Thursday, May 17, 2007

Orange Japanese watch tells time with intersecting polyhedrons

from Boing Boing by TokyoFlash's latest wildly impractical, handsome Japanese wristwatch is the EleeNo WebTime Elite. Although this isn't nearly as impractical as a watch that vibrates the time in Morse code, it is nevertheless extremely handsome. I'm really becoming a fan of "butterfly clasp" watch-straps that make a continuous loop around your wrist. Plus it comes in orange, which is unquestionably the best color a watch can be. Link

See also: Binary LED watch from TokyoFlash Crazy TokyoFlash watch: the Pimp Watch Radio Active watch from Tokyo Flash Scope watch tells time using line-intersections on Cartesian grid Impractical lovely pixelwatch from Japan

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Image-search isn't a copyright violation

Yesterday, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals handed down a mixed blessing in its ruling on the long-running Perfect 10 v Google lawsuit, in which Perfect 10, a photography site, sued Google for including thumbnails of its images in the Google Image Search results. Perfect 10 also sued Google for indexing infringing copies of its images that appeared on other sites.

The Ninth said that Google's Image Search thumbnails are fair use -- that's the good news. The less-great news is that the court also ruled that Google is a "secondary infringer" where it has "actual knowledge" of copycat sites in its index and fails to do anything about it.

Today's decision reversed the lower court's holding [PDF] that Google's thumbnails were not a fair use, following and bolstering an earlier image search engine precedent, Kelly v. Arriba Soft [PDF]. The court rightly took into account the important public benefit that search engines provide -- not simply the impact on the particular parties in this case -- and what would serve copyright's fundamental goal of promoting access to creative works. While Google's transformative use of the image provided a very real public benefit, Perfect 10's potential loss of thumbnail licensing revenue was highly speculative.

The Court also shot down Perfect 10’s claim that Google was displaying the full-sized versions of infringing images from third-party websites by framing them or providing an HTML in-line link tag to end users. The Court correctly discerned the technology at issue, finding that when you frame a page or provide an in-line link, it’s the site that you’re pointing to that could be displaying the picture, not the search engine that coughs up the HTML.

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Entropia Universe: A Better Second Life?

notice the exchange of value into and out of the game - Augustine

entropia.png Depending on who you listen to, virtual worlds are the new black. Second Life needs no introduction and yesterday rumors surfaced that Sony was in talks to acquire Club Penguin for $500+ million.

To date there are two leading online spaces. World of Warcraft has been an unrivaled success, bringing Dungeon and Dragons style fantasy role playing to an audience in excess of 8 million. At the opposing end is Second Life with its embrace of capitalism and intellectual property rights.

What happened if you combined both?

Enter Entropia Universe

Set in a Sci-Fi future players assume the roles of colonists who must develop the untamed planet of Calypso. Game play is open across a number of different fields. Players who prefer a World of Warcraft style experience can undertake quests and join in groups to hunt and fight monsters. Mining is an option for those who don't like swinging a sword. Moving towards a more Second Life experience, players are able to own and run shops, manufacture goods, own land and build on that land, as well as being able to trade, buy, sell and create goods and services.

The addition that makes Entropia Universe a direct competitor to Second Life though is money. Like Second Life, the in-world currency in Entropia Universe can be converted to US dollars. Unlike the Linden dollar that continues to decline in value, the Entropia Universe PED can be traded at a fixed exchange rate of 10 PED to $1 USD.

Players are able to buy PED's to use in-world or can transfer PED's made in-world, out.

But there's more to Entropia Universe than just the ability to transfer cash in and out. A MasterCard branded ATM Cash Card is available to players which allow direct withdrawal of funds earned in-world. Banking is also taken seriously, unlike the unregulated wild west of Second Life with it's various in-world ponzi schemes. Entropia Universe recently sold 5 banking licenses for the amazing sum of $404,000 USD.

It all sounds great on paper, but how does it actually play?

