Author: Serkadis

  • And the Left 4 Dead 2 boycott, how’s that going?

    l4d2

    It turned out that a lot of those so-called Modern Warfare 2 protesters were talking jive, as they played the game late into the night, alone with their hypocrisy. (It’s overdramatic Tuesday, by the way.) How did the Left 4 Dead II protesters do?

    A little bit better, yes. Less people in the Steam “L4D Boycott” group have turned their backs on their principles.

    Then again, now that Modern Warfare 2 has dedicated servers…

    And here’s a shocker: I read Rock Paper Shotgun’s review of the Left 4 Dead II today, and now I’m very likely going to buy the game. My one reservation is that the Xbox 360 version ends up being ignored, like the Xbox 360 version of Team Fortress 2 was. I need reassurances that Valve won’t stab me in the heart if I buy the game for the 360!


  • CO2 Emissions Produced in the UK, Fell by 5% Between 1992 and 2004, while CO2 Emissions from Goods and Services Consumed in the UK Increased by 12%

    800px-Bath_45

    2009Nov17: CO2 emissions produced in the UK, fell by 5% between 1992 and 2004, while CO2 emissions from goods and services consumed in the UK increased by 12% between 1992 and 2004, according to the Global Carbon Project. “The developed world has exported to the developing world the emissions it would have produced had it met its growing appetite for consumer goods itself for the last two decades,” said CSIRO’s John Finnegan (BBC).

    Reference: BBC http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/8364926.stm

    Read the Global Carbon Project’s 2008 Carbon Budget report – released 2009Nov17 http://www.globalcarbonproject.org/carbonbudget/index.htm

    Image Description: Bath, England, United Kingdom. Photo by Christophe.Finot, 2005July. Image Location: Wikimedia Commons http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Bath_45.JPG Image Permission: This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 2.5 License. In short: you are free to share and make derivative works of the file under the conditions that you appropriately attribute it, and that you distribute it only under a license identical to this one.

  • Ensuring the Integrity, Accessibility, and Stewardship of Research Data in the Digital Age

    Cover imageAs digital technologies are expanding the power and reach of research, they are also raising complex issues. These include complications in ensuring the validity of research data; standards that do not keep pace with the high rate of innovation; restrictions on data sharing that reduce the ability of researchers to verify results and build on previous research; and huge increases in the amount of data being generated, creating severe challenges in preserving that data for long-term use.

    Ensuring the Integrity, Accessibility, and Stewardship of Research Data in the Digital Age examines the consequences of the changes affecting research data with respect to three issues – integrity, accessibility, and stewardship-and finds a need for a new approach to the design and the management of research projects. The report recommends that all researchers receive appropriate training in the management of research data, and calls on researchers to make all research data, methods, and other information underlying results publicly accessible in a timely manner. The book also sees the stewardship of research data as a critical long-term task for the research enterprise and its stakeholders. Individual researchers, research institutions, research sponsors, professional societies, and journals involved in scientific, engineering, and medical research will find this book an essential guide to the principles affecting research data in the digital age.

  • Experimentation and Rapid Prototyping in Support of Counterterrorism

    Cover imageThe U.S. military forces currently face a nontraditional threat from insurgents and terrorists who primarily employ improvised explosive devices, and have shown a cycle of adaptation of less than 12 months to responses by U.S. forces to counter these attacks. This constantly evolving threat requires U.S. military forces to adapt and respond more rapidly with modified tactics, technologies, and/or equipment.

    In response to this need for new technologies, the Rapid Reaction Technology Office (RRTO) was established in 2006 to develop technologies that can mature in 6 to 18 months for purposes of counterterrorism. Although RRTO appears to be successfully fulfilling its mission, the agency seeks to understand and address barriers to and opportunities for meeting future counterterrorism needs–including the need to accelerate the transition of technologies for counterterrorism with an eye to countering emerging and anticipated threats. This book reviews RRTO approaches and provides a set of recommendations for potential improvements to help meet these needs for rapid technology development.

