November 30, 2005

Firefox 1.5

firefox_install.png

You’ve probably heard by now, Firefox 1.5 is out. This is the first time i’ve seen icons explaining how to install the application on a mac, instead of the “Drag to your applications folder” text you usually see, they went the international route - visually showing dragging the icon to the applications folder. Great job Firefox team!

tags: 
  • design
  • technology
 | posted: 11:29 am  Leave a Comment?

November 15, 2005

Google Maps + UTA + Friday Night

A friend of mine wanted me to plug a local googlemaps mash-up called Friday Night Hangout.

This site was developed by the UTA Libraries: GIS Program to demonstrate the capabilities of geographic information systems, the Google Maps API, and the power of combining the two.

This application demonstrates the integration of geographic information systems analysis with the Google Maps API. Answer all of the following 7 questions and the geoprocessor will calculate the best location in Tarrant County, TX for you to hang out. All user selections are stored, so who knows…maybe someone else will be hanging out there with you…

I’m glad to see some interesting “web 2.0″ apps coming out of North Texas!

tags: 
  • news
  • technology
 | posted: 5:57 pm  Join the Discussion!

November 11, 2005

The Turk visits the Amazon

Amazon has a new service called Amazon Mechanical Turk.

the_turk

The Turk is a reference to a “mechanical chess-playing automaton” from 1769:

In 1769, Hungarian nobleman Wolfgang von Kempelen astonished Europe by building a mechanical chess-playing automaton that defeated nearly every opponent it faced. A life-sized wooden mannequin, adorned with a fur-trimmed robe and a turban, Kempelen’s “Turk” was seated behind a cabinet and toured Europe confounding such brilliant challengers as Benjamin Franklin and Napoleon Bonaparte. To persuade skeptical audiences, Kempelen would slide open the cabinet’s doors to reveal the intricate set of gears, cogs and springs that powered his invention. He convinced them that he had built a machine that made decisions using artificial intelligence. What they did not know was the secret behind the mechanical Turk: a chess master cleverly concealed inside.

There is a great book I read about The Turk awhile ago called (what else) “The Turk“.

To break down what Amazon’s new service is:

  • Lets say you had 10,000 photographs and you needed only photographs with dogs
  • There is no computer that can do this reliability - so you need real people
  • You then write a program that displays the images and says “Is there a dog in this image” “Yes or No”
  • Using the Amazon Turk API you then can release the program on the web and pay people .05 per image
  • Amazon handles all the backend stuff and you get reliable results - real people looking at each image, telling you which images have dogs (and getting a small compensation for their trouble)

Very interesting, something to keep your eye on…

tags: 
  • technology
 | posted: 11:02 am  Join the Discussion!

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