Author: Serkadis

  • Bing Tests Authorship-Looking Images In Search Results

    It appears that Bing is experimenting with showing pictures of people in search results similar to how Google does with its authorship feature, but for when results are about a person, rather than written by them.

    Danny Sullivan at Search Engine Land points to some examples where Bing is doing this for results for journalists Kara Swisher and Nick Bilton.

    According to Sullivan, Bing’s Duane Forrester said Bing is considering something like authorship at the SMX conference last week. It’s unclear whether he was referring to this or something separate. As in the Bilton example Sullivan shares, Bing is not always showing images of the person when it is showing these images. In one case from that example, Bing was simply showing an image from the article.

    Here are a couple of the images Bing is showing for Sullivan himself:

    Sullivan on Bing

    Blind FIve Year Old’s AJ Kohn did some additional on what Bing is up to, and found a bunch of sources for results where Bing is showing these kinds of results including: CrunchBase, Myspace, NBA.com, Quora, TED, ESPN, The Canadian Encyclopedia, Amazon, MTV, Last.fm, Forbes, NNDB, Facebook, Twitter, Yahoo Movies, Hollywood.com, AskMen, FriendFeed, TV Guide, and Comedy Central, to name a few.

    According to Kohn, the images show up more often for about pages, which he says, “supports the idea that Bing is looking for high confidence entity pages and not assigning real authorship.”

    Google has been pretty clear that authorship is going to be an increasingly important factor moving forward. It’s no surprise that Forrester hinted that Bing will be working on this too. Perhaps what we’re seeing now will provide a sufficient supplement to whatever they come up with for real authorship.

  • Facebook Rolls Out ‘Lookalike Audiences’ Targeting Globally

    Last month, Facebook began testing a new targeting feature for marketers called lookalike audiences. Today, the company announced the global launch.

    The feature enables marketers to target audience segments with similar common attributes (interests, demographics) to the customers a marketer has already identified as a target audience, through the custom audiences feature.

    Lookalike Audiences

    “With lookalike audiences, advertisers (both e-commerce companies and direct response marketers) can expand their reach to specific geographic areas or audiences who are not already fans of the company’s page while still maintaining the desired demographic profile of their existing audience,” a spokesperson for Facebook tells WebProNews. “Companies using custom and lookalike audiences only know the size of their targeting groups; Facebook does not share any personal information from those audiences with advertisers.”

    “We’ve seen this new type of targeting drive a wide range of success metrics for direct response companies like Fab, including lower cost per checkout, lower cost per acquisition, larger purchase size, and faster and increased return on investment,” the company says in a blog post.

    The Lookalike Audiences tool will be available to all advertisers, in any country, from the power editor, this week.

  • Bringing Colo to the Customer: Modular Gets Local

    io-dayton-modules-aisle

    IO has created a modular data center for LexisNexis within a short drive of the company’s global headquarters in Dayton, Ohio. (Photo: Rich Miller)

    DAYTON, Ohio – Colo has come to the customer. In a business park just minutes from its global headquarters, LexisNexis is housing racks of IT gear inside factory-built data center modules from IO. It’s an example of a new paradigm for enterprise data centers, in which pre-fabricated designs can create resilient Tier III facilities within 120 days at any location a customer chooses.

    LexisNexis, an information service provider for the legal profession, is the prototype customer for IO’s on-site offering for enterprise customers. IO has built a data center on LexisNexis’ doorstep in Springboro, Ohio, a suburb of Dayton, where the company has already deployed two double-wide D2 modules,housing 400 kilowatts of IT load.

    This new facility is filled with modular data centers, steel enclosures which are about 42 feet in length and can house up to 50 racks of IT gear. Dubbed “IO.Anywhere,” the modules are built in a factory in Phoenix and can be shipped virtually anywhere by truck, rail or plane. IO has developed modules for networking gear and power and cooling equipment, allowing customers to create all components of a modern data center.

    A New Look for Enterprise Data Centers

    IO shifted to a modular design in 2010, and until now has housed its customers in a pair of massive “modular colo” facilities the company has built in Phoenix and New Jersey.  The IO Ohio facility represents the next phase in its vision, opening up new possibilities in site selection that could gradually alter the enterprise data center landscape.

    IO and other modular providers say these designs provide a cheaper and faster way to deploy data center capacity. They also offer a predictable, repeatable design that can standardize many aspects of expanding data center capacity. That’s attractive to a growing list of enterprise customers, including LexisNexis, which is using IO’s “Data Center as a Service” program .

    “This is a much better way to do it,” said David Short, Senior Project Manager for LexisNexis, a division of Reed Elsevier. “We’ve got to get to a point where we can control our operations and control our costs.”

    In addition to housing its IT gear, the 46,000 square foot Dayton facility includes offices for LexisNexis, which will soon build a networking operations center (NOC) at the site to manage its global data center footprint.

