Friday 31 May 2013

Capcom’s new IP, Remember Me , launches next week. In preparation for the title, Capcom has released a live action trailer that serves as a prologue for the title.



It’s a little depressing, but memory manipulation is hardly ever a happy thing. That will probably be the main sticking point of Remember Me.


Remember Me comes out June 4 for the Xbox 360, PS3 and PC.



Google1

A California judge has rejected Google's petition to dismiss more than a dozen secretive Federal Bureau of Investigation requests for users' data. The requests, called National Security Letters (NSL), come without a judge's warrant and usually include a gag order preventing recipients from discussing them publicly.


In its case, Google argued that 19 NSLs it has received from the FBI are unconstitutional and should be dismissed. U.S. District Judge Susan Illston dismissed 17 of Google's challenges because she considered the company's arguments too vague and because the constitutionality of NSLs are being decided in a separate ongoing case. She reserved judgement on two others until the government provided more information about them. Read more...


More about Google, Us World, and Us



Kenyanhighjump




By now, you've probably seen the incredible YouTube footage from a track and field meet in Kenya. To the backdrop of bouncy music, two contestants — one of them barefoot — take turns gaining momentum before clearing an impossibly tall high jump bar then landing without mats in front of a cheering crowd


In the aptly-titled "Kenyan High School High Jump," the combination of athleticism, unglamorous surroundings and mystery is pretty awe-inspiring. The video has garnered more than 2 million views in eight days online and been featured on sports and news sites worldwide. Here's how it reached your computer screen Read more...


More about Viral Videos, Entertainment, Videos, and Sports



From Nature magazine


[More]

Author John Pollack recently gave an “At Google” talk, which Google has now made available for all to enjoy.


“Some people may dismiss puns as the lowest form of humor. But this attitude is a relatively recent development in the sweep of history,” Google says in the YouTube description. “In The Pun Also Rises, John Pollack – a former Presidential Speechwriter for Bill Clinton, and winner of the world pun championship – explains how punning revolutionized language and made possible the rise of modern civilization. Integrating evidence from history, pop culture, literature, comedy, science, business and everyday life, this book will make readers reconsider everything they think they know about puns.”


Pollack won the 1995 O. Henry Pun-Off World Championships, was a Presidential Speechwriter for Bill Clinton.



More At Google talks here.



Robert Rodriguez teamed up with BlackBerry earlier this year to create a short film called Two Scoops. He called upon the community to fill in a role, create a weapon and design a monster for the final film. All of that is now finalized and the film is ready for your eyeballs.


Clocking in at 10 minutes, the short film isn’t going to win any awards. In fact, you may not even be able to get past the first five minutes. But hey, it’s a free Rodriguez film paid for by BlackBerry. What else would you expect?



Let’s just hope that Sin City 2 isn’t this bad.



Greta Van Susteren had something to say about her Fox colleagues after a video went viral yesterday which showed the men talking about the roles of men and women as breadwinners.


Lou Dobbs, Doug Schoen, Eric Erickson and Juan Williams all weighed in on how they feel about women supporting their households, and it wasn’t pretty.


“We’re seeing….something going terribly wrong in American society, and it’s hurting our children,” Williams said.


“I’m so used to liberals telling conservatives that they’re anti-science…When you look at biology, when you look at the natural world, the roles of a male and a female in society and in other animals, the male typically is the dominant role. The female, it’s not antithesis, or it’s not competing, it’s a complementary role,” Erik Erickson said.


Greta Van Susteren spoke up today after backlash began to hit, writing on her blog, “Have these men lost their minds? (and these are my colleagues??!! oh brother… maybe I need to have a little chat with them) (next thing they will have a segment to discuss eliminating women’s right to vote?)”


Watch the video below:




Many working adults know that playing hooky isn’t just reserved for kids, but the lies one Polk County, Florida teacher made up to skip out on work are just plain shocking.


According to school district officials Ashley Barker, a first-grade teacher at Laurel Elementary School, concocted a convincing story of illness in which she claimed she and her father were both dying.


