Blog

  • Facebook is Coming To Your PS3 This Wednesday


    PS3Facebook
    Hey guys and girls, I am sure you may have caught the news from last week about supposed integration of PS3 and your Facebook account (leaked picture) and this evening Sony Computer Entertainment has confirmed its entrance into social media. Though you won’t be able to get full functionality of your Facebook management (like updating your status), Sony says the first baby steps of integration will be available this Thursday Wednesday under new 3.10 firmware update. Check out video below for a walk through.

    From PS3 Blog:
    Hi everyone, here’s an early peek at PlayStation 3 (PS3) firmware update (v3.10). The latest update incorporates Facebook into the PS3 experience. By linking your PlayStation Network account to your Facebook account, you will have the option for the PS3 to automatically update your Facebook News Feed with Trophy and PlayStation Store activity. This update also enables developers to set specific criteria in their titles to publish additional game information to your News Feed. You can then check out your updates, and those of your friends, on Facebook, Twitter, and other social media favorites through the PS3’s built-in web browser.

    This is just the beginning of our integration with Facebook and we are looking forward to adding new features enhancing the experience in future updates.

    Additional highlights from update 3.10 include:

    * The Photo category on the XMB has been revamped to make it easier to see more of your photos stored on the PS3.
    * The PSN Friends List has been modified based on feedback we received after update 3.00. Additionally, you can now choose a color for your PSN ID on the XMB.

  • World’s smallest NAS: the Thecus N0204

    large_img_137So this is kind of cool. It’s a NAS that uses 2.5″ hard drives, making for a much smaller form factor. In fact, it’s about the size of a standard USB hard drive enclosure.

    The Thecus N0204 will use either HDD or SSD drives, with a maximum capacity of 1TB. Due to the fact that the NAS only has two bays, you are of course restricted to RAID 0, 1, or JBOD. The best part? The price. The Thecus N0204 retails for just $150; you’ll have to provide your own drives, though.

    The Thecus also functions as a print server, which could be handy. It’s compatible with both Mac and PC networks and will work with Wi-Fi orGigabit LAN via the ethernet connection on the back of the unit.

    [via Legit Reviews]


  • Video: Left 4 Dead 4 NES


    The “de-make” is a class of indie game where a popular new game is crushed into a low-fidelity environment; we’ve seen D-Pad Hero, Gang Garrison II (my favorite), and a whole competition based on the idea over at The Independent Gaming Source.

    The latest victim of this ridiculous trend is Left 4 Dead, which has apparently been recreated in loving 8-bit fashion by one Eric Ruth. It’s worth mentioning that it had an even more deconstructive de-make in Left 4k Dead, but this one is more extensive. Would it be too much to ask to make a zombie version of River City Ransom?

    lefty

    The game, about 30% done at this point, will be released to PC gamers in early January and will comprise all four missions from start to finish, with special infected and everything. So awesome.

    [via 1up]


  • PS3 firmware update v3.10 incoming, previewed

    Heads up to all PlayStation 3 owners! Sony has just revealed some more details about the upcoming PS3 firmware update version 3.10 which is scheduled …

  • BlackBerry Internet Service hit with data outages worldwide

    We’ve been receiving multiple reports that BlackBerry Internet Service, or BIS, is down for many people — possibly worldwide. Initially, we thought the outages were only affecting certain carriers, but users from multiple carriers have reported a service interruption for what seems to be a few hours now. Naturally, we’ll keep you updated as we receive more news, but for now we’re not quite sure what’s causing this outage as it seems to be possibly affecting BlackBerry users on a global scale and we have numbers of around 75-80% in terms of users affected. Is there anyone out there currently experiencing data issues? Let us know in the comments!

