Well good idea, but its got nothin’. I mean seriously there is no information on the site yet.
Category: Links
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WebOS 2.0 Features Revealed – What About the Hardware?
So we now know about the features, but does Palm/HP really expect people to stick with what will be a 3 year old device? Where is the new hardware?
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Oxford English Dictionary ‘will not be printed again’
Not that big of a surprise, perhaps more surprising is that there are still people who buy dictionaries.
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The Oatmeal Just Gets Us
So very very true. You won’t get me to blink until it hits $9.99 though, just ask my bank.
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Apple to Provide Live Video Streaming of September 1 Event
For the first time since 2005 Apple will be providing a live video feed for tomorrow’s event – no need for compulsive refreshing tomorrow as we can all now stream it.
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Coming Soon: AMD and Intel Inside
AMD is killing off the ATI brand name and rolling it all under the AMD brand. Smart move that makes a lot of sense. The thing is, this really looks to be a shot at Intel, I mean AMD primarily has competed against Intel and now you can get a computer that has both Intel and AMD chips – just look at the current Mac Pro’s.
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Courier for Mac
Realmac Software:
Courier allows you to share files, images, photos, movies, and more with all your favourite online services – including Flickr and Facebook.
I hate, hate, hate how cumbersome it is to upload to Flickr, so this is a very welcome app for me.
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Call Failed, Now Brought to you by Google
Michael Arrington talking about Google Voice’s recent troubles:
About 30% of my inbound calls have the caller muted – they can hear me but I can’t hear them. And outbound calls are worse. In the last 24 hours at least 75% of them failed completely. Either it never starts ringing, or it rings a couple of times and then dies. In fact, I called Google PR to give them a heads up on this story and that call failed too. As did a second attempt.
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Character Amnesia
Judith Evans:
Character amnesia happens because most Chinese people use electronic input systems based on pinyin, which translates Chinese characters into the Roman alphabet.
Interesting side effect of technology, really makes me wonder what would have happened if the US and western systems weren’t the ones to invent the digital inputs.
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National Parks Infinite Photo
Click to zoom in (flash) and reveal a lot more photos, very cool.
[via Coudal ] -
Gmail Priority Inbox Sorts Your Email For You
Jason Kincaid:
The system uses a plethora of criteria to decide which messages are most important: things like how frequently you open and/or respond to messages from a given sender, how often you read messages that contain a certain keyword, and whether or not the message is addressed solely to you or looks like it was sent to a mailing list. If you come across a message that’s been marked important when it shouldn’t have been, you can hit an arrow to tell Gmail it’s messed up. Likewise, if a message that should have been flagged gets sent to the ‘everything else’ area, you can promote it. Through these actions Gmail gets progressively smarter, so the system should work better over time.
This sounds really cool, I was getting ready to write up how to implement this in Apple’s Mail app and still will, but I can’t wait to try this out.
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Steve Jobs on Apple’s Core Value
Steve Jobs on Apple’s core value:
We believe that people with passion, can change the world for the better.
That is a lot different from Google’s ‘don’t be evil’ motto. This is also a great video where Jobs talks about marketing while wearing shorts.
Also here is a link to a better quality version of that Think Different ad.
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Lessons from Google Wave
Dare Obasanjo on Google Wave’s announcement
The product announcement read more like a technology showcase than an announcement for a product that is actually meant to help people communicate, collaborate or make their lives better in any way. This is an example of a product where smart people spent a lot of time working on hard problems but at the end of the day they didn’t see the adoption they would have liked because they they spent more time focusing on technical challenges than ensuring they were building the right product.
It is interesting to think about all the internal discussions and time spent implementing features like character-by-character typing without anyone bothering to ask whether that feature actually makes sense for a product that is billed as a replacement to email. I often write emails where I write a snarky comment then edit it out when I reconsider the wisdom of sending that out to a broad audience. It’s not a feature that anyone wants for people to actually see that authoring process. -
How to Ruin Twitter
Alexis Madrigal:
It allows you to stash a piece of content (say, a website or an e-book) and only allow access to it after a user has tweeted something about it. In other words, it’s like a paywall in which you pay by tweeting about something.
Sounds terrible to me.
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Leaked Screenshot Shows a Cleaner, Simpler IE9
Does anybody think that the translucent Windows Vista/7 UI looks good. Looks like crap if you ask me.
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The Amazing Wooden Mirror
Thomas Davie:
The concept is simple but formidably clever: a tiny camera gathers light and shape data, before sending it to a computer that processes it and uses hundreds of tiny electric motors to shift the wood blocks into the image in front of the device. Subtle gradations of shade are achieved by both the natural grain of the wood and the angle at which they are displayed, casting shadow if necessary.
Doesn’t look like a mirror, nor would it be useful for anything other than art, but it is very neat.
[via Hacker News]
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Apple’s TV Rentals May Offer Month’s Worth Of Shows For $1
Leander Kahney:
Instead of renting individual TV shows for $1, customers will pay $1 a month for ALL EPISODES of a show that aired during that month. In other words, fans of CBS’ “Big Bang Theory” can rent all the episodes broadcast during the month, for $1 a month.
Now that would kill cable TV. I hope this is true.