Archive for May 2nd, 2008

Microsoft’s Popfly team is rushing to complete a major addition to its mash up maker so it can do demonstrations at the Maker Faire in San Mateo, Calif., tomorrow. I got a swift demo earlier this week and I hope the product is ready in time, because it’s a great new service, and just perfect for the audience the Maker Faire draws.

The new feature: an environment for building casual games (think Solitaire, not Half-Life), called Game Creator There are lots of templates with generic titles to start from (personal favorite: “Badly built wall”) or users can create their own games from scratch using a scripting system and a built-in, and amusing, library of graphics and sounds.

Indeed, that is a badly-built wall.

(Credit: Microsoft)

Popfly Game Creator lets you assign behaviors to your game's "actors." (Click image to enlarge.)

(Credit: Microsoft)

In the demo I saw, a Space Invaders-like game was built in just a few minutes. I’m always skeptical when people with intimate knowledge of a development environment show how easy it is to build an application with it; I’ve always found that really learning a development system, even one geared for programmer newbies such as this, takes a bit of dedication. In other words, it’s never as easy as it looks. However, although I wasn’t able to try the product before writing this, Popfly Game Creator does indeed appear to be an easy and fun environment to build games in.

The system has a physics engine of some sophistication. It can tell when items collide (a key behavior in games), and it models gravity, but I was told that a Pong-type game required hand-coded extensions to compute bounce angles.

The runtime debugger shows your actors, behaviors, and actions. (Click image to enlarge.)

(Credit: Microsoft)

Popfly games can be run on the Popfly site, or embedded on any Web page or Facebook profile. The games use the Silverlight runtime, which is a straightforward install if it’s not already on your system (Yes, there’s a Mac version).

While Popfly Game Creator is part of the Popfly product, integration into the mash up maker environment is not complete, so you can’t build today, state, a shoot-em-up that lets you blast incoming Twitter messages out of the sky. Too bad.

Popfly’s Principal Group Program Manager, John Montgomery (disclosure: we used to work together) states that, “Games is what sucks people into coding.” I can relate to that. When I was a child, I taught myself BASIC so I could write games. Popfly Game Creator is the kind of system I’d love to put my own son in front of, when he’s old enough, to show him how much fun it is to program.

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

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It’s gossip no more: as rumored, Germany-based social-bookmarking site Mister Wong has acquired the social-media feed aggregator Lifestream.fm for an undisclosed amount. The news was originally reported on digital-media blog Mashable.

Mister Wong previously acquired Websnapr and Pixer.us, which were both created by Lifestream.fm founder Juan …

Source [The social]

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Bank of America Launches Asiana Airlines Credit Card with American Express WILMINGTON, Del., May 1, 2008 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ — Asiana Airlines, Bank of America, and American Express today announced the launch of the new Asiana American Express(R) Card from Bank of America. The card provides two miles per dollar on each day purchases and access to members-only golf courses […] For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

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Bank of America Launches Asiana Airlines Credit Card with American Express WILMINGTON, Del., May 1, 2008 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ — Asiana Airlines, Bank of America, and American Express this day announced the launch of the new Asiana American Express(R) Card from Bank of America. The card provides two miles per dollar on everyday purchases and access to members-only golf courses […] For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

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This is Google’s video introducing its work with artists worldwide to create
beautiful, funky, and visually enticing iGoogle pages for the masses.
(Credit: Google)

If you thought Google’s capacity for high design didn’t go far beyond its primary-colored logo, think again.

The iGoogle personalized home pages have …


Source [The social]

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In the long run, the debate will argue whether March served as a pause or a turning point on the road of evidence of climate change and the planet’s recent warming trend. The 50 cities measured against their historical average by the Forecast Earth Temperature Index produced an average gain in March of less than two-tenths of a degree, far below the average gain of +1.48 degrees seen this past winter.

Wild swings of unseasonable warm and cold weather also fell off in March, as temperatures did a much superior job of clinging to their historical averages - 18.8 percent of the month’s readings checked in within 2 degrees, plus or minus, of their historical counterparts. During the months of January and February, just 11.6 temperature readings measured within that spread.

Index cities recording monthly averages above their historical measurements outnumbered their colder counterparts 27-23.

Caribou, Maine, dealt with the coldest March compared to its history, with its month’s worth of temperatures averaging -5.5 degrees against the norm recorded in the National Climate Data Center Daily Normals (1971-2000). Madison, Wisconsin (-3.8), Detroit (-3.2) and Minneapolis-St. Paul (-3.1) were also among the coldest cities vs. history in March.

Washington, D.C., which measured out to be the warmest Index city (+8.2) compared to its historical average during the 91 days of winter, continued as the Index’s warmest city in March, with a +6.1 reading compared to history. Los Angeles (+4.4), Norfolk, VA (+4.3), Dallas (+4.2), and San Antonio (+3.9) rounded out the five warmest cities.

Remember, there were 19 days of duplicated readings between the March and winter measurements.

For more visit Source:[green.yahoo]

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Cafepress and Zazzle got you down when it comes to creating an on the internet shop? Check out Pikistore: half site builder, half store front for apparel that sports whatever logo or design you slap on it. Believe it or not, it’s from the same folks who did Comeeko, the zany comic strip builder our very own Caroline McCarthy called “the best Web 2.0 site in the history of the universe.”

Pikistore’s angle for getting you to ditch the competition is that the on the internet store you create exists as its own destination, and not a part of some network of other stores. Unlike Etsy, which does something similar, but focuses on the network of other sellers as part of the advantage, Pikistore is all about letting you create a standalone site that can be populated with your products, then giving you a way to make it a part of your existing blog or Web site.

Make your own custom clothing to sell to others with Pikistore.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

Like other on the internet store makers you can take a single design and populate it onto a multitude of products without any sort of repetitive reproduction on your part. You can set mark-ups, and pick which items you want to let people purchase, from mouse pads to kitchen aprons

It’s also got some pretty slick looking themes you can simply click to re-skin the look and feel of your site entirely. Users of WordPress, or any other Web based blogging platforms will be familiar with this, and advanced users who want to make the store simply match with their own sites can drop in the CSS and whatever graphics, logos, or backgrounds they’re using. It also allows for free domain transfer, which means you can link it up to your site’s .com address without having to sign up for a premium plan–something we’ve rarely seen in a free service.

As for the end result, most shirts cost around what they do on other services. Like competing customized apparel stores you don’t need to purchase an entire box of shirts, you and your buyers can simply get them printed one at a time. What makes the service especially cool is that you can track some of these purchasing statistics, including where your traffic is coming from, and what OS and browser your users are on. These are the things typically found in analytics services like Google’s, and very helpful for helping to target your audience.

I’m interested to see what the final product looks like, something that can only be accomplished with a purchase. My one qualm is that the editing interface might be a little complicated to novice users who aren’t comfortable going outside the general boundaries of the theme builder. Intermediate to advanced users, however will find the high level of customization to be refreshing.

In case you’re wondering what it’s like to actually create a Pikistore, I’ve embedded an example video below (try not to get nauseous):

Related: Web Shirts: 20 rad T-shirt sites

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

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