As WFTV reports, the deception went on for an entire year. During that time, school officials simply took Barker at her word. They let her come and go as she pleased and made special accommodations for time off. The school district was unwilling to give an actual number on how much time Barker took off as a result of the fake illness.


After investigators caught wind of allegations that Barker’s story might not be true, she apparently told them that she had just been at home the whole time.


“Wow. That’s kind of scary. Because if she lies about that, she can lie about anything,” said one parent.


Scary is one word for it. Parents leave their most important things in the world, their children, with educators. This sort of betrayal of confidence is sure to leave its mark. Barker has been terminated but is apparently fighting it.


What an odd story.












A novel therapy for the most common form of lung cancer shows promise and seems to yield largely manageable side effects, according to new research that will be presented at the 49th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology. The researchers, from Fox Chase Cancer Center, are conducting an ongoing clinical trial to determine whether the compound is more effective at treating tumors than existing treatments. Hossein Borghaei, DOs, chief of thoracic medical oncology at Fox Chase, said: "We're very excited about this drug...

Two-time Grammy-nominated artist Eric Roberson recently performed at Google NYC, where he played five songs and gave an interview (which starts about 40 minutes in). Google has now made the performance/talk available for all to enjoy.


Songs include: Change For Me, Dealing, an improvised song with the audience, Shake Her Hand and Couldn’t Hear Me.




When the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) began using backscatter X-ray machines, privacy advocates balked at the notion of TSA employees seeing a colorless image of passengers’ naked bodies. Not long after, naked airport protests embarrassed the TSA and worries of the the general ineffectiveness of the devices began to widely circulate. Now, the devices have been completely removed from U.S. airports.


According to a CNN report, the removal of the devices was due to a congressional act that required the machines to better protect passengers’ privacy. The TSA could not meet the new standards, and instead phased out the backscatter X-ray machines. The agency had until June 1 to stop using the devices. All 250 of the machines stationed in U.S. airports were reportedly removed two weeks ago at the expense of Rapiscan Systems, the company that manufactured them.


Fliers should not become too excited, though – a competing body scan technology is still in use in some U.S. airports. According to the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC), millimeter wave devices, which use a different portion of the electromagnetic spectrum to provide images, will continue to be used. EPIC is a a privacy and civil liberties organization that has filed multiple lawsuits against the TSA over privacy concerns.



[caption id="attachment_12843" align="alignleft" width="350" caption="Courtesy of University of California-Berkeley"] [/caption]Imagine watching a chemical reaction in real time: atoms breaking bonds with their neighbors and forming new arrangements as heat or pressure changes. That's what scientists at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and University of California, Berkeley came close to achieving in these images. Using an atomic-force microscope the researchers captured before and after images of a big hydrocarbon molecule--26 carbons with just 14 hydrogens tagging along--rearranging its shape as the heat rose from 270 degrees Celsius below zero to 90 degrees Celsius. [More]
Samuel-l-jackson-1




Samuel L. Jackson followed through with his promise on Friday, after asking Reddit users to submit a 300-word monologue for him to read out loud.


But not without punking the Internet in the process. Here's the beginning of his much-anticipated monologue:



Hi, I'm Samuel L. Jackson. I'm sorry to disappoint you, Reddit, but I've decided to break the rules of my own competition, and I will not be reading a user-submitted entry as my monologue. Instead, I'd like to speak to you all from my own heart, in my own words; honestly and openly. I've been waiting to reveal something for a long, long, time and... well, here it is: I am quitting acting and pursuing a life of vigilantism. Read more...



More about Reddit, Samuel L Jackson, Watercooler, Videos, and Conversations



Aside from Epic Mickey and Kingdom Hearts, Mickey Mouse has been largely absent from video games for the past 10 years. That used to not be the case back in the 80s and 90s when Capcom and Sega made fantastic games starring classic Disney characters. Now Disney is bringing those games back.


So, what is it like to create a remake to one of the most beloved Mickey Mouse games of all time? The team at Sega Australia and the creators of the original title recently spoke to Sony about bringing back Castle of Illusion to a modern audience, while retaining the beloved aspects of the original title.