Signing up is free, though personal details are not optional. Whilst you could probably enter false information, Entropia Universe does want to know who you are.

If Entropia Universe was to be judged alone on its installation procedures, there would be a lot less than the over 500,000 registered users. It's awful. The Windows only client is over 1GB in size and can only be downloaded from the one server using FTP. If you eventually mange to connect to the server, and it took me a several hours, you then have to wait an awfully long time for the download. Best I could get initially on a 2mb Cable connection was 20kbs download speed with an estimated time to download of 17 hours! In part it could have been a timing issue. I tried to download during the middle of the day European time (where the company is located). TechCrunch writer Nick Gonzalez reported a 4 hour download from the US during the European night.

A full sleep later I finally had it.

Login is simple although settings should be watched. I had regular issues staying connected until I dropped by internet speed settings to a much lower figure than my actual internet speed.

Users/ players must setup an avatar with a bewildering array of options. Entropia Universe claims that they have the best avatars in the business and it's a fair claim. Much nicer looking than Second Life with more customization options than you'll probably ever want to use.

In-world is good. I wouldn't call it excellent but it's definitely a slicker look and feel than Second Life. Moving around is easy enough, and once short-cuts and mouse options are learnt it's a pleasurable interface to use.

I took a tour of Calypso Island and teleported to a number of other locations as well. The non-user created areas look professional, but in some ways, compared to Second Life, it felt a little boring. Second Life would have to be 99% ugly but it's the raw passion of the user generated buildings that give it appeal.

The graphics engine behind Entropia Universe purrs. Even with relatively low settings the experience was seamless, and despite entering areas with large gatherings of people there were zero lag issues, a constant negative in Second Life.

I'd need to spend more time in-world to get a better feeling for all the possibilities Entropia Universe provides. You can't fly around and teleport at will in Entropia Universe like you can in Second Life so things do take a bit longer, and yet flying is not a feature you come to expect in virtual worlds if you're not an existing Second Life user.

Is Entropia Universe a better Second Life?

It depends on what you like. With a retention rate of 16% for Second Life amongst US users, it's clear that many don't enjoy what Second Life has to offer, despite the hype. One criticism I hear regularly about Second Life is that it's aimless; it's not a game so there is nothing really to do other than enjoy virtual sex and play Tringo. Now before I am shouted down by a legion of Second Life groupies, I do see Second Life's appeal as a creative and social space, but not everyone wants to get online and build virtual strip clubs or interrupt interviews with flying penises.

Entropia Universe offers the best of both Second Life and World of Warcraft style virtual worlds. The creativity and capitalism of Second Life can be experienced along with solid game play and decent graphics. If they can fix the issues with downloading the client (hint: bittorrent) and you don't mind downloading a 1gb file it's definitely worth a look. If it builds members so the social aspect becomes stronger, we could well be looking at a better Second Life, and already one that will appeal to a much more broader audience.

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Smithsonian images migrated to Flickr for fair-er use

Carl Malamud says,

SmithsonianImages.SI.Edu has 6,288 images of tremendous historical significance, but this federal institution protects their "property" with draconian copyright notices.

Most of this stuff appears to be in the public domain which means you can do whatever you want with it, but the Smithsonian site has considerably chilled our ability to increase or diffuse this knowledge.

To better ascertain the public domain nature of this archive, we scraped their html and piped all 6,288 lo-res images to Flickr (check out the cool tag cloud). For those interested in purchasing images to upload back into the public domain, we've created a public domain prospectus on Lulu. For the historic Muybridge Cyanotypes, we've started purchasing the hi-res images and have posted those for bulk download as well as created a series of derivative works.

There is a 2-page memo explaining the issues and the actions we've undertaken to better increase and diffuse this knowledge onto the net.

Link. Above, a cropped detail from the Edward Muybridge cyanotypes subset.

