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  • Why No One Will Sign Your NDA

    NDA_secrets_jan10.jpgA year ago ReadWriteWeb published an article in defense of embargoes with an outline of how startups can effectively manage embargoes and special releases. Lately, in place of embargoes we’ve received a few requests to sign non-disclosure agreements. While this may simply be a rookie mistake made by early-stage entrepreneurs, NDAs and embargoes are completely different requests. Sending an NDA is absurd for a number of reasons.

    Sponsor

    secret_nda_jan10.jpg1. Confidentiality: You just sent a confidentiality agreement to a news outlet. Why the heck would you want a journalist to keep your secrets? Shouldn’t we be revealing the brilliance of your products and services?

    2. Legality: An NDA is a legally binding agreement between two parties. As Andrew Warner of Mixergy puts it in his post,”I’m not signing a legal document without a lawyer.”

    3. Trust: In Venture Hacks’ Pitching Hacks book the author advises against presenting an NDA to VCs saying, “You might think an NDA is a barrier to entry for your competitors. Instead, it’s just a barrier to getting funded.” You likely have competitors in the space and if you’re not first to market then we’ve already seen them. An NDA is making you more difficult than your competitors. We’d rather write the story about the person who works with us than against us.

    Photo Credits: Marcin Wichary and See-ming Lee

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  • The Amazing Macro Shots of BBC’s Life [Photography]

    We’ve covered Life, BBC’s just-as-jaw-dropping follow-up to Planet Earth, a few times before. Mike Gunton, the program’s executive producer, offers more insight into how they made nature look so incredible.

    In this clip, Gunton explains some of the cutting-edge technology that is instrumental to capturing nature in such an impressive fashion. In addition to the advances in time lapse high-speed, and low-light photography, Gunton mentions the development of the “Heligimbal,” a stabilized mount which allows photographers to fill an entire frame with action from over a kilometer away.

    On the advances in macro photography, Gunton notes: “[There are] such advances that actually you don’t really feel like you’re in a miniature world anymore. So, for example, when you’re with a column of ants on the march, it feels like you’re with a herd of wildebeests on the migration…Emotionally what that’ll do is it’ll make you feel like you’re really part of their lives”

    Mike Gunton will be speaking at the Entertainment Gathering conference in Monterey, California, next month.







  • School kids can design video games on PCs with Microsoft’s latest Kodu tool

    koduMicrosoft is launching its Kodu video game design tools to the PC in the hopes of igniting interest in computer programming among children ages nine and up.

    Developed by Microsoft Research, Kodu launched last spring on the Xbox 360 as a learning tool that taught the basics of game development. Kids could use it to build game characters and the worlds where they live. They can easily morph the terrain of a game level and create logic loops that show the consequences of what happens after a trigger event. Matt MacLaurin, a director of the Redmond FUSE (Future Social Experiences) Lab and creator of Kodu, said in an interview that Kodu has been downloaded more than 200,000 times for use with the Xbox 360.

    Now the PC version has been launched in a beta test. MacLaurin is more optimistic that schools will be able to adopt the PC version on a larger scale, since they don’t need an Xbox 360 anymore and because they can now export their data to share it with anyone. The PC version can be used with a mouse and keyboard, while the original version worked with a game controller.

    MacLaurin said the tools introduce kids to programming, design, and math skills. And it does so in a way that doesn’t put kids to sleep. Anyone can create a game within minutes of trying it out.

    Kodu users have been able to share their creations on Xbox Live Community Games Channel. MacLarin got the idea for Kodu from his daughter. When she was three years old, she watched MacLaurin’s wife browse her Facebook page. He realized that most kids interacted passively with computer content, not knowing they can create their own worlds. It took a couple of years to create Kodu. Almost a year after its release, 60 educational institutions are using it to introduce children to programming.

    In Victoria, Australia, Kodu has been introduced in a pilot program at 26 schools. MacLarin estimates kids have created hundreds of thousands of games with Kodu. Fan sites such as Kodux.com share information among creators.


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  • Manoi Go break-dancing robot blows our minds

    We’ve got no idea how this nugget of glorious mechanized dance snuck past us — we’ll blame it on the horror we experienced while watching Doka Harumi’s robot dance routine. Another entrant in that same Japanese robo-dance contest, this red-blazered drone brings the pain, the funk, and all necessary accessories to rock your world. We’re not kidding — if you don’t like this, you don’t like technology. Skip past the break for not one, but two, doses of that mind-altering video action.