Castle of Illusion is just one out of two remakes that Disney is currently working with publishers on. Capcom announced at PAX East that it had partnered with WayForward to remake the much beloved Ducktales platformer for modern platforms.


With all these Disney remakes, would it be too much to ask to have a team remake Mickey Mania ? With a little bit of polish, it could be the best Mickey Mouse game ever made.


Castle of Illusion Starring Mickey Mouse will be available later this year on the PS3, Xbox 360 and PC.



Jacob Bijani, Tumblr’s creative director and their first designer, is leaving the company after 5 years.


He announced his departure in a blog post where he says that he’s sure the future of Tumblr will be “incredible.”


Here’s his short post:



Today was my last day at Tumblr.


Five years ago I joined a team of four as Tumblr’s first designer, creative director, and product engineer. That team has since grown to 182 of the most wonderful and talented people around.


I’m so proud of what we’ve all created together, and it’s been a privilege to contribute to something beloved by so many. I can’t wait to see what’s next for the product; I’m sure it will be nothing short of incredible.


There’s still a lot more I want to accomplish, and I’m really excited about this next chapter. For now, I’m going to take some time off to digest the last few years. I have about a dozen different projects planned, so expect more from me soon!



There’s no mention of the Yahoo acquisition and no evidence of any link between that and Bijani’s departure, but the timing is hard to ignore. Yahoo announced that they had acquired Tumblr for $1.1 billion less than two weeks ago, and earlier this week Tumblr added more ads to the dashboard.


[Jacob Bijani via Valleywag]



Tumblr

Tumblr's creative director and fifth employee, Jacob Bijani, has left the company less than two weeks after it was acquired by Yahoo.


In a post to his personal Tumblr, Bijani writes that he plans to take some time off "to digest the last few years" and that he has "about a dozen different projects planned" — projects, we assume, he'll want to get started after that break.



Bijani's post, in full:



Today was my last day at Tumblr.


Five years ago I joined a team of four as Tumblr’s first designer, creative director, and product engineer. That team has since grown to 182 of the most wonderful and talented people around.


I’m so proud of what we’ve all created together, and it’s been a privilege to contribute to something beloved by so many. I can’t wait to see what’s next for the product; I’m sure it will be nothing short of incredible.


There’s still a lot more I want to accomplish, and I’m really excited about this next chapter. For now, I’m going to take some time off to digest the last few years. I have about a dozen different projects planned, so expect more from me soon! Read more...



More about Yahoo, Tumblr, Business, Startups, and Jacob Bijani



Twitter has just made editing your profile much easier by adding inline editing for the profile picture, header photo, and basic information on the desktop.


Now, you can edit your profile inline (without having to go to a separate profile editing page). Just click the “edit profile” button on your “me” page and you’ll be able to change both your header and profile photos plus your bio, location, and website information.


Either click the image you wish to change and upload or even take a new photo – or you can drag and drop photos from your desktop. You gotta love some drag and drop.




If you’re on-the-go, you’ll still have to click the gear icon and then “edit profile” to make the aforemetioned changes. Plus, if you want to change your background photo on the desktop, you’ll need to go into you settings as well.


It’s a small change, but a good one. Ever since Twitter unveiled their new header photos, they’ve been pushing adoption pretty hard by suggesting users upload one when they first log in. And about the whole profile photo thing – look, if you still have an egg as your pic, you’re doing Twitter so wrong that you may as well just quit.


As Twitter has been known to do, they’re announcing the new profile editing features with a cartoon. Oh, Phillip.




Houston firefighters this afternoon responded to a fire at a Bhojan Restaurant in Houston. According to the Houston Fire Department, the blaze injured four firefighters, who were take to hospitals in the area. The call for the fire went out just after noon on Friday, and by 1 pm the fire was upgraded to 5-alarm status. The cause of the fire has not yet been determined.


According to a Houston Chronicle report, the fire had quickly spread to a Southwest Inn beside the restaurant, as well as a nearby sports bar and disco. Police closed traffic in the area, including freeway ramps.


Two of the injured firefighters are reportedly in critical condition. No other injuries or deaths have been reported.



