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Weekend Webware Turn pictures into letters with A

24 Aug 2010

Man of letters

There’s no use for this that I can see, but it’s fun if you’re old enough to remember printing out ASCII artwork on yellow ASR-33 roll paper. This modern ASCII portrait generator uses your Webcam to make a live image of your mug.

See also: Fix8 (review).

Check out the Amazing Instant ASCII Cam.

Via: Delicious.

The dancing letters are a little Matrix-y, which is cool, but I couldn’t find a way to redirect the output to a videoconferencing program, so it’s a bit of a solitary experience.

Microsoft hits back at Google with Live Search New

24 Aug 2010

There has been no announcement, at this point, from the Live Search blog, so detailed information on this new service is limited.

Google News already has a fairly loyal user base and it benefits from the popularity of the search engine, so Live Search News may struggle to find an audience until the search engine grows in popularity. However, I think that Live Search News is a strong offering and is definitely worth a look.

Microsoft’s Google News competitor, Live Search News

The orange breaking-news bar on the top is a decent feature of the site and only appears when big news is happening. The breaking-news information, unfortunately, appears only to be provided by MSNBC and not automatically generated by trends. Even considering this, it is still a good way to call attention to important stories.

At this time, Live Search News looks like a simplified version of Google News. The layout and design are aesthetically pleasing and will be familiar to Techmeme readers.

(Credit:
Microsoft)

Live Search News also lets you refine news results based on categories that are relevant to the story you’re viewing. To access this functionality, just click “More on this story” for any article and you’ll see relevant stories, along with these filters.

Update: As a clarification, Microsoft previously had a Google News competitor, named MSN Newsbot, which no longer exists.

One feature that I really like is the local-news sidebar on the right. It appears that the site automatically detects your IP address and feeds you news from the state that you’re in without you needing to register an account. This local focus is a nice touch.

While Microsoft is not providing a specific number of sources that are included in Live Search News, it appears, at this point, to be significantly less than Google News’ 4,500. Google News definitely has more customization and alert options than Live Search News. Despite those differences in features, I prefer the design of Live Search News over that of Google News, and simplicity does a lot for readability. In addition, I love the video preview integration, along with the breaking news.

As a part of its Rome release, Microsoft’s Live Search team has launched a new Live Search News, a direct competitor to Google News.

One feature that sets Live Search News apart from Google News is its “Top News Videos” section. Not only are the videos provided relevant, but Microsoft has implemented the same preview technology that Live Search uses in its video search. If you roll over any of the video images, a preview of the clip will automatically start to play. I can’t say enough about the cool factor of this feature, in both news and in its regular video search.

iLuv serves up palm-size iPod iPhone speaker

24 Aug 2010

Hot on the heels of Altec Lansing’s new Orbit, iLuv has announced a mini portable speaker as well. The offical name of the product is the iSP100 Mini Portable Stereo Speaker for
iPod,
iPhone 3G, 2G and MP3 Players and it will be available “worldwide” in the next few weeks and will carry a list price of $34.99.

The isP100 is a budget mini stereo speaker powered by three AAA batteries.

Comments?

It’s hard to imagine that this tiny speaker would sound all that good–most tiny speakers just don’t deliver impressive sound. But we suspect that like the Orbit, it will sound OK for casual listening. The whole surround thing seems a little ridiculous, but we’ll reserve final judgment until we get our hands on a review sample.

Like Altec Lansing, iLuv is touting the mini speaker’s “big” sound and something it calls 720? Surround Sound. It, too, features a retractable cable with a 3.5mm jack that connects to the headphone jack or audio output of any MP3 player, laptop, or portable DVD player. The speaker is powered by three AAA batteries and comes with a carrying pouch.

(Credit:
iLuv)

Sound quality aside, the budget mini portable speaker category appears to be hot. We expect to see even more products like this come out in time for the holiday buying season since this has stocking-stuffer written all over it.

Samsung goes square with the Propel

24 Aug 2010

Other features on the 3G phone include AT&T Navigator, Cellular Video, AT&T Video Share, AT&T Mobile Music, a 1.3-megapixel camera, a speakerphone, Bluetooth and personal organizer applications.

Tap away on the new Samsung Propel.

