Reblog: Google Wind Visualization Lets You See the Unseen
Google's "Big Picture" data visualization group has produced a stunning wind visualization tool. from Wired Top Stories http://bit.ly/IQ76g1

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Reblog: Google Wind Visualization Lets You See the Unseen
Google's "Big Picture" data visualization group has produced a stunning wind visualization tool. from Wired Top Stories http://bit.ly/IQ76g1
Reblog: How To Enable Personal Hotspot On A New iPad
For no obvious reason, the personal hotspot function on the latest iPad doesn’t work on Australian models. Over at Gizmodo, Alex details how you can fix this — no jailbreak required. Definitely worth checking if you want to share the 3G goodness from your new tablet. [Gizmodo] ...
from Lifehacker Australia http://bit.ly/GXrDBK
Reblog: The current state of styli and the iPad: does the stylus still blow it?
"Reading Steve Jobs by Walter Isaacson, it can be argued the creative catalyst for the iPad was not Jobs himself, nor Apple design wizard Jony Ive, but instead some Microsoft engineer who talked too much at parties. At least that's how Steve Jobs told it from 2002. 'But he was doing the device all wrong. It had a stylus. As soon as you have a stylus, you're dead. This dinner was like the tenth time he talked to me about it, and I was so sick of it that I came home and said, "Fuck it, let's show him what a tablet can really be".' Apocryphal dinner story or not, Apple did indeed show Microsoft how tablets are done, and attempted to bury the stylus in doing so. However, a decade later and just after the launch of the new iPad, it turns out the stylus isn't dead at all. In fact, it's getting better." from OSNews http://bit.ly/GPYdjD
Reblog: Easily Make A CD Case From A Sheet Of Paper
The need for CD cases is dwindling, but for that same reason it’s less likely you have an old jewel case laying around when you need one. Geeky blog Nerd Paradise devised a simple way to make CD case out of a sheet of paper for those rare instances when you need one. It’s a remarkably simple five-step process that works great in a pinch when you have to hand someone a physical disc. Th ...
from Lifehacker Australia http://bit.ly/GEKAFA
Reblog: Force The New iPhoto App Onto A First Generation iPad
iPad: Last week Apple released a version of iPhoto for iOS, but it’s only compatible with new devices like the new iPad and the iPad 2. However, if you want to get the app installed on an unsupported, first generation iPad, iPhone blog AppAdvice shows it’s pretty easy to do and doesn’t require a jailbreak. You’ll need the $5.49 iPhoto app downloaded in iTunes and the free i ...
from Lifehacker Australia http://bit.ly/zSWFIf
Reblog: How To Contribute To Open Source Without Being a Programming Rock Star
Esther Schindler writes "Plenty of people want to get involved in open source, but don't know where to start. In this article, Andy Lester lists several ways to help out even if you lack confidence in your technical chops. Here are a couple of his suggestions: 'Maintenance of code and the systems surrounding the code often are neglected in the rush to create new features and to fix bugs. Look to these areas as an easy way to get your foot into a project. Most projects have a publicly visible trouble ticket system, linked from the front page of the project’s website and included in the documentation. It’s the primary conduit of communication between the users and the developers. Keeping it current is a great way to help the project. You may need to get special permissions in the ticketing system, which most project leaders will be glad to give you when you say you want to help clean up the tickets.'" What's your favorite low-profile way to contribute?
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
from Slashdot http://bit.ly/yzArKN
Reblog: For Windows 8 Users, Stardock Revives the Start Menu
jones_supa writes "By reinventing the Start Menu in Windows 8, Microsoft has caused some resistance to the new Start Screen. For those longing for the classic way of doing things, Stardock comes to rescue. The Start8 is a piece of software which replicates the functionality of the button and menu found in previous versions of Windows. Supported is starting applications, the Run and Shutdown features, and search."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
from Slashdot http://bit.ly/zGRQ5p
Reblog: Turn your photos into fun comics with Halftone for iPhone and iPad
Halftone is a fun little photo editing app that creates comics out of photos by adding add paper styles, captions, speech balloons, graphic stamps, and fonts (including built-in comic fonts).
When you first import or capture a photo, Halftone gives you options to add effects, crop and rotate the photos, and make adjustments to brightness, contrast, saturation, colors, and sharpening. Once these edits are complete, the photo gets imported into the comic editing mode and the real fun begins.
