Thursday 31 March 2011

DailyDirt: You Have Won Second Prize In A Beauty Contest! Collect $10.

There are a lot of online contests, sponsored by all sorts of organizations (usually non-profits). Some of the contests are challenging, and others are just a little strange. Here are some examples that caught our eye.
By the way, StumbleUpon can recommend some good Techdirt articles, too.

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Source: http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20110224/19010713250/dailydirt-you-have-won-second-prize-beauty-contest-collect-10.shtml

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Is Publicly Sharing Your Location Creepy? This App Thinks So

You might want to file this under the "perhaps this was obvious, but we needed another app to show us" category, but if you check in, Tweet your location and otherwise publicly broadcast your GPS coordinates for all the world to see on the Internet, other people can see where you are.

Creepy is a desktop app for Windows and Linux and it's a stalker's dream come true. The big question, though, is should you stop sharing? And is it really all that creepy?

Sponsor

Last year, all the talk was about PleaseRobMe, a website that simply showed where people were checked in. It did nothing more than a Twitter search for the Foursquare domain, but it brought to attention the idea that whenever you publicly broadcast your location, you also publicly broadcast your absence from home. You know, the place with the valuables.

Creepy takes this idea a step further. It takes a couple minutes to gather all the data - which it searches for according to Twitter or Flickr username - before showing a very detailed map of every Tweet, check-in and geo-tagged picture that person has posted to the Internet for months on end. And depending on how a particular piece of information was sent, such as from a smartphone with an accurate GPS signal, the results can be, well...creepy. We're talking "Yep, I was next to that oak tree in the park when I took that picture" creepy.

creepy-1.png

So, should you stop broadcasting your location? I vote no. (And not because I want to stalk you, I swear.) I share my location all the time and for a number of reasons. It enables random and serendipitous connections to occur. I can look back and have all sorts of contextual information as I weave my way through the world. I can plug it all in to services like MemoLane and get a time-ordered snapshot of my own life, as I share it online. And in turn, it gets fed through algorithms and stuffed into features like Foursquare's latest recommendation service, which looks at where I've been and suggests where I may want to go next. And that's just the first step for what can be done with all of this location information.

I also get second hand value from all this public location sharing. I see people's check-ins on Twitter and can figure out that the coffee shop down the street is the place to be. Tweets can help with a host of scenarios, from public health issues to mysterious explosions in Portland.

Of course, I may be a bit overzealous in my location sharing. It's on, by default, for everything - pictures, check-in services (which are public) and Tweets. Go ahead - download Creepy and enter @rwwmike and you'll see my recent trips to Palm Springs, CA and Austin, TX. You'll see my bike ride across town to Golden Gate Park. You'll see snapshots of food and beer and bikes.

This isn't for everyone. If you have bad relationships with your exes or lawyers coming after you for bills, you might not want to live so publicly. And are we that far off from insurance companies gathering check-in information and using it to calculate your premiums? But that's what Creepy is about, right? It's saying "Look, you're sharing your life on the Internet and really, everyone can see." The question is, do you care? (And perhaps, far more importantly, should you care?)

Creepy is available for Windows and Linux with a Mac version on the way.

Discuss


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/%7Er/readwriteweb/%7E3/t2QPUMLULfI/is_publicly_sharing_your_location_creepy_this_app.php

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Quantum unleashes more robots on tape libraries

Key manager interoperability coming

Quantum is doubling up the robotics in its i6000 Scalar tape library to increase reliability.?

Source: http://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.co.uk/2011/03/31/quantum_dual_robotics/

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MS exec says tablet computing may not be 'persistent'

Microsoft's view of computing in the post-pc era is quite different than Apple's. Apple anticipates the tablet will temporarily fill the void between the smartphone and the computer. Eventually, it will replace the computer for many users.

Microsoft, on the other hand, questions the longevity of the tablet market and is slow to embrace this emerging market after its earlier, failed UMPC Origami project. Speaking at a luncheon in Sydney, Australia, Craig Mundie, the chief research and strategy officer at Microsoft, said

"Today you can see tablets and pads and other things that are starting to live in the space in between (a PC and a smartphone). Personally, I don't know whether that space will be a persistent one or not."

The future for Microsoft lies in connectivity of devices that does not tie to you a computer sitting on a desk. The computer will be "in the room" and controlled by a wireless controller similar to the Kinect.