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Flickr = Censorship

Flickr = Censorship [I am CEO of Zooomr] I'm pretty pissed right now. Two days ago I blogged about an incident involving Rebekka Guðleifsdóttira. Rebekka is one of the most popular photographers on Flickr and definitely someone that those of us who have been around for a while would consider "Old Skool" (RIP). Rebekka is a single mom and art student living in Iceland. She's an artist and a talented one at that. She does amazing things with her camera. Recently she discovered that a gallery Only-Dreemin had been ripping her off. They'd sold thousands of dollars worth of her images and when she caught them and tried to make them give her the money that they stole from her they refused. So Rebekka did what anyone with a following on the internet might do and she posted about her frustration and plight on her flickrstream. And her story resonated loudly with the flickr community. Her story made the front page of digg and by days end she had 100,000 views on this particular photograph with hundreds of supportive comments. So what's got me pissed today? What's got me pissed today is that according to Rebekka, Flickr has removed her image from their site. That's right. Not only did they remove and kill her image and her *non-violent* words of protest, but they censored each and every one of us who commented on her photograph, who offered support to Rebekka, who shared in her frustration by wiping every single one of our comments off the face of the internet forever. According to Rebekka, Flickr's explanation? “Flickr is not a venue for to you harass, abuse, impersonate, or intimidate others. If we receive a valid complaint about your conduct, we will send you a warning or terminate your account.” WTF?!? So a flickr photographer gets ripped off. Dares to complain about it. Has an outpouring of support on the internet over it and Yahoo decides censorship is the way to handle this? This is the worst I've seen from Yahoo yet. You know when Yahoo decided to without my permission delete a photograph I'd posted of Michael Crook and along with it a long dialog of community conversation I was pissed. But I'm even more pissed now. Yahoo should not get away with this. This type of censorship is not right. They should apologize to Rebekka and reinstate this photo that they deleted and all it's comments. These comments that Flickr don't belong to them. They belong to all of us. All of us, the community that makes Flickr even possible. Remember the community Yahoo? Remember the community that Flickr used to stand behind. I remember back when I posted a much earlier photo on Flickr when I'd almost been ripped off by PriceRitePhoto. I used this photo to put pressure on PriceRitePhoto which eventually put them and their sleazy business practices out of business. You know what? Back when this happened I actually got a personal email supportive of my plight from someone on Flickr staff. That was then though. This is now. Rebekka, I'm sorry that Yahoo has decided to censor you. Consider this post and the posting I'll make at Flickr a protest in support of you and your right to share your frustrations in your photostream and in your art. This really sucks, and know that even without Flickr, the attention to this matter will not die down. I'm not sure how this company got to Flickr and Yahoo, but this will not make their problem of cheating you go away. Because when people censor it only makes the censored story ring louder in the end. Rebekka, you had my support when you originally posted about your plight and you have it now. And to Yahoo and Flickr? Shame on you. Digg this here. Update: Flickr has formally responded on this matter and a debate regarding this "mistake" is going on over here in this Flickr Help Forum. Feel free to chime in if you'd like.

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Bringo: Phone Tree Killer. This Is A Genuinely Useful Service

Augustine: this is what I call useful innovation

Bringo solves one of the most frustrating problems that we encounter daily: phone trees. Call a customer service phone number and end up in automated operator hell.

I've memorized the keys you have to hit for United Airlines to get to an operator as fast as possible. With other companies I just keep saying "operator" while hitting # over and over again. Sometimes it works. With Bringo, none of that matters any more. You don't even need to dial your phone. Just find the company you want to talk to in their directory, type in your phone number, and a couple of minutes later Bringo calls you and connects you to an operator at that company. I tried it with Air Canada and it worked absolutely perfectly.

They need to create a stripped down mobile version of this as quickly as possible.

Thanks for the tip Narendra (Biz Stone also mentioned them recently).

