Feb
27
2009
saccade.com writes “Bunnie (of XBox hacking and Chumby fame) has written an insightful post about how a new phenomena emerging out of China called ‘Shanzai’ has impacted the electronics business there. A new class of innovators, they’re going beyond merely copying western designs to producing electronic “mash-ups” to create new products. Bootstrapped on small amounts of capital, they range from shops of just a few people to a few hundred. They rapidly create new products, and use an “open source” style design community where design ideas and component lists are shared.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Bunnie Huang on China’s "Shanzai" Mash-Up Design Shops | tags: cap, china, google, open source, xbox | posted in technical news
Feb
27
2009
saccade.com writes “Bunnie (of XBox hacking and Chumby fame) has written an insightful post about how a new phenomena emerging out of China called ‘Shanzai’ has impacted the electronics business there. A new class of innovators, they’re going beyond merely copying western designs to producing electronic “mash-ups” to create new products. Bootstrapped on small amounts of capital, they range from shops of just a few people to a few hundred. They rapidly create new products, and use an “open source” style design community where design ideas and component lists are shared.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Bunnie Huang on China’s "Shanzai" Mash-up Design Shops | tags: cap, china, google, open source, xbox | posted in technical news
Feb
27
2009
Al writes “Microsoft demonstrated new augmented-reality software for cell-phones at the 2009 TechFest conference, which was held this week in Redmond. Instead of using GPS or WiFi triangulation, the prototype system relies entirely on scene-recognition to identify its position and add virtual objects to a video picture of the real world. TechFest is a showcase for lots of projects at Microsoft’s various research labs. Other technologies on show included Photosynth for video, an image-tracking system for handwriting, a way of refining image searches using colors, and a 3-D version of Microsoft Surface.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Microsoft’s Augmented Reality, Video Photosynth | tags: google, microsoft, mobile, Phone, redmond, tv | posted in technical news
Feb
26
2009
Nocts writes “I’m currently working for a moderately sized company that manages a large portion of its internal help desk questions through a Jabber-based chat room. What we’re looking for instead is an open source, preferably Web-based solution that will give us the ability to have floor representatives queue questions and concerns in a similar fashion to BugTraq, directed at the help desk. Email capability would be preferred for elaboration of specific issues, but the more we can centralize everything into the queued system the better. Any recommendations and experiences? Just about any language is doable since I have the ability to configure and upgrade our servers and we’re looking at about a user base of 100 people, with around 5-10 questions a minute.”

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Comments Off on Best FOSS Help Desk Software For Small Firms? | tags: cap, email, google, open source, web, web-based | posted in technical news
Feb
26
2009
revealingheart writes “Plagiarism Today reports on the release of the Creative Commons Zero license, which allows you to waive copyright and related rights to your works, improving on the existing public domain dedication. This follows-on from their original announcement on CC0. The CC0 waiver system is a major step forward for the Creative Commons Organization in terms of their public domain efforts. Even though it isn’t a true public domain dedication, it only waives the rights as far as they can be waived (Note: Moral rights, in many countries, can not be outright waived), it opens up what is likely as close to a public domain option as practical under the current legal climate.”

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Comments Off on Creative Commons Releases "Zero" License | tags: google, news | posted in technical news
Feb
26
2009
An anonymous reader writes “If you’re planning on traveling internationally with a laptop, consider the following: District Court Overturns Magistrate Judge in Fifth Amendment Encryption Case. Laptop searches at the border have been discussed many times previously. This is the case where a man entered the country allegedly carrying pornographic material in an encrypted file on his laptop. He initially cooperated with border agents during the search of the laptop then later decided not to cooperate citing the Fifth Amendment. Last year a magistrate judge ruled that compelling the man to enter his password would violate his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. Now in a narrow ruling, US District Judge William K. Sessions III said the man had waived his right against self-incrimination when he initially cooperated with border agents.” sohp notes that “the order is not that he produce the key — just that he provide an unencrypted copy.”

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Comments Off on US District Ct. Says Defendant Must Provide Decrypted Data | tags: encrypted, encryption, google, laptop | posted in technical news
Feb
26
2009
Nakeot writes “In the continuing efforts to build faster and smaller components, a group of researchers at MIT have constructed a basic prototype device that folds materials only hundreds of microns across. Mechanical engineer and Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering George Barbastathis leads the charge into ‘nano-origami’ machines involving, the article reads, ‘a new technique that allows engineers to fold nanoscale materials into simple 3-D structures’ (more details available on MIT’s page). The group had worked in 2005 with MIT Associate Professor Yang Shao-Horn to build a single-fold nano-capacitor (or see Google’s HTML version), and this work appears to automate their 2005 process. A comment on the posted video appears to suggests this device is not completely automated yet, however. (This should not be confused with Paul Rothemund’s slightly-more-ahead DNA-origami technology.)”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Folding Nanosheets To Build Components | tags: cap, google, Mac, technology | posted in technical news
Feb
26
2009
In response to its extended Gmail outage yesterday, Google has just launched the Google Apps Status Dashboard. The dashboard offers an at-a-glance look at the system health of most popular Google services, including Gmail, Google Calendar, and the company’s suite of web-based document editors.
Comments Off on Google Responds To ‘Gfail’ Outage With Apps Status Dashboard | tags: gmail, google, web, web-based | posted in technical news
Feb
26
2009
Eu, a small town in North France, ranks rather poorly in search engines as the word EU may refer to the more popular European Union or or even the Chemical symbol for Europium.
Comments Off on French Town Changing Name to Improve Ranks in Google | tags: google | posted in technical news
Feb
26
2009
People who bought an unlocked version of the Android G1 phone are no longer allowed to download new paid applications from the Market, after a change Google made late last week. Google is prohibiting users of the unlocked phones from viewing copy-protected applications, including those that cost to download.
Comments Off on Google blocks paid apps for unlocked G1 users | tags: google, Phone | posted in technical news