View more videos at: http://nbcdfw.com.








video platformvideo managementvideo solutionsvideo player



Search is moving more and more toward structured data, which in turn, is leading search engines to delivering the information users are seeking without the need of having to send them to third-party sites. Google, in particular, is making tremendous use of this data in offerings like its Knowledge Graph and in Google Now, and it’s still very early days for both products. Google continues to provide webmasters with tools to help build Google’s structured database, but what ramifications does this have for businesses getting web traffic from Google going forward?


Are you willing to provide Google with structured data from your site, even if it means Google getting users this data without sending them to your site? Let us know in the comments .


Google announced the launch of Knowledge Graph just over a year ago. It was a major indication of Google’s reduction in dependence on keywords.


“It’s another step away from raw keywords (without knowing what those words really mean) toward understanding things in the real-world and how they relate to each other,” said Google’s Matt Cutts at the time. “The knowledge graph improves our ability to understand the intent of a query so we can give better answers and search results.”


From the user standpoint, it’s been hard to argue with the results, especially these days when you see them interact with your questions in a conversational manner. Outside of the occasional piece of erroneous data, the info has been pretty useful, and even when relevant, more traditional, organic results appear on the page next to a Google “Knowledge Panel,” it’s often the Knowledge Graph part that jumps off the page and captures your attention, and in many cases, let’s you know the information you needed without having to click further.


So far, the biggest loss in site clickthroughs has probably been seen by Wikipedia, simply because it’s typically the first source Google offers up with the Knowledge Graph, but Google is working to greatly expand the Knowledge Graph, and as that happens, more sites face the possibility of a similar sacrifice. It’s also worth noting that Wikipedia, of course, is a nonprofit entity. How much of the Knowledge Graph will consist of info from nonprofits when it’s all said and done?


It will never truly be done though. It will just keep growing, and Google’s giving webmasters the tools to give the search giant better access to the data it needs to give answers to users. For many, this will no doubt be an attractive option in an age where it has become increasingly hard to appear on page one of a Google results page.


Google launched the Data Highlighter back in December. It was initially just for event data, but has already expanded significantly.


“Data Highlighter is a webmaster tool for teaching Google about the pattern of structured data on your website,” Google explains. “You simply use Data Highlighter to tag the data fields on your site with a mouse. Then Google can present your data more attractively — and in new ways — in search results and in other products such as the Google Knowledge Graph.”


“For example, if your site contains event listings you can use Data Highlighter to tag data (name, location, date, and so on) for the events on your site,” the company adds. “The next time Google crawls your site, the event data will be available for rich snippets on search results pages.”


This week, Google announced that it has expanded the tool to support more types of data. Now it supports: events, products, local businesses, articles, software applications, movies, restaurants, and TV episodes. Suddenly, this is starting to involve businesses a lot more directly.


Google also introduced another tool called the Structured Data Markup Helper.


“As with Data Highlighter, one simply points and clicks on a sample web page to indicate its key data fields,” says product manager Justin Boyan. “Structured Data Markup Helper then shows exactly what microdata annotations to add to the page’s HTML code. We hope this helps give HTML authors a running start with adding structured data to their sites, in turn making search results more meaningful.”


“When Google understands a website’s content in a structured way, we can present that content more accurately and more attractively in search,” says Boyan “For example, our algorithms can enhance search results with ‘rich snippets’ when we understand that a page contains an event, recipe, product, review, or similar. We can also feature a page’s data as part of answers in search from the Knowledge Graph or in Google Now cards, helping you find the right information at just the right time.”


To be clear, there will certainly be plenty of cases, as with rich snippets, where new links to sites are created, potentially leading to more clickthroughs, but even sometimes with those, users will get the info they need on the page, without having to click. There are plenty of variables that enter the equation, not least of which is Google deciding when and where to display the data it obtains from sites.


The question is whether this move toward structured data will truly benefit sites in general in the long run or if it simply gives search engines like Google more control as the gatekeepers to information. With Google Now, for that matter, Google is even deciding when to show users this data, without waiting for them to search for it.