    Over time, LexisNexis will add another 400 kW of capacity, while IO will fill the remainder of the 26,000 square foot data area with modules housing its own colocation customers. This offers a “best of both worlds” relationship – Lexis-Nexis gets a dedicated, energy-efficient infrastructure that can be built in phases, while IO gets a marquee anchor tenant to support the facility, as well as the ability to generate revenue from its own customers.

    More “Anywhere” Projects in the Works

    The Dayton facility is IO’s first public construction project at a customer-selected site, but there are already more in the works. IO is creating modular data centers for investment bank Goldman Sachs in the United States, the UK and Singapore. And last week’s announcement that IO has won a $17.5 million contract with the Securities and Exchange Commission could mean a future presence for IO in the Washington D.C. market.

    LexisNexis is a long-time IO customer, starting out in traditional raised-floor data center space in IO’s first project in Scottsdale, Arizona. The company provides managed hosting and business continuity services for  law firms, helping them safeguard their intellectual property. The Dayton facility will consolidate LexisNexis customer gear that previously was housed in a facility in Columbus, Ohio.

    Short said the switch from a traditional data center to a modular deployment wasn’t a major stumbling block for LexisNexis’ customers. ”It’s an education process for our customers,” said Short. “As soon as they walk in and see it, they get a comfort level.”

    The IO. Anywhere modules are among a new generation of customized container-based designs that resemble a traditional data center. To provide visual continuity, the module design incorporates a raised floor, which isn’t essential but provides a familiar look and feel for users.

    Efficiency Through Containment, Control

    Efficiency is a major selling point for the IO modular solution, along with its flexibility and repeatable design. The enclosed environment functions like a containment system, allowing greater control over cooling airflow. The modules create a consistent environment that allows LexisNexis to customize its configuration “inside the box,” an important consideration for service providers.

    “We were able to design a power distribution system that allows us to install two to five cabinets at a time,” said Short. “That flexibility is important.”

    IO began retrofitting the space last  July, and LexisNexis was able to begin moving in by early November.

    “We were able to bring IO Ohio online in less than 90 days, demonstrating the technology’s ability to deliver data center capacity where and when it’s needed to meet the growing demands of customers,” said Rick Crutchley, Senior Vice President of Global DCaaS Sales for IO. “We’re proud to continue our relationship with LexisNexis as they adopt a Data Center 2.0 strategy for their IT operation in Ohio.”

    Lexis-Nexis is also using the IO.OS software to manage its infrastructure in Dayton. With a growing number of companies providing modular and factory-built data center products, IO sees its data center management software as a differentiator as more companies enter the market for modular enclosures.

    The industry debate about modular data centers will continue, as some continue to question the economics and breadth of use cases for modular designs. The IO Dayton facility provides a real-world example of the potential for local deployments, adding another data point to the discussion as IO continues to make its case, one customer at a time.

    io-dayton-lexis-nexis

    David Short, Senior Project Manager for LexisNexis (at right) checks in at the company’s new modular data center with Jon Lind (left), a business development manager at IO Dayton. (Photo: Rich Miller)

    For more photos of the facility, continue to page 2.

  • Have Windows 8 Start Screen on the Classic Desktop, Resize It

    Microsoft created quite a commotion among Windows users when they announced that the classic Start button will no longer be part of the operating system in version 8.

    Obviously, third-party developers responded to the users’ needs by making available both free and paid solutions that mimic the old orb.

    ImmersiveTaille, on the other hand, u… (read more)

  • Google: If We Mistakenly Penalize You For Paid Links, There Would Be A ‘Ton Of Collateral Damage’

    There has been a lot of talk about Google and paid links in the news lately, so it’s only fitting that they’re the topic of the latest Webmaster Help video from the company. In this one, Matt Cutts responds to this question:

    On our travel site, we recommend and link out to hotels and B&B’s in our niche. Our readers find it useful. They’re not paid links, so we don’t add the nofollow attribute. What stops Google from suspecting these are paid links and penalizing us?

    “The short answer is: if you’re linking to high quality sites, and you editorially think that they’re good sites, that’s how most of the web works,” says Cutts. “We get into this tiny little area of search and SEO, and we’re convinced all links are nofollowed, and if a link looks good, it must be paid or something like that, and the fact is that for the most part, whenever you’re looking at links, people are linking to stuff that they like. They’re linking to stuff that they enjoy.”

    “So, if we mistakenly thought that those were paid links, and as a result, penalized you, there would be a ton of collateral damage,” he says. “There would be a ton of algorithmic damage to our search rankings. So it’s in our enlightened, best self interest, as well as in the interest of our users to make sure that we don’t accidentally classify links as paid and penalize the site. And normally, even if we would classify links as paid, we might not trust the links from your site, but we wouldn’t have things where your site would necessarily stop ranking as well. It can happen if somebody is selling a lot of links, they’ve been selling them for a long time, and those sorts of things, so we do take strong action in some situations, but a lot of the times if we think that a link might be sold or if we have very good reason to suspect, we might just not trust that site’s links nearly as much or maybe zero.”

    Concluding the video, Cutts reiterates that it’s in the company’s best interest to be precise when it comes to getting paid links right.

