Kamis, 20 Januari 2011

“MMORTS” Is A Real Thing, Honest

MMORTS games keeping being talked about by various beardymen, but I can only remember ever playing one, or maybe two? Anyway, they weren’t great, nor memorable, clearly. Reverie World Studios are aiming to change that with Dawn Of Fantasy, which is both beautiful and epic (see trailer below) thanks to judicious use of GRAPHICS. Woo! See how they sparkle.
The game will be released June 3rd 2011, and we’ll play it. You can try to play it now, actually, as there’s a closed beta in progress. Anyway, when I have played it we will say that I have played maybe three MMORTS games, so it’s a real genre now. Okay.

Urinal games help men aim straight

Tokyo urinals fitted with games enabling users to test power and accuracy
A Japanese entertainment company has combined men's obsession with video games with their perennial inability to aim straight to create a range of distractions in selected Tokyo urinals.
Sega has installed the Toylets in male lavatories at four bars and games arcades in the Japanese capital.
The games use pressure sensors attached to eye-level LCD screens that test users' accuracy as they answer the call of nature.
The four games include one in which the object is to spray the screen clean of graffiti. Another, Manneken Pis, named after the famous statue in Brussels, measures the volume of the urine stream.
Splashing Battle, meanwhile, pits one user against another – though thankfully not directly – by challenging him to produce a more powerful stream than the previous visitor.
In the fourth game, the North Wind and the Sun and Me, sensors control a digital wind blowing up a young woman's skirt. The greater the stream's intensity, the higher the skirt travels.
The games sit (or stand) well with Japan's open attitude to all matters micturition.
Children are raised on tales of ghosts who inhabit toilets, perhaps to encourage cleanliness, while girls are encouraged to keep on the good side of the female deity who supposedly resides in domestic WCs.
While many foreign visitors to Japan find themselves befuddled by hi-tech 'washlets' in upmarket hotels and restaurants, locals are accustomed to heated sets, multidirectional jets of warm air and water, and even face-saving 'perfume bursts'.
For the easily embarrassed, the toilet maker Toto offers Otohime (Sound Princess) – a gadget tailored for women's public lavatories that emits the sound of running water.
Sega said the Toylet games would be available only until the end of the month, and it had no plans to market them commercially.
Household versions would be unlikely to succeed. According to a 2009 survey by Toto, more than 33% of Japanese men prefer to urinate while sitting down.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

7 A.M. (New Year's Morning) [Street Scene from Above, Man on Bicycle], ca. 1930

Laszlo Moholy-Nagy (American, b. Hungary, 1895-1946)

7 A.M. (New Year's Morning) [Street Scene from Above, Man on Bicycle], ca. 1930

Gelatin silver print; 27.8 x 21.3 cm (10 15/16 x 8 3/8 in.)

The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Ford Motor Company Collection, Gift of Ford Motor Company and John C. Waddell, 1987 (1987.1100.155)

© 2010 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn
Information about hundreds of thousands of works of art is available in The Metropolitan Museum of Art's Collection Database.
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Gingerbread Serenity is the sweetest ship in the 'Verse [Concept Art]


Perhaps if there had been a Christmas episode of Firefly, Kaylee would have made a gingerbreadish version of her home, the starship Serenity, out of some ghastly protein substance. But this gingerbread Serenity looks plenty good enough to eat. More »

These Apps Are Rampantly Stealing Your Info Without Permission [Privacy]

I love Pandora. I really couldn't do without it. But I could do without its sending my demographic information, phone ID, and location to eight trackers across six companies. And Pandora's far from the worst offender, the WSJ shows us. More »

Progress in Algorithms Beats Moore’s Law

Every so often Lance tweets about some science policy report. My natural tendency, like any good techie, is to keep my distance from such reports. I do recognize that they serve an important social function (like dentists or lawyers) but personally I would want to have as little as possible to do with them. However, I do sometimes skim over them, trying to gain some fuzzy insight or point of view. Here is an observation I picked from the Report to the President and Congress: Designing a Digital Future: Federally FUnded R&D in Networking and IT:
Everyone knows Moore’s Law – a prediction made in 1965 by Intel co-founder Gordon Moore that the density of transistors in integrated circuits would continue to double every 1 to 2 years. (…) Even more remarkable – and even less widely understood – is that in many areas, performance gains due to improvements in algorithms have vastly exceeded even the dramatic performance gains due to increased processor speed.
The algorithms that we use today for speech recognition, for natural language translation, for chess playing, for logistics planning, have evolved remarkably in the past decade. It’s difficult to quantify the improvement, though, because it is as much in the realm of quality as of execution time.
In the field of numerical algorithms, however, the improvement can be quantified. Here is just one example, provided by Professor Martin Grötschel of Konrad-Zuse-Zentrum für Informationstechnik Berlin. Grötschel, an expert in optimization, observes that a benchmark production planning model solved using linear programming would have taken 82 years to solve in 1988, using the computers and the linear programming algorithms of the day. Fifteen years later – in 2003 – this same model could be solved in roughly 1 minute, an improvement by a factor of roughly 43 million. Of this, a factor of roughly 1,000 was due to increased processor speed, whereas a factor of roughly 43,000 was due to improvements in algorithms! Grötschel also cites an algorithmic improvement of roughly 30,000 for mixed integer programming between 1991 and 2008.

From tables to 5 star linked data


The goal and vision of the Semantic
Web is to create a Web of connected and interlinked data (items)
which can be shared and reused by all. Sharing and opening up “raw
data” is great; but the Semantic Web isn’t just about
sharing data. To create a Web of data, one needs interlinking
between data. In 2006, Sir Tim Berners-Lee introduced the notion of
linked data in which he outlined the best practices for creating
and sharing data on the Web. To encourage people and government to
share data, he recently developed the following rating system -

The highest rating is for the data
that can link to other people’s data to provide context. While the
Semantic Web has been growing steadily, there is lot of data that
is still in raw format. A study by Google researchers shows that there are 154 million
tables with high quality relational data on the world wide web. The
US government along with 7 other nations have started sharing data
publicly. Not all the data is RDF or confers with the best
practices of publishing and sharing linked data.
Here in the Ebiquity Research Lab,
we have been focusing on converting data in tables and spreadsheets
into RDF; but our focus is not on generating just RDF, but rather
generate high quality linked data (as now Berners-Lee calls it
“5 star data”). Our goal is to build a completely automated
framework for interpreting tables and generating linked data from
it.

As part of our preliminary
research, we have already developed a baseline framework which can
link the table column headers to classes from ontologies in
the linked data cloud datasets, link the table cells to entities in
the linked data cloud and identify relations between table columns
and map them to properties in the linked data cloud. You can read
papers related to our preliminary research at [1]. We will use this
blog as a medium to publish updates in our pursuit of creating
“5-star” data for the Semantic Web.
If you are data publisher, go grab
some Linked Data star badges at [2]. You can show your support to
the open data movement by gettings t-shirts, mugs and bumper
stickers from [3] ! (all profits go to W3C)
Happy Holidays ! Let 2011 be yet
another step forward in the open data movement !