Monday, February 23, 2009

Ed Ulbrich shows how Benjamin Button got his face | Video on TED.com

Ed Ulbrich shows how Benjamin Button got his face | Video on TED.com: "Ed Ulbrich, the digital-effects guru from Digital Domain, explains the Oscar-winning technology that allowed his team to digitally create younger and older versions of Brad Pitt's face for 'The Curious Case of Benjamin Button.'"

Sunday, February 15, 2009

Social Graph API - Google Code

Social Graph API - Google Code: "Social"

Social Graph: Concepts and Issues - ReadWriteWeb

Social Graph: Concepts and Issues - ReadWriteWeb: "Brad Fitzpatrick recently wrote an elegant and important post about the Social Graph, a term used by Facebook to describe their social network. In his post, Fitzpatrick defines 'social graph' as 'the global mapping of everybody and how they're related'. He went on to outline the problems with it, as well as a broad set of goals going forward."

Saturday, February 14, 2009

David Merrill demos Siftables, the smart blocks | Video on TED.com

David Merrill demos Siftables, the smart blocks | Video on TED.com: "MIT grad student David Merrill demos Siftables -- cookie-sized, computerized tiles you can stack and shuffle in your hands. These future-toys can do math, play music, and talk to their friends, too. Is this the next thing in hands-on learning?"

Friday, February 13, 2009

How to make a flexible display | Bend me, shape me, anyway you want me | The Economist

How to make a flexible display | Bend me, shape me, anyway you want me | The Economist: "The crucial technological development happened recently at the Flexible Display Centre at Arizona State University. Using a novel lithographic process invented by HP Labs, the research arm of Hewlett-Packard, and an electronic ink produced by E Ink, a company spun out of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the centre’s researchers succeeded in printing flexible displays onto long rolls of a special plastic film made by DuPont. To make individual screens, the printed film is sliced up into sections rather as folios for magazines or newspapers would be cut from a printed web of paper."

How to make a flexible display | Bend me, shape me, anyway you want me | The Economist

How to make a flexible display | Bend me, shape me, anyway you want me | The Economist: "The crucial technological development happened recently at the Flexible Display Centre at Arizona State University. Using a novel lithographic process invented by HP Labs, the research arm of Hewlett-Packard, and an electronic ink produced by E Ink, a company spun out of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the centre’s researchers succeeded in printing flexible displays onto long rolls of a special plastic film made by DuPont. To make individual screens, the printed film is sliced up into sections rather as folios for magazines or newspapers would be cut from a printed web of paper."

IBM Research: Dynamic Infrastructure for a Smarter Planet

IBM Research: Dynamic Infrastructure for a Smarter Planet: "Dynamic Infrastructure for a Smarter Planet

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Amazon Mechanical Turk

Amazon Mechanical Turk: "Amazon Mechanical Turk is a marketplace for work that requires human intelligence. The Mechanical Turk web service enables companies to programmatically access this marketplace and a diverse, on-demand workforce. Developers can leverage this service to build human intelligence directly into their applications."

The Turk - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Turk - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: "The Turk or Automaton Chess Player was a chess-playing machine constructed in the late 18th century, and exhibited from 1770 for over 84 years, by various owners, as an automaton but later explained in the early 1820's as an elaborate hoax [1]. Constructed and unveiled in 1770 by Wolfgang von Kempelen (1734–1804) to impress the Empress Maria Theresa, the mechanism appeared to be able to play a strong game of chess against a human opponent, as well as perform the knight's tour, a puzzle that requires the player to move a knight to occupy every square of a chessboard once and only once."

Nokia's Down With Making A High-End Open Source Phone, Just Not With Android - Gizmodo Australia

Nokia's Down With Making A High-End Open Source Phone, Just Not With Android - Gizmodo Australia: "When Nokia first showed me their Maemo Linux-powered N800 Internet Tablet, I told them it was cool but that, ideally, I wanted this exact product, smaller, and as a phone. Seems like two years later, this might finally be the way things are headed."