Archive for March 21st, 2008

Battle Of The Podcasting Geek Chicks

Written by on Friday, March 21st, 2008 in Ajax News.

A long weekend usually means less news, but for those looking for a new and quite often attractive take on news, the ongoing battle for geek chick supremacy offers a bountiful choice.

Webb Alert

Michael discribed Morgan Webb’s daily tech show as “a winner” and even stays up till 2am to catch new episodes. Occasional mens mag model Morgan Webb delivers tech related news from across the world. Our August 2007 review here.

(more…)

Crunch Network: CrunchGear drool over the sexiest new gadgets and hardware.

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/255879589/

Many college students (but few others) will recognize the Risk-like game known as Turf that pits thousands of students against each other in a weeks-long online wargame that is similar to the board game Risk, but uses the college campus as the map.

What started off as a for-fun experiment by Yale student Gabe Smedresman in January 2007 resulted in a game that went on for over a month and involved over 3,300 Yale students (more than 25% of the student body).

But now that original game of Turf has spawned two separate and funded startups to push the game as a business. Smedresman joined with Harvard students Andrew Fong, Matt O’Brien, and Hugo Van Vuuren to found Kirkland North, a Y Combinator backed startup (screen shot of their game is above). Meanwhile, a rival company has launched that was founded by some of the players of Smedresman’s original game, called GoCrossCampus.

A New York Times article today written by Brad Stone profiles GoCrossCampus and suggested the founders invented the game and said “The game, a riff on classic territorial-conquest board games like Risk, may be the next Internet phenomenon to emerge from the computers of college students.” There was no mention of Kirkland North or Smedresman’s original work in that article.

Kirland North contacted the NYT, they say, to set the record straight. Stone then wrote a new article on the NYT’s Bits blog with the additional information supplied by Kirkland North.

The Kirkland North guys are obviously irate over what they see as a blatant rip-off of their idea. In a phone conversation, Van Vuuren said that the GoCrossCampus guys are not engineers and had to outsource the development of the game, using Turf as a guide. The code base is inferior, he said, and of the 20 games that have been run on the GoCrossCampus platform, half have had technical failures (GoCrossCampus has not yet responded to my request for comment) (Update: see below). Van Vuuren says their platform is stable and has had no problems in the six games they’ve run since last year. A recent Stanford game, he says, had 2,500 players, with more than 1/3 of undergraduates playing.

And there is yet more drama - the original NYT’s article on GoCrossCampus had a prominent quote from Google product manager Jonathan Rochelle, who “views it as similar to software like Google Calendar and Google Docs — tools that enhance real-world collaboration,” and “Next month, Google will bring GoCrossCampus to its New York office, pitting sales departments against engineering groups over a map of the company’s Manhattan campus.”

But it turns out that Gabe Smedresman is actually a full time Google employee. The fact that Google is planning to run his rivals’ game at their New York office must not sit well with him at all.

Of course, Hasbro, the owners of the original Risk game, will have something to say about the real inventor of the game, so neither company may have much moral ground beneath their feet.

See also our coverage of Kdice, a simple synchronous multiplayer version of Risk.

Update: I spoke to a somewhat bewildered GoCrossCampus co-founder Brad Hargreaves (who’s currently on spring break). He says that the GoCrossCampus code base was developed completely separately from the original Turf game, and that they made repeated offers to Smedresman to join their founding team, which he declined. He also says that at the time they spoke to the New York Times, which was last month, they had no idea Smedresman intended to start his own rival startup. Hargreaves also disputes KirklandNorth’s assertion that the GoCrossCampus founders aren’t engineers - two of the founders are engineers, he says. Finally, Hargreaves says that their technical hiccups were all in the first two games that they ran; all subsequent games, he says, have run smoothly.

Crunch Network: MobileCrunch Mobile Gadgets and Applications, Delivered Daily.

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/255793456/

Time Waster: Test Your Stock Trading Chops On Inspectd

Written by on Friday, March 21st, 2008 in Ajax News.

inspectd-screen.png

Think you are good at trading stocks? Here’s a good Friday afternoon time waster for those of you who prefer more grown-up games than you can find on Mytopia.

Test your trading skills at Inspectd. The site, which has been around for a while, shows you a historical stock chart with nothing more than the price and the moving average. You are given $100,000 in fake money and you have to decide whether to buy, skip, or sell based on nothing other than the price. Once you decide, it tells you the name of the stock, what it actually did over the next 20 days, and adjusts your account accordingly.

It is pretty addictive, and cheaper than day trading with real money.

Crunch Network: MobileCrunch Mobile Gadgets and Applications, Delivered Daily.

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/255760816/

logomed.pngThere is a new casual gaming network in town that’s got some serious cross-platform chops. Don’t be fooled by the cutesy graphics. Today, Mytopia is simultaneously launching across Facebook, Bebo, MySpace (currently pending approval) and its own Website with eight games (Chess, Backgammon, Sudoku, Dominoes, Bingo, Spades, Hearts, Video Poker). On Monday, it will release the same games across the major Web and desktop widgets: iGoogle Gadgets, Apple Dashboard Widgets, Yahoo Widgets and Windows Vista Toolbar Widgets.

mytopia-bebo-2.pngHere’s the thing: the games work across all of these platforms. You can be on Facebook playing cards with one friend on MySpace and another on Bebo. And you can control what people on each network see about you. For instance, you can present your real profile to your friends on Facebook, and a different Mytopia avatar to everyone else.

