Mar 4 2009

50 Things Every Mac Geek Should Know

Like a champion cyclist knows bike parts,a car buff knows model years, and a sports fan knows win-loss records, all Mac geeks worth the title must know these things.

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Mar 4 2009

Reboundfinder: New Twitter tool finds the recently dumped

In what has to be one of the most amusing (and slightly sinister) uses of Twitter’s API, Box UK has created reboundfinder to search for specific tweets from people who post that they have either dumped their loved ones, or been dumped by them, and then to RT, or retweet, their posts via its feed.

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Mar 4 2009

Bigg Digg Shindigg and More: Your Guide to SXSW Interactive

With the biggest conference presence of the entire SXSW festival, SXSW Interactive is more than just a place where, as ace SXSW Interactive Press and Publicity coordinator Tammy Lynn Gilmore put it, “you get to meet all those people you follow on Twitter.” Unlike music and film, it’s difficult to maintain an “I’m too cool” attitude when you’re surr

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Mar 4 2009

How to use Icons to Support Content in Web Design

In this article we showcase beautiful examples and best practices of using icons to support content in web design. Please feel free to take a look at the showcases of navigation menus, search boxes, blockquotes and web forms.

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Mar 4 2009

Why Google won’t Remove that Page you don’t like

Should Google remove a “crazy person’s page” from the index? The head of Google’s Webspam team gives his personal perspective.

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Mar 4 2009

Good Robot Projects For K-5?

bugs2squash writes “Some of the parents of kids at my son’s elementary school would like to set up a robotics club for the children. I see that Lego has a new line of robotics bricks called wedo (PDF) and that seems to be the path of least resistance to doing something. But I wanted to ask: What experience do all y’all have of running a robotics club for this age group (5 thru 10 years old) and what factors made it a success (or failure)? Did you use a commercial kit of parts or brew something from scratch? What kind of projects work well with kids this age? I was thinking maybe making robot flowers (yes, I know they’d all rather build robotic sharks with lasers).” (Here’s another page about Wedo.)

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Mar 4 2009

Calif. Politican Thinks Blurred Online Maps Would Deter Terrorists

Hugh Pickens writes “California Assemblyman Joel Anderson plans to introduce a bill to force Google Earth and similar services to blur images of so-called ‘soft targets’ like schools, hospitals, churches and government buildings to protect them from terrorists. ‘All I’m trying to do is stop terrorists,’ said Anderson. ‘I don’t want California to be helping map out future targets for terrorists.’ Concerns that detailed satellite imagery and photographs available on Web services could help terrorists plan attacks are not new, with reports that terrorists have used such imagery to carry out attacks in Iraq and Israel, and an Indian court is considering a ban on Google Earth following reports that its imagery played a part in the Mumbai terrorist attacks.”

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Mar 4 2009

Parallels Desktop For Mac vs. VMware

neilticktin writes “MacTech performed an exhaustive set of benchmarks comparing Parallels Desktop 4 to VMWare Fusion 2 to run Windows on a Mac. To tackle this problem, MacTech undertook a huge benchmarking project starting in December — over 2500 tests by stopwatch. The goal was to see how the recent versions of VMWare Fusion and Parallels Desktop performed on different levels of Mac hardware, using XP, Vista, 64-bit, multi-procs, games, etc. … As usual, results vary by what’s important to you.”

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Mar 4 2009

Google’s Struggle To Reach Authors — of Every Book Ever Written

eldavojohn writes “There’s no lack of news surrounding the settlement of Google’s controversial move to digitize books — but how do you even start this endeavor? A New York Times story reveals the obstacles they face just to get the word out that they want to settle with publishers and authors everywhere. They turned to a world-wide ad campaign to start the 5 million settlement process and they’re spending million to million in paper print ads and telephone hot-lines (handling 80+ languages) to reach as many people as possible. From the article: ‘We looked at how many books were published in various areas and we knew from the plaintiffs and Google that 30 percent were published in the U.S., 30 percent in industrialized countries. The rest of the world is the rest.’ That’s quite the herculean task! Hopefully Google’s efforts in digitizing books will breathe new life and revenue into authors and publishers the world over.”

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Mar 4 2009

Gravitational Waves May Have Been Detected In 1987

KentuckyFC writes “In 1987, a physicist called Joe Weber claimed to have detected gravitational waves at the same time that other scientists spotted a supernova called SN1987A. His claims were largely ignored because of calculations showing that gravitational waves could not be strong enough to be picked up by Weber’s equipment, a set of giant aluminium cylinders designed to vibrate as the waves passed by. But these calculations were based on first order effects in the way spacetime can be distorted. Now a new analysis shows that second order effects can enhance gravitational waves by four orders of magnitude, but only when certain asymmetries are present. It turns out that SN1987A possesses just the right kind of asymmetries to make this enhancement possible because the supernova wasn’t entirely spherical. Which means that Weber, who died in 2000, may have been the first to see gravitational waves after all.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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