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  • “Big Brother” Is Watching…

    “Big Brother” is watching…as you discipline your kids. 

    Child image: sxc.hu

    Child image: sxc.hu

     In today’s world of modern electronics (cell phones with cameras and videos, iPhones, Blackberrys, etc.), your activities and discipline with your children in public can easily be recorded, shown to authorities, and/or posted on the Internet.

    You find so many “experts,” who may not think as you do in disciplining kids.  Your verbal expression, your actions and your activities with your youngsters might not meet with their approval.

    So….they decide to play the “expert” and record you.  No matter that this is an invasion of privacy.  No matter that they don’t have all the facts.  If what you’re doing is different from what they think they would do, they find it a heady expression of importance in recording you, even reporting you.

    Yes, there are instances when a child is in danger.  But other times, the situation may be one for which the observer doesn’t  have all the facts.

    What do you think should be done if a child is throwing a tantrum in public?  If you’re a parent, you’ve probably had to deal with this and may or may not have yourself reprimanded.

    Post from: Blisstree

    “Big Brother” Is Watching…

  • Virgin Ads Too Sexy for Canadians?

    Quote:

    City pulls ads from bus shelters


    Off the bus. An advertisement for Virgin Mobile was pulled out from some Mississauga bus shelters by City officials.

    Two Canadian cities including Mississauga have pulled a pair of billboard advertisements for Virgin Mobile after receiving complaints.
    The ads, featuring a man in a passionate kiss with a woman while touching her buttocks, with a tagline “Hook up fearlessly,” did not sit well with the City officials.
    Ed De Grosbois, director of business services for the City of Mississauga, said the city removed the ads because they may be perceived as sexual exploitation of either men or women.
    "Many of these campaigns would be quite suitable for a magazine, but putting them into a bus shelter where there’s young children I think is the main issue," De Grosbois told The Canadian Press.
    Three versions of the ad from the cellphone provider were being displayed at about 50 bus stops around Calgary. It’s unclear just how many billboards were exhibited in Mississauga bus shelters.
    A spokesperson from Virgin Mobile Canada confirmed that some ads were taken down in Mississauga after some “minor complaints.”
    Officials from Canada’s national advertising watchdog said they have not had any complaints about the Virgin Mobile ads.
    “We never monitor advertising, but we always react to complaints,” said Danielle Lefrancois, spokeswoman for the group. “We would have to consider the nature of the complaint itself.”
    Virgin Mobile spokesman Nathan Rosenberg told media the company doesn’t see what all the fuss is about.


    Honestly, who the hell has enough time to complain about stuff like this? Im with Virgin here… I don’t see what all the fuss is about. They should have replaced them with the ones of two men kissing, just to stick it to the people who complained!

  • Google Introduces Click-To-Call Mobile Ads

    Google recently notified AdWords advertisers that it will display business phone numbers on mobile ads, allowing smartphone users to call the business with a tap.  Advertisers will be charged just as they would if a user clicked through to their website.

    As Rob points out at Phandroid, this is a concrete example of how Google will make even more money as mobile web use grows. And, of course, spreading Android far and wide will only grow mobile web use more quickly.

    These click-to-call ads on their own may seem a minor detail, but down the road we could see simple features like this combined with location-based and interest-based targeting to create ads that advertisers will pay a real premium for. And the more money Google can make from mobile advertising, the more its in their interest to continue growing the Android platform.

    Source: search engine land


  • Nokia concept cellphone ditches batteries for carbohydrates

    coke powered mobile phone_02

    Eco Factor: Concept cellphone runs on fuel cells powered by sugar.

    With the sources of lithium depleting at a fast rate, their users including electric car and cellphone manufacturers are thinking about alternatives. While auto makers are thinking about leasing batteries instead of selling them with an EV, industrial designers are taking up the task to develop cellphones that do without these expensive batteries.

    (more…)

  • No Spend Month: Week 1

    Week 1 of No Spend Month has been successful, if I do say-so-myself.

    Working really cuts into my urges to spend and shop! haha.

    To remind everyone, I only want to purchase essentials for the month of January. My goal in this whole process is to save and appreciate life without having to buy and consume mindlessly.

     Luckily, I have three movie gift certificates from work, so that is helping in the entertainment department.

    We’ve been eating in, of course.  I had left over tomato sauce in the freezer, so we had that, among other things. I am realizing more and more how much food I do have at times when I think I have nothing! Creativity helps!

