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Aasemoon =)

Intel demos 48 core possibilities - The Inquirer - 1 views

  • INTEL HELD AN EVENT in London last night to talk up its Core i3, i5 and i7 processors. To highlight the ceaseless march of technology and Chipzilla's own adherence to its beloved Moore's Law, the company was showcasing technology from the last 20 years as well as having a few demos about things we may expect to see in the future. Among these was this demonstration about the sorts of applications, such as advanced 3D rendering, that become feasible when a single processor can have 48 or more cores. µ
Aasemoon =)

robots.net - Robots: New Year's Special - 1 views

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    "The latest episode of the Robots podcast takes a closer look at three of our favorite news items in 2009. Co-coordinator of the Octopus European project Cecilia Lashi, talks about their soft bio-mimetic robotic octopus arm. Our second guest, hobbyist Carl Morgan, presents Joules, the sleek silver humanoid that rides behind your tandem bike and does all the pedaling. Finally, we speak with Carson Reynolds who is professor at the University of Tokyo about his high-speed robotic hand (shown in the video above). Read on or tune in! "
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    Kool stuff! =)
Aasemoon =)

Wired Declares The Web Is Dead-Don't Pull Out The Coffin Just Yet - 1 views

  • Over the past few years, one of the most important shifts in the digital world has been the move from the wide-open Web to semiclosed platforms that use the Internet for transport but not the browser for display. It’s driven primarily by the rise of the iPhone model of mobile computing, and it’s a world Google can’t crawl, one where HTML doesn’t rule. And it’s the world that consumers are increasingly choosing, not because they’re rejecting the idea of the Web but because these dedicated platforms often just work better or fit better into their lives (the screen comes to them, they don’t have to go to the screen).
Aasemoon =)

Iran's largest lake turning to salt | CapeCodOnline.com - 1 views

  • OROUMIEH LAKE, Iran (AP) -- From a hillside, Kamal Saadat looked forlornly at hundreds of potential customers, knowing he could not take them for trips in his boat to enjoy a spring weekend on picturesque Oroumieh Lake, the third largest saltwater lake on earth."Look, the boat is stuck... It cannot move anymore," said Saadat, gesturing to where it lay encased by solidifying salt and lamenting that he could not understand why the lake was fading away.
Aasemoon =)

NVIDIA and University of Illinois Join Forces To Release World's First Textbook On Prog... - 1 views

  • The first textbook of its kind, Programming Massively Parallel Processors: A Hands-on Approach launches today, authored by Dr. David B. Kirk, NVIDIA Fellow and former chief scientist, and Dr. Wen-mei Hwu, who serves at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign as Chair of Electrical and Computer Engineering in the Coordinated Science Laboratory, co-director of the Universal Parallel Computing Research Center and principal investigator of the CUDA Center of Excellence. The textbook, which is 256 pages, is the first aimed at teaching advanced students and professionals the basic concepts of parallel programming and GPU architectures. Published by Morgan Kaufmann, it explores various techniques for constructing parallel programs and reviews numerous case studies. With conventional CPU-based computing no longer scaling in performance and the world’s computational challenges increasing in complexity, the need for massively parallel processing has never been greater. GPUs have hundreds of cores capable of delivering transformative performance increases across a wide range of computational challenges. The rise of these multi-core architectures has raised the need to teach advanced programmers a new and essential skill: how to program massively parallel processors.
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    This, I want to read....
Aasemoon =)

Erik Meijer and Team: Cloud Data Programmability - Connecting the Distributed Dots | Go... - 1 views

  • When Sven Groot was in town a while ago we dropped by Erik Meijer's world and got a look at what he and team have been and still are working on (thus there is no out-of-date property of this fun and insightful interview that is off-the-cuff as it gets: deep Channel 9 ). It's great that we were able to put a real live Niner into fire in one of Erik's team meetings. There is a great deal to learn here. Thank you, Sven, for being a real sport! Great stuff in here. Tune in!
Aasemoon =)

