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Archive for the 'The Interweb' Category


Take in a New Point of View at Big Think [Video]

Posted by brad on 16th November 2008


If You Tube had an overly-intellectual kid brother who preferred Noam Chomsky to Naruto, that brother would be Big Think. Big Think is a web site built around interviews with prominent scientific and political figures about a broad range of topics.

[Big Think's] shorts are studio-shot, first-person interviews. Each clip features the interviewee answering a single question or waxing on a single topic: for example, UCLA law professor Kal Raustiala explaining his “piracy paradox,” the puzzle that intellectual property protection may be inhibiting creative progress in culture and industry.

Big Think can be searched by keyword or browsed by the various topics such as Identify, Truth & Wisdom, and more concrete topics like History or Science & Technology. The clips are well lit, professionally done, and full of interesting ideas and viewpoints you may not have come across otherwise. For more mind-expanding video goodness check out TED Talks, the free public archive of speakers from the Technology, Entertainment, and Design Conference.


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XBMC 8.10 Atlantis Leaves Beta [Featured Download]

Posted by brad on 15th November 2008

Ladies and gentlemen, start your downloads. XBMC 8.10 Atlantis—the release that’s bringing the popular media center to all platforms and integrating XBMC with Mac apps like iTunes and iPhoto—is officially available. For a closer look at what you can expect, check out our screenshot tour of XBMC Atlantis.


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Soocial Syncs Gmail, Outlook, Your Cellphone, and More [Contact Management]

Posted by brad on 15th November 2008

Web application Soocial promises hassle-free contact management, seamlessly syncing contacts between a handful of potential buckets including Gmail, Outlook, the OS X Address Book, Highrise, and over 400 phones (including your BlackBerry). To get started, just sign up with Soocial and start adding accounts and apps using their simple setup wizards. Some syncing will require you to download a utility (Outlook and Address Book, for example), while others simple require that you enter in a password (e.g., Gmail). The site is currently in beta, and though it’s gotten a lot of positive feedback from users, keep in mind that you could run into a bug or two. If you’re concerned with the privacy implications, Soocial makes it clear that if you decide to cancel your account, all of your data will be permanently deleted from their servers. Keep reading to get a clearer picture of how Soocial makes contact syncing a “hassle-free” process from their demo video.

Soocial is free to use and is currently in public beta. If you’ve been using it since the private beta period, let’s hear how it’s worked for you in the comments.


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50 significant moments from internet history

Posted by brad on 3rd October 2008

We take you through 50 defining moments of the internet.

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50 significant moments from internet history

Posted by brad on 3rd October 2008

We take you through 50 defining moments of the internet.

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10 Gadgets to Help You Survive the Oncoming Depression-Caused Apocalypse [Panic]

Posted by brad on 3rd October 2008

digg_skin = ‘compact’; digg_bgcolor = ‘#f1f8fa’; digg_url = ‘http://digg.com/gadgets/10_Gadgets_to_Help_Survive_the_Oncoming_Economic_Apocalypse’;

Well, things aren’t looking too great economy-wise. We might just be headed for a depression, which means you’ll need to start changing your lifestyle. While you may start out by changing your lifestyle in subtle ways, you need to be mentally prepared for the fact that more, well, drastic measures may be necessary in the not-too-distant future. Luckily, I’ve hand-picked 10 gadgets that may be necessary in our frightening, Lehman-Brothersless future.

10. The first thing you’re gonna want to do is start saving money. This Tomy RPG Piggy Bank makes saving money fun by featuring a simple game on the front that utilizes the money you insert into it. Make saving a game, you’ll be more apt to do it! [Link]

9. A good way to save money is to stop using so much electricity. This energy saving remote lets you cut the power to all of your home theater electronics that suck up juice even when they’re off. This should save you precious dollars every month. [Link]

8. Not everyone will be as responsible as you, and they may get desperate and try to steal your precious financial documents. Keep them locked up in this really intense hard drive/safe combo. It’s fireproof and waterproof, so you can be sure nothing will happen to your data. [Link]

Sequiam%20BioLock.jpg7. It’s not just your digital property that you need to protect, its your physical property as well. This lock uses your fingerprint to allow access, so only you and your family will be able to get into your house when the looting and rioting begin. [Link]

