Tuesday, March 27, 2007
Samsung's "world's smallest" 8.4 megapixel CMOS sensor: so long CCD?
Posted Mar 27th 2007 9:54AM by Thomas Ricker Filed under: Cellphones, Digital Cameras
Chalk up another world's smallest title for Samsung this morning with this, their new 8.4 megapixel CMOS sensor. By implementing extended photo diode technology, Samsung has managed to achieve higher light sensitivity and saturation levels into less space. According to Samsung, their new sensor's high signal-to-noise ratio results in the equivalent image quality found in today's CCDs while using one-tenth the power. As such, Sammy expects it to "quickly replace" the CCDs used in mobile phones, camcorders, and even digital cameras. Yeah, they wish. We'll find out soon enough as this CIS hits mass production in the second half of 2007.Posted by Augustine at 11:35 AM
TI's Mini Movie Projector: Not Everything is Big in Texas
A few select journalists got a flash at this year's CES, but no photos were allowed—until now. Texas Instruments is showing off its Pico, a DLP projector that is chiquitito enough to be incorporated into the bottom of a cellphone.
The 1.5-inch gizmo, which contains three lasers, a DLP chip capable of driving widescreen TV images, and a power supply, can be used to beam DVD-quality video onto a wall or a screen, giving you a bigger image than anything you'd find on even the biggest smartphone LCD screen. Two more pics of a nekkid Pico and its DLP chip after the jump. Oh, and need I say that the phone is obviously phake? TI demos its movie projector in a phone [CNet News]
– Ad Dugdale
Posted by Augustine at 11:27 AM
ZenZui: Microsoft's New Web Navigation Interface For Phones
Probably thought out by some interior designer with one too many sake shots inside him, ZenZui is both the name of a new Microsoft-backed startup and a new interface for phones designed to "transform how people engage, consume and interact with Web content through a revolutionary mobile user experience and information ecosystem."
Or in other words: "OMFG! We must do something about that iPhone-thang! Pronto!"
ZenZui's Zooming User Interface organizes Web and user content in 36 tiles arranged in a virtual desktop grid. The desktop can be panned and zoomed in or out using the cellphone's touchscreen or numeric keypad. Then, when you activate one of the tiles, it will show you a small interface, which appears to follow the same directional pad control for user interaction. The interface looks rather sleek and zoomtastic, I have to say, but you'll be the judge after you see the video demonstration, right after the jump.
The idea was originally patented at Microsoft Research labs, although to me it looks inspired by Don Hopkins' pie menus and the Nintendo Wii Channels. The system will require the participation of carriers and content providers, but beyond Kayak.com, OTOlabs, Avenue A | Razorfish, and Traffic.com, there's not much more detail.
The press release babbles on about social connections and digital content sharing, but I don't know if this is just marketing drone speech or if ZenZui will offer the users the possibility to share their bookmarks and content using a centralized server or some kind of peer-to-peer messaging. You can clearly see a "Rate tile" button on the screenshots in the gallery, so there may really be some kind of social bookmarking/recommendation system in place.
We will know more from CTIA, when Brian and Jason get their sticky paws all over it. – Jesus Diaz
Posted by Augustine at 11:26 AM
Samsung New 64GB Keeps Apple Fans Drooling
Yet another reason to drool about for Apple fans waiting for the next coming of the MacBook and those who dig solid-state storage: Samsung has released a new NAND drive and, unlike Intel, they have pushed it to 64 Gbytes this time.
And if 64MB/s reads and 45MB/s writes in a 15 grams, 1.8" low-consumption storage thingie doesn't have you drooling, I don't know what other Samsung thing will. – Jesus Diaz
Samsung unveils quick 64GB SSDPosted Mar 27th 2007 9:14AM by Thomas Ricker Filed under: Storage
Posted by Augustine at 11:08 AM
When Social Web Tools Get Creative
Written by Liz Gannes Thursday, March 22, 2007 at 1:30 PM PT | 11 comments
A social network like MySpace can help you express yourself and communicate. A bookmarking tool like del.icio.us can help you save and share stuff. A wiki can harness teamwork to build a webpage about whatever it is you care about.
But these social, accessible, dare-I-say-web-2.0 tools can be brought to another level to enable you to make something you can bring back to your offline life. Then they’re not just social, but collaboratively creative. Think Ze Frank’s the ORG or Instructables or Tabblo, which was bought by HP today.