BitFellas: The Best Creative Commons Music Moments in 2009 - 1 views

  • The netlabel portal phlow-magazine.com proudly presents a very special gift. Together with free music lovers from all over the planet, from Japan to America, from Portugal to Great Britain, from Italy to Germany, they asked for the fucking best Creative Commons Music Moments in 2009 and got 24 responses. All in all this makes 1,3 GB sweet stuff or 9 hours, 38 minutes and 35 seconds of free creative commons music in other words. You can download them all via P2P.
fishead ...*∞º˙

Nom Nom Nom - Neatorama - 1 views

  • Nom Nom Nom

    Posted by Miss Cellania in Animal, Video Clips on January 22, 2010 at 1:37 pm



    (College Humor link)

    It’s not “Yum yum yum”, it’s “Nom nom nom”! This kitten will tell you all about it. -via Unique Daily

Aasemoon =)

January 26, 2010: Haggis, Rewrites, and the Soliciting Your Opinions. « Josep... - 1 views

  • Today’s blog entry may be offensive to sensitive Scotsmen and/or Scotswomen.  Reader discretion is strongly advised – especially if you’ve ever worn a kilt. Yesterday, on my way to dinner with Marty and co., I stopped by my local butcher shop and picked up a fresh haggis, determined to finally sample the Scotland’s national dish (I thought it was the deep-fried chocolate bar.  That shows you how much I know).  For those of you not in the know, haggis is comprised of various minced sheep’s innards (ie. lungs, liver, and heart), beef and/or mutton fat, oatmeal, onion, and spices stuffed into a sheep’s stomach, served steamed or boiled with a side of turnips and rutabagas.
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    OMG LOL... Believe it or not, this in fact IS an SGU related article! =P
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    You are so funny! Even your bookmark highlights are in BLUE!!!!! LOLOL
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    Teeeheeee! ;) =D
Aasemoon =)

YouTube - Armin van Buuren ft Sharon den Adel - In and Out of Love (Official Music Video) - 1 views

shared by Aasemoon =) on 06 Jan 10 - Cached
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    Love this track....
Aasemoon =)

Robots with a human touch - A*STAR Research - 1 views

  • In recent years, ‘social’ robots—cleaning robots, nursing-care robots, robot pets and the like—have started to penetrate into people’s everyday lives. Saerbeck and other robotics researchers are now scrambling to develop more sophisticated robotic capabilities that can reduce the ‘strangeness’ of robot interaction. “When robots come to live in a human space, we need to take care of many more things than for manufacturing robots installed on the factory floor,” says Haizhou Li, head of the Human Language Technology Department at the A*STAR Institute for Infocomm Research. “Everything from design to the cognitive process needs to be considered.”
Aasemoon =)

robots.net - Robotic Maid Makes Breakfast - 1 views

  • Mahru-Z is the robotic maid that can make breakfast!. Given certain voice commands the robot can perform functions such as working a microwave, delivering toast, and other tasks such as washing clothes. The robots can see with stereoscopic vision and can identify what objects are and even decide what jobs needs to be done with the objects. In the video, one robot appears to be tethered and the other is not making me wonder if they are really self contained. Also, one is wearing a dress and the other not, so are they both maids or is one a butler? Shouldn't they just call them robotic servants or is that redundant? Regardless, although not apparently sentient, these do appear to be advanced robots. I only wonder if they washed their hands before and after handling the food?
Aasemoon =)

HTML5 Unleashed: Tips, Tricks and Techniques | W3Avenue - 1 views

  • Can we use HTML5 today? What can we do with it? Is it really going to kill Flash? You must have noticed a gradual increase in the frequency of these and similar questions being asked, debated and even answered. In my opinion, you must answer such fundamental questions yourself.
Aasemoon =)