    The challenge is to find fun activities that do not involve spending for the both of us. When I’m alone, no problem. I can read, surf the net, CLEAN, organize, etc. But when we’re together, it’s like…what do you want to do? I dunno, what do you want to do?
    Anyone have this issue? Please offer suggestions on things to do. The problem is that I tend to sleep most of the day since I’m on the night shift schedule, so then we need activities to do at night…

    I do have to confess though. I have spent on something that may not have been an essential.
    .
    .
    .
    I bought new pillows today.
    But in my rationalized defense, my pillows were over a year old, flattened, and making it difficult to fall asleep. Also, I bought cheap-o ones from Walmart, and only two (I have four total on my bed!), sooooo we’ll call it an essential.

    In other news, I got the night off, giving me 6 nights off in a row! I don’t go back until Wednesday, so Mirza and I can enjoy the rest of his vacation until school starts!


  • Buscar “cerca de mí” con Google en el móvil

    Nada de aplicación aparte o compra de un servicio establecido – de momento – la integración de las búsquedas de lo que está cerca del usuario en movilidad la han hecho directamente en la versión web del buscador, sin que el usuario tenga que ir a la búsqueda en el mapa. De momento sólo en terminales iPhone y Android y para Estados Unidos, como explican en el buscador oficial, donde detallan también casos de uso que podemos esperar: necesitamos un sitio para comer y realizamos una búsqueda de sitios “que estén cerca”. Lo novedoso no es ya la funcionalidad – que ya la tienen en mapas – sino que la ponen en el lugar más visible de las búsquedas desde el teléfono.

    El buscador devuelve no sólo información – localización, teléfono – sino también valoraciones y opiniones de otros usuarios, ya sean las que agrega Google o las que recoge directamente. Un paso más en pro de ganar la lucha por ser el interfaz en el internet móvil y la búsqueda por localización y hacerse con el que se presume próximo gran mercado de la publicidad online, el de los servicios locales.


  • Artist Thinking vs. Lawyer Thinking

    Darren alerts us to an interesting writeup by a performance artist who can’t do a certain performance because of licensing issues. It’s not that the musicians don’t want their work used by the artist. In fact, they’ve spoken and they would love for their music to be used. But, of course, they don’t own the copyrights on their own music, so the performer needs to work through all the licensing issues, which is simply too much of a pain — so the whole performance gets dropped:


    The thing is, I’ve spent a lot of time learning how to make art. I have spent no time learning how to negotiate the licensing of music. These are very different skills! It’s bizarre that in order to share my art, I need to have the latter skill set, or hire someone who does. The lack of that skill set results in my work being kept secret.

    It’s really backward. I would love to talk to artists directly, and negotiate something that’s mutually beneficial. Right? My work calls attention to their work. I’m a big fan of their work. I want to support their art and their livelihood. I want everyone to know about and support their work. It’s such a natural alliance, but it’s perverted by this system we have now.

    Of course, what’s really amusing here is that it’s the same people who berate us for suggesting that artists need to either become musical entrepreneurs or hire someone who understands the business side of things, who will say that there’s absolutely nothing wrong with these same artists having to become experts in the byzantine world of music licensing — a world in which even many lawyers remain very confused.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • Netgear Push2TV Links Your Laptop to Your TV, Sans Wires (Sorta) [Television]

    With digital content becoming more prevalent, some of us want to directly link our computers to our TVs quickly and easily. But we don’t all have a dedicated HTPC to make life simple. Enter Netgear’s Push2TV wireless display adapter.

    Netgear’s solution involves the use of a box which picks up a signal from your laptop and feeds your desktop to the TV via HDMI, eliminating the need for your lappy to be tethered to your entertainment center. The only downside is that it requires an Intel-based computer with Wireless Display technology built in.

    Push2TV will be available this month, bundled with select laptops at Best Buy, or sold separately for $100. Dongle plz? [Netgear]







  • need advice on insurance

    Ive been a type 1 diabetic for 20 yrs, on insulin pump. My a1c run in the 6’s. I have insurance now on me and wife and 2 kids. Keeps going up. Im up to 1500 mnth now. Im self employed. Im getting where I cant afford it. Its 1500 deductible. Looking for any advice. THanks
  • Intel Bringing Moblin, Moorestown to Smartphones — LG GW990

    Image credit: Engadget

    Intel demonstrated the first smartphone running the Moorestown processor during the keynote at the CES tonight. The LG GW990 was demonstrated on-stage running Moblin for the OS. The phone was able to easily handle complex multi-tasking, and was very responsive.

    Moblin is an interesting choice for a smartphone OS, and could be the dark horse in that area. Smartphones are small computers, and what better way to handle them than with a computing OS. The GW990 will be out later this year.

