Author Topic: Cool Techie Geeky Stuff...  (Read 8235 times)

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Re: Cool Techie Geeky Stuff...
« Reply #120 on: March 24, 2013, 09:18:13 am »
Bruno Maisonnier: Dance, tiny robots!

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Re: Cool Techie Geeky Stuff...
« Reply #121 on: March 24, 2013, 09:34:07 am »
Glacier Calving

Chasing Ice... this is just amazing to watch. I've never heard of Calving  :)

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Chiprocks1

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Re: Cool Techie Geeky Stuff...
« Reply #122 on: March 25, 2013, 02:17:15 pm »
Eye-Tracking Technology Coming Soon

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Re: Cool Techie Geeky Stuff...
« Reply #123 on: April 01, 2013, 09:24:06 am »
This is kind of cool...

GMAIL BLUE

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Re: Cool Techie Geeky Stuff...
« Reply #124 on: April 22, 2013, 10:35:06 am »
I've got to prep to migrate my laptop to Windows 7 at work and there is a ton of stuff to prep and consider.

I just got instructions on things to do before the migration. I just ran across the best IT comment evah!!!

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1.5 Uninstall Visual Studio
If you have Visual Studio installed, you need to uninstall Visual Studio before starting the decryption. If you don’t know whether you have Visual Studio installed, you don’t have it.
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Re: Cool Techie Geeky Stuff...
« Reply #125 on: May 05, 2013, 09:41:11 am »
I think it's premature to make a judgement before they are actually released...

The Verdict Is In: Nobody Likes Google Glass

Quote
The elite of the tech world have decided that Google Glass is the future.

And perhaps they're right, but, Google Glass is clearly not the present. It's not even the near-future, if the early reviews that are rolling in turn out to be accurate.

I haven't worn Glass. While I think it looks neat, I don't see a killer application that makes them worth it.

After reading all the reviews, and talking to people who actually wore Glass, I just see a product plagued by bugs, and of questionable use, that's generating a lot of buzz because people want so desperately to have some new gadget to latch onto, and fear being wrong about the next major technology trend.

Let's run through the ugly truth about Glass.

    The battery life is terrible. Engadget estimated battery life is at five hours. Our own Kevin Smith says the battery life is actually closer to three hours. For a gadget that's supposed to be on your face all day, providing push notifications and alerts, this is not good. ABC says it's 3.5 hours.

    It's disorienting, and gives you a headache
. Our own Alyson Shontell said of Glass, "It's disorienting. You're unable to focus on people or things around you ... Glass is headache-inducing too; you're more or less cross-eyed when focusing on something so close to your face." Hedge fund manager Eric Jackson also tweeted that he heard the same thing: "VC told me this week — who'd tried it and knows many people who have — Google Glass actually is not very good at the moment, gives big headaches."

    The screen is hard to see in bright light
. Here's Engadget: "seeing the display in bright sunlight can be a problem."

    You can't tweak any settings in Glass
. Engadget, again: "You can't adjust volume levels or display brightness, can't disable WiFi or Bluetooth (both appear to be always on), can't re-arrange the application cards in the interface or set their priority, can't modify the default screen timeout length and you can't enable a silent or do not disturb mode."

    The voice controls for Glass are buggy
. There are two ways to control Glass. One is a touch panel on the side of Glass, the other is through voice. You say, "OK Glass," then give it a command. Our own Megan Rose Dickey said that when she tested the voice commands there were problems: "While wearing Glass, my colleague Alyson Shontell was nearby having a conversation with someone else in the room. Without anyone saying, 'Ok, Glass...,' Glass picked up on what Alyson said, and then proceeded to do a Google search for 'running.'"

    You still need a smartphone to use Glass outdoors
. Google Glass doesn't have a built-in cellular data connection. So, you have to have to pair it with a smartphone that has a data connection when you leave your home. This will add to your data plan costs and drain your smartphone's battery.

    It's hard to take off Glass
. Unlike glasses, which actually fold up, Glass is one piece that can't be made smaller. Here's Engadget: "That unbroken titanium band looks nice and provides flexibility, but it also means that Glass doesn't fold up like a traditional pair of glasses, so it won't dangle from the front of a shirt or slide easily into a pocket. That's made worse by the seeming fragility of the exposed refractive display, which we were told shouldn't be touched. Google thoughtfully includes a microfiber carrying case with a hard plastic insert to protect everything sensitive, but the resulting package is hugely bulky. Better bring your big purse."

    Responding to messages is tough
. It's not easy to edit your responses, it seems: "If you speak slowly, clearly and avoid grammatical contractions you have a chance of sending a correct email. Should Glass hear you incorrectly, you have to cancel the entire message and start again."

Much of these things can be fixed over time by Google. These are hardware and software tweaks.

But even when these things are fixed, we still haven't heard a single compelling use case for Glass.

After reading the most enthusiastic review of Glass on the web from early adopter Robert Scoble, the biggest reason for owning Glass is that you can take photos more quickly.