It’s here that Halftone lets you choose between 25 paper styles and 9 layouts. If you add speech bubbles, Halftone will even recognize faces in your photo for automatic balloon placement. Next, you can choose between 15 different color-customizable stamps such as “Arrrggh!”, “Blam!”, “Sploosh” and other shapes like stars, hearts, and fireworks. Lastly, you can choose between an expansive list of fonts including 3 licensed comic fonts: Digital Strip, Alter Ego, and Billy the Flying Robot.
Once your masterpiece is complete, you can send it as a postcard, save to your camera roll, email, print, or send to other photo editing apps like Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and Photogene.
$0.99 – Download Now!
from iMore - The #1 iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch blog http://bit.ly/zvjyv7
Reblog: Take up to 800 pictures a minute with Fast Camera for iPhone
800 photos a minute — this an insane amount of photos and Fast Camera for iPhone accomplishes this without skipping a beat.
Fast Camera is one of the more interesting apps I’ve come across lately. The second the app launches, it opens the camera and a little ticker starts rolling. There is no visual cue that photos are being taken except for this ticker, and I’ll admit, I was a little confused. Once I realized what was happening, I tapped stop, then preview, and boom, there was 200 photos of my MacBook Air, in only about 15 seconds.
Then I thought out loud — “holy crap.”
After further investigation, it turns out that if you want photos to be taken at this rate, you must have it set to VGA quality, even from the rear camera. At 8 megapixel sized photos, the rate is closer to 140 photos per minute – which is still pretty darn fast. (Take a look at the larger version of the above photo to see the stopwatch times while taking 8 megapixel sized photos).
Situations where Fast Camera will be helpful could include trying to capture a series of photos to tell a story, wanting to catch an exact moment (like your dog catching his ball mid-air), or even for group photos — prop up your iPhone, set the built-in timer in Fast Camera, then press start and run into the group. After the photos are taken, you can scroll through to find the best shot.
Fast Camera is normally $0.99, but for today only, it’s free! So go grab it!
Free – Download Now!
from iMore - The #1 iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch blog http://bit.ly/xNldOB
Reblog: Pimp Your Facebook: How To Create An Awesome Timeline Banner
Facebook’s new, awesome Timeline feature is rolling out to everyone, and a few early adopters have discovered a neat trick where you cut your profile picture out from your cover photo, for a very cool picture-in-picture effect. Here’s how to do it. There are two main methods to this trick: one for those that have Photoshop (which we found via our friends at Gizmodo), and one for those ...
from Lifehacker Australia http://bit.ly/yqrNoC
Reblog: Game Guru Slips Microsoft Windows Onto Apple iPads
Steve Perlman's latest venture, OnLive, released a free iPad app designed to access a virtual Windows desktop running on a distant server, complete with software such as Word, Excel, and PowerPoint. And in typical Perlman fashion, it tackles the problem from an unexpected but completely sensible direction. Founded a year and half ago, OnLive is actually a gaming company. But rather than run games on your PC or your phone or your tablet, it streams them to your device over the net. from Wired Top Stories http://bit.ly/xv9PAL
Reblog: [How to] Install Ubuntu TV via PPA
There’s a good chance that following all of the screenshots and videos of Ubuntu TV you’d like nothing more than to play with it yourself.
The good news is that you can – but there are drawbacks to caressing your curiosity; you will need to sacrifice the Unity-2D session.
Content with that? You crazy fool – use Virtualbox or an installation you’re content with borking.
How to Install Ubuntu TV in Ubuntu
This is development software. Do not install unless you are competent enough to revert any or all changes made.
The Ubuntu Wiki provides instructions for compiling the latest code manually. This is the recommended way to test Ubuntu TV.
But, for the lazy amongst you, the Ubuntu TV code has also been packaged up into a PPA by Alin Andrei.
The PPA provides Ubuntu TV packages for Ubuntu 11.10 32bit and 64bit only. If you’re using an earlier version of Ubuntu you can droop you head in disappointment anytime about now.
So, on to installing. Open a new Terminal window and run the following three commands. Be sure to let each one finish before trying to run the next.