  • Demand Media: Etsy And Pinterest Will Feed Interest In Creativebug

    As previously reported, Demand Media announced today that it has acquired arts and crafts e-learning site Creativebug as part of its push to expand into paid content offerings.

    During a recent earnings call, the company expressed such an initiative, leading us to believe that we’ll be seeing more of these kinds of acquisitions in the near future.

    “We plan to leverage our premium video expertise to launch Subscription and On-Demand e-learning content by mid-year,” a spokesperson for the company tells WebProNews. “We’ve already begun beta testing eHow Now, a product that offers real-time expert advice, where we leverage our studio’s expert talent to provide real-time answers. In our beta, we have experienced strong conversion rates and a 90% customer approval rating. We’re also developing a LIVESTRONG subscription service. We’ve hired senior executives from the makers of P90X to help develop this product offering, which we plan to launch in Q2.”

    With an increased interest in sites like Etsy and Pinterest, one can only imagine that consumers are hungry for the kinds of content Creativebug has to offer.

    “We believe there is a disruption and reinvention going on, as people become more interested in the craft movement,” the spokesperson says. “People will continue to turn to the visual inspiration provided by Etsy and Pinterest, which will feed their interest in expressing themselves and learning to create things.”

    Of course, as far as Creativebug is concerned, they have to care enough to pay to learn.

    Creativebug already has hundreds of videos. The top three categories, according to Demand Media, are sewing ,yarn and jewelry. The average video length is about 30 minutes.

    But with all the free content already out there, is this stuff really worth paying for? They charge $16.99 a month for access to unlimited workshops, and $9.99 and up to buy single workshops. When asked what users can get for their money that they can’t get from other sites, the company says, “They get to learn from world class experts in the craft field, which is not available on any other site.”

    Demand Media is not disclosing the details of the acquisition. They’re also not disclosing how many paying members Creativebug already has.

  • Zoom, Zoom! Early Samsung Galaxy S 4 benchmark shows fastest phone yet

    Samsung not only has the newest phone about to hit the market, but it also may have the fastest. At last week’s Samsung Galaxy S 4 launch event, Android Authority ran a Geekbench 2 test on the handset, where it earned a score of 3163. Primate Labs, the company behind the benchmarking software, then compared that figure to prior tests on currently available handsets, finding that the Galaxy S 4 tops all handsets in this particular performance test — besting Apple’s iPhone 5 by nearly double.

    The new Galaxy S 4 — using Qualcomm’s 1.9 GHz Snapdragon 600 — also returned a score higher than the new HTC One, which also uses a Snapdragon 600. The HTC One Score of 2687 is likely due to a slower version of the chip; it clocks at 1.7 GHz, likely to balance performance and battery life. Here’s a full chart of the Geekbench 2 scores:

    Geekbench 2 - March 2013

    While synthetic benchmarks are a good indicator of performance, that’s all they are: indicators. There are many tests available to use on smartphones that check performance for specific features. Mozilla’s SunSpider or Google’s Chrome Octane tests, both challenge a phone to run through JavaScript tests, for example. So it’s possible that the Galaxy S 4 won’t be the fastest phone at every single task.

    Air Touch on Galaxy S 4However, raw performance is key when it comes to many smartphone tasks. The responsiveness of the user interface is a perfect example; swiping to another home screen should be instant at this point, for example. Processing of high-definition videos and still camera images is another area that benefits from hardware performance. Samsung’s AirTouch hovering isn’t much use if it takes too long for information to pop up. And of course, if you’re a gamer, you want the chips in your smartphone to offer the fastest frame rates and greatest visual details.

    One of the reasons for Samsung’s smartphone success over the past three years is a large marketing effort. I suspect the company will latch onto benchmark tests such as these and pound out the message repeatedly that its phones best all others in terms of speed.

    Surely, the next iPhone and other Android devices will offer improved performance thanks to the newest chips from Qualcomm, Nvidia and even Intel, but for until that happens, expect Samsung’s marketing team to make a big deal about this aspect of the Galaxy S 4. And once it debuts the phone with its 8-core Exynos chip, that message of speed will only be amplified.

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  • Old Gas Tower to Become Futuristic Data Center

    bahnhof-gasometer-exterior-

    The exterior of the Stockholm Gasometer, which was built in 1893. Swedish ISP and hosting provider Bahnhof hopes to convert the building into a data center. (Photo: Bahnhof)

    In one of the more interesting retrofit projects we’ve seen, a Swedish ISP is planning to convert a huge former natural gas holding tank into a five-story data center. The developer is Bahnhof, which has gained notice for its unusual data center designs, including the “James Bond Villain” data center in a former nuclear bunker and a modular unit designed to look like a space station.

    This time Bahnhof plans to rehab one of Stockholm’s huge gasometers – a towering building designed to store gas –  and turn it into a five-story data center housing thousands of servers.  The gasometer project is one of two new data centers planned by Bahnhof, both of which will capture waste heat from servers for use in district heating systems that will provide energy for homes and offices.