  • Libel Tourism Case Dismissed Because Little Evidence Of UK Visitors Seeing The Article

    We’ve discussed how the UK is used for “libel tourism” quite frequently, since its libel laws are more draconian than elsewhere. Thus, if someone is upset about what someone else has said about them, they’ll often file a lawsuit in the UK, arguing that because the content is available online, it’s been “published” in the UK. Thankfully, the UK courts have been a bit better about cracking down on these sorts of cases when they’re obviously frivolous. In one recent case, the court rejected the claim by noting that there was little evidence many people in the UK saw the article, which was published in a South African publication. Specific evidence over how many UK readers viewed that article were not provided, but log files showed that only a grand total of 65 readers viewed the article at all over the 2 months following publication (so you could even say that if all 65 were in the UK, the “damage” was pretty limited). But, the publication did show that its site normally gets about 6.79% of its visitors from the UK, which would translate to about 4 UK visitors — not nearly enough to prove “publication” in the UK. It’s good to see the UK courts being a bit more careful about these things, though it would still be much better if the UK updated its outdated libel laws to avoid this kind of lawsuit altogether.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • Apple Store Black Friday ad

    apple-black-fridayLooks like Apple is going to be doing a Black Friday special as well. It’s not confirmed yet, but it’s not too much of a stretch to think they’ll run with this.

    Here’s what we’re seeing:

    • Up to 30% off on all iPods (but not the iPhone or the iPod shuffle)
    • Up to 25% off on all Macs
    • Up to 15% off on all accessories, Apple Software, and Apple hardware.
    • The sale is only good on the 27th; some stores will open at 6:00am.


  • Visualizar’09: Second Day of Seminars

    visualizar09_audience.jpg
    Friday, November 14, was the 2nd day of seminar at Visualizar’09. See our previous post about its Kick-Off. Xavier Alonso presented data404, a collection of sources of public information. In the following talk, Jan-Christoph Zoels discussed on how data visualization can influence public behavior towards more sustainable attitudes. Jan presented several visualizations developed by Experientia within the context of the c_life project, which was the winner of the low2no design competition. He explained the importance of visualization in the process and in the final interface design of the project. Continuing the discussion, Paolo Viterbo and Valentina Barsotti presented a particular approach to engage people by collecting urban information in real-time and returning it to the public after placing it within the environmental context. According to them, data should be part of the environment and, linked to a specific goal, it should be presented simultaneous to harmful practices in order to produce change. Back to legislation, Javier Candeira presented a way of dealing with Copyright and Public Data based on evidence-based policies.

    layar.jpg

    In the afternoon, Kerr Mitchell presented the work of the Sunlight Foundation and its Labs. He presented the Capitolwords project (which has been already featured on this blog)
    and the a mashup with the Layar project, which had been already cited by José Alonso on the first day of Visualizar. Layar is an Android mobile phone application that allows users to visualize contextualized data (in this case, public spending) by using the camera of their mobile phones.

    aaron.jpg
    The highly anticipated talks of Aaron Koblin and Ben Cervery closed the day. Aaron presented some of his well known projects, such as the Flight Patterns and the New York Talk Exchange, which demonstrate his unique ability to retry interesting questions out of long existing data sets. He also displayed recent projects related to sound, such as the well known House of Cards and Bicycle Built for Two Thousand.


    At Ben Cerveny‘s talk, titled “The Dance of the Variables”, some key concepts around information visualization where exposed. He explained how information tend to result from finding patterns on exponentially growing data sets and while dealing with this complexity, one cannot avoid discussing concepts such as emergence and entropy. Some of these patterns are identified through recent Stamen´s projects. The exercise of visualizing information consists in applying physical qualities to a data set, transforming it in a “self-contained system that can work as a metaphor of reality“.

    The video stream of these seminars should be available soon, at Medialab Prado Visualizar webpage.

    This post was written by Larissa Pschetz and Miguel Cardoso.


  • Udder pitcher makes me want a glass of moo

    udder-pitcher
    There’s not a lot to say about this pitcher. You’re looking at it, right? That’s what it is. It costs $22.

    [via BoingBoing]


  • Gift Guide 2009: Toys

    Intro

    The problem with creating a category for toys on CrunchGear is that almost everything we review is a toy – it’s fun, cool, and great to play with for at least a day or two until our attention is inevitably drawn to something else. That said, here are some gift ideas for the toy lover in your life.