  • A Tentativa de Alcançar o Céu

    Há tempos,venho observado varias criticas aos arranha-céus neste fórum(que ironia,né?),pessoas que por falta de conhecimentos acham que isso é recente e sempre de uma forma projorativa tenta fazer uma ligação de um arranha-céu ao falo.
    Pois bem,neste threadh tentarei mostrar,que o sonho do homen de alcançar o céu(verticalização) é muito antigo,mas as construções verticais geralmente são feitas com um proposito.

    Você pode até não ser cristão,mas concerteza já deve ter ouvido falar da história da "Torre de Babel",que esta relatado na Biblia,no qual o objetivo era se alcançar o céu,não,a obsessão do homen em alcançar o céu não teve sua origem com o cristianismo,mas o fato é que ate na biblia esta obsessão já estava registrado

    sapo.pt

    Piramides do Egito,construidas a milhares de anos,tinha objetivos funerarios,e talvez também religoso

    lycos.es

    Pagode,se originaram inicialmente por volta do seculo III A.C no Nepal,de pois se espalhou para varios países asiaticos,geralmente tem função religosa(budismo)

    travelblog.org

    Shibam,fundada há mais de 1.700 anos,foi a primeira cidade do mundo a ser planejada verticalmente,em boa parte para evitar os ataques de beduínos ou até mesmo a imundação da cidade(que fica em um vale)

    yiesf.com

    Igrejas e Catedrais Goticas,comun na Europa da Idade Media,onde a religiosidade era forte,talvez uma ligação do céu com a terra?

    wayfaring.info

    Piramide de Kukulcán,construida pelos Maias no seculo XII D.C,mostando que a verticalização esta presente em praticamentes toda as culturas e epocas,e para varias tinha funções religosas e também astrologica

    members.cox

    Minaretes das Mesquitas,de tamanhos e arquitetura variada,uma forma para o fiel se orientar,e para ajudar na dispersão do som,nas chamadas para as orações no islamismo

    students.ou.edu

    Met Life Tower(O mais alto,nesta foto),construido em 1909 e com 213 metros,foi um dos primeiros arranha-céus construidos no mundo,ainda de pé

    inetours.com

    Burj Dubai,recentemente inaugurado,é atualmente o maior edificio do mundo


    pt.prontohotel.com

    Agora,discorram sobre o assunto!:cheers:

  • Vietnamese Prides

    Since there are not so many Vietnamese people know about inventions and famous creatures by Vietnamese people and famous Vietnamese people.
    I want to create this thread to introduce the work by Vietnamese people and the people that we, Vietnamese, are proud of.
    I hope others can add more so Vietnamese members here can be proud of Vietnam and Vietnamese people.

    —————————
    I will start with the two guys in scientific fields.

    Bui Tuong Phong, a Vietnamese Computer Graphics pioneer
    Source:
    http://www.cs.utah.edu/dept/history/#phong-ref
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bui_tuong_phong

    Bui Tuong Phong, born in Hanoi, Vietnam, is regarded as one of the pioneers of Computer Graphics for his inventions of Phong reflection model and the Phong shading interpolation method, techniques widely used in computer graphics.
    Phong’s lighting model is still one of the most widely used methods for illumination in computer graphics.

    He joint Stanford University as an assistant professor after receiving his PhD from University of Utah.

    It is a pity that he died a very young age. Otherwise, he could continue contributing to Computer Graphics research.

    —————————————————
    I am doing research in Computer Graphics and I’m very proud of this guy :banana:

    >>
    The work of a Vietnamese Mathematician, Ngo Bao Chau, was selected as one of top 10 Scientific Discoveries
    Source: http://www.time.com/time/specials/pa…944435,00.html

    Ngo Bao Chau, born in Hanoi, Vietnam, a professor at Paris-Sud 11 University (France), is currently invited to work at Institute for Advanced Study (IAS) in Princeton, NJ, USA.

    His roof of a Fundamental Lemma Is Listed One of the TIME’s Top 10 Scientific Discoveries of 2009.

    He was awarded the Clay Research Award in 2004. He also brought two gold medals for Vietnam in the IMO contests. 🙂

  • Make Your Own Online Magazine From Your Flickr/Facebook Photos With YouTellYou

    We love site-building and story-telling applications, and social webizens love sharing their content – particularly multimedia content – in new and compelling ways.

    YouTellYou is a fun and simple tool that allows users to grab, annotate, tag and share their pictures in an online magazine-type format. Users can pull in photos from Smugmug, Facebook, Flickr or one’s own computer, then go to town in a frenzy of sequences, captions and true pictorial story-weaving.