  • Eighty-Six-Year-Old Harper Student Displays Work in Rare Solo Art Exhibition

    (PALATINE, IL) One of Harper College’s most popular art students – an 86-year-old retired industrial designer who’s taken Harper art classes for two decades – will celebrate the opening of his first-ever art exhibit on Wednesday, November 18, in Harper’s Art Exhibition Space, Room C200, Building C.

    The show pays tribute to Bernard “Bernie” Bluestein’s 20-year artistic journey, which saw him exploring jewelry, ceramics, drawing and more as he took class after class at the College – usually completing more than one course each semester. The exhibit will focus on sculpture, his favorite medium, and will include pieces from his “Needles” series, a tribute to his tailor father and seamstress mother.

    This is only the second time in Harper’s history that a current student has exhibited works in a solo show.

    “I’m happy about it,” says Bluestein, of Schaumburg. “I’m absolutely delighted to have been asked.”

    Nearly 30 works will be displayed in the free exhibit.

    Bluestein, a World War II veteran, took his first Harper art class after retiring, hoping to find a new hobby. He now visits campus five days a week. One fellow student chose Bluestein’s likeness, including his trademark bucket hat, as the subject for a sculpture that has been on display on Harper’s campus.

    What:           First-ever art exhibit from 86-year-old student Bernie Bluestein

    When:          Wednesday, Nov. 18, 9 AM (Exhibit opening)

                       Tuesday, Nov. 24, 11:30 AM (Reception with artist)

                       Viewing Hours: 8:30AM – 4:30 PM weekdays through Thursday, Dec. 10

    Where:         Harper College Art Exhibition Space, Room C200, Building C

                       1200 Algonquin Road, Palatine, IL        

     

     

     

  • Animators Collaborate on Facebook All the Way to the Theaters

    Last fall, Mass Animation, which calls itself the largest global animation collaboration ever, posted an invitation on Facebook for artists around the world to collaborate on the making of an animated short film. This film is now getting a theatrical release this week with Columbia Pictures’ Planet 51 release. It’s called "Live Music."

    "When artists arrived at Mass Animation’s virtual studio on Facebook, they were given the essential tools and animation software necessary to participate, including individual storyboards and 3D models bundled for download along with guidelines on animation," a representative for Facebook tells WebProNews. "Through the social networking features of the application, animated shots could then be viewed, voted on and shared with friends."

    "’Live Music’ reflects the input of  58,000+ participants from 101 countries and 51 animators who collaborated in the making of this unique film, which introduces Mass Animation to the world," she adds.

    Mass Animation has illustrated to a great extent what can truly be acheived with collaboration efforts on Facebook (or social media in general). It probably helps that Mass Animation puts so much focus on Facebook as a tool. They even use their Facebook page as their website. If you go to massanimation.com, it redirects to facebook.com/massanimation. That’s some dedication to a specific channel. 

    Now Mass Animation is involved in another Facebook project with Sony Online Entertainment and DC Comics. This week the DC Universe Online Animation Contest was announced. This is being called version 2.0 of the Mass Animation FB app and will give DC fans, gamers, and animators a chance to animate characters from the DC Universe online game that Sony is developing. This is another example of Mass Animation allowing fans to collaborate on a big product. The contest will launch on December 7.

    Related Articles:

    > Paramount Follows Up "Paranormal" Marketing With More Social Fun

    > MySpace To Host Exclusive Stream Of "New Moon" Red Carpet

    > Social Networking Donation Cause Leaves MySpace For Facebook

  • Each Human Consumes Goods and Services Worth 1.3 Tons of Carbon 2009

    800px-Tucson_shab1

    2009Nov17: Each human consumes goods and services worth 1.3 tons of carbon, according to the Global Carbon Project. Each human consumed goods and services worth 1.1 tons of carbon in 2000 (BBC).

    Reference: BBC http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/8364926.stm

    Read the Global Carbon Project’s 2008 Carbon Budget report – released 2009Nov17 http://www.globalcarbonproject.org/carbonbudget/index.htm

    Image Description: Tucson, Arizona. Photo by Zereshk. Image Location: Wikimedia Commons http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tucson_shab1.JPG Image Permission: This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License. In short: you are free to distribute and modify the file as long as you attribute its author(s) or licensor(s).