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:nilarimogard/test3
sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install unity-2d
sudo apt-get install unity-lens-video
As Ubuntu TV can’t be run from the Unity 2D session you will only be able to run the prototype in Ubuntu itself. Assuming you’re in Unity run the following command: -
unity-2d-shell –opengl
The Ubuntu TV interface will now open. To close it just Alt+Tab back to the Terminal you ran the command from and press CTRL+C.
Using Ubuntu TV
Ubuntu TV is by no means finished or – don’t hate me – fully functional.
But there are enough features present to play around with to enable you can to get the ‘feel’ of how it all works – just be sure to go in with your eyes open.
For your own videos to show up in the shell you will need to place them in the following folders: -
~/Videos/unity/local/featured
~/Videos/unity/local/rented
~/Videos/unity/local/purchased
~/Videos/unity/local/recorded
And for video thumbnails to be generated and displayed the following command run: -
/usr/lib/unity-lens-video/create_tmb.sh ~/Videos/
[How to] Install Ubuntu TV via PPA OMG! Ubuntu! - Everything Ubuntu. Daily.
from Omg! Ubuntu! http://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2012/01/how-to-install-ubuntu-tv-right-now-via-ppa/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+d0od+%28OMG%21+Ubuntu%21%29
Reblog: Hilary Mason Wants To Get You Started With Big Data
I spent part of this week with Hilary Mason, one of the smartest people that I know in Big Data. She works as the Chief Scientist for Bit.ly and has a wealth of skills at her fingertips that bridge computer science and mathematics. Plus, she is used to facing largely male audiences and just being the smartest person in the room. She was speaking at The Strange Loop conference in St. Louis this week, which should definitely be on your radar for next year if you are interested in this topic or want to broaden your programming skills.
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Editor's note: This story is part of a series we call Redux, where we're re-publishing some of our best posts of 2011. As we look back at the year - and ahead to what next year holds - we think these are the stories that deserve a second glance. It's not just a best-of list, it's also a collection of posts that examine the fundamental issues that continue to shape the Web. We hope you enjoy reading them again and we look forward to bringing you more Web products and trends analysis in 2012. Happy holidays from Team ReadWriteWeb!
Mason outlined in a series of workshops the tools you need to get started with manipulating Big Data and understanding the basics of machine learning, something she does everyday as she sifts through each one of those shortened URLs that we all create furiously. (You can read about her latest revelation here which we wrote about earlier in the month.) You know when she says, "this is a hard problem" that she is really saying "this is a problem that I haven't yet figured out the best answer to." To each problem, her credo is Obtain, Scrub, Explore, Model, and Interpret. I'll review each of these steps.
The first step is setting up a proper environment, and for Mason it is a Linux machine with a variety of tools on it that you can find on her Github page linked above. She is a Python programmer, and so this reflects that interest. She uses Python with JSONview's Chrome extension, NLTK, numpy, Pycluster, hcluster, and mathplotlib. You can use most of these tools on other OSs too.
Second, you need to obtain a few test data sets that you can start to manipulate. Even if you aren't drinking out of the Bit.ly data fire hose, there are ways to get access to lots of great data around the Internet. Mason mentioned a few places, including:
The New York Times. Each and every article that is posted on the main NYT Web site going back dozens of years has oodles of metadata and tags galore. Just view the source on any news article to see how the human editors have classified it. You'll need to start off by registering for an API key here and then select "Article Search API"
Mason has put together several dozen different bundles of research-quality data sets at this link here
Pete Skomoroch's various sample datasets that he has collected, and there is always the epic reference
Data Source Handbook by Pete Warden
Some of these datasets have gotten almost urban legend status, such as the email collection that was part of all the Enron court cases: this is useful for testing anti-spam programs, even though it is several years old. Because of how people use Bit.ly, Mason said that they usually see malware and other bad stuff several hours before anyone else has picked it up around the Internet.
Third, you need to start thinking about how to make your data sets smaller. "Big Data usually refers to a data set that is too big to fit into your available memory, or too big to store on your own hard drive, or too big to fit into an Excel spreadsheet," says Mason. This is the "scrub" section. The smaller the dataset, the easier it is to manipulate and analyze.
Now comes the fun part, exploring your data. You want to ask questions and figure out patterns. If you are using the NYTimes data for example, you could look at words that are most frequently used to describe political candidates, or are particular words more often used in the technology section than in the sports section.