    Sponsor

    In about 10 minutes, we created this story about SxSW 2009. We were able to get access to all the needed Flickr photos through a simple interface. Pics were then organized into layouts of one or two photos per section with optional captions for most layouts.

    When we published, we were pleased to see links with each photo to enlarge it or to find the original URL for each pic. The finished product also has a thorough commenting system and the option to share zines via email and Twitter.

    Our wishlist for this app would be a drag-and-drop interface for pulling photos into the magazine, Facebook Connect for easier account creation, some kind of theming for finished zines, the ability to add photos from other users and the ability to reblog or share the content we created in more ways. Finally, the site navigation and overall design needs improvement; however, for a free app with no advertising, we can’t complain too much.

    We’re torn on whether we personally would use the app again – for most on the RWW team, it’d be worth the effort to just build a webpage from scratch. But for end users, this kind of tool is indicative of a trend for amateur content creation and sharing in more polished ways than a simple Flickr slideshow or Facebook set.

    What do you think – would you use YouTellYou to tell a story with your photos? Let us know what you think of the app in the comments.

    Discuss


  • Five Disruptive Biotech Ideas to Watch in the Coming Decade

    David Walt wrote:

    It was a remarkable decade. There were so many advances in biotech during the first decade of the millennium that it is hard to choose the most important ones so I’d prefer to focus on five transformational biotechnologies coming in the future.

    1. Who would have guessed that by the end of the decade, what took 10 years and several billion dollars to generate the first human genome sequence, could be done in a few days at roughly 10,000 times lower cost? This trend of increasing throughput and decreasing cost will continue with a number of new technologies on the horizon. Data processing and bioinformatics will become the bottleneck as the need grows to assemble and compare large numbers of genomes. Moore’s Law just can’t keep up.

    2. Genome wide association studies (GWAS), the approach that scans for markers across the genomes of many individuals to spot small variations that might be associated with a particular disease, have identified only a small percentage of the underlying DNA markers linked to hereditary disease, even for common diseases that are known to run in families. With the availability of many full human sequences, the identification of rarer, and perhaps more meaningful single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), is in the works. Microarrays are already available with millions of SNPs. With better sequence information, the content on microarrays will improve. The next round of genome wide association studies will be conducted and we will know if the “missing heritability” can be found.

    3. Cancer will be cured in some cases by sequencing genomes of tissues from cancer patients and comparing them to non-cancerous tissues from the same individual. The underlying defects in pathways will be determined by examining differences in sequence and appropriate customized treatments can then be employed. Personalized medicine will finally arrive at least for some cancers and probably for other diseases as well.

    4. Developments in bioanalytical science will begin to have an impact on clinical diagnostics. There has been a revolution in imaging technology that can provide increasingly high-resolution pictures of the smallest components of the cell. These techniques are beginning to be applied to monitor living cells in real-time, albeit in laboratory environments, not inside the body. Look for these methods to advance and migrate into the clinic where label-free imaging will be conducted to identify lesions at the sub-cellular level.

    5. Single molecule measurements have been all the rage the last decade, starting with fundamental physics and now moving toward biomedical research applications. Such capability will lead to more sensitive measurements of biomarkers that have not even been detected yet. The relevance of these markers to disease and wellness will start to be uncovered but don’t expect immediate clinical applications. These things take time.

    While these thoughts and predictions are the most exciting from my perspective, there is no doubt that we will be disappointed in the pace of progress in some areas and surprised by discoveries and technologies that are not even contemplated right now. As we reach the end of the decade and the start of a new one, I have high hopes for the new technologies and the discoveries they will enable.

    [Editor’s Note: This is part of a series of posts from Xconomists and other technology leaders from around the country who are weighing in with the Top 5 innovations they’ve seen in their respective fields the past 10 years, or the Top 5 disruptive technologies that will impact the next decade.]







  • Sony not publishing God of War Trilogy in Japan, it’s Capcom’s

    The God of War Trilogy is all set and raring to go out in te Japanese market. However, one important tiny detail seems to have been overlooked by the curious public, and it’s just so happens to

  • Tablet Fever: How Apple Could Go Where No Computer Maker Has Gone Before

    World Wide Wade
    Wade Roush wrote:

    After a steady crescendo over the last several years, the talk in the mediasphere about a new tablet computer from Apple has reached deafening proportions. With an actual product announcement now expected on January 27 (at least, according to the Wall Street Journal, which cites “sources in a position to know”), Apple may finally be on the verge of providing some official data to quell the many and oft-conflicting rumors.