Here are a couple examples. Their user bases are relatively small, but I’d like to think that their utility will give them lasting appeal, especially on a mainstream level.
Exhibit A: Social bookmarking for the home. MyDesignIn, in addition to providing a social bookmarking tool for collecting prospective sinks and couches and whatnot, has built a Flash floorplan tool, where you can drop the items you’ve bookmarked into a diagram of your space. It’s pretty functional considering the Marblehead, Massachusetts-based company is still working on raising its first round of funding.
You can play around with the plan, get recommendations based on users with similar tastes, and eventually get dynamic pricing information. Having a social bookmarking tool just for home-related stuff is not all that appealing, but transforming those bookmarks into a representation of your own home makes the hassle of a separate account worthwhile.
Exhibit B: Social networks for creating music. If social networks are the new shopping mall, as some have proposed, then it follows that much of the activity is about as productive as Mallrats. Not to take this metaphor too far, but perhaps this particular mall could have a recording studio, where musicians can remotely collaborate.
That’s an idea that’s occurred to a lot of people: see Splice, Jamglue, Indaba Music, YourSpins, Mix2r, Rype. In most cases, these sites offer some kind of web-based tool for remixing and collaborating on music.
I think they’re onto something here, though I’m not sure it’s a business. In various interviews, the people running these sites told me they were differentiated because they were targeting professional musicians, or instead amateurs, or even kids goofing off — or because they’re signing deals to license content for their users to sample, or rather all user-generated.
“It’s almost become a dating site — ‘emo girl looking for emo boy,’” said Matt Rubens, co-founder of Seattle-based Jamglue, which has 6,000 registered users, and 50,000 unique visitors per month. “The social currency of the site is to remix a song.”
P.S. Let us know what other sites you’ve used and liked in this categoryPosted by Augustine at 12:14 AM
Monday, March 26, 2007
Web 2.0 ... The Machine is Us/ing Us
A video by Michael Wesch (see http://www.ksu.edu/sasw/anthro…), Assistant Professor of Cultural Anthropology at Kansas State University, is currently the most blogged about video according to Technorati (http://www.technorati.com/pop/…).
Posted by Augustine at 11:10 PM
Writing a Digg-Style Popularity Algorithm
Theory March 26th, 2007Not so long ago I was tasked with creating a web site similar to Digg - users voted on records in the database, and those deemed “popular” were promoted to the front page. But how exactly does such an algorithm work? Let’s take a look under the hood…
Before we begin, a quick disclaimer: These are my own thoughts on such an algorithm, from scratch. I don’t know how Digg, Reddit and other such sites rank popular items, so this may be a quite different.
Records and Votes
We have a database record, whether it be a news story, picture, video, podcast, whatever. And we have voting, a method for users to place a single vote on a particular database record. We could order the “Popular” category by number of votes and be done with it.
Popularity = Votes
However records very quickly become stale, as new submissions are entered and the voting process begins again. If records from last year have 300 votes each, but popular records this year only have 100 or so, they won’t see the front page. So we need to look at time as a factor as well.
Records and Time
Let’s introduce the age of the record as another variable. If the record is newer it should have a higher prominence on the front page, yes?
Popularity = Votes / Record Age
The older the record, the more votes it requires to achieve popularity. But that’s not really fair - if a record takes a little while to receive votes, it doesn’t get the credit it deserves. This is especially a problem if your site doesn’t yet have enough traffic.
So what’s the solution? Let’s take a look at the age of each vote for the record.
Records and Vote Time
To keep the front page fresh, we can give more weight to votes placed recently. That way if a story is hasn’t yet received the credit it deserves, it’s still in for a chance if several users notice its value and vote accordingly. So let’s iterate through votes and calculate a popularity score:
Popularity = (V1/A1) + (V2/A2) + … + (Vn/An)
Vn is a vote, and An is the age of that vote (for example, in minutes). If a vote is 60 minutes old, it is worth 1/60th of a vote placed 1 minute ago. All the values of all the votes are added to achieve a popularity score.
This seems to solve the previous problem, but introduces a new one. If a single person votes on a record a year old, his vote will be worth more than 200 votes on a different record posted yesterday. Old material comes back to haunt the front page. So we’re close, but no cigar yet.