    Continue reading Manoi Go break-dancing robot blows our minds

    Manoi Go break-dancing robot blows our minds originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 12 Jan 2010 21:48:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Brave new world: China attacks Google

    Based on the phrasing and response, it’s clear that Google believes this attack was launched by parties working for the government of China. We can also assume that the “relevant US authorities” (FBI) agree with them. I wonder if the targeted companies used software with similar vulnerabilities.

    Official Google Blog: A new approach to China

    Like many other well-known organizations, we face cyber attacks of varying degrees on a regular basis. In mid-December, we detected a highly sophisticated and targeted attack on our corporate infrastructure originating from China that resulted in the theft of intellectual property from Google. However, it soon became clear that what at first appeared to be solely a security incident–albeit a significant one–was something quite different.

    First, this attack was not just on Google. As part of our investigation we have discovered that at least twenty other large companies from a wide range of businesses–including the Internet, finance, technology, media and chemical sectors–have been similarly targeted. We are currently in the process of notifying those companies, and we are also working with the relevant U.S. authorities.

    Second, we have evidence to suggest that a primary goal of the attackers was accessing the Gmail accounts of Chinese human rights activists. Based on our investigation to date we believe their attack did not achieve that objective. Only two Gmail accounts appear to have been accessed, and that activity was limited to account information (such as the date the account was created) and subject line, rather than the content of emails themselves…

    … We launched Google.cn in January 2006 in the belief that the benefits of increased access to information for people in China and a more open Internet outweighed our discomfort in agreeing to censor some results. At the time we made clear that “we will carefully monitor conditions in China, including new laws and other restrictions on our services. If we determine that we are unable to achieve the objectives outlined we will not hesitate to reconsider our approach to China.”

    These attacks and the surveillance they have uncovered–combined with the attempts over the past year to further limit free speech on the web–have led us to conclude that we should review the feasibility of our business operations in China. We have decided we are no longer willing to continue censoring our results on Google.cn, and so over the next few weeks we will be discussing with the Chinese government the basis on which we could operate an unfiltered search engine within the law, if at all. We recognize that this may well mean having to shut down Google.cn, and potentially our offices in China.

    The decision to review our business operations in China has been incredibly hard, and we know that it will have potentially far-reaching consequences. We want to make clear that this move was driven by our executives in the United States, without the knowledge or involvement of our employees in China who have worked incredibly hard to make Google.cn the success it is today. We are committed to working responsibly to resolve the very difficult issues raised.

    This may be the end of Google’s services in China. We should expect their share price to fall in the morning. Google’s “evil score” has now dropped to the lowest possible level for a public corporation.

    Update 1/13/10: There’s a lot of commentary this morning, including comparisons to how the USSR hobbled itself by shutting out access to world knowledge. I’m wondering if Google’s increasingly powerful and ubiquitous machine translation services played a precipitating role. Language has been the cultural equivalent of the Himalayas – preserving China from cultural invasion. I suspect the Chinese government is very concerned about widespread direct unmediated access to English language materials.

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  • Healthy Comfort Food That’s Gluten-Free: Quinoa, Lentil Soup

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    Feeling instant warmth and joy is achievable when you create your own soup. And this recipe is comfort food like no other and so easy to make — but you don’t have to tell anyone that. I love to promote healthy food that tastes amazing and this … Read more

     

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  • An Elegant Grey Galley Kitchen Remodel PointClickHome

    I am on an improvement spree right now in my rental kitchen. It’s old and worn, and sorely in need of freshening up. So I have been looking for inspiration, and this elegant yet cost-conscious remodel at PointClickHome caught my eye. Read on to see how they updated the cabinets, created a gorgeous stove nook, and added touches of glamour here and there.

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  • Google’s China Stance: More about Business than Thwarting Evil

    bej80304121112.hmediumWriting about China as an American is always tricky, but nowhere near as tricky as what an American company faces doing business there. Let me say upfront, I don’t envy Google. The company has had more success in China than a lot of other big Valley names, but isn’t and will likely never be the market leader. And to get that far, many in the West feel Google has had to compromise its “do-no-evil” ethics by agreeing to some of the government’s censorship rules. Google has been damned either way: China is too big of a market to ignore, but getting as far as they have has come at a steep price to their reputation and international (read: Western) integrity.

    Enter the now famous blog post (that was notably, only on the English-language site) saying that Google was no longer playing by the Chinese government’s rules and was prepared to close down Chinese operations if it came to that. Valley elites erupted into applause on Twitter and blogs saying Google was showing more backbone than the US government and was a model of integrity for the world.