    Stylophonestylophone

    Stylophone Beatbox: $25.50 (100Milligrams.com)

    I’m sorry I’m going to thrust this upon you but this is a really cool way to make music. Seriously. You slide the little stylus all over the pad to create different beats and the resulting cacophony can even sound somewhat professional. If the kids don’t want to learn violin, this is the next best thing.

    Product Page | CrunchGear Review

    Ghostbustersghostbusters

    Ghostbusters Action Figures: $19.99 (ThinkGeek.com)

    These make for a great stocking stuffer and they’ll make the kids aware of films from the era before computer-generated video.

    Product Page

    Genesis Portablegenesis

    Sega Genesis Portable: $69.99 (InnexInc.com)

    Kids asking for a console? Don’t give them the satisfaction. Make them earn it. But don’t be completely cruel. Give them something like the Sega Genesis Portable Handheld. It includes great games like Sonic & Knuckles and will make them hunger for the New Super Mario Brothers even more.

    Product Page (available for purchase at Buy.com) | CrunchGear Review

    Eyeclopseyeclops

    Jakks Pacific EyeClops Night Vison 2.0 Binoculars: $69.99 (Jakks.com)

    One of my favorite toys of the season. This amazing night vision kit makes it fun to run around in the dark – especially for the kid wearing the night vision goggles. Recreate your favorite scenes from G-Force and Silence of the Lambs.

    Product Page | CrunchGear Review

    Zippityzippity

    Zippity from Leapfrog: $69.99 (Leapfrog.com)

    Kids too young for games? Give them this massive joystick/footpad combination and let them lead Winnie the Pooh, Diego, and other characters down the primrose path to fun.

    Product Page | CrunchGear Review

    Ball and Cageballandcage

    Homemade Ball and Cage: Free (GVSU.edu)

    Trust me: the kids will think you’re a freak but when they’re thirty or so they’ll pull this out and think of you.

    Product Page


  • FreeCreditReport Wins Over 1,000 Domain Names In Dispute Process

    It’s quite common for various trademark holders to go through the UDRP domain dispute process to get back domains held by cybersquatters. Still, it’s quite impressive to hear that FreeCreditReport.com was able to get 1,017 separate domain names in a single dispute (found via Slashdot) apparently by using some sort of software that identified all the domains. The company that held the domain names argued, in part, that the term “free credit report” should be seen as generic, not a specific trademark, but the arbitration board simply said that since the USPTO had granted FreeCreditReport.com with a trademark, that the trademark was solid — and thus most domain names that included those words could be turned over.

    This does raise some questions however — since we’ve seen plenty of other cases where domains that included trademarked terms, but which would not be confusing to users (such as “trademarknamesucks.com”), have been allowed to be used by the original registrant, rather than handed over to the trademark holder. It’s unclear, in this case, if some of those domains were like that — or if they were all pure squatter domains. Still, it’s quite an impressive haul by FCR.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • Who Will Foster the Great Location API?

    Nextstop, a user-generated travel site, is releasing an API for its location-specific short-form recommendations. The self-funded company, founded by former Google product managers, only launched in June and has attracted low hundreds of thousands of monthly visitors, however it has ambitious plans to be a global (read: not hubbed around a few cities like Yelp) and comprehensive resource of recommended places and activities.

    For now Nextstop is just a web site, and an English-language one at that, but the API enables things like automated Twitter queries (built in-house as an example) where you can ask @nextstopbot what’s good and near to an address. The six-person Nextstop team, said co-founder Carl Sjogreen (best known as product manager of Google Calendar), has put much focus into laying the groundwork to scale to be “a Wikipedia of all the great places in the world,” spending much of its time working on things like a reputation system to give good users more contribution powers.

    The race to build a database of the world’s coolest locations may be moving faster than San Francisco-based Nextstop, though, with companies like Foursquare — which also just released an API — using the real-time and personal nature of mobile, as well as social gaming, to incentivize user contributions. Others working on location databases include Mozilla, uLocate and Geodelic. Though it seems folks like Twitter and Facebook could easily propel themselves past the competition with their highly social user bases.


