Apr
25
2009
Comments Off on Students Fall Ill in New York, and Swine Flu Is Likely Cause – New York Times | tags: google, news, virus, youtube | posted in technical news
Apr
25
2009
Comments Off on From Sandy Strip of Sri Lanka, Tales of Suffering as War Traps … – New York Times | tags: google, news, program, youtube | posted in technical news
Apr
25
2009
“Ubuntu Studio is a multimedia editing/creation flavor of Ubuntu, built for the GNU/Linux audio, video, and graphics enthusiast or professional”
Comments Off on Ubuntu Studio 9.04 Released! | tags: linux, ubuntu | posted in technical news
Apr
25
2009
At first I thought it must be a mistake, so I decided to click the Stumble button and see what would happen. Instead of jumping back down to 98 as I expected it would, it went down to 499 and then continued to count down as I stumbled more pages.
Comments Off on StumbleUpon Toolbar Storing 500 Cued Pages Now? | posted in technical news
Apr
25
2009
A Collection of all the best free photo editing services, which will keep You busy for quite a while and You will receive amazing results – maybe funny, maybe silly – but You’ll get original photos and few more reasons to smile
Comments Off on 28 Online Photo Editing Websites To have Fun With | tags: web | posted in technical news
Apr
25
2009
An anonymous reader writes “Accurate face recognition is coming. Pittsburgh Pattern Recognition, a face recognition start-up spun out from Carnegie Mellon University, has posted a tech demo showing an analysis of the entire original Star Trek series using face recognition. The online visualization includes various annotated clips of the series with clickable thumbnails of each character’s appearance. They also have a separate page showing the full data of all the prominent characters in every episode including extracting thumbnails of each appearance.” Their software can recognize frontal or near-frontal face instances.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Analyzing (All of) Star Trek With Face Recognition | tags: google | posted in technical news
Apr
25
2009
krou writes “In Dec. 2006, we discussed the Espresso Book Machine. Well, on April 27 the bookseller Blackwell will launch a three month trial of the machine in its Charing Cross Road branch in London as a ‘print on demand’ service for shoppers in an effort ‘to consign to history the idea that you can walk into a bookshop and not find the book you want.’ When the trial begins, it will be able to print any of some 400,000 titles; Blackwell’s overall goal is to extend this to a million titles by the summer, and to spread out more machines to the rest of its sixty stores once it works out pricing. Currently, they charge shelf price for in-print books, and 10 pence per page for those out of print (about for a 300-page book), but are analyzing customer behavior to get a better pricing model. Says Blackwell chief executive Andrew Hutchings: ‘This could change bookselling fundamentally. It’s giving the chance for smaller locations, independent booksellers, to have the opportunity to truly compete with big stock-holding shops and Amazon… I like to think of it as the revitalization of the local bookshop industry.’ Their website notes that in addition to getting books printed in-store, in future you will be able to order titles via their site. (They also mention that one of the titles you can print is the 1915 Oxford Poetry Book, which includes one of Tolkien’s first poems, ‘Goblin’s Feet.’)” You’ll also be able to bring in your own book to print — two PDF files, one for the book block and one for the cover.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Blackwell Launches Print-On-Demand Trial In the UK | tags: amazon, google, Mac, web | posted in technical news
Apr
25
2009
Comments Off on Burnt, broken, silent: the child victims of Tamil war – Times Online | tags: china, google, news, program, youtube | posted in technical news
Apr
25
2009
Comments Off on Zuma to be South Africa's Next President – Voice of America | tags: google, news, tv | posted in technical news