    I’ll give Google this much: They’re taking a bad situation and making something good out of it, both from a human and business point of view. I’m not saying human rights didn’t play into the decision, but this was as much about business. Lest we get too self-righteous as Westerners, we should remember three things:

    1. Google’s business was not doing well in China. Does anyone really think Google would be doing this if it had top market share in the country? For one thing, I’d guess that would open them up to shareholder lawsuits. Google is a for-profit, publicly-held company at the end of the day. When I met with Google’s former head of China Kai-fu Lee in Beijing last October, he noted that one reason he left Google was that it was clear the company was never going to substantially increase its market share or beat Baidu. Google has clearly decided doing business in China isn’t worth it, and are turning what would be a negative into a marketing positive for its business in the rest of the world.

    2. Google is ready to burn bridges. This is not how negotiations are done in China, and Google has done well enough there to know that. You don’t get results by pressuring the government in a public, English-language blog post. If Google were indeed still working with the government this letter would not have been posted because it has likely slammed every door shut, as a long-time entrepreneur in China Marc van der Chijs and many others said on Twitter. This was a scorched earth move, aimed at buying Google some good will in the rest of the world; Chinese customers and staff were essentially just thrown under the bus.

    3. This is only going to be a trickier issue in the next decade. Think the Shanda acquisition of Mochi Media was an isolated event? Think again. Chinese Web companies are building huge cash hoards and valuable stock currencies and it’s still a comparatively young Web market. Increasingly, these companies could be likely buyers of US startups—not the other way around. Will the Valley’s rhetoric stick then?

    This may be the most shocking part: In retrospect Yahoo has played China far better than Google. It pulled out of the country years ago, knowing it wouldn’t win and owns nearly 40% of the Alibaba, a company that very definitely knows how to grow in China. Long-time journalist Bill Bishop —who hasn’t always agreed with my China coverage in the past—pointed this out, adding “Not often Yahoo looks smarter than Google.”

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  • Stream your home media files with the WirelessMediaStick from Home Server Technologies Inc (HSTi)

    The WirelessMediaStick shares content files over your home network

    Get ready to ditch those bulky set-top boxes and clunky media servers. The WirelessMediaStick from HSTi is a media streamer the size of a thumb drive that shares content from any computer on your home network with any USB-enabled media playback device. Connect the WirelessMediaStick to your Blu-ray or DVD player, TV, DVR, or even a digital picture frame, and you can play movies, music, and photos over your wireless network…

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  • In Defense of Play: What Are Your Most Fun Kitchen Tools?

    2010_01_13-tools.jpgWhat are the most fun tools in your kitchen? You know, the ones that, regardless of functionality and usefulness, are just pleasant to handle? Do you have toys tools that you make excuses to use? Here are a few of my favorite fun tools.

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  • Your Deadly TV, DNA Dating and More

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    Each morning, we dish out a few links we love.

    You know those fancy running shoes you spent a fortune on? Studies show that they might be bad for your joints … even worse than walking in stilettos!

    Got skin woes? Naturopathic remedies might … Read more

     

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  • Stanford Hospital Shoots Human Tissue Around in Pneumatic Tubes [Zoom]

    7,000 times a day, the staff at Stanford Hospital launch a sample or some other vital object through their four miles of pneumatic tubing. Because the internet is good at sending emails, but not chunks of stomach lining.

    While pneumatic tube systems are not exactly hot new technology, this one isn’t about to be replaced. It’s still the absolute fastest way to transport a small object across a quarter-mile wide hospital.

    This one has 124 stations, 141 transfer units, 99 inter-zone connectors and 29 blowers. The cylinders that hold whatever is being transferred can scoot along at up to 25 feet per second, and they’ve never gotten stuck along the way.

    I wish these systems were in use in more places today. It’s still entertaining to pass cash to a bank teller through a tube after this many years. Where’s my pneumatic tube restaurant? [Stanford]







  • Vuzix display Wrap 920AR augmented reality glasses

    Playing a maze game designed by a PHD student from Columbia University using the Vizux Wra...

    Forget looking at the world through rose colored glasses – try these on for size. Video eyewear manufacturer Vuzix has unveiled its Wrap 920AR glasses prototype that features cameras mounted to the lenses that project real world images onto LCD’s inside the glasses, seamlessly mixing real-world and computer generated imagery.
    With the LCD’s offering the view of a 67” display from ten feet away and the cameras able to capture video at a resolution of 752×480 at 60fps, the application promises a myriad of uses from gaming to education and social networking.
    ..