(Credit:
AT&T)

The Propel will be available in three color options–blue, green, red, and white with red trimmings–and it will cost you $79.99 after a two-year agreement and mail-in rebate.

Samsung announced a new cell phone Tuesday that appears to take aim at the recently announced LG Lotus for Sprint and the Verizon Wireless Blitz. The Samsung Propel SGH-A767, which is bound for AT&T later this month, is a slider phone with a square shape that hides a full QWERTY keyboard. This isn’t a true smartphone, so there’s no Outlook Exchange support, but you can text and IM on the Propel to your heart’s content. Web-based POP3 e-mail support will be available as well.

Yudu Freedom hosts your PDFs, makes them SEO frien

24 Aug 2010

Yudu Freedom is a new entrant to the world of online document publishing. Like Scribd, it lets you take PDF files from your hard drive and host them online for free. The files can be viewed a little faster than with Adobe’s Acrobat reader, and it runs entirely in Flash with that neat page turning effect you might have seen in other document hosting services such as Issuu and Idio.

What Yudu is seriously lacking is support for other document formats and the capability to embed PDFs on third party sites. In comparison, Scribd lets you upload nearly any kind of file on it, then share it anywhere with its iPaper service which launched in February. Between the two I’d rather use Scribd simply because of this.

Yudu's document viewer is simple and fast, although you can't embed it on third party sites like you can with competitors. To view it in action simply click on the image above.

(Credit:
CNET Networks)

Yudu promises that any document you upload will be search engine optimized, making it show up in Google, and so on. There’s also a built in search tool, and a simple way to skip ahead to the page you’re looking for using a thumbnail viewer. My favorite feature, however, is that you don’t need to sign up to use the service. You can simply dump the files and leave your e-mail address and it will send you a link when it’s done processing. In my test, it processed my six page PDF and sent me the link in less than a minute.

Oracle buys Sun The big picture

24 Aug 2010

This is how essentially all computer companies used to be, but that way of business gave way to the horizontal industry structure epitomized by the likes of Microsoft and Intel.

One of the favorite water-cooler games of the enterprise computing set over the past month or so has been, “Whither Sun Microsystems?” Now the first phase of that game is over. The answer, as of this morning, is: Oracle–subject to the usual approvals, of course.

But the next phase of the the game is just beginning.

This is not to say that Oracle may not divest or shutter segments of Sun’s portfolio that don’t post the right kind of financial return. But this looks to me like a very serious play to vertically integrate. With their applications portfolio, it’s actually a more vertical integration than even IBM offers directly, for the most part. (IBM does have some industry-specific solutions but not at the same scale as Oracle Financials and Manufacturing.)

It’s obviously very early in the process but here are a few initial reactions:

To get the bigger picture here you have to view it in the context of what’s going on within the system vendor landscape more broadly. At the risk of overstating things, the system vendor landscape is being reconstituted into big, highly integrated companies that can do it all.

Oracle has poked at this sort of thing before. Unbreakable Linux and in-house virtualization work were early efforts. But the purchase of Sun lets Oracle take this to the next level. Consider these sound bites from the press conference: “Tightly integrate the Oracle database to some of the unique high-end features of Solaris,” Sun’s operating system; “for the first time deliver complete integrated computer systems, applications to disk;” and deliver “complete industry-in-a-box.”

Sun is not a hardware company. It is a systems company. And, in fact, Sun has steadily ramped up its software business in recent years. Sun Solaris and Java were instrumental in Oracle’s decision to acquire Sun. So this isn’t really a software company buying a hardware one.

At first blush, this acquisition may seem odd. Oracle is a software company. Sun tends to be viewed as a hardware company. Why would Oracle CEO Larry Ellison want to get into the hardware business? That’s the standard “Huh???” about this purchase. But this misses a number of important points.

commentary

If there were any doubt that the pendulum is in full swing back to large, integrated systems companies, this should erase it. We had IBM and Hewlett-Packard (most recently with its EDS acquisition). Now we have Oracle. And Cisco Systems is easing over that way.

Hands-on with EA and Spielberg’s Boom Blox

24 Aug 2010

In the different gameplay modes in Boom Blox, we were able to try out a Jenga-like mission in which we had to carefully remove a number of pieces from a large construction, making certain not to harm the little cow creatures balancing at the top. Remove the wrong block and it all comes tumbling down. This mode was able to show us some of the most convincing Wii controls we’ve seen in a while. It seems that Boom Blox really takes advantage of everything the Wii has to offer as distance detection really shined here. It’s clear the game was developed from the ground up specifically with the Wii’s capabilities in mind.