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MULTIMEDIA 2.0 - Update

It's a typically generic, copycat segment, where everybody is in peace with doing nothing original. The basic proposition "let's share media" must do it. Since the fall of 2006 I only add sites with distinctive features.This is one of the most crowded categories in EVERYTHING 2.0. Many more media samples in AUDIO 2.0, IMAGES 2.0 and VIDEO 2.0. 3voor12~** - Tag cloud based affiliate network Addictingclips - Post & get matches for classified ads thru cell & email Allpeers - Profile yourself & share media Audiri - Upload, watch & share multimedia Avidbeauty - Upload & share your media (Czech) Bigcontact - Recommend & share your media Bix* - Share photos & sounds Bofunk - Publish your videos & mp3s Broadsnatch - Create & vote for content, and win Bubbleshare - Pick up content for your blog Buzznet - Share multimedia Castpost - Phlog, share, add audio captions Colib - Share videos & photos Crowdrules - Upload your media, ask questions & get unbiased results Cruxy - Upload & share your av clips Douban - Tag, share & sort your media Eefoof - Sell, promote, buy your content Everybit - Catalog, rate, review & share books & music Fireant - Publish & share media Flukiest - Share your media Fluxiom - Upload & share multimedia Genwi - Publish & share videos & photos Glance - Share your screen (7 day free trial) Glide - Capture, manage, access & deliver content Grouper - Upload, share & promote all your media Hackoff*** - Upload & share multimedia Ibloks - Upload, create & share media Insolitus* - Book published as blog & podcast Izimi - Share everything, from your pc Jamglue - Mix, share, play your media Junklog - Upload & share all your files & docs Kaneva - Upload, edit, publish & share remixes Kaywa - Rate, review & share media Latengo* - Upload or publish & share all your digital things (German) Lemonzoo - Digital entertainment marketplace (3D) Lifelogger - Publish & share multimedia on web & cell, using sema code Listal - Upload, rate & share funny media Livedigital - Share audio, video & photos Loomia - List & share all your media Lphanr - Store, share, produce, distribute your content Lulu - Folksonomied media search Magnoto - Multi compatible P2P file sharing Mediamashup - Publish & sell your content Mediamatrix - Phlog & blog MediaMax* - Create, mix & share media Mediatuner - Isolate, segment & annotate media Mirpod - Store, manage & share media Mobango - Manage text & rich media feeds Moblr - Tuner, radio & tv to play RSS feeds or xspf Mochilla - Discover & share mobile media; ; marketplace for syndicated content Mogopop - View or upload & share mobile content Moqvo - Publish & share iPod content Mosaicglobe - Upload & share your media Multiply - Aggregate & share all your online personal data Mycoogee - Store, share & discuss multimedia Mygads - Compile info, access, update & share it thru phone, im, web, etc Mynumo - Access, store & share your cell's contents (client) Mytube - Create, share or sell mobile content Myvideokaraoke - Upload & share photos, video, music Nayio - Sing & share your song on video Onetruemedia - Record your music, add video & share Openmedianetwork - Mix & share videos, photos & music Orb - Multimedia epg Panjea - Stream your media, wherever Phanfare - Upload & share content, and get paid for it Pickle - Upload & share photos & videos Picpix - Share videos & photos Picturepush~ - Upload & share photos & videos Pixilis - Store & share videos & photos Pixpulse - Upload & share or sell media Podcastfm - Upload & share photos and videos on your mobile Podcastpickle - Publish pod & vod casts Poperti - Share podcasts & vidcasts Putfile - Enjoy music (and more) from your Gmail inbox Qnext* - Share all media & chat about them Quizilla - Upload, rate, share & discuss multimedia Radar - Create & share content Redswoosh - Upload & share photos & videos from your cam phone Sevenload*** - Upload & share video, audio & other big files Snapjot - Upload & share photos & videos Songbird - Organize & share photos, videos, text & communications Sonr - Media player & web browser Splashcast - Track media & media users Streamdrive - Create, mix & publish any media anywhere Streamload* - Upload & share multimedia Strmz - Store & share your media Suggestica - Clip & share tv & video Swagroll - Get media suggestions from experts Tagworld - List & share all your media Twango - Share music & photos Ubiplanet - Upload & share your media Ulinkx - Explore, share, discuss & manage your content Umundo - Search, bookmark & share media Upwarded - Upload & share mobile videos and pics Uspot - Upload, rank & share multimedia Veotag - Upload & share media Vidilife - Enrich media files with meta data & share Vidivodo - Upload & share media Virb - Profile yourself & share media Vox - Upload & share multimedia Winksite - Blog & share content Woomp - Create & share mobile content Yiibu - Upload & share art, photos & video Zannel - Publish & share videos & photos on your mobile Zshare - Remix, adapt, expand, share & sell content

