Archive for April 25th, 2008

This past week at the Web 2.0 Expo has been a great chance to meet up with other bloggers and come face to face with some of the companies we write about every day. It’s also a great time to see how other people work, as we’re all packed into small seats in big auditoriums, or scouring rooms for the last remaining outlet to get the necessary wattage to keep writing.

A side effect of that was seeing our own Caroline McCarthy in action, typing away. In case you’re wondering part of the reason she’s so productive, it’s her keyboard skills–which I think put her in the league of a court stenographer. If you’d like to know how you stack up in the typing world, there’s TypeRacer–a wonderfully easy game that pits you up against other typers, and of course your 100-plus key stead.

The goal is to type as well as you can to get your vehicle from point A to point B. All the while you can compete with other users in real time and “race” across the landscape of the English language.

The one nice thing about TypeRacer compared with Keybr (review) is that it uses real words. It’s also a stickler about errors, requiring you to go back and make any repairs before continuing the race, keeping lead-finger slopsters from winning based on speed alone. I’m not really sure if TypeRacer really helps you type any faster, but it sure is fun.

What’s your score?

[via Kotaku]

See how your typing skills stack up with TypeRacer. And yes, in case you were wondering: Even the fastest vehicles are still VW Beetles.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

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This post was updated at 10:11 AM on Friday with comment from Chi.mp’s Myles Weissleder.

SAN FRANCISCO–Wednesday night was a wild one.

As part of this week’s Web 2.0 Expo, the ubiquitous digital-media blog Mashable enlisted a brand-new social-media site called Chi.mp to sponsor …

Source [The social]

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This post was updated at 10:11 AM on Friday with comment from Chi.mp’s Myles Weissleder.

SAN FRANCISCO–Wednesday night was a wild one.

As part of this week’s Web 2.0 Expo, the ubiquitous digital-media blog Mashable enlisted a brand-new social-media site called Chi.mp to sponsor …

Source [The social]

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FDA Found Concerns At Merck Vaccine Plant - Newspaper Last Update: 4/24/2008 7:29:39 PM TRENTON, N.J. (AP)–A number of possibly serious concerns, including contaminated packaging of children’s vaccines, were spotted by federal regulators who combed Merck & Co.’s (MRK) vaccine plant in the Philadelphia suburbs, according to a published report. Unwanted fibers on vaccine vial stoppers also were among the areas […] For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

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Tariq Krim

Tariq Krim

(Credit: Netvibes)

Netvibes, a developer of customizable begin pages, plans to make its widget platform, application programming interfaces, and iPhone version open source, according to CEO Tariq Krim.

“We want to compete with Google widgets,” Krim stated. “Our container supports Google widgets and every other platform. If we release our code, people will leverage it and grow the reach of our platform.”

Krim hopes that supporting a broad range of platforms, including Windows Vista and Windows Live, Mac OS X, Opera, Yahoo, and Google, will inspire the developer community to adopt and innovate on the Netvibes platform.

Netvibes will make money with sponsored widgets, Netvibe Universes, and business services. Opening up the code to developers will enable them to compete on more equal footing with Netvibes as well.

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

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And now for your daily dose of minor social-networking developer application announcements: MySpace.com announced on Thursday that the “application gallery” for its developer platform has made its official debut. Members of the site can browse the offerings and add applications created for the OpenSocial-compatible platform to their profiles.

“The …

Source [The social]

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Sam Newman is an analyst with the Energy and Resources Team at Rocky Mountain Institute.

For years, Hollywood has sold us images of futuristic houses filled with “smart” appliances. Think of the coffee machine that can make as many drinks as a Starbucks barista, the refrigerator that tells you when you’re out of milk, or the clothes drier that can talk.

Real attempts at such devices have long been constrained to trade shows and demonstration homes. These devices have been portrayed as artificially intelligent, user-friendly, and capable of two-way communication with us and other appliances.

Today’s smart appliances have a new benefit that goes far beyond novelty and will finally bring them to the shelves of Home Depot: energy efficiency. Their adoption will be part of a response to the urgent need to modernize the ways that we buy and consume electricity.

Appliances and electricity use

More than a third of electricity generated in the United States is used in households. Air conditioners use 16% of that electricity; refrigerators use another 14%. Hot water heaters and other home appliances — including clothes dryers and dish washers — consume an even more: 29%. Using existing technology, each of these machines can be made “smarter,” lessening our environmental impact.

Each time your air conditioner kicks on during a hot summer afternoon, it contributes to a larger problem. When many air conditioners turn on at the same time, they force up the demand for power from the local utility, putting stress on the system.

To meet this demand, utilities rely on peak generating plants, which might only be used on the hottest days of the year. Power from these plants is carbon-intensive and pricey to generate.

The benefit of smart appliances

Smart appliances will respond to price signals from the grid to lessen these peak loads. Under a “real-time pricing” system, energy used during peak hours will cost more than energy used at night, when demand is low. This price structure allows residential energy users to optimize their energy usage habits to save energy and reduce emissions.

Envision setting your air conditioner to save money by remaining off during weekday afternoon hours when power is high-priced. It would turn on in the late afternoon, so the home would still be cool when you returned from work.

Similarly, a clothes dryer could be programmed to an “economy” setting which would turn its heating element on and off to take advantage of the cheapest power rates. The dry cycle would take a bit more time, but it would allow the household to respond to variations in electricity supply.

For instance, if a cloud passed in front of the sun, reducing the output of a solar power array, the price of power would increase, signaling the dryer to turn off until the cloud moved away.

Studies have shown that consumers conserve energy when provided with real-time feedback and improved control systems via a computer or appliance smart meters. Just as car owners drive more efficiently when provided with real-time fuel economy data, residences with smart meters use less electricity.

In a current study in Washington state, overall energy usage fell 10% following the implementation of smart water heaters and dryers. If used nationwide, these technologies could save $70 billion and eliminate the construction of 30 new coal-fired power plants over 20 years.

Smart appliances in the real world

The next step toward getting smart appliances in each of our homes is taking these pilot programs to scale.

In March, Xcel energy, one of the United States’ largest utilities, chose Boulder, Colorado, for an innovative smart city project.

Residences will be fitted with smart appliances, and the utility infrastructure will be upgraded to enable real-time demand response and power pricing. Predicted benefits include lower peak demand on summer afternoons, reduced overall carbon emissions, and improved system reliability.

Appliances that can speak back to you’re unlikely outside of Hollywood fantasies any time soon. But smart appliances that save money and reduce carbon emissions are not science fiction. These technologies offer a market-based approach to energy efficiency that’ll help reduce your environmental impact.

For more information see:

 

For more visit Source:[green.yahoo]

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Brazil’s Oi Sees Brasil Telecom Takeover Deal Signed Friday Last Update: 4/25/2008 10:39:20 AM SAO PAULO (Dow Jones)–Tele Norte Leste Participacoes (TNLP4.BR), or Oi, anticipates to sign an agreement to take over smaller local rival Brasil Telecom Participacoes (BRTP4.BR) later Friday, ending months of negotiations, it said in a release. However, due to the complexity of the deal and size of […] For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

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