Archive

Archive for the ‘fun’ Category

Will this be the most expensive car ever sold? | What One Million Dollars Buys

September 11, 2009 Leave a comment

Just in through JamesList:

Hans-Gunther Zach is selling his entire collection of Rolls’ and Bentleys and center piece of the collection, the 1934 Rolls Royce Phantom II 40/50 HP Continental also known as the Star of India is listed for £8,000,000

If the sale goes through, it is believed to be the highest price ever paid for a car.
Rolls Royce Phantom II “Star of India” for sale

More about the sale on JamesList.com

The Star featured revolutionary new technology like adaptive curve lights following the movements of the steering wheel and an “all weather” Torpedo Convertible made by Thrupp & Maberly. The engine is a more powerful Continental 7.7 litre pushrod V8 and the Maharaja originally had 14 headlamps put on the car to combat the dark Indian nights, or just scare the living daylights out of his donkey riding countrymen.

Posted via web from kforden.com

Categories: entertainment, fun, just because, success Tags: , ,

Nokia Augmented or Mixed Reality

September 9, 2009 Leave a comment

This concept allows to you to experience immersion and effortless navigation in an Augmented Reality environment. New types of interactions involving near-to-eye displays, gaze direction tracking, 3D audio, 3D video, gesture and touch.

Through these new types of social linkages people will be connected in innovative ways between the physical and digital worlds.It’s hands-free and weightless compared to a tablet, no small screen problem as you have on a mobile phone – but is it truly useful?

Unlike most other AR apps we’ve seen lately, where the physical world is referenced by the AR – the two seem unrelated here. It takes all kinds, though, and who’s to say how AR will be used?(Also, isn’t this music a little creepy? It sounds bittersweet about the inevitable and yet slightly frightening future.)None the less, we’d love to get our hands on a prototype of this technology to test it – just as soon as it becomes real.

more about “Nokia Augmented or Mixed Reality“, posted with vodpod

Quickies. intelligent sticky notes

September 5, 2009 Leave a comment

The goal of ‘Quickies’ is to bring one of the most useful inventions of the 20th century into the digital age: the ubiquitous sticky notes. Sticky (a.k.a. Post-it) notes help us manage our to-do lists, tag our objects and documents and capture short reminders or information that we may need in the near future. Keeping track of these sticky notes is a difficult task in itself. They are yet-another passive pieces of paper. ‘Quickies’ are stickies that have some intelligence and the ability to remind us about the task we ought to perform or to provide us at the right time with the information we captured in the past. ‘Quickies’ enrich the experience of using sticky notes by allowing them to be tracked and managed more effectively. The project explores how the use of RFID, Artificial Intelligence and ink recognition technologies can make it possible to create intelligent sticky notes that can be searched, can send reminders and messages, and more broadly, can help us to seamlessly connect our physical and digital worlds.

Post it notes for the now – MIT Media Labs hits it out of the ballpark again.

College for $99 a Month by Kevin Carey | Washington Monthly

September 5, 2009 Leave a comment

Crucially for Solvig—who needed to get back into the workforce as soon as possible—StraighterLine let students move through courses as quickly or slowly as they chose. Once a course was finished, Solvig could move on to the next one, without paying more. In less than two months, she had finished four complete courses, for less than $200 total. The same courses would have cost her over $2,700 at Northeastern Illinois, $4,200 at Kaplan University, $6,300 at the University of Phoenix, and roughly the gross domestic product of a small Central American nation at an elite private university. They also would have taken two or three times as long to complete.

College for $99 a Month

The next generation of online education could be great for students—and catastrophic for universities.

Times are changing.

ideas

September 2, 2009 Leave a comment

As an idea person, I’m constantly amazed at the speed of which new ones seem to be entering the main stream.  If ideas use to be “a dime a dozen“, they are more like “penny for a pound” today.

From tweeting stuff your older father says to discussing the life of a squirrel, these ideas seem to be finding an audience and gaining sucess in short timeframes.  Today the New York Times released an article that showcased the case of a Twitter account named “shitmydadsays”.  Less than 30 days after launch, this young man has over 200,000 followers, media coverage, market appeal, an agent and multiple book offers.

So here’s to the speed of ideas and to hitting that sweet spot that only the world can tell you about.