    The second project, known as Nimrod, will be built on the site of one of the plants feeding Stockholm’s district heating and cooling system. The existing building is operated by Fortum, a large energy company in Stockholm.

    “Fortum let us construct a data center on top of Europe’s most powerful heat pumps for a direct transfer of heat into their system,” said Jon Karlung, the CEO of Bahnhof, whose love of futuristic design has informed the company’s facilities. “Why vent the energy out?”

    Karlung says these projects are envisioned as data centers for large IT companies, and that Bahnhof is in talks with a large US company about one of the sites. ”There is really a substantial interest,” said Karlung. “The concept works for anybody that doesn’t want to ventilate out money in thin air. Our role is to build and provide the concept. We do this as part of our business. We are also a hosting provider, but this is pure design and construction.”

    The Gasometer

    The gasometer is a cylindrical building erected in 1893, constructed with red bricks and enclosed by a spectacular wood and steel ceiling structure as ceiling, which Bahnhof says contributes to the “sacral character of the space.” Here’s a look at the building’s interior:

    bahnhof-gasometer-interior-

    Bahnhof has commissioned two designs for the gasometer site. One is from Albert France-Lanord, the designer of Pionen White Mountain, Bahnhof’s stylized high-tech underground fortress 100 feet beneath Stockholm.

  • Nurses can play key role in reducing deaths from world’s most common diseases

    Nurses and midwives can play a critical role in lessening people’s risk of cardiovascular diseases, cancers, chronic respiratory disease and diabetes, according to a groundbreaking new report issued by the World Health Organization and co-authored by a UCLA nursing professor.
     
    These four non-communicable disease types account for a combined 60 percent of all deaths worldwide.
       
    “The global burden of non-communicable diseases is already high and continues to grow in all regions of the world,” said Linda Sarna, a professor at the UCLA School of Nursing and co-author of the report. “Nurses and midwives have the expertise to help individuals and communities improve health outcomes.”
     
    Sarna points out that since nurses and midwives make up more than 50 percent of all health care providers in most countries, they are the logical candidates to affect lifestyle changes among patients and increase health awareness. Worldwide, there are more than 19 million nurses and midwives, she said.
     
    The 38-page report issued by the WHO highlights evidence-based, value-added nursing interventions that have been shown to reduce such risk factors as tobacco use, alcohol dependence, physical inactivity and unhealthy diets.
     
    “The examples contained in the report are proven activities that nurses can start doing today to make a meaningful impact with their patients and in their community,” Sarna said. “Many of the interventions have been proven to reduce costs and improve the quality of care.”
     
    Sarna notes that tobacco control has been one of the biggest areas of missed opportunity. Tobacco use is the leading preventable cause of death in the United States and worldwide and is the one risk factor that cuts across all four of the non-communicable disease categories. Nursing intervention studies support the idea that nurses can play a major role in helping smokers quit.
     
    As the roles and responsibilities of the nursing profession continue to evolve in many countries, the findings of the WHO report validate the important role of nurses and midwives not only in caring for patients in times of need but also in prevention. In that regard, the report is intended to encourage nursing schools to offer curricula that addresses nurses’ role in counseling people about unhealthy behaviors and encouraging smart lifestyle choices. It also highlights the importance of funding more nursing research in this area.
     
    In addition, the report calls for nursing and midwifery to play a more active role in policy and advocacy at the highest levels. This includes establishing a pool of nurse and midwife experts who can work with legislators in drafting policy and who can provide leadership in addressing issues of standards, research, education and practice.
     
    While a number of nursing and midwifery organizations have already developed position statements, model curricula and other resources to help move the non-communicable diseases agenda forward, the report stresses that it is “essential that nurses, midwives and their organizations now take an even stronger leadership role in working with policymakers to promote the integration of evidence-based nursing practice in the reduction of risk factors.”
       
    “Risk-reduction counseling should be an essential part of clinical practice at all levels, and throughout the life span,” Sarna said. “This document is a template for focused activities that nurses can implement today to reduce risk factors and that can direct policy and funding for education programs and research.”
     
     
    The report was written by Sarna and Stella Bialous, senior consultant with the WHO and president of Tobacco Policy International, and was coordinated by Annette Mwansa Nkowane of the WHO’s Department of Health Systems Policies and Workforce. It is an outgrowth of two conferences held in 2012: the WHO Global Forum for Government Nursing and Midwifery Officers, and the joint meeting of the International Confederation of Midwives, the International Council of Nurses and the WHO (the TRIAD). Both meetings produced statements supporting the need for changes in policy, research and education to better prepare nurses and midwives to tackle the non-communicable diseases epidemic.
     
    The UCLA School of Nursing is redefining nursing through the pursuit of uncompromised excellence in research, education, practice, policy and patient advocacy. For more information, visitnursing.ucla.edu.
     
    For more news, visit the UCLA Newsroom and follow us on Twitter.

