawless design and fierce devotion to their teams.

Both Ive and Panay also have strong family ties. Ive has spoken extensively about the influence he received from his silversmith father. Panay likens the Surface tablets to his own children -- a fact that he acknowledges irks his son and three daughters. Just like he wants everyone to love his children as much as he does, Panay says he wants every customer to get the same satisfaction out of Surface.

To accomplish that feat, Panay spends three hours a day in Building 87, a prototyping laboratory on Microsoft's campus in Redmond, Washington.

There, Panay and his team of engineers and designers work on refining their Surface ideas.

The Surface team consists of 120-or-so people with expertise in 25 different disciplines, including radios, hinges, magnets, metallic rigidity, fabrics and fashion. There are tooling engineers, mechanical engineers and optical engineers. They create prototype after prototype until Panay and the team leaders are satisfied.

"If you don't get an emotional experience, it's not right," Panay said.

The toy-factory-like lab allows the Surface team to build prototypes quickly -- and throw them out if they detect even the slightest imperfection.

The lab has 3-D printers that can print as thinly as 1/10th the width of a human hair. There are class-four lasers that can hack to pieces anything on the planet. There's a paint room and a light lab that lets you detect whether there's a hint of a color you don't like under certain lighting conditions.

"When you're able to innovate every hour, you can put your hands on it and know every detail," Panay said. "You can know if people are going to love it. (Is it thin enough? Is it light enough?) That's how you get emotion into your products."

surface 3 logo

The Surface tablets are beautiful, and the new Surface 3 is the best-looking of them all. Its gorgeous, polished magnesium logo on the kickstand, super-bright and trendy-colored keyboard/covers, and pristine attention to detail are Apple-like (AAPL, Tech30).

"You don't leave anything on the table when you pick up this device," Panay said. "You have some pride in the craftsmanship. You feel proud to hold it. Hopefully some people say, 'I don't know why but it just looks beautiful.' And if that happens, we achieved what we wanted to achieve."

Related: 11 things you need to know about Microsoft's new Surface 3

Related: How the Surface lost $1 billion and lived to tell the tale

CNNMoney (REDMOND, Washington) March 31, 2015: 10:16 AM ET


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