Another issue worth considering is just how well Google will be able to deal with accuracy of data as it gets more and more structured data from webmasters, as it is encouraging. We’ve seen Google make mistakes on more than one occasion. They’ve gotten marital status wrong. They’ve let nudity slip through when inappropriate (multiple times). Will they be able to keep too much erroneous information from being passed off as “knowledge”? If not, things could get really out of hand.


Earlier this week, I had a bad experience with Google Maps in which I was directed to a non-existent eye doctor on the other side of town (turn by turn, no less) when the actual doctor was right outside of my neighborhood. I was late for the appointment because of a Google error. What happens if some piece of erroneous data from some webmaster’s site makes it into Google’s Knowledge Graph, and gets served to me via Google Now when I supposedly need it, only for me to find out that it is completely wrong. Who knows what kinds of mishaps that could bring on?


Maybe Google can keep the errors from becoming too prevalent. I guess we’ll see, though I can’t say my confidence is incredibly high. Back when Google launched Knowledge Graph I questioned the company about accuracy with regards to Wikipedia vandalism. I was told that Google has quality controls to “try to mitigate this kind of issue,” and that Google includes a link so users can tell them when they come across inaccuracies.


“Our goal is to be useful,” a spokesperson told me. “We realize we’ll never be perfect, just as a person’s or library’s knowledge is never complete, but we will strive to be accurate. More broadly, this is why we engineer 500+ updates to our algorithms every year — we’re constantly working to improve search, and to make things easier for our users.”


But that was before Google Now, and it was when the Knowledge Graph was significantly smaller than it is now. At Google I/O earlier this month, Google announced that Knowledge Graph was up to over 570 million entities (not to mention rolling out in additional languages), and that it continues to grow. Even since then, Google has announced the launch of nutritional information.


It also remains to be seen how well Google is able to keep spam out of the structured data pool. I can’t say I’ve seen any spam from it thus far, but as more and more businesses look to provide Google with this kind of data in hopes of boosting their search visibility, which again, Google is encouraging them to do, and as long as Google moves further and further into this direction, making it harder for businesses to get traditional first-page rankings, it seems likely that more will try to game the system. Maybe they won’t be successful. Maybe some will find ways.


The point is that it’s still early days for this era of search, and it’s hard to say just what it all means for webmasters and for search quality. Either way, things are getting interesting.


Do you like the direction this is all headed in? Share your thoughts in the comments .



Twitterbio




Twitter has now made it even easier to upload a new profile picture, header image or background image to your profile.


You can edit profile photos by clicking the “Edit Profile” button at the top of your Twitter profile page, which will allow you to click and edit individual parts of your profile –- such as the profile picture, background image and even your personal description.



For profile photos, access the forward-facing camera on your computer and snap a quick profile pic. For header and background images, just drag and drop photos from your computer and make quick, on-the-fly adjustments Read more...


More about Twitter, Twitter Profile, and Social Media



Obama-audubon

President Barack Obama has a Follow Friday suggestion for all you Twitter users out there: environmental/bird appreciation group The Audubon Society.



#FF: @audubonsociety


— Barack Obama (@BarackObama) May 31, 2013




What's up with this #FF? It's a playful response to a recent slideshow from satirical news outlet The Onion, "19 Tweets From The Audubon Society/Barack Obama Twitter Feud" (warning: language).



OK, the @BarackObama account isn't really the president anymore. Rather, it's controlled by Organizing for Action (OFA), a grassroots organization set up to support Obama's legislative goals. While that sounds like semantics, it's actually an important distinction for a couple of reasons Read more...


More about Twitter, Barack Obama, The Onion, Us World, and Politics



Sometimes I want to show you something just because it's wonderful. So today I'm introducing a new feature: Wonderful Things. The name is taken from my blog's masthead, but is also inspired by Howard Carter . When he broke in to the tomb of Tutankhamun, he stuck a candle in the hole and surveyed the contents. After a pause, his patron Lord Carnarvon asked him if he saw anything. "Yes," Carter replied. " Wonderful things. "So here's Wonderful Thing #1: Desmids . I stumbled on these as I was writing about the Alternation of Generations in my post a few back on mosses. With tiny, sculpted bodies and some distinctly unplantlike behavior, desmids are gorgeous botanical oddballs. The best description for them might be "chiseled" -- although not the sort of chiseling that comes from protein shakes and 6-minute abs. This is more the kind that comes from guys with Italian last names and lucrative papal commissions. [More]
Memories are story shaped. As are understandings. To remember, or make sense of, a thing is to have a story about it. Colonoscopies and correcting cathartic errors can probe the inner workings of these stored stories.Memories aren't machine-like recordings. They resemble movies more than raw footage. They are carefully lit and edited. Daniel Kahneman says of this filtering and forming, that " Confusing experience with the memory of it is a compelling cognitive illusion ." [More]