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  • LinenMe Good Shops for Cooks

    2010_01_13-LinenMe.jpgYou know we’re big fans of linen in the kitchen. Linen is tough and lasts nearly forever, and it’s also beautiful. It can also be extra-expensive, but we have found that independent artisans offer better prices and more lovely designs for linen than mainstream kitchen shops. Here’s one of our favorite online shops for kitchen textiles: LinenMe.

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  • Mercedes-Benz E-Class Cabriolet with AIRCAP announced in Detroit

    The Mercedes-Benz 2011MY E-Class Cabriolet, on display at the Detroit Auto Show

    This week in Detroit at the North American International Auto Show, Mercedes-Benz premiered the latest addition to its popular E-Class family – the 2011MY E-Class Cabriolet. The soft-top convertible is the first car to feature Mercedes’ new AIRCAP draught-stop, an air-deflection system that greatly reduces interior wind turbulence for all four passengers, front and back. Mercedes also announced the upcoming release of the much-anticipated SLS AMG. This gull-winged beauty is a stylistic throwback to the classic 1950’s 300SL, but with the technology of today…

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  • Recipe: Fennel and Radicchio Winter Salad with Pecans

    2010_01_13-Salad.jpgWinter salads can be wonderfully impromptu affairs. This one, for instance, came out of my need for a fresh salad and one expedition to the grocery store. I just picked up a few relatively seasonal things to toss together, and the result was this crunchy, slightly bitter, tangy salad.

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  • Calculate Your Paper Impact

    The Environmental Defense Fund has a handy dandy paper calculator you can use (for free) that will show your impact, or lack there of, when it comes to paper use. Paper does create a big impact. Even though you can easily recycle it, many people don’t and even when you recycle paper there is still an impact, for example both the manufacturing process and recycling process use resources such as energy and water. Making better paper choices can help you to better conserve all sorts of resources – water, trees, energy plus limit other issues like pollution.

    best paper to use in a green office

    Using the calculator you can calculate and compare individual papers, such as if you’d like to compare the impact of a specific paper to an alternative paper choice that contains a smaller or higher recycled content. You can also compare paper groups which will help you determine the combined impact of all the paper you may generally use and compare that impact to the combined impacts of different papers you could be using that contain more recycled content.

    The paper calculator allows you to create an easy-to-read report that you can use to help your company, community, non-profit or other organization make the best paper decisions possible. Plus this tool will clue you into the environmental impacts your decisions create. I thought the tool was very simple to use and questions in the calculator were well explained.

    Beyond paper calculations the paper calculator page at the Environmental Defense Fund offers links to more useful info such as…

    • The environmental benefits of recycled paper.
    • Resources that can help you make smarter paper purchasing decisions.
    • An excellent glossary of paper and eco-minded terms to browse.

    [image via stock.xchng]

    Post from: Blisstree

    Calculate Your Paper Impact

  • DS homebrew – Dice Roller DS v1.1

    Are you looking for some nifty dice rolling homebrew app for your Nintedo DS? Well, perhaps you might like Wisen’s Dice Roller DS. He recently updated the brew to add more features and various other improvements.
     
     
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  • BMW expanding its electric presence with Active-E leases

    bmw_active-e_electric02
    You’ve probably heard about the BMW Mini E lease program — 500 or so of the little buggers were let into the wild to be given real-life, long-term testing by regular people. It seems like the program was a success, because BMW is doing it again, this time with their Active-E (Activeeee!) concept, a more practical car for most people, but also mighty expensive.

    The Active-E is a converted 1-series, yet weighs nearly 4000 pounds and as a result, acceleration and handling are probably nothing to write home about. Still, I’m sure it’d be a nice car to get around in, although you’ll be paying through the nose: $850/month, plus a grueling application process.

    Like the Mini E, the Active-E is extremely pre-production, so all these specs are probably going to change, I suppose most notably the weight and range, as batteries get more efficient over the next couple years of testing.

    [image credit: Chuck Squatriglia/Wired.com]


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  • Everything you need to know about Halo: Reach

    halo-reach
    Bungie has done a great job of making fans salivate over Halo: Reach by keeping most the aspects of the game under wraps. Thus far, all the info we have been able to discern has come from the trailers which Bungie released–until now. Yesterday, leaked pictures (shown below) of an upcoming Game Informer magazine hit the web, and the information is quite revealing. It looks like the team at Bungie is going all out on this title. The magazine deals mostly with the campaign–profiling new weapons, characters, and vehicles–but tidbits regarding the multiplayer experience were included as well. All the info we have gathered is after the jump.