  • Voting for Department of Education Video Contest Begins

    Since September 21st, hundreds of students across the country responded to the President’s call to take greater responsibility for their education by creating videos explaining why education is important. In less than two months, students submitted more than 600 video entries.

    In their entries, students talked about the goals they had for their future and the steps they would take to meet them. The submissions came from students from diverse economic, social and ethnic backgrounds, and the content ranged from music videos to short skits. The common theme in all of these videos was the understanding that education was the key to success. 

    Secretary Arne Duncan recorded a message thanking all the students who submitted videos:

    var params = { allowscriptaccess: “always”, allowfullscreen: “true”, wmode:”transparent”}; swfobject.embedSWF(“http://www.youtube-nocookie.com/v/oxjD9st3MM4&hl=en&fs=1&showinfo=0&showsearch=0”, “flashcontent2”, “480”, “295”, “8”, null, {}, params);

    Viewing this video requires Adobe Flash Player 8 or higher. Download the free player.
     

    The U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Communications and Outreach has carefully reviewed each submission and narrowed the submissions down to 10 finalists based on creativity, strength and originality of content, and ability to inspire. These videos are now available for voting at www.youtube.com/Iamwhatilearn.

    Voting for the videos runs from November 16th to December 4th. The three videos with the most votes at the end of this period will each win a $1,000 prize issued by the U.S. Department of Education.  

    Eddie Lee is Director of New Media at the Department of Education
     

  • Global CO2 Emissions Rose by 29% Between 2000 and 2008

    800px-Factory_in_China

    2009Nov17: Global CO2 emissions rose by 29% between 2000 and 2008, according to the Global Carbon Project. The growth came from developing countries, but 25% of that growth came through production of goods for consumption in advanced economies (BBC).

    Reference: BBC http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/8364926.stm

    Read the Global Carbon Project’s 2008 Carbon Budget report – released 2009Nov17 http://www.globalcarbonproject.org/carbonbudget/index.htm

    Image Description: Factory in China on Yangtze River. Photo by High Contrast, 2008Sept. Image Location: Wikimedia Commons http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Factory_in_China.jpg Image Permission: This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Germany License.

  • Does an Organic Search Presence Help Paid Result Performance?

    A study from a couple of NYU Stern professors has found that organic search engine results can play a direct role in whether or not a paid listing is clicked. Basically, if this research is any indication, if your business has both a paid result and an organic result appear at the same time, you have a better chance of your paid result getting clicked than if the organic result had not appeared.

    Seen better CTRs when paid and organic listings are present? Tell us about it.

    Professors Anindya Ghose and Sha Yang have highlighted the following findings:

    – On average, the impact of organic listings on paid advertising is 3.5 times stronger than vice-versa, possibly because of the tendency of consumers to trust organic listings more than paid ads.

    – The positive association between paid and organic listings increases advertisers’ profits by at least 6.15% when compared to profits in the absence of either of them. The positive association is strongest when advertiser-specific keywords are used and weakest when brand-specific and generic keywords are used.

    – Click-through rates, conversion rates and total revenues are higher when both paid and organic listings are present simultaneously than when paid search ads are absent.

    – The combined click-through rates are 5.1% higher when paid and organic listings are present simultaneously than when only the organic listings are present.

    – The combined conversion rate increases 11.7% when paid and organic listings are present simultaneously than when organic listings alone are present.

    – Paid search advertising drives up to 54% of total revenue growth.

    Anindya GhoseThe professors used "a unique panel dataset of consumer responses to keyword ads on Google" to conduct their research. The complete findings from the study are evidently available in a paper entitled "Analyzing the Relationship between Organic and Sponsored Search Advertising: Positive, Negative or Zero Interdependence?" It’s 52 pages long.

    "These findings have important implications for the incentives of search engines to strategically modify the rankings of their organic search listings in order to boost their revenues from paid search advertisements," says Professor Ghose.

    Ghose’s point is an interesting one. Nobody’s making any accusations here, but would search engines tweak organic results specifically with the goal of increasing the performance of paid results, and bringing in more revenue?