This wait-and-see attitude towards the tablet is further evident in Microsoft's current tablet strategy. The Redmond company pushed HP's Windows 7-powered slate in 2010, but the device failed to attract customers. Future tablets will be based on Windows 8 and will not debut until 2012 at the earliest.

While Microsoft waits until 2012 to release a tablet competitor, Apple will have sold over 30 million iPads in 2011 alone.

MS exec says tablet computing may not be 'persistent' originally appeared on TUAW on Thu, 31 Mar 2011 10:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.tuaw.com/2011/03/31/ms-exec-says-tablet-computing-may-not-be-persistent/

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Quantum unleashes more robots on tape libraries

Key manager interoperability coming

Quantum is doubling up the robotics in its i6000 Scalar tape library to increase reliability.?

Source: http://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.co.uk/2011/03/31/quantum_dual_robotics/

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Vanilla Ice to tackle panto Captain Hook

In Chatham, wherever that is...

In highly-improbable celebrity news, Chatham's Central Theatre has announced that its Xmas panto this year will feature Vanilla Ice as Captain Hook.?

Source: http://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.co.uk/2011/03/31/ice_hook/

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TUAW's Daily App: 8-bit Pocket Camera

The iPhone's camera has only gotten better over the years, with higher resolutions, better ways to deal with low lighting and brighter colors than ever. But here's an app that passes on all of that technology for a much more retro feel. The 8-bit Pocket Camera app is designed to take pictures the old-fashioned way: as low-res black-and-white 200x200 pixel .tiff files, just like the old Game Boy Camera and other early digital cameras did. Why would you want to take pictures that way? Well, you might not. But it's more of a nostalgia thing; just as apps like Hipstamatic are great at making iPhone pictures look like old film or old instant cameras, these pictures might take you right back, if you happen to have taken some shots in the right time period.

There's a real raw quality to these, and I don't mean .RAW files. These are straight up black-and-white shots, full of digital noise and pixelated lines. They may not look great, but they certainly have a feel to them, and with 8-bit Pocket Camera, you can take these pictures, put any number of old-school effects on them and send them out via Facebook or Twitter. The app's currently on sale for a launch price of just US$0.99.

TUAW's Daily App: 8-bit Pocket Camera originally appeared on TUAW on Thu, 31 Mar 2011 08:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.tuaw.com/2011/03/31/tuaws-daily-app-8-bit-pocket-camera/

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Best Travel and Navigation Apps For iPad and iPad 2

Today we are going to share list of best navigation and travel apps for iPhone, iPad and iPad 2.
Where do you want to go today? And how do you plan to get there? Apps that can answer those questions form the backbone of the utility of iOS.
Travel and Navigation apps for iPad and iPad 2 help you find your way from point A to B to C by car (or see where you?ve been en route), and help you travel through the air?while coping with hassles on the ground.


You may be interested in related articles as well:
Best iPad 2 Apps
Best iPad 2 Games
Best iPad Apps
Best Free iPad Games


Best Navigation and Travel Apps for iPhone, iPad and iPad 2


TomTom U.S.A.




Cost: $39.99
Developer: TomTom International
The power of a standalone GPS mostly transferred into iOS


Navigon MobileNavigator



Cost: $49.99
Developer: Navigon
Clearer maps and better audio control


MotionX GPS Drive




Cost: $0.99*
Developer: MotionX
An inexpensive way to get from point A to B without a loss of quality


ATT Navigator




Cost: FREE*
Developer: ATT
Avoid traffic jams with this constantly updated subscription navigation aid


Kayak




Cost: FREE*
Developer: Kayak Software
A shortcut to finding the best prices for flights, hotels, and more


GateGuru




Cost: FREE*
Developer: Mobility Apps
Airport terminal information revealed and reviewed


EasyTrails GPS




Cost: $4.99
Developer: Zirak
If you don?t know where you?ve been, how do you find it again?


FlightTrack Pro




Cost: $9.99
Developer: Mobiata
Frequent air travelers can rely on knowing which gate to run to and when

Source: http://www.techespot.com/2011/03/best-ipad-and-ipad-2-apps-for-travel.html

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Wednesday 30 March 2011

With +1, Google Search Goes Truly Social - As Do Google Ads (MG Siegler/TechCrunch)

MG Siegler / TechCrunch:
With +1, Google Search Goes Truly Social — As Do Google Ads  —  Back in early December of last year, we first reported that Google was toying around with the name “+1″ for an upcoming social product.  At the time, we were told it was sort of like Google's version of the “like” or “retweet” button.

