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Iam me

Give Me My Data | A Facebook application to reclaim your information - 0 views

shared by Iam me on 05 Jul 11 - Cached
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    "Give Me My Data is a Facebook application that helps users export their data out of Facebook for reuse in visualizations, archives, or any possible method of digital storytelling. Data can be exported in common formats like CSV, XML, and JSON as well as customized network graph formats."
Iam me

Choosing the right license for open data - O'Reilly Radar - 0 views

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    We have a multi-year process to re-license based on advice from multiple sources that Creative Commons is not applicable to data. We wish it were, and it probably will be in the future but it wasn't clear when we began. Until that happens we have a process to move to the Open Database License, which explicitly covers data and not just creative works like photographs or text. The ODbL was in fact started as a result of investigations around the needs of Science Commons and we just helped it to its conclusion. At some point down the line I personally expect the ODbL and CC to be compatible and we will be able to cross-pollinate once more.
Iam me

Data-Crunching Program Guides Santa Cruz Police Before a Crime - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • But the presence of the police officers in the garage that Friday afternoon in July was anything but ordinary: They were directed to the parking structure by a computer program that had predicted that car burglaries were especially likely there that day. The program is part of an unusual experiment by the Santa Cruz Police Department in predictive policing — deploying officers in places where crimes are likely to occur in the future.
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    But the presence of the police officers in the garage that Friday afternoon in July was anything but ordinary: They were directed to the parking structure by a computer program that had predicted that car burglaries were especially likely there that day. The program is part of an unusual experiment by the Santa Cruz Police Department in predictive policing - deploying officers in places where crimes are likely to occur in the future.
Iam me

Global Adaptation Index enables better data-driven decisions - O'Reilly Radar - 0 views

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    The launch of the Global Adaptation Index (GaIn) literally puts a powerful open data browser into the hands of anyone with a connected mobile device. The index rates a given country's vulnerability to environmental shifts precipitated by climate change, its readiness to adapt to such changes, and its ability to utilize investment capital that would address the state of those vulnerabilities.
Iam me

Official Google Blog: Mining patterns in search data with Google Correlate - 0 views

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    Using Correlate, you can upload your own data series and see a list of search terms whose popularity best corresponds with that real world trend.
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Zanran Numerical Data Search - 0 views

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    Tagline: "Your source for data & statistics - graphs, charts and tables"
Iam me

Why mobile data encryption doesn't matter (as much) | VentureBeat - 0 views

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    encryption, as a preventive measure, assumes the primary threat is coming from the "outside" - typically (but not exclusively), in the form of a hacker trying to intercept communications or extract data from a lost or stolen device. While such threats are real and you absolutely must guard against them, we've reached a crucial point in the evolution of mobile technology, and just as importantly, user behavior where the primary mobile security threat is no longer the faceless and malicious hacker, but instead the legitimate, fully authenticated owner of the device itself.
Iam me

Social, mapping and mobile data tell the story of Hurricane Irene - O'Reilly Radar - 0 views

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    Exemplifies the emergence of a networked world.  
Adam Roades

80% of Children Under Age 5 Use the Internet Weekly [STATS] - 0 views

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    Nearly 80% of children between the ages of 0 and 5 who use the Internet in the United States, do so on at least a weekly basis, according to a report released Monday from education non-profit organizations Joan Ganz Cooney Center and Sesame Workshop. The report, which was assembled using data from seven recent studies, indicates that young children are increasingly consuming all types of digital media, in many cases consuming more than one type at once. Television use dwarfs internet use in both the number of children who surf the web and the amount of time they spend on it. The analysis found that during the week, most children spend at least three hours a day watching television, and that television use among preschoolers is the highest it has been in the past eight years. Of the time that children spend on all types of media, television accounts for a whopping 47%. Heavy television viewing may even be partially responsible for the rising number of children who use the Internet. Parents in one study indicated that more than 60% of children under age three watch video online. That percentage decreases as children get older (the report suggests this is because school-age children have less time at home), but even 8- to 18-year-old children reported in another study that they consume about 20% of their video content online, on cellphones, or on other portable devices like iPods. Internet and television use among children has become entwined in other ways as well. A 2010 Nielsen study suggests that 36% of children between the ages of 2 and 11 use both mediums simultaneously. Altogether, children between the ages of 8 and 10 spend about 5.5 hours each day using media - eight hours if you count the additional media consumed while multitasking. The report doesn't attempt to solve the more-than-decade-old debate of whether all of this screen time is good for children. Instead, it preaches balance: "My mother used to say that too much of anything isn't good fo
Iam me

Summarize your data with pivot tables - Docs Blog - 0 views

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    Google blog post about adding pivot tables to Google Docs. 
Iam me

Cloud-Powered Facial Recognition Is Terrifying - Jared Keller - Technology - The Atlantic - 0 views

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    "The relevant point here is not Schmidt's thought on behavior and choice but the fact that, no matter what you choose to do or not do, your life exists in the cloud, indexed by Google, in the background of a photo album on Facebook, and across thousands of spammy directories that somehow know where you live and where you went to high school. These little bits of information exist like digital detritus. With software like PittPatt that can glean vast amounts of cloud-based data when prompted with a single photo, your digital life is becoming inseparable from your analog one. You may be able to change your name or scrub your social networking profiles to throw off the trail of digital footprints you've inadvertently scattered across the Internet, but you can't change your face. And the cloud never forgets a face. "
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Additional iPhone tracking research - O'Reilly Radar - 0 views

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    As some time passes we're getting a better understanding of what's going on with the iphone and android tracking data.  This post summarizes the research done as of 24 April, 2011. 
Iam me

Privacy, Security & Your Dropbox - 0 views

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    Dropbox explains changes to their Terms of Service and their various policies and approaches to protecting user data
Iam me

Platform Versions | Android Developers - 0 views

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    Get near real time data on Android versions by what is accessing the market in the last 14 days.  
Adam Roades

Cisco Blog » Blog Archive » The Dawn of the Zettabyte Era [INFOGRAPHIC] - 0 views

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    Good descriptions for visualizing what a zettabyte is.
Adam Roades

What Would 10 Petabytes Look Like? [Infographic] - ReadWriteCloud - 0 views

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    Interesting visualization of 10 Petabytes
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