Apr
22
2009
Comments Off on Storms dampen hopes of record turnout in South Africa elections – guardian.co.uk | tags: google, news, tv, youtube | posted in technical news
Apr
22
2009
Comments Off on Sri Lankan war in endgame, 81000 escape rebel zone – Reuters | tags: cap, google, news, youtube | posted in technical news
Apr
22
2009
Google recently released software called O3D to bring accelerated 3D graphics to browsers, a significant effort but not the only one to try to endow Web applications with some of the computing muscle that PC programs can use.
Comments Off on Google tries jump-starting 3D Web with O3D | tags: google, program, web | posted in technical news
Apr
22
2009
jd writes “The BBC is reporting that the United Nations’ World Digital Library has gone online with an initial offering of 1,200 ancient manuscripts, parchments and documents. To no great surprise, Europe comes in first with 380 items. South America comes in second with 320, with a very distant third place being given to the Middle East at a paltry 157 texts. This is only the initial round, so the leader board can be expected to change. There are, for example, many Sumerian and Babylonian tablets, many of which are already online elsewhere. Astonishingly, the collection is covered by numerous copyright laws, according to the legal page. Use of material from a given country is subject to whatever restrictions that country places, in addition to any local and international copyright laws. With some of the contributions being over 8,000 years old, this has to be the longest copyright extension ever offered. There is nothing on whether the original artists get royalties, however.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Ancient Books Go Online | tags: google | posted in technical news
Apr
21
2009
Comments Off on Canada more lax than US about whom it lets in, Napolitano says – CBC.ca | tags: google, network, news, obama, security | posted in technical news
Apr
21
2009
Comments Off on CanJet crew helped commandos sneak into cockpit, surprise hijacker – Globe and Mail | tags: 3G, cap, google, news, tv, youtube | posted in technical news
Apr
21
2009
Comments Off on RCMP 'sorry' for inaccurate remarks on Dziekanski incident – Globe and Mail | tags: google, news | posted in technical news
Apr
21
2009
Google me? I’ll Google you! Google has become the de facto public record these days but most people remain in relative obscurity there and/or fear of what past indiscretions Google will expose to people who search for them.
Comments Off on Now You Can Change What Google Says About You | tags: google | posted in technical news
Apr
21
2009
Hugh Pickens writes “Erick Schonfeld has an interesting story in TechCrunch about a consortium of publishers including Reuters, the Magazine Publishers of America, and Politico that plans to take a new approach towards the proliferation of splogs (spam blogs) and other sites which republish the entire feed of news sites and blogs, often without attribution or links. For any post or page which takes a full copy of a publisher’s work, the Fair Syndication Consortium thinks the ad networks should pay a portion of the ad revenues being generated by those sites. Rather than go after these sites one at a time, the Fair Syndication Consortium wants to negotiate directly with the ad networks which serve ads on these sites: DoubleClick, Google’s AdSense, and Yahoo. One precedent for this type of approach is YouTube’s Content ID program, which splits revenues between YouTube and the media companies whose videos are being reused online. How would the ad networks know that the content in question belongs to the publisher? Attributor would keep track of it all and manage the requests for payment. The consortium is open to any publisher to join, including bloggers. It may not be the perfect solution but ‘it is certainly better than sending out thousands of takedown notices’ writes Schonfeld.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Consortium To Share Ad Revenue From Stolen Stories | tags: google, network, news, program, youtube | posted in technical news
Apr
21
2009
smolloy writes “The world’s first X-ray laser (LCLS) has seen first light. A Free Electron Laser (FEL) is based on the light that is emitted by accelerated electrons when they are forced to move in a curved path. The beam then interacts with this emitted light in order to excite coherent emission (much like in a regular laser); thus producing a very short, extremely bright, bunch of coherent X-ray photons. The engineering expertise that went into this machine is phenomenal — ‘This is the most difficult light source that has ever been turned on,’ said LCLS Construction Project Director John Galayda. ‘It’s on the boundary between the impossible and possible, and within two hours of start-up these guys had it right on.’ — and the benefits to the applied sciences from research using this light can be expected to be enormous: ‘For some disciplines, this tool will be as important to the future as the microscope has been to the past.’ said SLAC Director Persis Drell.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on World’s First X-Ray Laser Goes Live | tags: applied science, google, Mac | posted in technical news