Feb
18
2009
lamaditx writes “The book Collective Intelligence in Action shows you how to apply theory from Machine Learning, Artificial Intelligence and Data Mining to your business. The goal is to create systems which make use of data created by groups of people — i.e. social networks — and abstract from these to gain new or additional information. Some of you might think “just another kind of Web 2.0.” This is one application you might think of, but the input and output format do not matter that much. You can use these methods anywhere as long as the amount of data is big enough. You will find some examples related to the latest web technologies to explain methods, but the code is rather generic. Also, you won’t find a lot disturbing details about HTML, HTTP and the like.” Keep reading for the rest of Adrian’s review.

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Comments Off on Collective Intelligence in Action | tags: google, Intel, Mac, network, web | posted in technical news
Feb
18
2009
Intel has finally found its first customer for Moorestown, its follow-on to the Atom-based Menlow platform. But the Moorestown-based MID that Intel and LG have announced faces some serious headwinds, not even counting the basic questions about the form factor itself.
Comments Off on Intel, LG announce first Moorestown mobile Internet device | tags: Atom, Intel, mobile | posted in technical news
Feb
17
2009
goran72 sends in a story out of the Chicago AAAS meeting contending that Earth-like planets with life-sustaining conditions may be spinning around stars in our galactic neighborhood — we just haven’t found them yet. “‘So I think there is a very good chance that we will find some Earth-like planets within 10, 20 or 30 light years of the Sun,’ astrophysicist [Alan Boss]… told his AAAS colleagues meeting here since Thursday. … The images from those new planets, he added, should identify ‘light from their atmosphere and tell us if they have perhaps methane and oxygen. That will be pretty strong proof they are not only habitable but actually are inhabited. I am not talking about a planet with intelligence on it. I simply say if you have a habitable world. … Sitting there, with the right temperature with water for a billion years, something is going to come out of it. At least we will have microbes,’ said Boss.”

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Comments Off on Earth-Like Planets In Our Neighborhood | tags: google, Intel | posted in technical news
Feb
16
2009
Comments Off on GMC Yukon Hybrid – Daily Camera | tags: google, Intel, news | posted in technical news
Feb
16
2009
Comments Off on LG Electronics, Intel Collaborate on Future Mobile Internet Device – YTN | tags: Atom, google, Intel, mobile, news, Phone, wireless | posted in technical news
Feb
16
2009
Comments Off on Great horned owls actively nesting across Quinte – Belleville Intelligencer | tags: google, Intel, news | posted in technical news
Feb
16
2009
bmsleight writes in with a Guardian piece on the decision of the world’s second biggest pharmaceutical company, GlaxoSmithKline, to radically shift its attitude towards providing cheap drugs to millions of people in the developing world. “[The new CEO] said that GSK will… cut its prices for all drugs in the 50 least developed countries to no more than 25% of the levels in the UK and US — and less if possible — and make drugs more affordable in middle-income countries such as Brazil and India; put any chemicals or processes over which it has intellectual property rights that are relevant to finding drugs for neglected diseases into a ‘patent pool,’ so they can be explored by other researchers; and reinvest 20% of any profits it makes in the least developed countries in hospitals, clinics, and staff.”

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Comments Off on Drug Giant Pledges Cheap Medicine For World’s Poor | tags: google, Intel, Mac | posted in technical news
Feb
16
2009
Comments Off on Great horned owls actively nesting across Quinte – Belleville Intelligencer | tags: google, Intel, news | posted in technical news
Feb
16
2009
On CNet.com, Brooke Crowthers has a review of some flops in the chip-making world — from IBM, Intel, and AMD — and the hype that surrounded them, which is arguably as interesting as the chips’ failures. “First, I have to revisit Intel’s Itanium. Simply because it’s still around and still missing production target dates. The hype: ‘This design philosophy will one day replace RISC and CISC. It is a gateway into the 64-bit future.’ … The reality: Yes, Itanium is still warm, still breathing in the rarefied very-high-end server market — where it does have a limited role. But… it certainly hasn’t remade the computer industry.”

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Comments Off on A Brief History of Chip Hype and Flops | tags: google, IBM, Intel | posted in technical news
Feb
15
2009
Comments Off on When The Theory Was New – Atlantic Online | tags: google, Intel, news | posted in technical news