    I’m as curious as all of my tech-journalist colleagues about what Apple will reveal. And my inner gadget freak is impatient, too. Speaking purely with my consumer hat on, I’ve long been budgeting mentally for an “iSlate” purchase sometime in 2010. There’s only one company where I’d commit sight unseen, years in advance, to dropping a grand on the next new thing, and it’s Apple.

    But what’s really been catching my interest, as we wait for news from the horse’s mouth, is the apparent strength of the market pull for Apple’s hypothetical tablet. Everybody, it seems, desperately wants the iSlate rumors to be true: bloggers, journalists, publishers, mobile application developers, generic geeks, and even average consumers. Indeed, the expectations have built up to such a pitch that if the January 27 event doesn’t materialize, or if it’s not about a tablet device, Apple’s PR team will have global-scale disappointment to deal with.

    The details don’t seem to matter. Whether the device is called the iSlate or the iPad or the MacBook Touch; whether its screen measures 7 inches diagonally or 9 or 11; whether it costs $600 or $1,000; whether it’s primarily designed as an e-reader or a gaming pad or keyboardless netbook—most observers seem to agree that the Apple tablet will be über-cool, that the company will sell millions of units, and that 2010 will be the year of the tablet.

    Whether or not you buy into that consensus (and I do, more or less, though there are also a few dissenters), you have to admit that all this enthusiasm is a little strange, given that the market has shown so little interest in tablet computers up to now.

    Tablets are a very old idea—in fact, the first computer that can rightly be called a PC, Alan Kay’s 1968 Dynabook, was a tablet device. (The Dynabook concept evolved into the Xerox Alto, which inspired the Apple Lisa and the Apple Macintosh, which eventually spawned the Apple iPhone, which paved the way for the alleged iSlate—so in a way, personal computing is now coming full circle.) But it’s a product category that has never quite matched up with an identifiable consumer need.

    Apple’s Newton was essentially a small tablet, and Steve Jobs himself killed the product in 1997 after disappointing sales and embarrassments over the device’s suboptimal handwriting recognition capabilities. Full PCs with touchscreens and pen interfaces have been on the market since 2001, when Microsoft introduced a tablet version of Windows, but they’ve never sold more than a few hundred thousand units a year, and have never caught on outside a few specialized habitats, such as hospitals, shipping and logistics operations, surveying and mapping, and the military.

    So, what accounts for the dissonance here? Why are the same consumers who have been so apathetic about the tablet form-factor in the past suddenly so excited about a possible Apple version? I think there are several things going on.

    First, as Pen Computing Magazine founder Conrad Blickenstorfer has pointed out, most of the tablets built to date have suffered from the same set of fatal drawbacks. On the input side, if you’re going to dispense with a physical keyboard, then you’d better have either perfect handwriting recognition, an efficient virtual keyboard, or …Next Page »







  • Chevrolet Aveo RS concept proves small hatches are ready for a renaissance

    Filed under: , , , ,

    Chevrolet Aveo RS concept – Click above for high-res image gallery

    If by chance we thought about the Chevrolet Aveo at all during the past several years, it was usually because of its unfortunate styling and cheap feel. Starting with next week’s 2010 Detroit Auto Show, Chevy is out to change the Aveo’s image into a product that we might actually desire. The process begins with the Aveo RS concept, which provides a preview of what to expect from the next-generation production Aveo when it arrives in showrooms sometime next year.

    The B-segment of small cars in the U.S. is shaping up to be a real battle royale with the new Ford Fiesta arriving soon, Fiat bringing over the stylish 500, the Volkswagen Polo and, of course, the incumbent Honda Fit and Toyota Yaris. It remains to be seen how much the segment will grow unless gas prices start climb again. Regardless, those of us who appreciate good small cars are certainly in for more feast than famine in the next several years. Follow the jump to learn more about Chevy’s redesigned entry in the resurging small car segment.

    Continue reading Chevrolet Aveo RS concept proves small hatches are ready for a renaissance

    Chevrolet Aveo RS concept proves small hatches are ready for a renaissance originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 08 Jan 2010 00:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Boeing: The New Solar Thermal King, In Patents

    Boeing is hardly a high-profile name in the world of solar thermal power development — firms like BrightSource Energy or Abengoa spring to mind a lot quicker. But Boeing, as it turns out, is the lord of solar thermal technology patents, according to a cleantech law firm.

    A patent tracker by Heslin Rothenberg Farley & Mesiti […]