  • Google’s Babble: It’s a great idea

    Google is looking to bring all its communications products into a single product, Babble, according to a report in Geek.com.  When asked to comment, a Google spokesperson declined to speculate on rumors. The report goes on to outline:

    Google’s got a huge communication problem right now. If you take a look at all of their services, you’ll find a series of communications platforms that don’t interact with each other very well, if at all. Google Talk, Hangout, Voice, Messenger, Chat for Drive collaboration, and the pseudo Google Talk for G+ all function just a little differently from one another. The only two to really function together are Google Talk for Gmail and G+, but ask anyone using the two systems and you’ll hear just how bad things are right now. There’s not an easy fix for the situation, but a cross platform solution would enable Google to overtake platforms like iMessage and BlackBerry Messenger in one sweeping gesture. According to multiple sources reporting separately to Geek.com, this service is being called Babble, and it’s being built fresh from the ground up to solve these problems.

    If this is true, then I think it is a capital idea, and I’m glad to see Google finally getting around to this kind of thinking. About two years ago, I wrote How Google can beat Facebook. No, it’s not on the web, where I proposed that Google should build a Babble-like service.

    …instead of getting bogged down by the old-fashioned notion of communication – phone calls, emails, instant messages and text messages – it needs to think about interactions. In other words, Google needs to think of a world beyond Google Talk, Google Chat and Google Voice. To me, interactions are synchronous, are highly personal, are location-aware and allow the sharing of experiences, whether it’s photographs, video streams or simply smiley faces. Interactions are supposed to mimic the feeling of actually being there. Interactions are about enmeshing the virtual with the physical. Google has access to real-world intimacy – the mobile phone address book – thanks to Android OS. All it has to do is use that as a lever to facilitate interactions. Ability to interact on an ongoing basis anywhere, any time and sharing everything, from moments to emotions – is what social is all about. From my vantage point, this is what Google should focus on.

    Looks like they listened. Hey Vic, next time you are paying for coffee.

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  • Google ‘Peanut Gallery’ is a brilliantly-conceived Web Speech API demo

    If you want to get any more work done today, read no further! Google unveiled the “Peanut Gallery” a fun, silent-move-making tool showcasing the Web Speech API released with Chrome 25 last month. You could fritter away hours creating and sharing funny clips.

    “We thought it would be fun to demonstrate this new technology by using an old one: silent film”, Google’s Aaron Koblin explains. “The Peanut Gallery lets you add intertitles to old black-and-white movie clips just by talking out loud while you watch them. Create a film and share it with friends, so they can bring out their inner screenwriters too”.

    I quickly — emphasis rushed — made a movie on Chromebook Pixel, dictating text. The process is fast and simple, and the results can be fun. Expect to see lots of silent clips today and the next couple as people share them across social networks. Google makes it easy for Facebook, G+ and Twitter.

    There’s real viral possibilities here, and time tells whether there will be any. If the Peanut Gallery hits a viral chord, Google just might achieve its broader objective.

    “We hope that developers will find many uses for the Web Speech API, both fun and practical—including new ways to navigate, search, enter text, and interact with the web”, Koblin says. “We can’t wait to see how people use it”.

    I want more! Let me use dictation to create Hitler clip parodies. Can you imagine?

    I posted my clip to Google+ while writing this story. There Russell Holly makes an important observation: “The text is in the URL, which means it can be edited and the text in the video changes. That’s just begging for trouble”.

    He’s right. Perhaps that’s more fun than trouble. Editing the text doesn’t change the destination from the Google shortlink. On the other hand, it would matter using the full URL — meaning someone can change your movie and redistribute. Does it matter? 

  • Google Makes It Easier To Find Animated GIFs

    Google announced a new “Animated” search filter in “Search Tools” in Image Search, which will (obviously) allow you to quickly find animated GIFs based on your query. As Google points out, this image format has been around for a long time, so it’s somewhat surprising they’re just now doing this, but better late than never, right?

    In addition to this new search filter, Google has also added the ability to search for images with transparent backgrounds via the “Transparent” option under the “any color” dropdown box.

    Here’s what Google had to say about the new features on Google+:

    Google

    Even if you’re a fan of animated gifs—say you were the first to email your friends the slow loris very slowly eating a rice ball (goo.gl/KDDX1)—you may not know that the origins of animation go as far back as 1879 and Eadweard Muybridge’s “zoopraxiscope” (see our doodle homage to Muybridge: goo.gl/PGQW3). Gifs have been around since 1987 and have become the de facto standard for short animations on the web, from pony glitter text (goo.gl/iZoEZ) to grumpy cat memes (goo.gl/bC9um).

    Starting today, there’s an easier way to unearth those gems: when you do an image search, click on “Search tools” below the search box, then select “Animated” under the “Any type” dropdown box.

    We’ve also added a second handy filter: if you’re after the perfect picture of Easter basket clipart (goo.gl/XutAa) but must have one with a transparent background, simply select “Transparent” under the “Any color” dropdown box.

    I’m not actually seeing the features yet, so they must be in the process of rolling out.