The photo quality, it should be noted is worse than that of your iPhone or the latest Android.

His other reason for buying Glass is, "They are much more social than looking at a cell phone. Why? I don't need to look away from you to use Google, or get directions, or do other things."

That's actually not true. You have to look up to activate Glass, or lift your eye to see the display. The person you're with will see you checking email, or whatever you're trying to do.

These things are going to cause a lot of social angst early on. It's hard to imagine going out to dinner with your wife and not getting heat for wearing Glass. Or hanging with your friends at a bar, and having them believe you're fully committed to the conversation.

Looking at your phone in front of friends sends a direct, honest signal that you are tuning them out. With Google Glass, you're doing the exact same thing, just in a more surreptitious way.

There's a lot of excitement around Google Glass right now because it's new, shiny, and exciting.

The iPad was the last new, shiny, exciting tech gadget. And that was three years ago.

Three years may not sound like a long time to you, but imagine if your entire livelihood is built around writing about new gadgets, or selling applications for new gadgets? Of course you're going to get excited about the next new thing.

Thus, the tech press, and the tech investment community, is thrilled with Google Glass.

Plus, Google has brilliantly limited the roll out of the product. Early on, a few Googlers had them. Naturally, they were enthusiastic about the potential of Glass.

Then, Google held a contest to win Glass, giving people the privilege of paying $1,500 to be beta testers for its new gadget.

(By the way, why is it so expensive? It's not using top of the line processing, according to leaked specs. It's about as powerful as the original Kindle, which cost $159 right now. Is miniaturization and a metal headband a $1,341 cost?)

The people that won the right to pay $1,500 for Glass are inherently disposed to like Glass, no matter what. Would you tell your friends you blew $1,500 on something that's totally useless?

There's another reason people are irrationally excited about Glass, despite seeing a long list of problems — nobody wants to be the person that was wrong about the future.

The tech elite have decided that Glass is the future, dammit. If you say otherwise you're a short-sighted Luddite who can't accept how the world is about to change. You will be ridiculed in five years when everyone and their grandmother is walking the streets will creepy pieces of glass floating over their right eyes.

If you don't say something nice now, people will remember it, they will mock you, and you will be a fool. It's better to be safe and say something like, "it is undoubtedly a game-changer," despite the fact that you only see problems with Glass.

There is a lot of excitement around Glass, but the early reviews are making it clear that this is very much a first generation product that's very buggy, and will probably fail to revolutionize the tech industry, at least as Glass is currently built.

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/nobody-really-likes-google-glass-2013-5#ixzz2SRAAUiHF



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Re: Cool Techie Geeky Stuff...
« Reply #126 on: May 05, 2013, 09:43:01 am »
A Boy and His Atom: The world’s smallest movie from IBM

Quote
A Boy and His Atom is, as the title suggests, a minute-long film involving thousands of precisely placed atoms over 250 frames of stop-motion action.

The film, uploaded on to YouTube and with a playful backing track, shows the eponymous boy befriending a single atom and going dancing, playing catch and bouncing on a trampoline.

IBM said the film, made using cutting-edge technology, represented a ‘unique way to convey science outside the research community’.

‘Moving atoms is one thing; you can do that with the wave of your hand. Capturing, positioning and shaping atoms to create an original motion picture on the atomic-level is a precise science and entirely novel,’ Andreas Heinrich, principle investigator, IBM Research, said.

‘At IBM, researchers don’t just read about science, we do it. This movie is a fun way to share the atomic-scale world while opening up a dialogue with students and others on the new frontiers of math and science. ‘

Atoms in the film were moved with a two-tonne microscope that is itself a recipient of a Nobel Prize.

Scientists used the microscope, which magnifies the atomic surface over 100million times, to control a super-sharp needle across a copper surface.

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Chiprocks1

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Re: Cool Techie Geeky Stuff...
« Reply #127 on: May 05, 2013, 11:46:53 am »
A Boy and His Atom: The world’s smallest movie from IBM


Is this legit or is it really CGI manipulation?
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Chiprocks1

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Re: Cool Techie Geeky Stuff...
« Reply #128 on: May 05, 2013, 11:53:05 am »
I think it's premature to make a judgement before they are actually released...

The Verdict Is In: Nobody Likes Google Glass

I didn't like it in its infancy stage. All the bullet points in yellow are exactly the things that were running through my head when I first heard about it. I'm not at all surprise that it's getting slammed and honestly, I don't see it ever catching on any time soon, if ever. Even if they are able to address all the problems, does anyone really want to have this on their face all day long? Half a day? An hour? Think more along the lines of 10 minutes and then done. The 'headache' that comes with it is already the deciding factor for me in not  wanting to try it out.
Chip's Rockin' Art
Michael Scott To Meredith: "You've slept with so many men, your starting to look like one. BOOM! Roasted! Go here.

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Re: Cool Techie Geeky Stuff...
« Reply #129 on: May 05, 2013, 12:39:17 pm »
I think the hype is what people are searching for. The next iPhone or iPad. The technology that will change your life.