6. OK, so they’ve cut the power to your home and you’ve barricaded yourself inside. You obviously can’t go to the grocery store for food as all of the stores have been overtaken by roving bands of weapons-wielding former stock brokers, so you should ensure you’ve got plenty of non-perishable food to last you through the financial crisis. [Link]


5. So they set your house on fire, forcing you to flee into the woods. What you’ll need is a tent that’s quick to set up and quick to pack up when you hear the sounds of the bloodthirsty brokers crashing through the underbrush. This self-pitching tent sets itself up in the air as you throw it, allowing you to set up camp quickly and easily. [Link]

VE0622.jpg4. You’ll want to be able to know the weather and charge your phone while you’re on the run, and this is the device to do it for you. Assuming the national weather services haven’t been overrun and destroyed, you’ll be able to check on the forecast while charging your gadgets with this. [Link]

rhino.jpg image3. You need to escape the city, where all the former bankers are based, and since cars are susceptible to bombs and rocket launchers, you’ll need something a bit more tough. The Rhino can withstand just about anything that’s thrown at it and keep you and whatever is left of your family safe inside. [Link]

2. OK, so you needed to get out of the Rhino and dole out some punishment man-to-man. This recoilless auto shotgun can fire off 300 rounds per minute, making quick work of anyone with a blue shirt with white cuffs flecked with human blood around. Just make sure to pick up plenty of extra ammo while you’re at it. [Link]

digital_tombstone.jpg1. So you didn’t make it. That’s disappointing! You can at least leave a lasting memorial to yourself with your last near-worthless American dollars by purchasing this digital tombstone with your dying breath. It can display videos on its LCD monitor of you in happier times, buying gasoline for less than $150 a gallon and owning a house that actually has some value. Maybe in heaven things will be like that again. For your sake, I hope so. [Link] [Top image via Pink Tentacle]


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Official Gmail Blog: Tip: Read your mail without touching your mouse

Posted by brad on 3rd October 2008


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Google’s World-Saving Clean Energy Plan Costs $4.4 Trillion, Dramatically Shrinks Google’s Power Bill [Google]

Posted by brad on 3rd October 2008

Google, who in aggregate, effectively knows everything, unsurprisingly has a solution for our energy problems. The plan, called Clean Energy 2030 will cost $4.4 trillion over its 22-year span, if we start on it right now. Google says it’ll give us back a net of $1 trillion, like half of which will be savings on Google’s massive power bill notes the former Fake Steve.

None of the key points are radical, except for asking for a $4.4 trillion investment—90 percent of new cars electric by 2030, 45mpg average fuel efficiency, efficient electricity use to cut demand 33 percent, replacing all coal with renewable electricity. I was hoping for something more innovative and exciting, like Google Power, which would be in beta for 22 years. Cause if Google can’t save the world, who can? [Google via Alley Insider]


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Google Claims Most Efficient Data Centers Ever [Google]

Posted by brad on 2nd October 2008

Responding to criticism for its secrecy over its data centers, Google has lifted the veil a little on how much energy its information hotbeds use. The world’s largest search engine insisted that Google-designed data centers used nearly five times less energy than conventional facilities, and launched a website to inform environmentally-bent customers on their 5-step approach to efficiency.

The move is important since data centers are becoming an ever-increasing drain on the energy grid, accounting for about 1.5 percent of all electricity consumed in the U.S. in 2006 (expected to rise to 2.5 percent in three years). While the efficiency levels Google touted are admirable, data center trackers cautioned that the test results hadn’t been verified by a third party. [NYTimes]


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Ballmer says “Windows Cloud” OS will debut this month

Posted by brad on 2nd October 2008

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While a good chunk of this month’s Professional Developers Conference will be focused on Windows 7, it looks like Microsoft has another little surprise up its sleeve, with CEO Steve Ballmer himself dropping word that the company also plans to introduce its new, tentatively-titled “Windows Cloud” OS at the conference. Of course, Ballmer isn’t about to get very specific about the OS just yet, though he does seem to be dampening expectations a bit by saying, “just like Windows Server looked a lot like Windows but with new properties, new characteristics and new features, so will Windows Cloud look a lot like Windows Server.” He also apparently confirmed that geo-replication and other features “designed for the cloud” would be built into the OS, and he confirmed the existence of Midori, but said it was still in the incubation phase, adding that, “the guy in the office next door to somebody working on Midori is not supposed to know about Midori.” We assume that also means that Windows Cloud is not Midori, but we’ll know for sure once PDC gets underway on October 27th.

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