- Shutterfinger: What Your Choice of Camera Says About You - Funny!
- Enterprises face integration hurdles to private clouds - Some of the challenges in moving from virtualization to private clouds.
- Virtualization Then & Now: Symposium 2009-2010 - "IaaS (infrastructure as a service) providers have focused on open source and internal technologies to deliver solutions at the lowest possible cost. But that’s changing. In the past year, there’s been a rapidly growing trend for IaaS providers to add support for major commercial VM formats – especially VMware, but also Hyper-V and XenServer. The reason? To create an easy on-ramp for enterprises. As enteprises virtualize (and in many cases, build private clouds), the IaaS providers know that they need to make interoperability, hybrid, overdrafting, migration as easy as possible."
- What is VMware vCloud Director? - Brief but good overview of various prerequisites and user reaction.
- Rocky and Bullwinkle Creator Alex Anderson Dies - TIME - "Animation has had plenty of unknown geniuses — from the directors, artists and storymen of Walt Disney's early features to the sly hands behind the silent pornographic cartoon Buried Treasure — but few were more obscure, or more important, than Alexander Anderson, who died Friday at 90 in Carmel, Calif. Anderson created the characters Rocky the flying squirrel, Bullwinkle Moose and Dudley Do-Right, and the vaudeville-style format, for the 1959 animated program Rocky and His Friends and its 1961 spin-off The Bullwinkle Show, known collectively as The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show. "
Friday, October 29, 2010
Links for 10-29-2010
Monday, October 25, 2010
Links for 10-25-2010
- Gentrification and its Discontents - Megan McArdle - Business - The Atlantic - Good follow-on to earlier post.
- One Div Zero: A Brief, Incomplete, and Mostly Wrong History of Programming Languages - Funny!
- The Gentrifier's Lament - Megan McArdle - Business - The Atlantic - Thoughtful piece about gentrification.
- PeteSearch: Visualization myths around Snow's cholera map - "Visualizations are fantastic at engaging people, everyone loves maps. When it comes down to detailed analysis though, a spreadsheet or other list-based interface is almost always better. Maps and other visualizations tell stories so well because of how much they leave out, but textual representations still rule when it comes to actually working with the full data."
- Captured: New York City from Above – Plog Photo Blog
- What Amazon Fears Most: Diapers - BusinessWeek - Focus in a commodity business.
- YouTube politics: A quest for victory or notoriety? | The Social - CNET News
- Google LatLong: The world as the eagle and the wild goose see it - The first aerial photograph. It's of Boston.
Friday, October 15, 2010
Links for 10-15-2010
- A VC: The Impact Of Priority Inbox - "If your email gets into the third section of the main page, called "Everything Else", I most likely won't see it unless I see it on my Android phone. And hopefully Google is working on bringing Priority Inbox to Android. When that happens, I won't ever see it."
- Gartner's 2010 Hype Cycle Special Report Evaluates Maturity of 1,800 Technologies - You can't take these things too seriously IMO, but they can stimulate some useful discussion.
- Another Year, Another Blogoversary - Chuck's Blog - Interesting meta-blogging piece by EMC's Chuck Hollis.
- HDRI Photography: Exciting New Frontier, or Gimmick to Avoid? - A Picture's Worth | PhotoShelter - Unsurprising general consensus. Useful tool but often overdone.
- IBM, Oracle and Java: The Q&A – tecosystems - Typically good writeup by Stephen O'Grady.
- By The Bell: Who really invented virtual desktops? - Pretty good rundown that, for the most part, accurately parses the different forms. (Doesn't clearly distinguish VDI from Terminal services.)
- Amazon Media Room: News Release - "Less than 10,000 words or more than 50,000: that is the choice writers have generally faced for more than a century--works either had to be short enough for a magazine article or long enough to deliver the "heft" required for book marketing and distribution. But in many cases, 10,000 to 30,000 words (roughly 30 to 90 pages) might be the perfect, natural length to lay out a single killer idea, well researched, well argued and well illustrated--whether it's a business lesson, a political point of view, a scientific argument, or a beautifully crafted essay on a current event."
- Talking Business - For H.P. Board, a Double Standard - NYTimes.com - Tough stuff. "More important, for a company that professes to be concerned with ethics — so concerned that it had to get rid of Mr. Hurd, with his piddling expense account problems — it is astonishing that it would find Mr. Apotheker’s lapses acceptable. He may not have been directly involved in this brazen theft of intellectual property, but it defies belief to say he didn’t know about it. And he did nothing to stop it until it was far too late. Apparently, the H.P. directors adhere to the highest ethical standards — but only when it’s convenient. "
- What we can learn from procrastination : The New Yorker - "Not surprisingly, for the movie they wanted to watch immediately, people tended to pick lowbrow comedies and blockbusters, but when asked what movie they wanted to watch later they were more likely to pick serious, important films. The problem, of course, is that when the time comes to watch the serious movie, another frothy one will often seem more appealing. This is why Netflix queues are filled with movies that never get watched: our responsible selves put “Hotel Rwanda” and “The Seventh Seal” in our queue, but when the time comes we end up in front of a rerun of “The Hangover.”"
