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Posts Tagged ‘Killer App’

10 Interesting Links From January 22st

January 23rd, 2010 Greg Smith No comments
  • Business & Technology | Starbucks to close 130-worker call center in Seattle | Seattle Times Newspaper – Starbucks said Thursday it will close a 130-worker call center at its Seattle headquarters and rely on an outside company in Albuquerque, N.M., to handle customer feedback.
  • AMD posts first profit in 13 quarters – AMD's revenue jumped 42 percent year-over-year to $1.626 billion, handily beating Intel's (also impressive) 28 percent jump. The chipmaker's quarterly profit, $1.288 billion, is mostly thanks to the $1.224 settlement with Intel.
  • Ex-IBM Employee reveals TV Abandoned Analog Band to Make Room for RFID | qbit.cc – According to a former 31-year IBM employee, the highly-publicized, mandatory switch from analog to digital television is mainly being done to free up analog frequencies and make room for scanners used to read implantable RFID microchips and track people and products throughout the world.
  • How to Survive in Federal Prison – wikiHow – If you have been sentenced to federal prison, you will become the property of the Bureau Of Prisons (BOP) and this will be the end of life as you know it. As with most federal sentences, you will most likely have many years during which to deal with this new life. This article will offer some advice so you can prepare and survive.
  • Al Jazeera English – Africa – Huge ransom paid to Somali pirates – The ransom delivered on Sunday is believed to be between $5.5m and $7m, according to unnamed sources interviewed by the Reuters news agency.
  • GM Corn & Organ Failure: Lots of Sensationalism, Few Facts | 80beats | Discover Magazine – On Wednesday, we covered the overreaction by a few important online sources to an International Journal of Biological Sciences article claiming to find “signs of toxicity” in three varieties of genetically modified (GM) corn produced by Monsanto. We posted some caveats that made us uneasy about the study, such as the funding sources, the unknown quality of the journal, and the fact that the toxicity claims rely on reinterpreting statistical data that Gilles-Eric Séralini and his coauthors themselves note is not as robust as it needs to be.
  • Infant sealed in concrete by a Brooklyn couple charged with enslaving hooker mom was beaten to death – The infant boy sealed in concrete by a Brooklyn couple charged with pimping out his enslaved hooker mom, was beaten to death, the Daily News has learned.
  • News : Developers envy the pace of Rio Rancho’��s ‘��Lego Man’�� – Rio Rancho Observer – At 58, Larry Winchell of Northwest Albuquerque is anything but a kid – and his expertise with Legos gives him good reason to dub himself the “Lego Man.” His life could’ve taken almost any direction, given that he came from a broken home, had 18 residences in a span of 18years and didn’t start turning his life around until he joined the Air Force. A self-proclaimed East Village hippie “back in the day,” he later used the G.I. Bill to finance his education, later serving as a college teacher and planetarium curator.
  • Intel uses iTunes for performance benchmarking – iPod owners already know that the Windows version of iTunes is anything but an advertisement for good or stable application design, so as a benchmark of how a processor can help matters no matter what software is running this could prove quite informative. Unsurprisingly, the newer i5 processor was much quicker to finish the task than the older Core II Duo it was matched against.
  • The killer app that busted ski-resort snow jobs – The Globe and Mail – The deceptive advertising has been decisively busted by the internet, where skeptical skiers can now check a skireport.com application on their iPhone to vet the resort-supplied snow tally against first-hand accounts from the slopes and lifts.
  • 10 Interesting Links From February 25th

    February 26th, 2009 Greg Smith Comments off
    • Naked corporate FUD-wrestling: Intel, NVIDIA hit the pit – Ars Technica – The fact that Intel wrote a confidential Ion-smashing document for internal use is scarcely surprising; the company prefers to sell an entire Intel solution rather than just an Atom processor. Rather than assaulting Ion with a strong, product-centric argument, however, Intel chose instead to ladle enormous amounts of FUD over the entire document and goes as far as to borrow quotes from other tech sites that were arguably pulled out of context. I won't belabor that point—it's up to the sites involved to decide whether or not their own quotes were misused—but it's fair to say that Intel did some extremely selective quoting.
    • Los Angeles Music – Google’s New Killer App? Why Are Music Bloggers’ Posts Disappearing, and Who Is Deleting Them? - – But in November, some of Spaulding’s posts, both recent and older, long-forgotten ones, started disappearing from his site. There didn’t seem to be any rhyme or reason to it. One moment they were there, the next they were gone. Confused, he started comparing notes with other music bloggers, and they noticed a trend. A lot of posts across the Web, on everything from Abba to Zappa, had vanished.
    • ATP GPS PhotoFinder Mini Review — NaviGadget – Have you ever looked through old photos and wondered, “Where did I take this picture again?” If the answer is yes, then allow me to introduce you to the GPS PhotoFinder mini, the latest geotagging gadget from ATP Electronics. This handy little device will record your GPS position and with the help of a standalone docking station, add it to the image’s EXIF metadata. No need to remember where you shot that photo. After matching the GPS coordinates to the photo’s date and time stamp, your pictures can then be copied from the memory card to a PC and used with a geotagging compatible website such as Flickr. The PhotoFinder mini can also create ‘KML’ route files that are exportable to Google Maps and Google Earth – no computer required.
    • Urine-Fertilizer DIY Kit – We all think of human pee as gross and something that ought to be vigorously “cleaned up” or sanitized. However, human urine is actually sterile (unlike faeces, urine is bacteria-free). This liquid by product of our daily lives can be a rich food source if it gets into the RIGHT part of the right ecosystem. Now, most human urine travels untreated into the waterways and is a significant cause of eutrophication, a toxic condition caused by harmful algae blooms, in the oceans. The excess Nitrogen and Phosphorus in our urine overfeeds algae (like Red Tide) and effectively suffocates fish. However, a pioneering biological waste treament process being used in Switzerland can extract this phosphorus & nitrogen for use as a fertilizer, leaving the rest of urine almost harmless to aquatic life. This kit gives users the opportunity to replicate the new technique at home and fertilize their plants with their own pee.
    • Atlanta police look to restore trust after drug raid killing | ajc.com – The federal sentencing of three ex-Atlanta police officers for the illegal drug raid that left a 92-year-old woman dead closes only one chapter in the tragic case, the Atlanta Police Department said Wednesday.