  • Survey shows huge interest in an HDTV from Apple, but few willing to commit

    iTV Survey
    Apple’s (AAPL) much rumored own-brand HDTV is among several highly anticipated new opportunities that industry watchers expect to help reverse investor sentiment once it launches. But according to a recent survey of 3,910 consumers polled by online buying guide Retrevo, high interest in Apple’s upcoming “iTV” won’t necessarily translate into sales. 69% of all people surveyed said they might consider a purchase of an HDTV from Apple, and that number shot up to 81% among those polled who were already iPhone or iPad owners. But only 15% of shoppers said they would “feel comfortable” buying an Apple television, compared to 39% who would feel comfortable buying a Sony (SNE) TV and 51% comfortable with Samsung (005930) TVs. On the plus side, however, 22% of those polled (and 30% of current iPhone and iPad owners) said they would hold off on buying a TV from another vendor if they knew Apple planned to unveil an HDTV of its own.

  • UCLA researchers create tomatoes that mimic actions of good cholesterol

    UCLA researchers have genetically engineered tomatoes to produce a peptide that mimics the actions of good cholesterol when consumed.
     
    Published in the April issue of the Journal of Lipid Research and featured on the cover, their early study found that mice that were fed these tomatoes in freeze-dried, ground form had less inflammation and plaque build-up in their arteries.
     
    “This is one of the first examples of a peptide that acts like the main protein in good cholesterol and can be delivered by simply eating the plant,” said senior author Dr. Alan M. Fogelman, executive chair of the department of medicine and director of the atherosclerosis research unit at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. “There was no need to isolate or purify the peptide — it was fully active after the plant was eaten.”
     
    After the tomatoes were eaten, the peptide surprisingly was found to be active in the small intestine but not in the blood, suggesting that targeting the small intestine may be a new strategy to prevent diet-induced atherosclerosis, the plaque-based disease of the arteries that can lead to heart attacks and strokes.
     
    Specifically for the study, the team genetically engineered tomatoes to produce 6F, a small peptide that mimics the action of apoA-1, the chief protein in high-density lipoprotein (HDL or “good” cholesterol). Scientists fed the tomatoes to mice that lacked the ability to remove low-density lipoprotein (LDL or “bad” cholesterol) from their blood and readily developed inflammation and atherosclerosis when consuming a high-fat diet.
     
    The researchers found that mice that ate the peptide-enhanced tomatoes, which accounted for 2.2 percent of their Western-style, high-fat diet, had significantly lower levels of inflammation; higher paraoxonase activity, an antioxidant enzyme associated with good cholesterol; higher levels of good cholesterol; decreased lysophosphatidic acid, a tumor-promoter that accelerates plaque build-up in the arteries in animal models; and less atherosclerotic plaque.
     
    Several hours after the mice finished eating, the intact peptide was found in the small intestine, but no intact peptide was found in the blood. According to researchers, this strongly suggests that the peptide acted in the small intestine and was then degraded to natural amino acids before being absorbed into the blood, as is the case with the other peptides and proteins in the tomato.
     
    “It seems likely that the mechanism of action of the peptide-enhanced tomatoes involves altering lipid metabolism in the intestine, which positively impacts cholesterol,” said the study’s corresponding author, Srinavasa T. Reddy, a UCLA professor of medicine and of molecular and medical pharmacology.
     
    Previous studies performed by Fogelman’s lab and other researchers around the world in animal models of disease have suggested that a large number of conditions with an inflammatory component — not just atherosclerosis — might benefit from treatment with an apoA-1 mimetic peptide, including Alzheimer’s disease, ovarian and colon cancer, diabetes, asthma, and other disorders. 
     
    The immune system normally triggers an inflammatory response to an acute event such as injury or infection, which is part of the natural course of healing. But with many chronic diseases, inflammation becomes an abnormal, ongoing process with long-lasting deleterious effects in the body.
     
    If the work in animal models applies to humans, said Fogelman, who is also the Castera Professor of Medicine at UCLA, consuming forms of genetically modified foods that contain apoA-1–related peptides could potentially help improve these conditions.
     
    The peptide would be considered a drug if given by injection or in a purified pill form, but when it is a part of the fruit of a plant, it may be no different from a safety standpoint than the food in which it is contained — and it may be better tolerated than a drug, Fogelman said. He noted that one possibility could be the development of the peptide into a nutritional supplement.
     
    The current study and findings resulted from years of detective work in searching for an apoA-1 peptide that could be practically produced. Peptides prior to the current 6F version have required additions that can only be made by chemical synthesis. The 6F peptide does not require these additions and can therefore be produced by genetically engineering plants.
     
    The team chose a fruit — the tomato — that could be eaten without requiring cooking that might break down the peptide. The researchers were able to successfully genetically express the peptide in tomato plants, and the ripened fruit was then freeze-dried and ground into powder for use in the study.
     
    “This is one of the first examples in translational research using an edible plant as a delivery vehicle for a new approach to cholesterol,” said Judith Gasson, a professor of medicine and biological chemistry, director of UCLA’s Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center and senior associate dean for research at the Geffen School of Medicine. “We will be closely watching this novel research to see if these early studies lead to human trials.” 
     