    Story:
    Rumors were floating around that the game would follow the book Fall of Reach, but this is not the case. The game will instead follow the Spartan soldiers, codenamed Noble Team, as they traverse the world of Reach before it is destroyed (the happenings on Reach occurred before anything in Halo 1). Given that the levels will show Reach being destroyed in a progressing manner, we infer that the game will take place over a considerable amount of time, instead of just a few days. The game is also purported to be darker than the previous Halo games. We will also be able to alter the appearance of the main protagonist, Lone Wolf, a feature new to the Halo series.

    haloreach1fin

    Gameplay:
    The biggest difference in gameplay is Bungie’s use of an overhauled graphics engine. As we saw in the in-game trailer, Reach will show a massive improvement over the graphics in Halo 3 and ODST. Reach has outsourced facial animations to Image Metrics, who have worked on titles such as Assassin’s Creed 2 and Gears of War 2. Besides better graphics, Reach will increase the scale of combat. Previously, only 20 AI characters could be on the screen at a time, but with the new engine, over 40 AI and 20 vehicles can be present! Cut-scenes have been improved as well, and are going to be more cinematic.

    The HUD is now yellow instead of blue, and the health bar has made its return, alongside the energy shield we have grown accustomed to. The motion tracker is now oval-shaped instead of the customary Halo circle. Assassinations are different as well. Instead of simply coming behind an enemy and meleeing, one must hold down the melee button; resulting in a satisfying knife slash.

    Reach is said to incorporate full stealth gameplay. You are now able to sprint via the use of equipment permutations (there are other permutations, we just don’t know what they are yet) available at certain points in the levels.

    Co-operative campaigns, splitscreening, theater, and Forge all make a triumphant return in Reach.

    haloreach4fin

    Characters:
    Reach introduces a slew of brand new characters, starting with the Noble Team, comprised of 5 Spartan III’s, and 1 Spartan II. Carter 259, Kat 320, Emile 239 (He has the skull helmet in the trailer), Jun 266 (the sniper), and Lone Wolf are the Spartan III’s (with Carter and Kat being the only original members of NT), and Jorge is a Spartan II heavy weapons specialist, and thus larger than the rest of the team. Marines similar to those in Halo 1 will be in this game, and it is possible that Human Insurrectionists will make an appearance.

    The covenant are back, and deadlier than ever. The grunts look considerably more threatening but will most likely continue to be pushovers. Elites make a return in Reach as well: they seem taller and are no longer hunched over. If Reach multiplayer allows for both Spartans and Elites, then this is a significant improvement as Elites won’t have the same hitbox issues that we’ve seen in previous versions of Halo. Jackals seem to have been replaced with “Skirmishers,” an enemy who attacks in packs and flank secure positions. They should prove to be annoying at the very least. An unfortunate change, especially for those who play with the IWHBYD skull on, is that Covenant soldiers speak in their own languages, instead of English.

    haloreach3fin

    Weapons:
    There are a few exciting changes and additions to the weapon repertoire available in Reach. The sniper, assault rifle, and magnum will be returning, but it seems the battle-rifle will be replaced with a single shot rifle dubbed the “Designated Marksman Rifle.” It’s possible they removed the BR due to its inaccurate spread, but we can’t be certain. The needler also gets an overhaul, and has been morphed into a mid-range headshot capable weapon. Due to inconsistencies in the game physics of spike and flame grenades, both have been removed. This leaves only frag and plasma grenades.

    Vehicles:
    I’ve always thought that if there are vehicles in a game, you should be able to drive them, no matter what. It seems Bungie felt the same way. We will be able to drive civilian vehicles, alongside the more common warthog. A new helicopter transport, the Falcon, has also been introduced.

    Covenent Spirits (the dropships in Halo:CE) return alongside the more powerful Phantoms, which now have a search light.

    haloreach2fin

    Our Take:
    Halo: Reach is looking to once again disrupt the first person shooter genre. The graphical overhaul is much needed, and thus far is impressive. Halo has always had a compelling storyline and the introduction of new characters, enemies, and most importantly a new world, are sure to keep players enthralled. This little sneak peak sure leaves me wanting more, and I cannot wait until the Beta is available to the public.


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