- Google sends multicore warning: wimpy cores don’t cut it « SoftTalk – multicore and parallel programming - Of course this will vary by application but for the most part, the mega-multi-lightweight-cores approach seems to be a niche.
- Rebate card comes with a catch | OregonLive.com - "In fact, behavioral economists chalk up my error to something called "mental accounting."" Yup. I've done this.
- First NYC/London cable in a decade promises sub-60ms latency - In case anyone had any doubts that even (very) extra-datacenter latency matters. "How can the speed of light vary among cable operators? It can't, but operators can plan their geographic routes strategically to keep the total cable length a bit shorter than the competition. According to the consultants at Telegeography, breaking 60ms would make Project Express at least 5ms faster than its closest competitor."
- Confessions of a used-book salesman. - By Michael Savitz - Slate Magazine - An eye-opening look into how high-volume used book selling works.
- 'Paradise' found: 70-ton elephant at S.F. Port - "The problem with the map is simple: it is huge and would cost a lot of money to move, restore and display it. The last estimate was in the range of $500,000. And that was 30 years ago. It is a classic white elephant, too valuable to scrap, but too expensive to keep."
Wednesday, October 06, 2010
Links for 10-06-2010
- 13 Wildly Irresponsible Vintage Ads Aimed at Kids | Cracked.com
- Some like it loud … « Music Machinery - "One of the nifty features that we’ve rolled out in the last 6 months here at the Echo Nest is an extremely flexible song search API. With this API you can search for songs based upon all sorts of criteria from tempo, key mode, duration. You can use this API to do things that would be really hard to do. "
- Typographic Maps - Axis Maps LLC - Cartography. Visualization. Design.
- An Awesome Look at Mini-San Francisco - SF in tilt-shift.
- 483 - The Great European Shouting Match | Strange Maps | Big Think - Funny.
- louisgray.com: New Apple TV Extends Fragmentation, Cupertino Style - This is part and parcel of a broader content fragmentation within the home issue. As one commenter says,, this problem is hardly unique to Apple and partly stems from the content providers. However, Apple has hit the seamless user experience drum so hard that we expect more from Apple's product ecosystem hardware and software.
- Family Guy Abortion Episode and Other Controversial Cartoons - The Daily Beast
- How Karen Owen and Tyler Clementi Lost Control - Kashmir Hill - The Not-So Private Parts - Forbes - "In these tech-savvy, Internet-happy, Google-caching, live-streaming-made-easy days, it’s very easy to be public; control, though, is hard to come by. Welcome to the real Social Network."
Monday, October 04, 2010
Links for 10-04-2010
- Amazon.com : Make Ice Cream with Liquid Nitrogen - This is great!
- The Atlantic Tech Canon - Alexis Madrigal - Technology - The Atlantic
- Weak Ties, Twitter and Revolution | Wired Science | Wired.com - "These are all important questions, and I don’t think we have many good answers. But I would quibble with Gladwell’s wholesale rejection of weak ties as a means of building a social movement. (I have some issues with Shirky, too.) It turns out that such distant relationships aren’t just useful for getting jobs or spreading trends or sharing information. According to Granovetter, they might also help us fight back against the Man, or at least the redevelopment agency."
- Cloud Computing's Stormy Future - Bloomberg - "Cloud computing has the potential to generate a series of disruptions that will ripple out from the tech industry and ultimately transform many industries around the world. This is definitely a technology that deserves serious discussion from the entire senior leadership team of a company."
- The Tech - Browse Volume 97 - Re: the latest Duke thing. Nothing is ever truly new. See story about thursday (newspaper) in this issue.
- The Sounding Board: Worth Watching: Journalism in the Age of Data
- Apple Logo Is an Agnostic's Crucifix, Star of David: Study | Fast Company - "In both cases, "those that were highly religious [or primed to think about religion] cared less about national brands ... religion reduces brand reliance by apparently satisfying the need to express self-worth.""
- Evaluating TEDx as a brand strategy | opensource.com - "When it comes to choosing the right brand strategy for our current 2010 world, we need to weigh two opposing forces tugging mightily at each other."
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