Shortly after completing work on Windows 8, former Windows boss Steven Sinofsky left Microsoft. He hasn’t said much since, but he finally opened up during an interview yesterday at D11. The general message seemed to equate to he knew Windows 8 would be polarizing, but it was the right thing to do.


Early on, Sinofsky was asked about the reaction Windows 8 received from the early testers. If you recall, there was a lot of negativity surrounding Windows 8 from longtime users of Microsoft’s operating system. Sinofsky says that feedback may not be the best, especially when dealing with a product that betrays their expectations:



“When you test a product before it’s in market, the people who naturally go to use it will push it in the same way they pushed the old one. They like the old direction — that’s why they signed up [for the] pre-release. You have to break from them, and those first hundred people will be very upset, but you want a million people, not a hundred.”



Speaking of that million people, Sinofsky says that he’s pleased with the 100 million Windows 8 licenses Microsoft has sold since it was released late last year. Of course, it should be noted that Microsoft has only reported 100 million licenses sold, and that number is not indicative of actual use. According to the latest numbers from IDC, manufacturers are buying a lot of licenses, but not selling a lot of machines. That’s not exactly a healthy business in the long run.


Regardless, it’s obvious that Sinofsky is proud of the work he and his team did with Windows 8. If that’s the case then, why did he leave so suddenly after shipping the OS? All he’ll say is that “it was time for a change.”


You can watch the entire conversation with Sinofsky below:




Oscar Pistorius has gone into hiding since he shot and killed his girlfriend, model and law school graduate Reeva Steenkamp. He now lives with his uncle in Pretoria, South Africa, and would be unrecognizable to anyone who knew him before the tragic incident.


Pistorius’ uncle, Arnold, says his nephew is inconsolable and has surrounded himself with photos of Reeva; while the state prosecutors want to try him for murder, the Olympian claims it was a horrible accident. The trial won’t begin until at least early next year.


“What can you say if the person you love the most dies, and you were the instrument? How would you feel? It’s unthinkable,” Arnold Pistorius said. “He’s got photos in his room, photos all over the place. He’s housebound, you know. He doesn’t go out in public places.”


Pistorius was charged with Steenkamp’s murder after he shot her in the early morning hours on Valentine’s Day. He says he heard noises in the bathroom and thought it was an intruder and, after retrieving his gun, shot through the bathroom door. The double-amputee claims he thought Steenkamp was still in bed and that it was dark in the bedroom.


However, officials say that Steenkamp suffered wounds on her arms that looked defensive, and stories began floating around the web that it might have been a domestic violence dispute that led to the shooting. As attorneys prepare for the trial, a staggering amount of evidence will have to be examined. Pistorius faces another court hearing next Tuesday.



Hulu-newlook

Hulu has rolled out a new interface for Hulu Plus on Roku, select Samsung TV and Blu-ray players and the Nintendo Wii.


The update mirrors changes made to the PlayStation 3 Hulu Plus interface last fall and this spring's Apple TV redesign.


The update is more living room-centric, with a focus on larger artwork, an easier way to scroll through recommendations and improved search. It also brings the Hulu Kids section into the living room.


Roku users should get the update now, as should 2012 and 2013 Samsung TV and Blu-ray owners. The update will hit the Wii soon.


At least five companies are reportedly bidding on Hulu — including Yahoo. While Hulu's top traffic draw is its free website, the more than 3 million paying Hulu Plus subscribers are the key to the company's future. Read more...


More about Hulu, Roku, Wii, Hulu Plus, and Connected Devices



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