Mytopia was founded by a young Israeli American, Guy Ben-Artzi, and his sister Galia Ben-Artzi. They grew up in Silicon Valley, but now split their time between the U.S. and Israel. Nearly all the company’s engineers are in Israel. Guy wants to bring the computing architecture and game-play behind massively multiplayer online (MMO) games like World of Warcraft to casual games with broader appeal. Guy explains:

mytopia-fb-2.png

What we have done over the past year is look at all the massive multiplayers and tried to analyze what makes those sticky and social. What is great about all of these massive multiplayers is you have people playing in guilds and trading with each other. We are building the MMO backend minus the 3D perspective and hard core genre.

Mytopia games include the ability to join teams, compete in matches, send in-game messages, win points for different skill levels, collect virtual currency and trade in-game items with other players. The company plans to explore different ways to make money including in-game sponsorships, premium subscriptions, and micro-transactions linked to game items and the in-game economy.

In May, the startup plans to open up its casual gaming platform to other developers. By delivering this write-once, deploy-anywhere capability, it hopes to challenge other social gaming networks with platform ambitions such as Zynga and SGN. This should be fun to watch.

mytopia-backgammon.pngmytopia-spades.pngmytopia-chess.png

Crunch Network: MobileCrunch Mobile Gadgets and Applications, Delivered Daily.

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/255678795/

Google AJAX Translation API

Written by on Friday, March 21st, 2008 in Ajax News.

The game above uses the new Google AJAX Translation API that allows you to do two things via a simple JavaScript API.

Translation

If you want to take a word in one language, and translate it to another, you simply call something like this:

JAVASCRIPT:

  1.  
  2. google.language.translate(’Gato’, ‘es’, ‘en’, function(result) {
  3.   alert(result.translation);
  4. });
  5.  

Here are the languages we support.

What if you need to programatically grok which language a string is written in? You can use the detection algorythm:

JAVASCRIPT:

  1.  
  2. google.language.detect(’Questa linea di rilevare che questa è la lingua.’,
  3.  function(result) {
  4.   alert(result.language);
  5. });
  6.  

The detector doesn’t just tell you the result, it also lets you know how reliable and confident it is.

Source: Ajaxian
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/ajaxian/~3/255657826/google-ajax-translation-api

Get Into The SearchMe Private Beta Right Now

Written by on Friday, March 21st, 2008 in Ajax News.

New Sequoia-backed visual search engine SearchMe is just starting to send invitations to their private beta, which launched last week. The company says there are 30,000 people now on the waiting list. But if you want to get in now, just click here and enter your email. The first 1,000 people get in immediately.

Information provided by CrunchBase

Crunch Network: MobileCrunch Mobile Gadgets and Applications, Delivered Daily.

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/255631479/

[Sunspots] The noodle edition

Written by on Friday, March 21st, 2008 in Ajax News.

IT's recovering complexaholics

“We in IT are addicted to complexity. And our addiction to the complex, the expensive and the clunky is increasingly indulged at our own peril. That’s because business people have discovered that consumer IT is better than corporate IT. It has more features and is more responsive, easier to use, faster to install and a whole lot cheaper to operate.”

Chef David Chang on staying simple

“Chang opened Momofuku Noodle Bar in 2004 after having an epiphany: ‘Why can’t I cook something simple? I’m not an awesome cook—I just want to make noodles.’ MacFarquhar writes, ‘The idea of Noodle Bar from the start was to take the humblest meal—a bowl of noodles, a pork bun—and, with a combination of obsessive devotion and four-star technique, turn it into something amazing.’” [via JK]

The origin of the iChat UI

“The original 1997 sketch I made of a chat user interface based on speech balloons.”

People who are sleep deprived have no sense of their limitations

“For the millions of people who don’t get enough sleep because their commute to work is too long, or they spend too many hours at work, or they just want this lifestyle of go, go, go, it’s convenient to say, ‘I’ve learned to live without sleep.’ But you bring ‘em into the laboratory – and we have an open challenge to any CEO or anyone in the world, come into the laboratory – we don’t see this adaptation.”

How caricaturists draw the candidates

“Every four years presidential candidates are given satiric makeovers and in this spirit I asked four caricaturist/illustrators to describe the most critical feature needed to achieve the likenesses of John McCain, Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, and whether or not a single pose best defines the candidate.”
Book on graphic design in movies

“Uncredited is the first book to offer a general and historic insight into the role played by graphic design in films, from the dawn of cinema to the present day. It presents a critical analysis of the opening title sequences, thus throwing a light on the typographic work and composition of anonymous designers or of those rarely accredited. This book includes over 1,000 films and over 300 sequences of opening titles, from more than 150 creators.” [tx Matt]

Logos can make you 'Think Different'

“Each of us is exposed to thousands of brand images every day, most of which are not related to paid advertising. We assume that incidental brand exposures do not affect us, but our work demonstrates that even fleeting glimpses of logos can affect us quite dramatically.”

