Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Facebook Just Declared War on Google: Meet Your New Search Engine (Updating Live)

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5976014/facebook-just-declared-war-on-google-meet-your-new-search-engine-updating-live

Facebook Just Declared War on Google: Meet Your New Search Engine (Updating Live)Today's big bad Facebook revelation is a search engine—not for the web, but for your life. And it's just another step in Facebook's attempt to conquer the entire Internet. Meet Graph Search.

Facebook's search has been convoluted and weak for years until now—it's hard to expect what you get when you type anything in, even if it's your best friend's name. People, pages, maybe places. Boring and often broken. But with today's search monster, Zuckerberg isn't just offering you a way to find your friends (or college frenemies). And it's beyond just some attempt at a Google replacement. It's an attempt to do what Google failed at doing—pulling all the information that matters to you within the context of your social life, skipping the results that are popular to The Internet, in favor of the results that are popular within a group you actually give a damn about. Not a horde of strangers. Everyone you know uses Facebook, and now those people are going to work for you when you search.

For example: searching for a sushi restaurant won't just bring up a well-linked list a la Google. Instead, your restaurant query will be answered with a little help from your friends, presenting you with suggestions based on where your relations have checked in. Or if you're looking for music, the recent selections of your pals will inform the results. For any occasion, the answer doesn't lie with some invisible algorithm pointed out toward the web void, but at the people you know, who are doing or have done the thing you're talking about. Your friends' experiences will give you answers to what you're wondering. At least that's the idea. And if it works, we'll have all the reason to skip opening a new tab headed to Google.com—an enormous victory for Facebook, and a profound change in how we all use the Internet every single day.

Facebook Just Declared War on Google: Meet Your New Search Engine (Updating Live)

So how does Graph Search work?

Graph Search is a live, constantly updating list of results, triggered from a nice thick search box at the top left of the page. It changes as you type, a la Google's autocomplete queries.

Facebook Just Declared War on Google: Meet Your New Search Engine (Updating Live)

As you start typing, say, "photos of my friends," results will pop up. If you add "taken in 2008," you'll get those photos.

Facebook Just Declared War on Google: Meet Your New Search Engine (Updating Live)

Searches are built using simple, natural language searches. "Friends who like Star Wars and Harry Potter." "What music do my friends like?" Even more complicated questions, like "People named Brian who went to Princeton and like Star Wars."

Facebook Just Declared War on Google: Meet Your New Search Engine (Updating Live)

It looks incredibly fast, and allows for the kind of spastic hopping around that's become natural on Facebook. Every piece of data you share on Facebook, now searchable, will be privacy aware—meaning it's only available to the friends you want it to be available to, not the web. You won't be dumped into some Internet database.

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Rezhound Will Fetch You a Table at [Insert Exclusive Restaurant] Anytime

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5976140/rezhound-will-fetch-you-a-table-at-[insert-exclusive-restaurant]-anytime

Rezhound Will Fetch You a Table at [Insert Exclusive Restaurant] AnytimeHave you been trying to get a table a Babbo since the beginning of time? Stop calling that snooty hostess incessantly a month in advance. Instead, try Rezhound, a new site that will alert you when a spot opens up on OpenTable.

Pick your region, then pick the restaurant you want to go to, the size of your party, and the time and date you want to go. Give Rezhound your email, and they'll let you know when that exclusive restaurant you've been dying to get into for months has a table for you. Magic. Delicious, ingenious magic. [h/t Twitter]

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Exynos-powered Kite tablet flies Android 4.0 and Ubuntu 12.04 for รข¬309

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/01/15/exynos-kite-tablet-android-ubuntu/

DNP Exynospowered Kite tablet flies Android 40 and Ubuntu 12 for 309

Italian electronics firm DaVinci Mobile Technology is now accepting pre-orders for its Kite Full-HD tablet. This European slab features a 10.1-inch 1,920 x 1,200 IPS display, a Samsung Exynos 4412 quad-core processor, 2GB of RAM, 32GB of internal storage, a front-facing VGA camera and a rear-facing 2-megapixel shooter. In addition to packing some decent specs, the device also dual-boots Ubuntu 12.04 for ARM and Android 4.0. While there's no telling if this switch hitter will ever officially make its way to US soil, our friends abroad can fly this Kite for €309 (around $413 USD).

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Via: Notebook Italia (translated)

Source: DaVinci Mobile Technology (translated)

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Udacity to announce partnership with San Jose State University, will trial for-credit online classes

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/01/15/udacity-to-announce-partnership-with-san-jose-state-university/

Udacity to announce partnership with San Jose State University, will trial forcredit online classes

Working alongside college professors at San Jose State, online course start-up Udacity will launch a pilot program for remedial and college-level algebra. Importantly, these classes won't simply result in a nice certificate, but genuine college credit. Students will have to stump up $150 for each three-unit course, with the intake limited to 300; half will come from San Jose State, while the remaining places will be given to those attending nearby community colleges and high schools. The online course start-up, founded by former Stanford professor Sebastian Thurn, says that its own mentors will assist university staff in administering the course, which will include instructional video and web-based quizzes.

MIT and Harvard's similar EdX course saw promising results during its own pilot tests at San Jose. While 40 percent in the traditional class arrangement got a C grade or lower, only 9 percent using the blended online course picked up the same grades. California Governor Jerry Brown hopes that the courses might help reduce barriers to college education entry -- more than 50 percent of entrants are unable to meet the college's basic requirements in math and English.

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Via: The Verge

Source: New York Times

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Huawei's dual-SIM Ascend D2 for China Telecom priced at $640, available online tomorrow

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/01/15/huawei-ascend-d2-china-telecom/

Huawei's Ascend D2 gets a price and a date for China,

It's only been about a week since the Ascend D2's official debut at CES, but according to Huawei's latest announcement on Sina Weibo, the manufacturer will already be offering its unsubsidized 5-inch 1080p flagship at its online store right after 5pm local time tomorrow. Specifically, this will be a China Telecom (CDMA2000) variant with dual-SIM support, so Huawei fans outside China may want to wait for the WCDMA flavor (there's always the Oppo Find 5 as well). If you happen to be in China and don't mind using China Telecom, then feel free to fork out ¥3,990 or about $640 to be one of the first handful of owners of this 32GB, 1.5GHz quad-core device. That is, if you manage to get your order through "while stocks last."

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Via: Sina Weibo

Source: Vmall

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