(Credit:
EA)

The game is primarily a puzzle-based physics simulator in which you partake in a variety of “blox” maneuvering modes. We learned how to play the game in a stage where you throw a baseball at different pieces, relying on real-world physics to knock over and blow up blox while accomplishing goals. While most of our time was spent understanding the basic fundamentals of the game, we learned that the original concept spawned mostly from Spielberg.

His idea was centered on the fact that children love to use building blocks to construct large structures, only destroy them. Boom Blox is essentially this but without the mess. The game is definitely the most physics-intense experience we’ve seen on the
Wii. It looks a lot more accurate and complex than games that have tried to tackle physics simulation before, such as Elebits. Boom Blox may have a cartoony style, but its effects are much more in the vein of technical achievements, such as Crysis.

Boom Blox will be a Wii exclusive title and is scheduled to ship in May.

The game will also feature a “build-your-own” mode in which players can redesign Boom Blox stages and share them with friends over the WiiConnect24 network–ultimately adding a virtually infinite gameplay experience.

EA was showing off its slate of upcoming releases to NY-based press last night. In addition to a peek at Spore, we were treated to a one on one with the Steven Spielberg and EA collaboration known as Boom Blox.

Microsoft-Yahoo deal ‘preaction’

24 Aug 2010

Although Yahoo looked long and hard, the company really had no alternative that would allow shareholders to cash out now at anywhere near the price Microsoft was offering.

Still, the work is just beginning for the two companies. First of all, they have to secure regulatory approval. Although Microsoft faces a significant rival in Google, they have to convince regulators that they themselves will not be in a position to dominate any markets. In addition to the usual regulatory hurdles in Brussels, Seoul, and Washington, China could also pose a potential threat to the deal.

In many cases, Microsoft is not where it wants to be with its homegrown products, but has built them with its long-term vision in mind. Some of Yahoo’s products, by contrast, have more users today, but are built on vastly different technology, much of it based on open source.

Microsoft will have to deal with both significant overlap as well as significant cultural differences. The company has indicated it has some plans under way already in terms of handling both issues, but wisely said it wants many of the decisions to be made by a group made up of leaders from both companies.

Speaking of price, Microsoft did have to hike its bid to seal the bid (or didn’t–you’ll have to read the press release for that one). As the company pointed out during the drawn-out process, every extra dollar per share it paid added about $1.4 billion to the deal’s price tag.

Rest assured, I’ll be pushing on my sources even if I am a continent away. Still, the deal could break while I am asleep or something. To make sure my faithful readers are not left in the lurch, I offer my first take on the deal now:

WHEREVERTHEHECKIAM–As widely expected, Microsoft and Yahoo came to terms on a deal that will see the search pioneer absorbed by the software giant.

For all its challenges (and they are many), the deal was the single biggest thing Microsoft could do to bulk up ahead of what many see as an epic showdown over the next several years.

It is how Microsoft handles these issues that will be critical. First and foremost, such decisions are critical to retaining the very talent that Microsoft has said it is looking to acquire. The decisions on which products to keep will be based on a number of factors. One of those factors will be which product is more popular today, but I would not expect that always to be the deciding factor.

Ultimately, though, this deal wasn’t really about price for Microsoft. It was about the fact that the company is struggling mightily to compete against Google in the market for advertising-funded content and software.

If and only if they can get past these hurdles, do Microsoft and Yahoo get to the real hard part–actually combining. Microsoft has a decent track record of absorbing smaller companies, but past deals pale in terms of the size and scope of the Yahoo move.

One of the big risks of heading down to Latin America right now is that something big could blow up–the Microsoft-Yahoo merger.

Mixin makes your big schedule micro-sized

24 Aug 2010

Embedded below is a demo of the tool in action, and no there’s nothing wrong with your computer–the video is sound-free.

The system rewards advanced users fewer keystrokes by learning some basic shortcuts, but those looking to create a more detailed entry can toggle an advanced view that lets you pop in things like addresses, specific times, and RSVP options.