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MARKETING 2.0 - Update

Some mind candy for innovative marketers in this category: 1millionsentencesxista - Buy a sentence and increase traffic9minutesoffame - Submit your blog & get 9 minutes exposureAdahead - Marketplace for advertisers & affiliatesAdgridnetwork - Ad exchangeAdmob - Buy or sell mobile advertisingAgloco - Subscribe to portal & get paid for itAlexscoupons - Find coupon dealsAmigo - Matches advertisers with email newslettersAttentiontrust - Advertising based on mutual understanding Beetagg - Scan branded sema code with your cell to get access to websiteBlast - Promote your site for freeBoo-box - Add shopping links to your postings & make money on themCafespot - Social guide to cafes, restaurants, etcCampaignmonitor - Email marketing toolCitypixel - Claim your space in 3D citiesCoastr - List & share your beers and beer placesCreamaid - Spread the word thru your blog & get paidDaem* - Take pics with your phone cam, have them recognized & win prizes Dropcash - Create & manage online fundraiserEcityxista - Buy internet real estate to increase trafficEdgeio - Find classified listings, publish your ownFeedvertising - Put advertising in your feedsFruitcast - Podcast advertising networkHeyamigo - Matches advertisers up with newsletters Hittail - Search optimization softwareIgnoreme - Meta brandInvideo - Make money on free, customizable, brandable video playerItlinkz - Network of social networking sitesJaduka - Call-us-now features for all online mediaJigsaw - Subscribe, buy, sell sales contactsJoga - Nike + Google communityKanoodle - Sponsored links servicesKramkoob - Submit your online properties for 1 second fameKramkoob - Submit & share your site, blog, auction, news, vidcast or podcastLinklike - Link exchangeMailchimp - Design & code your newsletter, and have it distributedMarktd - Digg marketing storiesMemetrics* - Optimize your marketing across mediaMillennialmedia - Mobile marketing solutionsMmmzr - Buy space on this page now, or your price doublesMoola - Win millions with sponsored game (stealth)Movoxx - Get localized & personalized alerts & coupons on your cell phoneMsgme - Communicate or advertise thru sms keyword serviceMy-brand - Manage online advertising onlineMylongtail - Optimize search engine findabilityNumarketing~ (formerly: Keepaddit) - Digg on marketingOffermatica - Test & optimize your online marketingPayperpost - Buy a buzz in the bloggospherePipeline - Track your deals & organize your teamPixelotto - Click ads & win $ 1,000,000Ploud - Build subscriber lists for RSS marketingPodbridge - Metrics for usage of podcastsPodtrac - Advertise in podcastsPrimomailer - CMS for email newslettersPSFK - Share trends watchedRbloc - Sell, buy & meet auction market placeReferralmonitor - Manage word-of-mouth marketingRentxista - Rent a pageRmxdirect - Auction your ad inventoryRocketbux* - RocketEngine: deliver targeted offer to credit card holders' cell.Root* - RocketLaunch: sms couponing.Salesgenius - RocketPower: local closed loops for mobile marketing.Shotcode~ - Trading platform for realtime consumer dataShycast - Track your prospect's behaviour onlineSmackshopping - Scan branded sema code with your cell to get access to websiteSpotrunner - Participate in sponsored video contestSpringspotters~* - Jellyfish' web shopping gameshowTagacloud - Recycle, recreate & air tv adsTagdirectory - Watch & share trendsTenhunt - Add your domain to cloud & promote bothText2store - Tagged business directoryTheadcloud* - 10 questions, 10 sites, best & fastest winsThisplaceiknow - Get best offers & coupons on your mobileTitlez - Create & tag classified listingsTurn - Share placesVflyer - Get publishing market data from AmazonWebmarketing20 - Automate your online campaignsWikicompany - Compose classified ads and multi-post themWordofblog - Wiki on marketing 2.0Yawords - Social business directoryYellowikis - Spread the word for good causesYumenetworks - Video ad networkZookoda - Buy a search term, eternallyZoomtags - Social business directoryZypsy - Promote your blog with email marketing