    Some think the idea is absurd. For example, one WebProNews reader commented:

    No additional CPC is incurred when an organic listing is present, and the CPC certainly does not change depending on the organic listing’s position. The PPC auctioning process has nothing to do with the organic SERPs.

    Lastly, manipulating the organic SERPs in order to charge more for PPC clicks is cutting your own throat, from an SE perspective. In effect, telling advertisers: "You got a better organic position, therefore you will be charged more for your PPC clicks." Under which business model does this make sense? Exactly none. (respond here.)

    Even if a search engine did engage in such a practice, it is highly unlikely that anybody would know about it. I think the larger point is still just that it pays to optimize your site for organic listings, even if you are paying for listings. This may seem like common sense, but it is easy to dismiss the time and effort that go into an optimized site if you think you can just buy your way to clicks. What are your thoughts on the subject? Comment here.

    Related Articles:

    > Google and Heineken Study Search for Branding

    > Report: Paid Search Spend Up 10%

    > Search Ads Convert Better with Display

  • The Pirate Bay Goes More Distributed, Shuts Down Tracker

    So this is interesting. The folks at The Pirate Bay have shut down its tracker for good, and switched entirely to a distributed, decentralized system, called DHT. As others are noting, this is quite a milestone, but I actually wonder if it will also have legal implications. Basically, using such a distributed system takes The Pirate Bay even further out of the equation in terms of its role in the sharing of content, and in theory could impact the ruling against The Pirate Bay. Of course, the entertainment industry will say it doesn’t matter, and the courts (who don’t seem to understand these things very well) might not realize the difference, but it is meaningful in terms of how involved The Pirate Bay actually is in the activity that’s happening.

    But, of course, even if this makes no difference in how the courts view The Pirate Bay (as expected), it does show the inevitable trend of these things: making them ever more and more decentralized and harder to shut down. When the RIAA shut down Napster, what came out of it was even more decentralized and harder to stop. Now the same thing is happening with the attempted shut down of The Pirate Bay. Even if you don’t like what sites like The Pirate Bay do, at some point you have to wonder what good it does to keep shutting down these offerings when all it does is drive people to the “next” offering that’s even more difficult to stop? At some point, someone is going to get the message that you can’t stop this stuff. So why not figure out a way to use it to your advantage?

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • Dell Adamo XPS now available, praise be He Who Makes The Ultrathins


    How excited are you about the Dell Adamo XPS 13? Like (*stretches arms wide*) this excited? (*stretches arms wider*) Or this?

    Well, it’s true. The XPS is available now for a mere $1,799 with a 128GB solid state drive, 13-inch WLED screen, 4GB memory, and an Intel Core SU9400 1.4GHZ processor. It will run Windows 7.

    You can pick the old girl up right here

    We’ve been pretty excited about Adamo generally and this is an interesting move towards the right size and shape for the line.


  • It’s a list of fake things that look like real things

    notarolex

    I point you in the direction of Business Insider, which has compiled a list of knock-off products that’s worth your time. It’s not just the typical, Chinese iPhone wannabe, either. Like, nalencia oranges? Never heard of those. Dolce & Banana? I might be able to afford that. And, hmm, that looks an awful like the Amazon Kindle, but it’s not quite it, now is it?


  • Major Companies Endorse Legal Agreement For Open Standards

    Sharing open source software just got a whole lot easier.  The Open Web Foundation has announced the availability of the Open Web Foundation Agreement, and some huge corporations – namely Facebook, Google, Microsoft, and Yahoo – have given the arrangement their figurative seal of approval.

    It’s important to note that this isn’t some superfluous, feel-good pact.  Eran Hammer-Lahav, Director of Standards Development at Yahoo and President of the Open Web Foundation explained in a post on Yodel Anecdotal, "While Open Source software enjoys a wide range of licenses for making software freely available, specifications and standards are usually licensed under a complex set of rules and conditions."

    He then continued, "These licenses are hard to read and spread over many pages full of terms even many lawyers don’t fully understand.  There was also no suitable standalone agreement available for companies and communities to use when making their work available, forcing them into long and costly legal negotiation between the contributors."