    In addition, Gasson noted that this early finding and future studies may yield important and fundamental knowledge about the role of the intestine in diet-induced inflammation and atherosclerosis. 
     
    The study was supported in part by U.S. Public Health Service Research Grants HL-30568 and HL-34343 and by the Laubisch, Castera and M.K. Grey funds at UCLA. Studies on the determination of 6F in intestinal contents and plasma were partially funded by a Network Grant from the Leducq Foundation.
     
    All of the intellectual property is owned by the UC Regents and managed by the UCLA Office of Intellectual Property and Industry Sponsored Research. The technology is currently licensed exclusively to Bruin Pharma Inc. Authors Alan M. Fogelman, Mohamad Navab and Srinivasa T. Reddy are pincipals in Bruin Pharma. Fogelman is an officer in the start-up company. Other disclosures are available in the manuscript.
     
    Other authors included Arnab Chattopadhyay, Mohamed Navab, Greg Hough, David Meriwether, Victor Grijalva, James R. Springstead, Ryan Namiri-Kalantari, Brian J. Van Lenten and Alan C. Wagner of the department of medicine at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA; Robin Farias-Eisener, Feng Gao and Feng Su of the department of obstetrics and gynecology at the Geffen School of Medicine; and Mayakonda N. Palgnachari and G.M. Anantharamaiah of department of medicine at the University of Alabama, Birmingham.
     
    For more news, visit the UCLA Newsroom and follow us on Twitter.

  • Drawn to Scale wants to solve your MongoDB scalability problems

    If you love MongoDB but are tired of trying to scale it past a handful of machines and a few hundred gigabytes, database startup Drawn to Scale says it has you covered. The company has expanded the functionality of its distributed data platform from SQL to MongoDB, meaning users of the popular NoSQL database can import their data to Spire and see high performance on hundreds of terabytes.

    Drawn to Scale’s flagship product, called Spire, is a distributed data platform that’s built atop an optimized version of the Hadoop-based HBase database. HBase is what lets Spire scale cheaply and easily across. Its fully distributed index is what lets Spire read and write data at speeds that other approaches to scaling databases (e.g., sharding) can’t handle while maintaining the ability to handle rich queries.

    To date, the company has been focused on letting users run massive SQL databases, but it has finally completed a lengthy process of rewriting parts of MongoDB to work with Spire, Founder and CEO Bradford Stephens (who’ll be participating in our Structure: Data event this week in New York) told me. The company had been keeping the work under tight wraps “because we didn’t know how long it was going to take to build,” he added.

    SpireMongo-230x300“Our big vision for the market is providing people with a universal data platform,” Stephens said. After SQL — which accounts for the vast majority of databases in existence — MongoDB is a logical next step (although Spire also supports queries using Hadoop MapReduce). It’s the most-widely used NoSQL database by a longshot, but although many users love its functionality and tooling, the database is notoriously poor at scaling to meet the demands of big data or high performance.

    “You just sort of top out once you max out the memory,” Stephens explained, adding that MongoDB often starts getting inefficient as it’s forced to scale across 50 or 10 servers. “[T]hat’s where we start getting efficient.”

    Now, without changing a single line of code, he claims, MongoDB users can import their data onto Spire and start handing 200-plus terabytes with ease. Of course, he noted, this doesn’t mean MongoDB users will abandon the database entirely. It might be they keep it for running applications that don’t require it to scale beyond a single server, and then use Spire to store big data for analytical purposes.

    Initially, Spire will just support data importation and the basic CRUD (create, read, update, delete) functions of MongoDB, Stephens said. Later this year, assuming users want it, Drawn to Scale will implement MongoDB’s native MapReduce functionality as well as its management features.

    As data volumes and data stores continue to proliferate, though, Drawn to Scale isn’t the only startup trying to provide a one-stop shop experience. At least for analytics, Citus Data is building a Postgres-based database capable of analyzing SQL, Hadoop and MongoDB data, although each data store remains external. And there’s a whole group of companies merging SQL and Hadoop for analytic workloads that might be wise to consider supporting operational data stores such as MongoDB, as well.

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  • Westly Group raises a $160M (gasp) cleantech fund

    Not all venture capitalists are fleeing the cleantech sector. On Tuesday The Westly Group — the fund managed by former California controller Steve Westly — announced that it’s closed on a $160 million fund that it will invest into cleantech companies. The firm raised funds from investors like Citi, E.ON and SK Group.

    The firm’s previous fund was for $127 million, and the Westly Group has been working on raising this current fund for awhile (since mid 2011). Originally the fund was targeted at $175 million. The Westly Group is a little different from other investment firms in that it says its principals have invested more than $50 million of their own money into the company’s funds over the years.

