Mike Wheatley

Mike Wheatley is a senior staff writer at SiliconANGLE. He loves to write about Big Data and the Internet of Things, and explore how these technologies are evolving and helping businesses to become more agile. Before joining SiliconANGLE, Mike was an editor at Argophilia Travel News, an occassional contributer to The Epoch Times, and has also dabbled in SEO and social media marketing. He usually bases himself in Bangkok, Thailand, though he can often be found roaming through the jungles or chilling on a beach. Got a news story or tip? Email Mike@SiliconANGLE.com.

Latest from Mike Wheatley

Winston App Creates A Customized Morning News Show, Just For You!

It’s been compared to Siri, but quite unlike Apple’s personal assistant, Winston doesn’t come up with dumb answers to your stupid questions, nor does it give you any backchat. Instead, Winston is more of a voice-enabled, visually-orientated news reader, scanning your social media accounts and favorite news websites for the most relevant content, which it ...

Relationship Science: Connecting The World’s Elite With Big Data

For high-flying Wall Street smarts and successful entrepreneurs alike, networking can be absolutely critical to their success. Those all-important connections to big shots at the biggest banking institutions and venture capital firms are often the only people that can get things moving and The only problem is, making those connections in the first place isn’t ...

Nok Nok Labs Hates Passwords, Wants Them Dead.

Passwords are going to have a battle on their hands if they want to play a part in the future of online security. If it isn’t Google imagining cryptographic rings as a replacement for the standard random digit security codes, it’s some other upstart that’s vying to win over the confidence of netizens. This week ...

Looking For Love With Big Data

Could Big Data be used to help lonely hearts find their soul mate this Valentine’s Day? Well, if you’re one of those that believes the ‘dating game’ is actually just a ‘numbers game’, then the answer would be absolutely yes. There are “plenty of fish in the sea”, or so our ‘cozied up’ friends constantly ...

Mike Lynch, The World’s #1 Confidence Trickster?

Is Mike Lynch the world’s most successful conman or what? Judging from today’s revelation that he’s just secured backing to the tune of £1 billion (about $1.57 billion) for his new investment fund, it’s hard not to jump to that conclusion. Either he’s a damn good liar, or he’s hooked up with some similarly crooked ...

Google Pays Apple $1 Billion A Year To Be Default Search Engine on iOS

It’s no secret that Apple hates Google, so why is it that the latter always seems to worm its way into being the default search engine on iOS devices? Because money talks, that’s why, and this is especially true if you’re in a position to throw around as much of it as Google can. For ...

Healthy Big Data: Mapping The Kumbh Mela

Big Data meets the biggest gathering of humanity in the world. That’s the most apt description for Harvard University’s study of the 2013 Kumbh Mela anyhow. The university’s South Asia Institute has sent a team of Big Data experts to study what is commonly believed to be the world’s largest public gathering, in a bid ...

Yandex Surpasses Bing In Search Engine Wars

Bing just got bitch-slapped. Despite Microsoft’s very best efforts in attempting to claw back Google’s overwhelming lead in web search, stepping up its “Scroogled” campaign and integrating Bing apps with its new Office platform, it’s just been humiliated by the Russians – with Yandex shunting it out the way and to become the world’s fourth-biggest ...

RIOT: The Big Data Social Tracking Tool From Hell

Another day, another surveillance tool that falls into our laps. Only this one seems to be getting a few more pairs of knickers in a twist than usual, because not only can it track a random individual’s movements, but it can even be used to predict where they’re likely to be on any given day ...

Egypt Plans To Dump Microsoft & Go All-Out With Open-Source

One of the problems with Microsoft is that, while most experts agree it offers the best suite of business tools and the most dependable operating system around, its gear isn’t exactly what you’d call cheap. And if you happen to have several hundred thousand computers lying around in schools and offices, all needing to be ...