    The Open Web Foundation Agreement should address most of those problems.  It’s a relatively short, relatively simple, and easily tailored document that’s meant to be serve individual developers, large corporations, and everything in between.

    The fact that so many important organizations support the Agreement should ensure that it actually gets some use, too, and perhaps becomes the standard it’s meant to be.  Without Facebook, Google, Microsoft, and Yahoo, the Open Web Foundation Agreement – interesting as it is – might be forgotten within days or weeks.

    But as things stand, Hammer-Lahav concluded, "This is just the first step in what we hope will be a new path for open collaboration and innovation on the web."

    Related Articles:

    > Google Programming Language On The "Go"

    > Facebook Open Sources FriendFeed Web Server

    > Another Google Summer Of Code Concludes

  • Facebook and Twitter Now on Xbox 360

    Update: Facebook officially announced the integration of Facebook and Xbox today:

    We’re excited that beginning today the social game experience is coming to Xbox Live, so now you can play Xbox games with your Facebook friends…

    The Xbox Facebook integration allows you to take part in some of the most popular activities on Facebook directly from your living room on your television. With Facebook for Xbox, you can update your status, browse updates from your friends and view photos on the big screen. You also can link your Facebook profile to your Xbox Gamertag to find your Facebook friends and connect with them on Xbox Live. It’s never been easier to discover friends you never even knew played Xbox.

    XBox and Facebook

    According to Mashable, Twitter is also now available on Xbox via the latest Xbox 360 system update.

    Original Article:
     At the E3 Expo today, it was announced that Facebook and Twitter integration would be coming to Xbox. I guess MySpace gets left behind here too. Liveblogging the event, Daniel Terdiman of CNET writes:

    Finally, Xbox Live members will now be able to interact with both Facebook and Twitter through their consoles. They’ll be able to share photos with Facebook friends via Xbox Live, and be able to see their lists of Xbox Live and Facebook friends simultaneously.

    As for Twitter functionality, Xbox Live users will be able to post tweets directly from their consoles, without a PC.

    It only makes sense that social networks and the gaming consoles get together. Games (particularly a service like Xbox live) are already social by nature, and Facebook and Twitter just happen to be two of the hottest forms of communication at the moment.

    Facebook on Xbox

    "Ever since the Facebook Platform launched two years ago, Facebook has become an increasingly important platform for online game developers. Entirely new companies have been built on the back of the Facebook Platform, like Playfish, Zynga, and SGN, that are creating the next generation of social games," says Justin Smith at Inside Facebook. "However, today’s announcement shows Facebook’s potential as a content distribution channel that could actually lead to more viral growth for games on other platforms."

    It will be interesting to see if other consoles and social media companies integrate with one another. Smith notes that Electronic Arts is taking advantage of Facebook Connect for its Xbox version of Tiger Woods 2010.

    Related Articles:

    > Facebook Connect Adds New Features To Service

    > Facebook Connect Made Easier for Site Owners

    > Facebook Translates Websites and Apps

  • Apple Ranks a Lackluster Fourth in Notebook Reliability Study

    Apple is fairly reliable, but not the most reliable company of all when it comes to notebooks, according to a new study by research firm SquareTrade. The top honor goes to Asus, which surprised me, but I suppose shouldn’t have when I consider the build quality of my fairly inexpensive Eee PC. Toshiba and Sony rank next most reliable, with Apple coming in a close fourth.

    I remember a time not too long ago when IBM and Apple would top the list every time, with other manufacturers coming in a fair distance behind them. IBM sold its hardware business to Lenovo, which seems to be having some effect on quality, but is Apple also slipping as it grows? I don’t think there’s enough data to identify a trend, but it is a little worrying.


    Still, at least Apple is still under the 20 percent mark for three-year laptop malfunction rates, which is the measure that indicates reliability in the study. Dell is the only company below it, also under 20 percent, with 18.3. After that, things take a significant turn for the worse, with HP coming in ninth place at 25.6 percent. That means Apple is still showing better-than-average performance overall.