Making new events, proposals, or ideas is a single line affair. You can also turn on advanced view to access more customizable event creation tools.

One thing to note up front is that Mixin doesn’t sync up with Microsoft Exchange or any other calendar data feeds. Instead, you must include mixin@mixin.com as a guest when creating or planning to attend an event in any calendaring tool you’re using and it will parse that data and convert it into an event on your Mixin calendar. It’s not a perfect system, but if you’re not worried about two-way sync this is a viable solution.

[via WebWorkerDaily]

Like Twitter it centers around a blank box on the top of the screen where you can drop in text, along with a timeline of what’s on your plate for the next five days. To create a new plan or item you can simply jot down what you want using conversational text, so writing “grab a beer at Dave’s pub at 6″ will convert that to a recognizable event that goes in your schedule. You can also accomplish the same thing by typing “Beer@Dave’s 6.”

I’m still a little wary to recommend Mixin to the the casual user. As a standalone tool it offers little in the way of organization compared to most calendaring tools. Where it shines, however, is the social integration with other Mixin users. Like tools that help find a consensus for a single meeting time, Mixin does something similar with your social or work life. If you and your friends are willing to hunker down and log your schedules onto Mixin’s servers there’s a lot of power here, however I think Google’s Calendar service is far easier for basic scheduling and appointments. It also includes daily and monthly views, which I think are a must-have.

Mixin is a very pretty and simplistic scheduling tool that makes your calendar readily available to others. It’s been designed to help you block out time and keep everything organized with color coding and an entry system that makes creating a new event as easy as typing just a few characters.


mixin presentation from mixin on Vimeo.

(Credit:
CNET Networks)

Right after you make an event anyone who has subscribed to you will be alerted, and depending on their notification settings that means they could be getting real-time updates by SMS or a simple e-mail. From there users can interact with the event like they would on Facebook or Upcoming to make time or location suggestions, add photos and videos, or leave a note to explain why they’re not going.

Digital clothing takes center stage at S.F. Explor

24 Aug 2010

As a longtime Burning Man veteran, I am very familiar with EL wire, and that annual countercultural arts festival is one of the first places the colored wire became well known.

The way this works: Haefele had a container of water strapped to her back, out of which came a tube that was pumping water up into the air. It would then come down as “rain” on her umbrella, which was made with Nasturtium, a lovely green plant.

I didn’t know quite what to expect at this event. But within minutes of walking through the door of this wonderful science museum, I was participating in one of the oddest group circles I’ve ever encountered. Known as ok2touch, a project by MIT Media Lab members Jay Silver and Jodi Finch, it was an outfit that was the central element in a circuit that can be made up of almost anything, as long as human skin is a part of it.

In the fashion show toward the end of the evening, my favorite piece might have been Amanda Parkes and Adam Kumpf’s Piezing, a dress that is able to generate its own power based on the model’s natural gestures while walking. The way it works, according to the evening’s program, is that it “converts mechanical strain into electrical voltage as a person walks.”

SAN FRANCISCO–A man wearing costumes covered head to toe in LEDs. Another man wearing a suit made of bubble wrap. A woman in a skirt made of Snickers wrappers. And a woman in a dress that generates power when she moves.

“We learn so much about when it’s not OK to touch,” Silver said. But “touch is just such an important part of our humanness.”

The idea, explained Silver, is that the outfit–which is designed with special metallic-based conductive thread–turns people’s bodies into musical instruments, along with the bodies of anyone else around who is touched.

Adrian Vanallen poses with her dog in a dress that honors 18th-century anatomist Robert Hook

That’s why Silver organized myself and a bunch of others into a big circle and then proceeded to explain how, as long as we all held hands, our collective movements would produce music on the outfit being worn by a model who was also in the circle.

Back off the catwalk, however, I ran into Jill Haefele, who works in the Exploratorium’s living systems department, and she talked to me about her Portable Nasturtium plant, which was doubling as a rain-producing umbrella.

And then there were the three people walking around together in matching full-body outfits of dozens and dozens of protruding circular foam pieces.

Next, I wandered over to a different area at the Exploratorium where a photographer was getting those people taking part in the evening’s fashion show–the central event of the exhibition–to pose for pictures.

