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Iam me

uClassify - free text classifier web service - 0 views

shared by Iam me on 03 Apr 11 - Cached
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    "uClassify is a free web service where you can easily create your own text classifiers. You can also directly use classifiers that have already been shared by the community. Examples: Language detection, Web page categorization, Written text gender and age recognition, Mood, Spam filter, Sentiment,, Automatic e-mail support.   So what do you want to classify on? Only your imagination is the limit!"
Adam Roades

ifttt - 1 views

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    Connect various web services with a simple equation wizard.
Iam me

New Chrome Blurs The Line Between Web and Native Apps - 0 views

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    Google just shipped a new stable release of the Chrome browser that includes two new technologies: Native Client, which allows execution of C and C++ code within the browser, and the Web Audio API, which brings advanced audio capabilities to JavaScript. 
Iam me

Web 3.0 on Vimeo - 0 views

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    "A sotry about the Semantic Web".  Author also provides a downloadable transcript and video.  
Adam Roades

50+ Tools for Web Based Collaboration - Popwuping - 0 views

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    The brainstorming sites listed here may hold ideas for an enterprise application for virtual meetings or offsite notetaking.
Adam Roades

Page2RSS - Create an RSS feed for any web page - 0 views

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    Create RSS feeds for pages/sites that don't natively offer it.
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

Beautiful web-based timeline software - 1 views

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    "Welcome to TikiToki, a web app that makes it dead easy to make stunning, animated timelines that work in your browser. Our basic account is completely free.'
Iam me

Is Every Browser Unique? Results Fom The Panopticlick Experiment | Electronic Frontier ... - 0 views

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    Today we are publishing a report of the statistical results from the Panopticlick experiment on web browser fingerprintability. The results show that the overwhelming majority of Internet users could be uniquely fingerprinted and tracked using only the configuration and version information that their browsers make available to websites. These types of system information should be regarded as identifying, in much the same way that cookies, IP addresses, and supercookies are.
Adam Roades

The Web & Business Tools Startups Use Most [INFOGRAPHIC] - 1 views

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    Many of these tools were mentioned by my team in a recent offsite - nice validation!
Iam me

The AWS Outage: The Cloud's Shining Moment - O'Reilly Broadcast - 0 views

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    So many cloud pundits are piling on to the misfortunes of Amazon Web Services this week as a response to the massive failures in the AWS Virginia region. If you think this week exposed weakness in the cloud, you don't get it: it was the cloud's shining moment, exposing the strength of cloud computing. In short, if your systems failed in the Amazon cloud this week, it wasn't Amazon's fault. You either deemed an outage of this nature an acceptable risk or you failed to design for Amazon's cloud computing model.
Raq Winchester

A 'Spooks And Suits' Red Team Game - Dark Reading - 0 views

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    A 'Spooks And Suits' Red Team Game Social media apps meet national security Jul 20, 2011 | 12:40 PM | 0 Comments By Kelly Jackson Higgins Dark Reading What if a former Navy SEAL petty officer were a member of Anonymous? Senior members of the U.S. intelligence agency, including Michael Chertoff, the former Secretary of Homeland Security, and a former SEAL officer, will participate in a red-team exercise in September where they'll play the role of Anonymous/LulzSec and APT attackers, as well as the defenders trying to fend off these adversaries. Sure, simulated cyberattack games are nothing new these days. But this one is part and parcel of the upcoming Spooks and Suits summit in Silicon Valley on Sept. 23 and 24, and it throws together intell officials and attendees. It's the brainchild of cybersecurity expert Jeffrey Carr, who wanted to bring together three-letter agencies, like the CIA, NSA, and DoD, with social media and Web 2.0 developers and start-ups to actually communicate one-on-one with each another and with general attendees. It works like this: Attendees will be randomly assigned to one of four teams of 25 to 30 people: Anarchist hackers (a la Anonymous and LulzSec), APT attackers, or one of two defending organizations. The teams then must observe all of the panel discussions -- which will cover threats against the intell community, as well as demonstrations of new and existing social media applications -- from the perspective of either adversary or defender, depending on which team they are assigned. "If one of the apps presented has to do with a game, the objective for the attendee is to say, 'How can I use that game as an adversary? Or how can I use it to uncover or defend against an adversary?'" says Carr, who is the founder and CEO of Taia Global, an executive cybersecurity firm, and author of "Inside Cyber Warfare." "During breaks, they can play with the apps with an eye to their mission." The teams will have a working lunch period for buildi
Iam me

INTERNET TRENDS - Web 2.0 Summit San Francisco, CA by Mary Meeker - 0 views

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    Mary Meeker - October 18, 2011
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