    Electronista suggests that the reason for the divide between top-tier manufacturers and those that fall below the average is that the companies with greater than 20 percent malfunction rates tend to do much of their business in the budget laptop and notebook categories, which see higher failure rates overall than premium-priced laptops, where Apple exclusively does its business. It’s possible NVIDIA-gate accounted for some of those failures, although SquareTrade doesn’t go into detail about malfunction causes in this report.


  • Sony Silently Releases Muteki/MHC-GZR33i Shelf Stereo With 7 Inch LCD, DVD Playback, iPod Dock


    I originally had a hot tip on a dark colored Sony mini stereo system that was quite impressive and headed for Europe, sporting a 3 disc DVD changer and a 7 inch LCD screen. I didn’t have a price, but I had a model name – the MHC-GZR33i. I then looked at SonyStyle USA and noticed that this product already existed, and is called the Muteki Shelf System LBT-LCD7Di. The US version has a tang orange color scheme on the speakers and light while the European version is more subdued and in tune with Sony Design. Oddly enough, I have seen little to zero coverage about its debut. However, what’s really crazy is that the product is available at a ton of stores. Let’s talk about the US version first:

    LBTLCD7DI2

    Fusing a 7″ LCD screen, 3-disc DVD/CD player and an iPod (including iPod Touch and iPhone) dock, this Muteki shelf system is an extremely diverse offering from Sony that is sold at $499, but can be found for nearly $75 less already. In addition to 360 total watts (180W x 2) with GROOVE and Z-GROOVE (lol) bass boost, this Muteki system comes with a karaoke feature that allows you to sing along to your favorite tunes. Plus, you can play your iPod video, DVD or view a photo slide show. The tiny screen is nice, and if you want to show video on a bigger screen it has composite video output.

    Other I/O include digital audio output, headphone, and analog in. You can play music (MP3) or video from CD’s, DVD’s, iPod, and USB. Put a single DVD disc with a bunch of MP3’s and your sitting pretty. Overall codec support includes MP3, WMA, AAC, and DivX. Did we mention it reads many Walkmans easily because they appear as mass storage devices? It also has the ability to listen to the radio or record and playback from the USB port. More specifications are available at SonyStyle.

    MHCGZR33i

    So, the European version is essentially the same but looks much better in my eyes and is called the MHC-GZR33i – it hasn’t shown up anywhere yet but it will soon. I don’t have details on the price, but at $499 in the USA, I’m sure you can use your imagination. The only comparable system being sold in Europe right now by Sony (although that will change when this arrives soon) is the similarly named MHC-GTZ3i, which has less features.

    This information is a Sony Insider exclusive, brought to you here first.

  • Contest: Win a Nikon D3000

    d3000Looking for a DSLR this holiday season, but the budget is a bit tight? Let CrunchGear and Photojojo help you out. Photojojo is running a giveaway for a Nikon D3000, and they’ve invited you, our very special friends, to join in on the contest. Find out how to win after the jump.

    The contest starts today, and the will end on the 23rd. To win, just leave a comment below telling us what your big plans are for the Thanksgiving holiday. You’ll enter here instead of at Photojojo, but we’ll collect the entries and send them over on the 25th. Only one entry per person please, and we will be watching.

    It’s definitely worth your time to check out Photojojo as well. They have some pretty cool photography tips and some suggestions for projects you might not have ever seen before.


  • T-Mobile UK employees caught peddling personal data

    tmobile

    Here in the states, T-Mobile has been no stranger to screw-ups, but we’d always just figured that their UK counterparts were stand-up guys. After all, they’re British – as we all know, every one from that side of the pond is charming, affable, and rocks a bloody good accent. Unfortunately, it looks like not everyone employed there is as scrupulous as their customers would hope – a story by the BBC has confirmed that T-Mobile UK employees sold private subscriber data to a third-party broker.


  • PS3 cross-game chat confirmed by EU PSN manager?

    We’ve seen a lot of “confirmations” for the much-rumored and believed-to-be-impending arrival of cross-game chat to the Sony PS3. Here’s another, this…