Jill Haefele walks around the Exploratorium with her raining umbrella. It is covered with nasturtium, and has a reservoir filled with water on her back, which pumps a spray of rain onto the plants.

“The project is about designing more human-to-nature contact,” said Silver, pointing out that it works with water, flowers, and skin-on-skin, and that, for example, the circuit can go through water without any kind of danger. That’s why, when I first walked up, Silver was having people run their fingers through some water on the ground, and the model’s outfit was breaking out in music.

(Credit:
Daniel Terdiman/CNET News.com)

(Credit:
Daniel Terdiman/CNET News.com)
–>

But these days, it is cheaper and much stronger and brighter than it used to be. So all over the place at the Exploratorium, I was almost blinded by the intensity of the EL wire necklaces, hats, and other garments people were wearing.

A man wearing a costume covered in green LEDs at the Exploratorium for the opening night of the 2nd Skin digital-clothing exhibition.

In fact, she said, the dress was based on blowfish behavior.

And it didn’t have to be hands: we could bump foreheads, and music would erupt from the outfit.

Three people in outfits covered in foam pieces play with an exhibit at the Exploratorium in San Francisco during the opening of the 2nd Skin exhibit.

Nearby, Amisha Gadani was showing off her self-inflating dress. At least a couple of people seemed to see it as a dress that would autonomously re-enact the famous Marilyn Monroe scene from The Seven Year Itch, but Gadani said it was about something else entirely.

Amisha Gadani shows off her self-inflating dress during the opening of the 2nd Skin exhibition at the Exploratorium on Friday night. The dress is meant to be reminiscent of the actions of a blowfish.

(Credit:
Daniel Terdiman/CNET News.com)

The larger message behind the project? That it’s OK to touch each other.

Another interesting piece in the digital part of the fashion show was Leah Buechley and Hunter Ewan’s Reconfigure, a dancing outfit that creates music with the wearer’s body motions. As the model wearing the dress strutted her stuff on the catwalk, the outfit broke out in all forms of music, a very odd experience.

As Adrian Vanallen stepped down from the photographer’s lights, I grabbed her. That’s because she was wearing an outfit adorned with some sort of complex outline of the human anatomy–and she was carrying a small dog whose internal anatomy was also pictured on an outfit it was wearing.

A man working with electroluminescent wire, otherwise known as EL wire, at the Exploratorium in San Francisco on Friday night. The EL wire was part of a larger creation he was making.

All in all, it was an enjoyable evening. Everywhere you looked, someone was wearing an outrageous outfit, often adorned with some form of lighted technology. In many cases, it was electroluminescent wire, or EL wire, a form of thin, battery-powered, wire somewhat reminiscent of neon.

This was opening night of the 2nd Skin exhibit, a celebration of “imaginative designs in digital and analog clothing,” at the Exploratorium here. And if the best and brightest in clothing embedded with technology and pure cacophony weren’t on hand tonight, I can’t even imagine where else they might be.

Some were dressed in various forms of circus attire, while others were adorned in what looked to be many, many, many layers of orange pom-poms.

(Credit:
Daniel Terdiman/CNET News.com)

She said that someone had told her that the dress–which she actually inflates with a little control button she holds in her hand that operates a couple of fans built into the fabric–might be more like a mating ritual than something that scares people away.

(Credit:
Daniel Terdiman/CNET News.com)

As she walked around, the system was producing the rain and she was forced to keep on moving lest the water puddle up around her feet.

“I’m OK with that,” she said, “but it’s definitely inspired by a blowfish.”

While the opening night exhibition was a lot of fun, visitors can enjoy some of the pieces from the evening throughout the full 2nd Skin run, which lasts until Sept. 7.


For those interested in people watching, this was an evening to remember. Everywhere you looked there were men, women, and children dressed to the nines in all manner of outlandish outfits. Some were just for fun, and others were for the fashion show.

(Credit:
Daniel Terdiman/CNET News.com)

Vanallen explained that her outfit represented an 18th-century anatomy circulation system created by English scientist Robert Hook, whom, she said, theorized that there were mini-humans inside our cells. Her outfit and that of her dog, then, were odes “to the history and the future of anatomy.”

“Whenever I’m intimidated,” she said, speaking in the guise of a human playing a blowfish, “I blow up. And I deflate when I feel like I’m safe again.”