Next comes the mathematical modeling portion of the program. If you don't have a lot of depth in probability or statistics, you are going to need some help here. Mason rolls off the math almost as if she is speaking fluently in a foreign language. And given that I was an undergraduate math major, I can only understand your own frustrations here when you see something with the Greek Sigma sign (hint: that means a sum of things). She let slip the words "fourier transform" which brought me to the Wikipedia definition before I could try to remember what it was. But the essence here is to write code to get the answers of the questions that you are asking in your explorations.
Finally is interpretation. You want to put the answers that you obtained from your modeling into the context of why they are important. You may need to do some visualizations or reporting so that your results can be understood. Or you may choose to omit this part if your answers are sufficient for your particular purposes. Mason mentioned her spam-fighting tactics that she uses to cleanse the shortened URLs from evil doers. "As long as our routines seemed to be working, that was good enough for us and so we just stopped," she said. Part of this process is understanding when you have the best answer that you are going to have to your questions, "knowing when you have won" as she says.
If you are looking to learn more, a good place is to sign up for one of Stanford's free classes on AI, Machine Learning, and databases here. The classes start October 10 and continue until mid-December. They are free and you submit homework assignments and do everything that you would normally do in a typical CS class, including getting help from teaching assistants too.
Mason is lucky to have such a large playground to operate in, and we are lucky when we can sit at her feet and try to understand the totality of her experience. I hope I have given you a taste for the world of Big Data here and some of the best ways to get started at your own analysis. And if you need more motivation, she tells me that just about everyone is hiring their own "data person" these days, so if you get good enough at you probably have your pick of employers for years to come.
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from ReadWriteWeb http://rww.to/v2rvcq
Reblog: VDIs Compared: Citrix XenDesktop vs. VMware View
InfoWorld's Keith Schultz provides an in-depth comparison of enterprise-grade virtual desktop infrastructures from Citrix and VMware. 'As in my comparison of entry-level VDI solutions, my goal was to see what it would take to deploy a complete VDI solution based on Citrix XenDesktop 5.5 and VMware View 5 for up to 50 users,' Schultz writes. 'When compared to the Kaviza, NComputing, and Pano Logic solutions, XenDesktop and View take much more effort, knowledge, and time to get up and running. But for companies that need to be able to grow and manage a large number of virtual desktop users, XenDesktop and View are the only way to go.' from OSNews http://bit.ly/v1tYvo
Reblog: Most Popular Windows Downloads And Posts Of 2011
Windows had some great apps and how-tos in 2011, not to mention our first preview of Windows 8 and all the fun that comes along with a public beta. Here’s our look at Lifehacker’s most popular Windows downloads, how-tos, and other posts from the past year. How to Break Into A Windows PC (And Prevent It From Happening to You) If you’re trying to break into a Windows computer-w ...
from Lifehacker Australia http://bit.ly/s2V5ph
Reblog: 'Vocal Fry' Creeping Into US Speech
sciencehabit writes "A curious vocal pattern has crept into the speech of young adult women who speak American English: low, creaky vibrations, also called vocal fry. Pop singers, such as Britney Spears, slip vocal fry into their music as a way to reach low notes and add style. Now, a new study of young women in New York state shows that the same guttural vibration — once considered a speech disorder — has become a language fad."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
from Slashdot http://bit.ly/uRwiTt
Reblog: ISC Announces Major BIND 9 Vulnerability
The Internet Systems Consortium (ISC) is reporting a major vulnerability in BIND 9, with an apparent exploit in the wild. According to the announcement, servers running BIND 9 and performing recursive queries should upgrade immediately.
The actual exploit for this vulnerability is not yet reported. ISC says that it will cause a resolver to cache an invalid record, then crash when responding to queries that request that record.
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If BIND has crashed due to the flaw, ISC says it should log an error in query.c with the message "INSIST(! dns_rdataset_isassociated(sigrdataset))."
The ISC does not yet know the actual cause of the vulnerability, but has a patch that deals with the symptom of the exploit. The vulnerability affects multiple versions of BIND, and ISC has produced patches for BIND 9.8.1, 9.7.4, 9.6 and 9.4. Versions 9.2.x and earlier may be unaffected due to an older implementation of DNSSEC.
The announcement from ISC has links to the patches, and many vendors have already produced updates that incorporate the patches. If you're running affected versions of BIND 9, upgrade immediately.
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from ReadWriteWeb http://rww.to/tl8Pzf