    We drive the new Tesla Model S thumbnail

    The firm has been one of the more successful cleantech investors out there. Three of The Westly Group’s portfolio companies have gone public on the NASDAQ, including electric car company Tesla, biofuel company Amyris, and Chinese recycling company China Recycling Energy Corporation (CREG). The firm says on its website that “at the end of 2010, we had returned nearly all of invested capital to our limited partners.”

    Not all of the Westly Group’s startups have done well, of course. Solar company Amonix has been struggling. Waste-to-fuel startup Enerkem withdrew its IPO plans last year.

    With this fund, The Westly Group joins the elite club of venture firms that will continue to make new cleantech investments, including Khosla Ventures, Lux Capital and Braemar Energy Ventures.

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  • View Landing Pages From AdSense Ad Review Center

    Google announced a new feature for the AdSense ad review center, which lets you check landing pages for ads from within your account. This builds on a recent announcement, which let you search for ads by images.

    “If you’re looking for more insight into your users’ experience with the ads on your site, the landing page view offers you a quick and easy view of what users see when clicking on an ad,” explains AdSense software engineer Pedro Diaz. “This in turn will help you make a more informed decision about whether or not an ad is suitable for your audience.”

    Ad Review Center - Landing Pages

    You can find the feature when you log in to your AdSense account, and go to the “Allow and block ads” tab. Hover over ads, and you’ll see a small magnifying glass in the corner, which will show you the landing page preview.

    The feature is only available in accounts with English set as the language preference, though it will roll out to other languages in time.

  • Walking Dead ‘Dead Yourself’ App Hits Android

    AMC announced that the “Dead Yourself” app, which lets you turn yourself into a walker, has come to Android. AMC says in a blog post:

    For two months AMC’s Dead Yourself app has been taking the world by storm, turning men, women, children and pets into zombies. Well, you ain’t seen nothing yet: Dead Yourself is now available on Android-powered smartphones. Simply download the Dead Yourself app from Google Play, take a photo of yourself, zombify it, then watch as your transformation contributes to the global pandemic.

    The app was previously available for the web and for iOS.

    Dead Yourself

    It’s a big week for fans of the show. The soundtrack was just made available, and the Survival Instinct video game just came out.

    More The Walking Dead fun here.

  • Google Shopper For Android, iOS Gets New Search Refinements

    The Google Shopper app for Android and iOS just got a new update with version 3.2, which adds some new search refinement options to make shopping easier.

    “Need a new camera, but aren’t quite sure which one is right for you? Google Shopper 3.2 allows you to see the most popular cameras on Google Shopping via a specialized result page,” explains Google Shopper product manager John-Shriver Blake. “Overwhelmed by choice? Google Shopper 3.2 provides you with the ability to use category-specific refinements to narrow down your search. This means that if you’re looking for a point and shoot camera with a 10 Megapixel sensor, you can easily find the most popular cameras on Google Shopping which include that set of features.”

    Google Shopper

    You can also refine searches by specific brands, stores, prices and other criteria. It will then show you the most popular items based on the criteria you select.

    “Finally, once you’ve narrowed down your query to a few options, Google Shopper allows you to view detailed product information about each so that you can make an informed buying decision,” says Blake. “In addition to reading that information, viewing reviews from across the web or watching video reviews from YouTube, you may find it useful to view multiple high-resolution product images in the new lightbox viewer.”

    The app is available in the Google Play Store, and in the App Store.

  • HTC One phone delayed as parts suppliers focus on other customers

    At a time where HTC needs a smartphone sales hit, the company is facing a new challenge. Its new flagship phone, the HTC One, may be delayed in some markets, mainly because HTC can’t get all the components it needs for the new smartphone. According to a Wall Street Journal report on Tuesday, the issue isn’t because the parts aren’t necessarily available; the problem is that HTC is no longer considered a top-tier hardware customer.

    HTC OneHTC specifically stated to the WSJ that the camera parts and metal frames are hard to come by. And to an extent, these parts are relatively unique. The HTC One touts “ultrapixels” in the camera, which use sensors with larger pixels for better clarity and low-light performance. And the phone’s metal frame is all new.

    It appears, however, that if hardware component makers had more confidence in HTC’s ability to sell smartphones — and thus increase component orders — HTC would have the parts it needs. Instead, component makers may be focusing production line efforts on partners such as Apple and Samsung, which continue to outsell all others in the smartphone market.

    Indeed, HTC’s sales woes have been a sore spot; it recently has had a string of months with decreased sales growth and reduced future expectation. In turn, this hurts the company’s component demand forecasts, which can’t make hardware partners happy.

    Per an HTC executive speaking to the WSJ: “The company has a problem managing its component suppliers as it has changed its order forecasts drastically and frequently following last year’s unexpected slump in shipments.”

    By repeatedly reducing component orders, it’s simply a safer bet for companies that make smartphone parts to focus their production lines on companies that are selling more smartphones than before in a consistent manner. It’s all well and good to create an innovative new smartphone; my limited hands on time with the HTC One suggests it’s a solid step forward for HTC. But if markets have little confidence in the company behind the product, making a sales comeback becomes a much tougher road to tread.

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