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Spam Hunters Become a Digg Spammers Best Friend

collactive.pngNew service Collactive comes to the world courtesy of the team behind the failed Israeli outfit Blue Security, best known for running the anti-spam service Blue Frog. Wildly popular at first, the denial of service attacks from BlueFrog (be it a DOS from a moral high ground) rubbed spammers the wrong way and in May last year all hell broke lose, taking down SixApart amongst others. They subsequently gave in and shut the service.

What we didn’t know then was that having lost the battle in the war against spam, they’d actually manufacture arms for the opposing side.

Collactive works as a distribution service for what they call an All Points Bulletin (APB). You add, social bookmarking style a page on Digg or any where else to the APB system, then others are notified of the page. At this point the service differs. Users are directed to Collactive itself as opposed directly to the marked page. The page is presented with a Collactive frame to the left of screen that includes notes on the action required, for example “vote for this”. Traffic for your submitted pages comes from other collactive users plus there is support for emailing friends, a browser extension and a blog widget for displaying your APBs.

There are non-controversial uses for the site, any sort of page can be listed. However the real intent in terms of use is clearly promoted through out the site. The top listed APB when I visited the site was a request to vote on a story at Digg and other social networks were also listed amongst APB’s and social networking site logos were used in promotional material.

Alarm:Clock quotes Digg CEO Jay Adelson who puts it in perspective: “For sure, Digg is always being jacked around by people who are manipulating it, but Collactive is taking it to another level”.

Collactive is funded by Sequoia. Yes, that Sequoia.

Maybe there is something more to the service than spamming Digg? Of course there is aside from a name that sounds like medication; it works for spamming Reddit and Netscape as well!

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Veotag’s Deep Tagging Gets $750K

from TechCrunch by

veotaglogo.png Veotag just got an angel investment of $750K. As we've covered before, deep tagging is an important feature in lengthier online media. Who hasn't wanted to skip the boring parts of a keynote address? A host of startups are incorporating deep tagging into their services, such as Pluggd, Viddler, Motionbox, and JumpCut, among others.

Veotag allows you to add this functionality to any of your video or audio from within their embeddable player. You can upload content (WMV, FLV, mp3) from your computer or via URL. Anyone can sign up for an account, upload content, publish, and start tagging points in the programming. The Veotag player wraps around the content, displaying time stamped comments along the right hand side that link to interesting segments, as chosen by the publisher. You can see an example of the player on a speech by Guy Kawasaki here.

Veotag has a search engine for the tags, which is also indexed by the major search engines. This index can then be transmitted to an ad serving engine for targeted advertising around the audio or video.

Readers interested in incorporating deep tagging into their own media should also check out Click.tv's video deep tagging widget with comments.

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Engadget Knocks $4 billion off Apple Market Cap on Bogus iPhone email

What a day for Apple investors. The stock started off strong today on a lot of pre-market buying, despite news that Amazon will finally start competing on sales of DRM-free music.