      “Restoring trust and confidence as well as healing the communities we serve are paramount in our efforts to rebuild a positive relationship with citizens of Atlanta,” the department said in a statement.

    • The Navy Has a Top-Secret Vessel It Wants to Put on Display – WSJ.com – One is called Sea Shadow. It's big, black and looks like a cross between a Stealth fighter and a Batmobile. It was made to escape detection on the open sea. The other is known as the Hughes (as in Howard Hughes) Mining Barge. It looks like a floating field house, with an arching roof and a door that is 76 feet wide and 72 feet high. Sea Shadow berths inside the barge, which keeps it safely hidden from spy satellites.
    • What should government do? A Jindal meditation – Paul Krugman Blog – NYTimes.com – But both sides, I thought, agreed that the government should provide public goods — goods that are nonrival (they benefit everyone) and nonexcludable (there’s no way to restrict the benefits to people who pay.) The classic examples are things like lighthouses and national defense, but there are many others. For example, knowing when a volcano is likely to erupt can save many lives; but there’s no private incentive to spend money on monitoring, since even people who didn’t contribute to maintaining the monitoring system can still benefit from the warning. So that’s the sort of activity that should be undertaken by government.

      So what did Bobby Jindal choose to ridicule in this response to Obama last night? Volcano monitoring, of course.

    • Amazon.com: Clear Butter Gadget – Maxspace: Kitchen & Dining – If you're the type who struggles when trying to spread cold butter on toast, this is just the gadget you need. My father-in-law loves kitchen gadgets, but this is his very favorite. Simply turning the handle forces a thin ribbon of butter to be extruded from a slot in the end of the dispenser. Even straight out of the refrigerator, the ribbon of butter is soft enough to spread with ease. The handle is big enough that it doubles as a stand, allowing you to store the dispenser in the fridge standing on a shelf. The dispenser is easily washed in the dishwasher.
    • Ergen: Must-Carry Is Due for a ‘Tweak’ – 2009-02-25 15:52:43 – Multichannel News – Armed with market-coverage maps, Dish Network chairman Charlie Ergen sat down with reporters last week for a breakfast briefing here before his testimony on reauthorization of the Satellite Home Viewer Extension and Reauthorization Act, the bill that sets the rules of the road for satellite carriage of local TV stations.
    • Kindle 2 Rips Off Authors And Publishers, Says Authors Guild – "Audio rights" should not encompass technologies that convert text to audio on the fly. The audio book industry is about hiring actors and paying them to "act" out books. When you buy an audio book, you don't get the actual book–you get a recording of the actor reading it. When you buy a Kindle book, meanwhile, you get the actual book…and then you ask your computer to read it to you. You're paying for the book–so the author and publisher already get paid. But now they want a double-dip!

    Check out Delicious Library

    October 25th, 2004 Greg Smith Comments off

    I previously mentioned the next version of Library, what I think will be the next killer app. The authors have made a formal announcement and the software will be available November 8th.

    Run your very own library from your home or office using our impossibly simple interface. Delicious Library’s digital shelves act as a visual card-catalog of your books, movies, music and video games. A scan of a barcode is all Delicious Library needs to add an item to your digital shelves, downloading tons of info from the internet like the author, release date, current value, description, and even a high-resolution picture of the cover.

    The use of a iSight to scan barcodes makes it a handy feature.

    Library 3.0 Preview

    August 3rd, 2004 Greg Smith 4 comments

    This is the next “Killer App” that everyone will want. It’s basicly a media cataloger, to catalog your books, movies & CDs. The current version has a nice UI, but with 3.0 they have really taken the Apple design guidelines to their highest level, Mike Matas is one of the experts (IMHO) in this field.

    The killer part of this app is it’s entry mode. You can scan bar codes with not only a bar code scanner but with a iSight camera (and I suspect other video sources). This means you most likely already have the hardware you need to easily scan in your media. Once it has the barcode info it looks it up at Amazon and automatically enters all the details for you.

    I’ve been trying out various media catalogers over the last year without finding one that meets my needs. This appears to meet almost all of them. In case the developers come across this site here is one feature I would like to have. The ability to sync the data from this library from multiple sources. So if my girlfriend and I can both add and remove stuff from the library and get to the data from both of our computers.