I agree, all those points, even one of the points is a negative.

I was reading about how Apple had been successful in creating products that controls everything the consumer wants... or so they think. The article was really slamming them for this, about canned products do have the negative side. Android is more open, but that can lead to conflict too.

I think a product like Google Glasses needs to have all it's ducks in a row to introduce a product that will springboard into success. Look at all the great products (Betamax for example) that failed because it had glitches, and not introduced fully.

I think it's hard to do, to make a product fully ready for the masses, but it just takes one of these small missteps to get a bad taste in consumers mouths that will make the product fail.
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Re: Cool Techie Geeky Stuff...
« Reply #130 on: May 21, 2013, 09:53:53 am »
How Steve Jobs Felt About Products Like Google Glass (Circa 2007)

Quote
With all of the talk around wearable computing lately, most notably Google’s Project Glass, many might wonder how Steve Jobs would have felt about Google Glass, and the potential for Apple to enter that market with a competing product. Jeff Soto recalls a moment from his time as an Audio Test Engineer at Apple that could provide some food for thought on what Steve might think of Google Glass and similar projects.



From an article on Soto’s blog, I AM NOT A ROBOT, entitled Steve Jobs’ Take on Google’s Project Glass:

    As soon as I saw the video for Google’s Project Glass I instantly recalled a funny story from my time at Apple. I was once at a Town Hall meeting in Cupertino where Steve Jobs commented on this type of wearable computing. An Apple employee in the audience asked Steve a question to the extent of: “How can we reach out to our leadership if we have a really good idea”. Steve immediately put him on the spot and made him pitch the idea in front of everyone there. An opportunity to pitch Steve Jobs. What?

    The employee proceeded to pitch an idea about glasses you can wear that display various types of information. A heads up display a’la terminator cyborg vision if you will. He continued to explain how he wished he had a way to see projected information while he perhaps went for a run outside. Keep in mind this is happening in a room filled with a lot of people.

    Steve immediately shot his idea down and told the guy that he would probably trip and fall if that were the case. Steve also suggested he should get a girlfriend so he has someone to keep him company while running. I can not watch this Project Glass video without recalling this moment. So if you’re wondering what Steve would think about Project Glass, that’s pretty much it.

    Update: I had a few people ask me when this happened. If I remember correctly this was during the summer of 2007.


The referenced YouTube video is as follows:

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Re: Cool Techie Geeky Stuff...
« Reply #131 on: May 31, 2013, 09:35:41 am »
Will Google Glass destroy your love life?

Quote
Months ago, a fella asked if it'd be alright for him to wear Google Glass on a date with me. The question was, at that point, hypothetical, but I hesitated. I hadn't even considered how the tech giant's new headgear could affect romantic entanglements. Now — after a month of wearing Glass and taking it on half-a-dozen dates — I can say that while it's not a deal-breaker, the headset sure makes the awkward moments more awkward.

Lest you don't know, Google Glass is a head-mounted computer with a camera, microphone, bone-conducting speaker and all kinds of sensors. It connects to the Web via Wi-Fi or by tethering to a smartphone and can take pictures, record video, initiate video chats, send messages, search Google and more.

Few — mainly Google employees, software developers, journalists and some other early adopters — are running around with Glass right now. Even fewer are actually wearing it for the majority of their waking hours like I am. (When I adopt new technology, I really adopt it, darn it!)

It's difficult to imagine that bringing technology closer — to one's face — could actually help get it out of the way, but that's what happens with Glass. It's tempered my smartphone addiction and reduced the amount of time I spend staring at a screen. I've even rediscovered the fine art of making eye contact with people.

There's plenty about Glass that can make a date weird.

More...

The thing is, I find a great many people incredibly rude today with the phone situation. I can only imagine to what new levels of rudeness the glass will bring.
« Last Edit: May 31, 2013, 09:38:18 am by Mac »
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Chiprocks1

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Re: Cool Techie Geeky Stuff...
« Reply #132 on: May 31, 2013, 09:39:17 am »
I'm taking my Google Glasses to as many strip clubs as I can get into.
Chip's Rockin' Art
Michael Scott To Meredith: "You've slept with so many men, your starting to look like one. BOOM! Roasted! Go here.

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Re: Cool Techie Geeky Stuff...
« Reply #133 on: May 31, 2013, 10:18:30 am »
So, you enjoy getting your ass kicked and thrown into the ally?

It's way to soon to tell about good vs. bad technology. While I have my opinions now of thinking this glass thing is mostly bad, I'll give it a chance and see how it plays out.
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Re: Cool Techie Geeky Stuff...
« Reply #134 on: June 02, 2013, 08:54:30 am »
I'm surprised no one has referenced this to Google Glass yet.
Chip's Rockin' Art
Michael Scott To Meredith: "You've slept with so many men, your starting to look like one. BOOM! Roasted! Go here.

 

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