Study Finds That Online Education Beats the Classroom

September 1, 2009 Leave a comment

computer-learning

According to the New York Times Bits blog, a recent study funded by the US Department of Education (PDF) found that on the whole, online learning environments actually led to higher tested performance than face-to-face learning environments. “On average, students in online learning conditions performed better than those receiving face-to-face instruction,” concluded the report’s authors in their key findings.

The report looked at just under one hundred studies that compared the performance of students in online learning environments (or courses with an online study component) to those who were given strictly face-to-face instruction for the same courses. What they found was that students who completed all or some of their coursework online tested on average in the 59th percentile, compared to the 50th percentile for those who received only classroom instruction, and that the results are statistically significant.

http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/08/19/study-finds-that-online-education-beats-the-classroom/?hp

Candy.com gets pops in Emmy swag bag

August 31, 2009 Leave a comment

Joe Melville and I have both worked the east and west coast selling our lollipops.  His company is one of only three left in the US that hand pours candy in the traditional manner. 

Candy.com gets pops in Emmy swag bag

Just a month after launching, Candy.com has a prime-time gig.

The Weymouth company, which sells more than 6,000 candy items online, has landed one of its products in the swag bags for the “Daytime Emmy Awards” party this weekend.

The 36th annual program, which honors soap operas and other daytime TV shows and their stars, will be broadcast on the CW Network at 8 p.m. tomorrow

Candy.com

Candy.com

Offbeat Traveler: Ithaa Undersea restaurant at Conrad Maldives Rangali Island

August 30, 2009 Leave a comment

a new way to write

August 29, 2009 Leave a comment

lately i’ve been educated by the younger people i work with on my day job, on the way that language is changing “in the wild” (my tags for real life)

LolCats (http://icanhascheezburger.com/) was one of the first to start using it, but not the only one and twitter hit it out of the ballpark with the micro text portion
not only are these sites and adoptees changing the spelling of words, they are also changing the quantity and style of the written word

i do it
for my personal taste i forgo the limits enforced by punctuation and proper grammar
do i know them
yes, i do -  i just chose to not worry about them while i am expressing my thoughts on my personal blog

so knowing that change is evident and closing in fast, i started searching and found a wonderful discovery – the guide below

http://www.140characters.com – while going through the site, i discovered the history page

<excerpt>

The original post “How Twitter Was Born” follows.


Twttr Strip Twitter was born about three years ago, when @Jack, @Biz, @Noah, @Crystal, @Jeremy, @Adam, @TonyStubblebine, @Ev, me (@Dom), @Rabble, @RayReadyRay, @Florian, @TimRoberts, and @Blaine worked at a podcasting company called Odeo, Inc. in South Park, San Francisco. The company had just contributed a major chunk of code to Rails 1.0 and had just shipped Odeo Studio, but we were facing tremendous competition from Apple and other heavyweights. Our board was not feeling optimistic, and we were forced to reinvent ourselves.

“Rebooting” or reinventing the company started with a daylong brainstorming session where we broke up into teams to talk about our best ideas. I was lucky enough to be in @Jack’s group, where he first described a service that uses SMS to tell small groups what you are doing. We happened to be on top of the slide on the north end of South Park. It was sunny and brisk. We were eating Mexican food. His idea made us stop eating and start talking.

I remember that @Jack’s first use case was city-related: telling people that the club he’s at is happening. “I want to have a dispatch service that connects us on our phones using text.” His idea was to make it so simple that you don’t even think about what you’re doing, you just type something and send it. Typing something on your phone in those days meant you were probably messing with T9 text input, unless you were sporting a relatively rare smartphone. Even so, everyone in our group got the idea instantly and wanted it.

Later, each group presented their ideas, and a few of them were selected for prototyping. Demos ensued. @Jack’s idea rose to the top as a combination of status-type ideas. @Jack, @Biz, and @Florian were assigned to build version 0.1, managed by @Noah. The rest of the company focused on maintaining Odeo.com, so that if this new thing flopped we’d have something to fall back upon.

The first version of @Jack’s idea was entirely web-based. It was created on March 21st, 2006. My first substantive message is #38:

Read more and preorder the book - “140 Characters – A Style Guide for the Short Form”

Cheezburger on Agile Software Development

August 26, 2009 Leave a comment

i know you’ve heard of or visited LoLCats or Failblog, here is Ben the founder talking about one of my favorite subjects

how his company makes 7 figures in ad sales last year is due to this method of development

more about “Cheezburger on Agile Software Develop…“, posted with vodpod
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.