Top 5 reasons why “the customer is always right” is wrong

“1: It makes employees unhappy. 2: It gives abrasive customers an unfair advantage. 3: Some customers are bad for business. 4: It results in worse customer service. 5: Some customers are just plain wrong.”

MP3: Jim Coudal at SxSW

A talk about where creativity comes from from our officemate.

Down for everyone or just me?

Is [insert site here] down for everyone or just you? Find out here.

Source: Signal vs. Noise
Original Article: http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/924-sunspots-the-noodle-edition

Yahoo! releases new performance best practices

Written by on Friday, March 21st, 2008 in Ajax News.

Stoyan Stefanov has been working with the Yahoo! engineers to find more best practices, and presented on a new batch:

He covers the existing 14 rules, plus 20 new rules for faster web pages. We’ve categorized the optimizations into: server, content, cookie, JavaScript, CSS, images, and mobile.

Here are the new items, with details on them coming soon:

1. Flush the buffer early [server]
2. Use GET for AJAX requests [server]
3. Post-load components [content]
4. Preload components [content]
5. Reduce the number of DOM elements [content]
6. Split components across domains [content]
7. Minimize the number of iframes [content]
8. No 404s [content]
9. Reduce cookie size [cookie]
10. Use cookie-free domains for components [cookie]
11. Minimize DOM access [javascript]
12. Develop smart event handlers [javascript]
13. Choose <link> over @import [css]
14. Avoid filters [css]
15. Optimize images [images]
16. Optimize CSS sprites [images]
17. Don’t scale images in HTML [images]
18. Make favicon.ico small and cacheable [images]
19. Keep components under 25K [mobile]
20. Pack components into a multipart document [mobile]

Is it just me, or is performance getting a LOT of attention these days?

Source: Ajaxian
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/ajaxian/~3/255593731/yahoo-releases-new-performance-best-practices

Don’t mess with March Madness. CBS Sports is learning that lesson the hard way on Facebook, where a major backlash is happening over its NCAA basketball bracket application. Yes, this is the same application that was allowed to spam users’ friends with more invites than other Facebook apps. cbs-sports-wall.pngThe app—which lets you pick which basketball teams you think will win March Madness, track your progress, and compare with friends—isn’t working properly. For instance, yesterday it didn’t know that Texas A&M won against BYU. We were alerted to this problem by Jack Pease, a student at the University of Florida, who wrote in an e-mail:

I just wanted to report on the issues I’ve seen with the CBSSports Facebook app that has users peeved on the forums. . . . As some of you may know, A&M won their game today against BYU. Alas, Facebook says otherwise, with A&M coming up in red.

On top of this, if you refresh your bracket a few times, you’ll see different calculations for your current score.

People commenting on the CBSSports app are saying some pretty harsh things about the app. I can’t blame them. This is supposed to be an application that awards $10,000. If they can’t get the math right enough to tell me my score, how can I know they’re picking the right person? Come on CBS, didn’t your coders actually test the program before you deployed it?

Fail.

This is a serious issue for college students and other sports fans following the tournament. There is a lot of beer money at stake, not to mention that chance at $10,000 CBS Sports is offering to anyone whose picks end up in the top 10 percent. But it is an even more serious issue for CBS Sports. It is failing in a very public way. This is the risk big brands take when they put an app on Facebook. It had better work or else the world will hear about it. Below are some more comments from irate Facebook members who add the application to their pages:

cbs-sports-reviews.png

Information provided by CrunchBase

Crunch Network: MobileCrunch Mobile Gadgets and Applications, Delivered Daily.

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/255587434/

An Ajax Ascii Art Generator

Written by on Friday, March 21st, 2008 in Ajax News.

Ajaxian ASCII

Thomas Hansen of the Gaia Ajax Widgets project took a look a the Asciify project that we posted about recently, and thought that Ajax could do just as good a job!

So, he created an Ajax Ascii Art generator:

So when I saw this Ajaxian Article about an ASCII art generator in Flash I felt compelled to demonstrate it could easily be done in a standardized set of web technologies.

I set out to see if I could find some libraries to use, and I found Sau Fan Lee’s codeproject article about his ASCII fying .Net library. It was GPL so it mixed perfectly together with Gaia. So I just brushed it up a little bit, added some Gaia Ajax for falvor, and voila! Have fun!

All the Ajax is of course built with Gaia Ajax Widgets ;)

All the code can be downloaded here and is GPL so you can use it as you wish as long as you comply with the GPL license terms. If you find bugs, cleans up the code or in any other ways improves it (hint; Linux/Mono port would be awesome) I’d be more than willing to host the modified code here and update the running version with credits to you, email it then if so to thomas dot hansen at gaiaware dot net :)

ASCII Art Options

Source: Ajaxian
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/ajaxian/~3/255570757/an-ajax-ascii-art-generator



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