Then, whoops, at 11:49 AM EST Engadget posted saying that the iPhone and Leopard operating system launches would be seriously delayed. They based the story on an internal Apple email that was forwarded to them. The original post:

This one doesn’t bode well for Mac fans and the iPhone-hopeful: we have it on authority that as of today, the iPhone launch is being pushed back from June to… October (!), and Leopard is again seeing a delay, this time being pushed all the way back to January. Of 2008. The latest WWDC Leopard beta will still be handed out, but it looks like Apple-quality takes time, and we’re sure Jobs would remind everyone that it’s not always about “writing a check”, but just how much time are these two products really going to take?

Apple’s stock promptly tanked on massive selling, going from $107.89 to $103.42 in six minutes (11:56 - 12:02). This wiped just over $4 billion off of Apple’s market capitalization. A lot of people lost a lot of money very quickly.

Well, it turns out that the email was a hoax. In an update, Engadget said that the email was in fact sent from Apple’s internal email system, but that it was not accurate. Apple quickly notified Engadget of the error, saying “This communication is fake and did not come from Apple. Apple is on track to ship iPhone in late June and Mac OS X Leopard in October.”

By 12:22 Apple stock had mostly recovered and it ended the day down just $1.40/share, or $1.25 billion in market cap.

Let the lawsuits and criminal investigations commence (although to be clear, I do not believe Engadget will have any liability here. Apple may, if the email did originate from its servers).

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Researchers create inexpensive, super-strong "nanoglue"

from Engadget by

Filed under:

Researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute have announced that they've developed a new type of glue that's not only inexpensive, but can supposedly bond "nearly anything" together. To create the so-called "nanoglue," the team created a thin layer of "molecular chains" with a carbon backbone and sandwiched it between a thin film of copper and silica (as less-than-realistically depicted above). They then found that the more they heated the "nanosandwich," the stickier it got, ultimately going all the way up to temperature of 700 degrees Celsius before reaching its peak. Not surprisingly, the researchers see a wide range of uses for the glue, including applications in nano and microelectronic devices, not to mention high-heat environments -- for instance, holding paint to the inside of a jet engine. They also don't seem to think it'll have any trouble catching on, costing just $35 for 100 grams -- which, when you get down to the nano level, works out to be quite a bargain.

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Wednesday, May 16, 2007

HP e-Book Reader Design Fakes Turning Pages

hpebook.jpgAlthough there've been lots of eBooks the past year, none of them have had this HP concept that was demoed at the HP Mobility Summit. Instead of pressing a button to turn the page (which you can presumably still do) there are touch strips on the top, bottom, and sides of the ebook that you can slide to virtually turn the page.

We're not entirely sure how the act of swiping makes reading more enjoyable on an ebook, but hey, whatever makes people adopt technology faster. On a similar note, who's reserved the last Harry Potter book? Doesn't he show his wand in this one or something?

HP to present 'ebook reader' featuring intuitive interface [AVING]

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Product Innovations that are ... NOT!

Pur Water Purifying Fruit Flavor Cartridges Are Both Fantastic and Horrible

As if drinking regular water isn't enough for kids these days, Pur is introducing Pur Flavor Options, which is a fruit cartridge you can stick into their Pur water filter systems. The upshot? Now you can flip a switch and get filtered fruit-flavored water from your tap, which has the taste of water you used to rinse actual fruit in but none of the health benefits of water. Yum!

(Source: Gizmodo)

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Microsoft: Vista sells nearly 40 million licenses in first 100 days

what they DON'T say is that all/most of it was purchased by OEMs like Dell, HP, Lenovo ($1.3 billion software deal announced May 10th) etc. Anyone check with end users? Anyone know of an end user who has actually upgraded or is planning to upgrade to Vista (i.e. actually buy it?)? Posted May 16th 2007 5:04AM by Thomas Ricker

In case you're keeping track, nearly 40 million Microsoft Vista licenses have been sold in its first 100 days. According to Billy G, 78% of all sales made since the January 30th launch had been for the software's premium versions. Not bad, in fact, pretty damn impressive leaving little doubt that this is Microsoft's most successful OS (measure by rate of sale) ever with record profits sure to follow.

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