  • Word of the Year: an unreliable yet fascinating barometer of tech

    First recorded use of Tweet
    The New Oxford English Dictionary has announced that 2009’s Word of the Year is unfriend. While it is perhaps not used as broadly as the newly-verbed friend, the latter is already in the dictionary, so they can’t very well call it new. The best they can do is run with unfriend, which implies and extends the other. A worthy choice, I think, with “currency and potential longevity,” as Oxford’s Senior Lexicographer puts it. It set me thinking, though: how prescient have Word of the Year choices been? Have they infallibly documented the rise of tech in mainstream language and culture? —or are they a dusty collection of buzzwords, a history of folly and haste? And really, which of those is the truer depiction of the world of technology?

    I examined Oxford’s Word of the Year lists going back as far as their blog documents them, and consulted a few other word-tracking sources. Unsurprisingly, the popularity and continued pertinence of new words have been as unpredictable as the technologies they describe. Still, the world from a dictionary’s perspective makes for a unique retrospective.

    Take hypermiling, for instance. 2008’s word, relevant and rich at the time, seems positively archaic now; as electrics and more efficient hybrids populate our roads more and more, the idea of hypermiling seems to be no longer a cool technique employed by savvy drivers, but a weird fuel-based cult obsessed with aging technology. It brings to mind a sentimental geek zealously maintaining a Windows 3.1 box. Webster’s 2008 word, more farsighted to be sure, was oversharing, certainly a symptom of the personal-broadcasting era that we’ve all observed. Hypermiling was chosen for its immediacy, which does not correlate well with longevity.

    Yet podcasting, chosen in 2005, is going stronger than ever. A blog or website these days is incomplete without a podcast, though some question the practicality of adding yet another modality to the increasingly multi-tiered stream of information assaulting every webgoer. Still, no one would dispute that it is a meaningful and useful term, and one not likely to be replaced any time soon. Runners-up that year included rootkit, a surprisingly technical entry that has stayed with us, and lifehack, which, while being an interesting blog, is a pretentious failure as a word.

    2007 was a bit of a misfire for Oxford; although it was a big year for Apple and Facebook, their tech nominations were red herrings like bacn, an abortive attempt to brand “desired spam,” and cloudware, which at the time was (if you’ll forgive the expression) too hazy a concept to really get much traction among casual users. Locavore hasn’t gained much ground in the popularity contest, probably because people who use it tend to be selling it. It’s still a good app, though. Unfriend would have been a real win here, since the new politics of online relationships were being written by users at large. Cloud has remained but I think perhaps the term which may best have represented 2007 was iTouch. This common misnomer evokes both the rapid expansion of personal media devices and widespread mystification at its terminology and function. Unfortunately, those who use the word are by definition nearly incapable of propagating it as a meme.

    The ‘97-’98-’99 series of WAP, to Google, and blogger have an almost causal connection, as if each must have necessarily followed the other. While WAP was never a term laypeople used, and Wi-Fi would have been a better choice, its import was clear. Increasingly secure, convenient, and popular, the internet began getting personal in 1997, and that wave gathered energy with Googling over the next year, finally crashing on the shores of the collective idiom as blogging. Laptop plus coffee shop plus being able to explore the internet efficiently was a sort of tech trifecta, and blogs started sprouting like weeds (sorry about that).

    But back to this year’s words. Unfriend is, I think, one for the ages. But the others are groaners: intexticated? Funemployed? Sexting maybe, but we can’t nominate every clever portmanteau. If that were the case, half the words in the dictionary would be creations of my own (I have a talent for them). Better to collect them in a little bundle, as they’ve done with what I called the infernal bird-based jargon of Twitter: Tweeps, Tweetup, Twitt, Twitterati, Twitterature, Twitterverse/sphere, Retweet, Twibe, Sweeple, Tweepish, Tweetaholic, Twittermob, and Twitterhea (Twitterhead?).

    These word clusters provide an interesting cross-section of the culture around a certain word (the other one they note is Obama) and its emergent phenomena — Twitterati is a good example of this, and a good word to keep around. The others I consign to the pit.