Let’s take a look again at the age of the record …
Records and Time and Vote Time
If we put together everything we’ve discussed so far, we get something that looks like this:
Popularity = [ (V1/A1) + (V2/A2) + … + (Vn/An) ] / Record Age
It’s a bit of a mouthful, but basically it adds together the weighted votes based on age, then divides that total by the age of the record. It doesn’t impose too much of a time limit on becoming popular, it dampens votes based on age, and prevents old stories from leaping back to the front page. It solves all our problems.
Dampening Popularity
Admission: In writing this article, I’ve discovered a more advanced algorithm than used previously on my project. Guess what I’m doing this evening?
But already I can see a problem - I think a dampening effect will need to be introduced to prevent wild jumps of increased popularity and back down again. I will update this post when I’ve had a chance to implement the new algorithm in the wild.
Other Variables
What other variables could we introduce to the algorithm?
- Number of page views - a form of popularity, but far less useful than voting
- Page views versus people who don’t vote - If 60% of readers vote, should it be more popular than if 10% vote? Remember this isn’t the number of votes, it’s the percentage of readers who vote
- Iterative algorithm of amount of time between individual votes
- Voting down as well as up
- Trustworthiness of user who originally submitted the record, maybe based on votes of previous submissions
- If a web URL is involved, maybe use metadata such as Google PageRank, inbound links (Google/Yahoo API), Blogosphere activity, and so forth
Further Reading
Posted by Augustine at 10:36 PM
auto-generated thumbnail grid (yes, it's actually a jpeg created on the fly)
created by FlickrCash and installable on any and all blogs with a simple image tag. the install code can be copied and pasted and it looks like this ...
Posted by Augustine at 4:54 PM
Isn't It Embarassing?
TV commercials that use the same song! Didn't their agencies check who else is using the same song? Energizer Pampers training pants Hotels.com Ford more... (sorted by song) "Just What I Needed" - The Cars (Circuit City) "Lust For Life"- Iggy Pop (Carnival Cruiselines) "U Can't Touch This"- MC Hammer (Purrell) "Picture Book"- The Kinks (Hewlett Packard)
"Weight"- The Band (Cingular) "Let My Love Open the Door"- Pete Townshend (JC Penneys) "It's Over"- Roy Orbison (Blockbuster) "Have Love, Will Travel"- The Sonics (Land Rover)
"Run Away"- Real McCoy (Lexus) "Should I Stay or Should I Go"- The Clash (Pontiac) "I Want to Break Free"- Queen (Coke) "Rock 'N' Roll"- Led Zeppelin (Cadillac)
"Got To Be Real"- Cheryl Lynn (Clairol) "Rock 'n Me"- Steve Miller Band (Wrangler) "What's new Pussycat"- Tom Jones (Special K) "I Feel Good"- James Brown (Ameriquest)
"Dream On"- Aerosmith (Buick) "Comon' Get Happy"- The Partridge Family (PA Lottery) "Rescue Me"- Aretha Franklin (Pledge) "Magic Carpet Ride"- Steppenwolf (Chevy)
"Too Hot Ta Trot"- The Commodores (Special K) "All Right Now"- Free (Tweeter) "Give it to Me, Baby"- Rick James (Papa John's) "I Can See For Miles"- The Who (Silverstar)
"Happy Together"- The Turtles (Clinique) "I Melt With You"- Modern English (Ritz) "Dream Weaver"- Gary Wright (Macy*s) "Push It"- Salt-n-Pepa (Nextel)
"She's a Lady"- Tom Jones (Commerce Bank) "Complicated"- The Rolling Stones (Lexmark) "Love Hurts"- Nazareth (Norelco) "Rebel Yell"- Billy Idol (Blockbuster)
"I've Got the Power"- Snap (Hotels.com, Pampers, Ford) "You Sexy Thing"- Hot Chocolate (Applebees) "Over Under Sideways Down"- The Yardbirds (Chevy) "Let's Get it On"- Nazareth (Chevy Mailibu)
Posted by Augustine at 1:08 PM
Apple TV OS loosed into the wilds
Apple TV will succeed like Palm and Wii because intentionally or unintentionally it is allowing the user base (their fans) to make mods and make it better.
Posted Mar 26th 2007 6:36AM by Thomas Ricker Filed under: Home Entertainment, Media PCs
Posted by Augustine at 7:15 AM