An Open Source Personal Robot On The Horizon? - 1 views

  • GetRobo has pointed out a new website by Francisco Paz, which focuses on his experience building an open source personal robot called Qbo.  From the few images on the site Qbo looks remarkably well made and quite similar to NEC’s PaPeRo, meaning it might be used to experiment with image processing, speech recognition, speech synthesis, and (assuming it has wheels) obstacle detection and SLAM.  He also mentions in his blog some of the open source software that’s out in the wild such as OpenCV, Festival, and Sphinx, which would allow you to do some of that.
Aasemoon =)

Walking With Robots: A Look Inside Exciting New Technology From Berkeley Bionics (TCTV) - 1 views

  • The Berkeley-based startup is developing exciting new technology that is truly the stuff of comic books and, formerly, of science fiction. Specifically, the company is making wearable, artifi­cially intelligent bionic devices that it calls “exoskeletons”. This has taken shape in two significant forms: eLEGS and HULC. Both of which you can see (as well as an interview with Berkeley Bionics CEO Eythor Bender) in the accompanying video.
Aasemoon =)

Develop Web Apps in F# with WebSharper | .NET Zone - 1 views

  • In ASP.NET development, F# also offers productivity advantages over VB and C#.  F# is different because it is statically checked and type-safe.  It addresses weaknesses in ASP.NET development like untyped values, complex form construction, and using strings for IDs and method names that connect markup with code-behind (class-files).  Writing a web application in F# on the WebSharper platform can be less-time consuming if a developer is not great at writing web apps in JavaScript.  Through WebSharper, developers can write a web app using a large subset of F# and .NET core libraries and then just let WebSharper map the code to JavaScript.  WebSharper can integrate with ASP.NET applications, but it is different from the standard approach because it builds applications from miniature web pages called "pagelets".  The pagelets correspond to functions on the client-side and they are automatically translated into JavaScript.   WebSharper supports a wide range of JavaScript libraries, making it easy for developers to optimize their code in whatever way they choose.  jQuery, qooxdoo, Flapjax, and Yahoo UI are all supported by WebSharper.  The leap from F# to JavaScript is manageable because both are functional languages that support lambda expressions and closures.  Another unique part of WebSharper is a "formlet".  A formlet is a special pagelet that provides form functionality.  Formlets in Web Sharper run and validate on the client, submitting their result to a either a client- or a server-side callback.
fishead ...*∞º˙

Popped Culture: Rick Roll In A Bottle - 1 views

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    " I know, it's probably old (I couldn't find it on Cyanide and Happiness) and Rick Astley is so last decade, but it made me laugh and it's a meme kind of day for me. (Link via Tumblefrog)"
  • ...3 more comments...
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    Hahahahahahaha.... good one fishy! =D
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    Eh?? Where did the image go?
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    The image disappeared! =P But the link is still there!
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    hmmnn...it's visible when you click 'snapshot' above. It's also visible if you view on the "My Network" page. perhaps on Groups, the highlighted images don't show on purpose?
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    But it did, at first! And the rest of the images that you've posted still show up!
Aasemoon =)

Universal property of music discovered - 1 views

  • Researchers at the Institute for Logic, Language and Computation (ILLC) of the University of Amsterdam have discovered a universal property of musical scales. Until now it was assumed that the only thing scales throughout the world have in common is the octave.
Aasemoon =)

Cutest Quadcopter Ever Sounds Like a Swarm of Angry Bees - IEEE Spectrum - 1 views

  • Instead of calling CrazyFlie (as it's known) a tiny quadcopter, it might be more accurate to just describe it as a PCB that happens to also be able to launch itself into the air. Measuring a scant 10 centimeters per side, CrazyFlie uses its PCB as a primary structural component, which helps keep the size and weight to a minimum... In total, we're talking about only 20 grams. Despite its tinyness, the quadcopter includes a charging port, radio, 3-axis accelerometer, two gyroscopes, and a lightweight 110 mAh LiPO battery that gives it about four and a half minutes of flying time: 
Aasemoon =)

Gallery | Iran Tehran & The Grand Bazaar - 1 views

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    "Cooking, eating, friends, metro, Tehran and even a few photos from the Grand Bazaar of Tehran. =) [Iran is really a lot about the food eh? =P]
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