    The level to which this invented jargon, or even something like the more practical unfriend, is actually used is unclear. I’m sure we’ve all seen freemium, and it has worth, but will it end up as widely used as paywall? It’s impossible to say, given the malleability of both new words and the people who use them. The environment for creating words is becoming more democratic, for better or for worse. Personally, I find my new words in old books, but even this cursory look at the new word market shows that those terms we may dismiss as fleeting or overly specific may be the most signal of the era.

    Lastly, as many of you readers are specialists in tech, feel free to submit some of your more interesting or useful terms. For example, I like tentacular but rarely get to use it. Not really jargon, or a word even, but when it works, it works. Let’s populate this post with submissions for next year’s list; maybe someone from Oxford will find something they like.

    [image: first recorded tweet; chemheritage’s Flickr]


  • iPhone to Be China’s Top-Selling Smartphone? Really?

    China Unicom is continuing to trumpet the iPhone’s prospects in China — despite widespread conviction that it’s too expensive there. As Stacey recently noted, Daniel Amir, director and senior research analyst of semiconductors at Lazard Capital Markets, has cited China Unicom officials as saying they’d sold some 30,000 iPhones in the country since its launch there on Oct. 30.

    And the company’s chairman, Chang Xiaobing, says he expects the device to become the best-selling smartphone in the country, Bloomberg is reporting. So should we buy all this iPhone love from China Unicom?

    “We’re very confident about the market position of the iPhone,” Bloomberg quotes Chang as saying. The report also quotes IDC analyst Aloysius Choong, who said that “Unicom must lower its prices if it wants to access the mass market for the iPhone.”

    That last fact is likely to be true. In China, a 32GB iPhone 3GS sold at launch for 6,999 yuan ($1,024) without a service contract; add that in and over two years a Chinese subscriber will pay some $3,000. Android phones, on the other hand, are likely to cost less in China given that Dell and other players providing them aren’t smartphone titans, and Android phones could play into pre-existing preferences for open source platforms that exist there.

    China Unicom’s Chang is also denying that users will choose iPhones sold on the gray market, according to Bloomberg. Sales of gray market phones “won’t be very significant,” he claims, even though we just reported on iSuppli’s numbers showing that gray market phones are moving briskly in China.

    Come on now. These pronouncements from China Unicom sound like little more than PR spin. There are many valid questions to be asked about the iPhone’s future in China. After all, the device will probably be hindered from using certain kinds of technology (it will get Wi-Fi, but only following a battle involving China’s government), there won’t be the same freedom to choose applications as there is elsewhere, and it’s very expensive relative to Chinese salaries.  Only  a few short weeks after the iPhone’s Chinese launch, it’s just too early to read the tea leaves.


  • Video: Crazy kid goes crazy because he’s not very good at Modern Warfare 2

    So we’re in agreement: this kid is crazy, right? He’s ranting about losing in Modern Warfare 2, then proceeds to freak out. I damn near started chanting “EC DUB! EC DUB!” when he attempted to reverse fireman’s carry the wall. That makes no sense, no. Warning: he uses salty language to describe his displeasure with the game.


  • MPAA/Sony Pictures Realizes That Shutting Down Muni-WiFi Over Single Download Was A Bad Thing

    Last week, we wrote about the ridiculous situation, whereby the MPAA had an entire muni-WiFi network shut down because one person using that system had downloaded a single film. The story ended up getting a fair amount of press, and it looks like the MPAA and Sony Pictures in particular, quickly realized that this was really, really bad publicity for the company. After the company got bombarded by complaints, Sony Pictures contacted the town and asked them to turn the WiFi back on, while also claiming it could help the town set up tools to block such things in the future. Of course, as Broadband Reports notes in the above link: “Of course if the MPAA and Sony had approached the network owners like human beings in the first place — instead of engaging in the kind of scorched earth tactics they’ve employed for several years now — they probably wouldn’t have gotten the bad press to begin with.” But, acting like human beings in the first place isn’t the sort of thing the industry does well.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • Review: The Genetics of Delirium