Source: http://www.techmeme.com/110330/p40#a110330p40

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Tesla Motors sues BBC for defamation

Petrolhead pundit sparks electric storm

Tesla Motors has filed libel a suit against the BBC, accusing Top Gear of defamation.?

Source: http://go.theregister.com/feed/www.reghardware.com/2011/03/30/tesla_sues_bbc_for_defamation/

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Trey Ratcliff releases one of the sexiest photo editing apps for iPad

If you are into photography and haven’t heard of Trey Ratcliff, you should. He gave an awesome talk at Google about High Dynamic Range photography. It’s a classic, one of the best I’ve seen on photography. But today he’s released 100 Cameras in 1 for iPad. Very awesome new iPad app that lets you take [...]

Source: http://scobleizer.com/2011/03/30/trey-ratcliff-releases-one-of-the-sexiest-photo-editing-apps-for-ipad/

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No Comment: Dell exec dismisses iPad, can't count

Dell's global head of marketing Andy Lark spoke to CIO Australia this week, and he not only dissed Apple -- a company with a current market cap of $323.3 billion compared to Dell's measly $28.2 billion -- but also found some time to dream up some completely bogus specifications and pricing for the iPad.

Lark started by stating that "Apple is great if you've got a lot of money and live on an island. It's not so great if you have to exist in a diverse, open, connected enterprise; simple things become quite complex."

Ahem. That deserves a spot on our No Comment wall of confusion.

Next, Lark stated that enterprises were not going to be jumping on iPad deployments, since "an iPad with a keyboard, a mouse and a case [means] you'll be at $1500 or $1600; that's double of what you're paying."

Joshua Schnell at Macgasm pointed out that a 16 GB Wi-Fi iPad 2, Apple Wireless Keyboard, iPad Dock and iPad 2 Smart Cover price out at US$666 before taxes. Where the extra $900 - $1000 comes into play is a mystery, unless Dell is selling thousand-dollar mice.

Moreover, apparently Lark has no idea that the iPad doesn't need a mouse. It uses a magical and revolutionary "touchscreen" for its user interface.

In the annals of Dell executive history, this has to go down as a pretty impressive foot-in-mouth comment; it rivals Michael Dell's famous quote about Apple on October 6, 1997: "What would I do? I'd shut it down and give the money back to the shareholders."

Looks like it's time for Andy to go back to school and learn a little bit about his competitors. It might also help to brush up on those math skills.

No Comment: Dell exec dismisses iPad, can't count originally appeared on TUAW on Wed, 30 Mar 2011 01:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.tuaw.com/2011/03/30/no-comment-dell-exec-dismisses-ipad-cant-count/

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Fujitsu Taps Into Mobile 3D Trend, Ships Lifebook AH572

Fujitsu's new wide-screen Lifebook AH572 laptop does 3D (with glasses) and targets 3D movie and video buffs.

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Source: http://feeds.pcworld.com/click.phdo?i=f1a1098a516e465999f276a35e3d3476

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Cable-backed anti-muni broadband bill advances in North Carolina

The North Carolina bill is called the "Level Playing Field/Local Gov't Competition" act, intended to "protect jobs and investment by regulating local government competition." Opponents call it just the opposite—a cable industry-backed proposal intended to make it almost impossible for cities to build their own broadband networks.

Whatever you call it, H129 passed the state's House of Representatives on Monday 81 to 37. Its sponsor, Marilyn Avila (R-Wake), told WRAL TV that the legislation would protect businesses from "predatory" local governments that want to build their own ISPs. "We have to have some sort of framework that everybody understands when you go into this," she explained. "This bill is going to establish those rules."

Baloney, responded Rep. Bill Faison (D-Orange). The law will "make it practically impossible" for cities to provide a "fundamental service," he insisted. "Let's be clear about whose bill this is. This is Time Warner's bill."

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Source: http://feeds.arstechnica.com/~r/arstechnica/index/~3/IdZ9-qrz7EA/cable-backed-anti-muni-broadband-bill-advances-in-north-carolina.ars

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