     

    The paper reviewed here is ‘The Role of Genetics in Delirium in the Elderly Patient’ by van Munster, Rooij and Korevaar. In the abstract van Munster and colleagues write that

    Two important gaps in daily practice with delirium are the pathophysiological obscurity and the low recognition rates. Genetics offers the possibility to contribute knowledge to both of these gaps with its unique and diverse techniques

    The authors give an overview of delirium in the introduction before going on to consider the syndrome of delirium. They consider the difficulties of diagnosis given the relatively short window of time which may be available to make the diagnosis as well as a number of other practical issues. The authors consider briefly and in turn several hypotheses about the aetiology of delirium including the dysregulation of dopamine or acetylcholine, the stress response and the immune response particularly the response involving cytokines. The authors then go on to consider the genotype and phenotype of delirium.

    The authors hypothesise that if genetic risk factors are present, the precipitants for an episode can be ‘milder’. They also suggest that the study of the genetics of delirium is comparatively more difficult than with other diseases as the average age of onset of delirium may be causally related to the relative dearth of twin studies in this area. They then look at the methodology of genetic studies including the gene-wide association studies and look at some of the advantages comparing them with invasive procedures.

    They use the broad categories describe above to suggest some suitable candidate genes which are listed in table 1. These can be compared with the genetic studies that have already been carried out and which are described in a later section. A number of the studies examining APOE4 associations for instance have not produced such interesting findings. The authors conclude with some suggestions of how future studies can facilitate a better understanding of the role of genetic factors in delirium including cohort studies.

    I was persuaded by a number of the arguments particularly the suggested model combining precipitants with the genetic risk factors. While there is no explicitly stated methodology for the construction of the paper the authors have used a systematic approach towards the article which identifies a list of candidate genes as well as justifying an investigation into the genetics of delirium as well as highlighting potential difficulties of such an approach. This is a young field and articles such as this provide a useful overview.

    References

    van Munster B C, de Rooij S E and Korevaar J C. The role of genetics in delerium in the elderly patient. Dement Geriatr Cogn Disord. 2009. 28. 187-195.

    Twitter

    You can follow ‘The Amazing World of Psychiatry’ Twitter by clicking on this link

    Podcast

    You can listen to this post on Odiogo by clicking on this link (there may be a small delay between publishing of the blog article and the availability of the podcast).

    TAWOP Channel

    You can follow the TAWOP Channel on YouTube by clicking on this link

    Responses

    If you have any comments, you can leave them below or alternatively e-mail [email protected]

    Disclaimer

    The comments made here represent the opinions of the author and do not represent the profession or any body/organisation. The comments made here are not meant as a source of medical advice and those seeking medical advice are advised to consult with their own doctor. The author is not responsible for the contents of any external sites that are linked to in this blog.

  • Homebrew – ScummVM v1.0.0

     The homebrew coders from the ScummVM Team has finally release version 1.0.0of their classic multi-platform point-and-click adventure games emula…

  • Pictured: Magellan’s new iPhone car cradle

    Hey, you! I know you. You’re the one that gets all hot around the collar over shots of unreleased iPhone accessories, aren’t you? Boy, oh boy – are you gonna love this..


  • New stealth jumpjet starting hover trials

    f35b_rollout_4_20071219The Harrier jumpjet is one of the most famous aircraft in the world. Ideal for carrier take off and landings, the jumpjet has been part of the US military arsenal for many years. The problem is that it isn’t very fast. Now the next generation of jumpjet is entering testing to see if it measures up.

    The new Harrier, known as the F-35B, combines stealth and supersonic speed. Currently there is only one other aircraft in the world that does this: the F-22 Raptor. The problem with the Raptor is it requires a standard runway to take-off and land, and is also extremely expensive ($361 Million per aircraft). The new Harrier, on the other hand, is both cheap (comparatively so, at $83 million each) and doesn’t require a full-length runway to operate. Assuming the F-35B passes testing, the U.S. is expected to invest in a large number of the new aircraft.