Archive for August 1st, 2008

In the high school cafeteria of Facebook apps, Scrabulous is like that girl who gets in trouble for showing too much skin, only to throw on a hoodie and be let back into the principal’s good graces. Sort of. The game has effectively returned, but with a redesigned board, …

Source [The social]

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There’s something funny about Facebook’s handling of this week’s Scrabulous affair.

One of the social network’s most popular developer applications, as the Web well knows by now, was pulled by its creators after Scrabble parent company Hasbro filed a copyright and trademark infringement claim. The …

Source [The social]

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If you’ve been on the hunt for a tool that lets you chat with friends or clients that talk a different language, MeGlobe is a really easy solution that does all the work for you. Like Meebo, it will turn a single open browser window in a Webtop where you can manage your buddy list and chat windows. There’s no software to install, and it handles 15 languages with relative ease.

I gave it a spin using French to English, and as advertised it translates in real time. You see what the person wrote in small letters, with the translation showing up right above. It doesn’t matter what language the other user is typing in–everything gets converted to your default language. Changing it with a quick drop down will go back and reverse-translate previous chat items–it’s very cool.

Other solutions for real-time chat translation have come from many places including Google. However, Google’s system required using chat bots that act as a middle-man. MeGlobe’s solution is far simpler, putting the entire process behind what the user sees.

In the future, I’d like to see MeGlobe tap into existing IM networks instead of requiring you to plug into its own, something I’m expecting based on a rather cryptic blog entry from earlier this week.

Embedded below is a video of the tool in action.

Related:
How to translate RSS feeds
I can has lolcat translator?

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

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In the high school cafeteria of Facebook apps, Scrabulous is like that girl who gets in trouble for showing too much skin, only to throw on a hoodie and be let back into the principal’s good graces. Sort of. The game has effectively returned, but with a redesigned board, …

Source [The social]

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Mass Charges Merrill With Fraud In Auction-Rate Sec Sale Last Update: 7/31/2008 10:46:11 AM DOW JONES NEWSWIRES The Massachusetts Secretary of the Commonwealth charged Merrill Lynch & Co. (MER) with fraud in pushing the sale of auction-rate securities while “misstating the stability of the auction market itself.” “This company was aggressively selling ARS to investors and its […] For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

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Yahoo has revamped Delicious, saying the site for storing, describing, and sharing Web site bookmarks is faster, easier to use, and has better search capabilities.

Delicious site redesign

The updated look to Yahoo's Delicious Web site for storing, searching, tagging, and sharing bookmarks. (Click to enlarge.)

(Credit: Yahoo)

The speedup comes from a new server system that’s snappier and more reliable, Yahoo stated on its Delicious blog on Thursday. “You might not have noticed, but the old back-end was getting creaky under the load of 5 million users,” the company stated.

But for me, half the productivity gains will come from a rebranding of the service. No more will my fingers trip over my keyboard trying to type “del.icio.us,” the old name of the service, because Yahoo now is calling it just plain old Delicious. (And conveniently conforming with CNET’s ages-old spelling in the process.)

“We’ve seen a zillion different confusions and misspellings of ‘del.icio.us’ over the years (for example, ‘de.licio.us’, ‘del.icio.us.com’, and ‘del.licio.us’), so moving to delicious.com will make it easier for people to find the site and share it with their friends,” Yahoo said. The name change also means users will have to log in again.

The older Delicious limited descriptions of bookmarks to 255 characters, a cap that gave some appeal to rivals such as Ma.gnolia, but the new Delicious raises it to 1,000 characters. However, the Firefox plug-in I’m using to tag sites still imposes the 255-character limit.

Though Yahoo is working to unify its profiles, Delicious accounts are still separate from those at Flickr, Yahoo Mail.

Delicious founder Joshua Schachter left Yahoo in June.

Here’s Yahoo’s official word on the changes:

Speed: We’ve moved to a new infrastructure that makes each page faster. This new platform will enable us to keep up with traffic growth while ensuring Delicious is responsive and reliable…

Search: We’ve absolutely overhauled our search engine to make it faster and more powerful. Searches used to take ages to return results; now they’re very swift. The new search engine is also smarter, and more social: you can search within one of your tags, another user’s public bookmarks, or your social network. Now it’s easier to take advantage of the expertise and interests of your friends, not to mention the Delicious community at big.

Design: Finally, we’ve updated the user interface to improve usability and add a few often-requested features (such as selectable detail levels and alphabetical sorting of bookmarks). Our goal has been to keep the new design similar in spirit to the old one, so all of you veterans should be able to jump in without any confusion. At the same time, we’re hoping that newcomers to Delicious will find it easier to learn.

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

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In the high school cafeteria of Facebook apps, Scrabulous is like that girl who gets in trouble for showing too much skin, only to throw on a hoodie and be let back into the principal’s good graces. Sort of. The game has effectively returned, but with a redesigned board, …

Source [The social]

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I see this question in my inbox several times per week. The asker generally proposes one of several possibilities. These range from oil-company assassinations to esoteric problems with the car’s transmissions.

Fortunately for everyone, it’s neither as exciting as assassination or as mundane as fundamental mechanical flaws. It’s a collection of problems, actually, that are slowly being overcome.

And though we can’t do it today, five years down the road, the future of electric vehicles will look a lot brighter.

So here’s a collection of problems and their upcoming solutions:

Problem #1: Automobile manufacturers have put many billions of dollars and nearly a 100 years into the development of the internal combustion engine, and they don’t want to (or can’t even envision how to) abandon that investment for new technology.

Solution: It only took a global crisis, a quadrupling of gas prices, and the majority of consumers shifting to efficient vehicles to convince them that maybe gasoline wasn’t the best idea. Now even the biggest, oldest, and stodgiest of the vehicle manufacturers are investigating electric cars.

Problem #2: Batteries do not store power as efficiently as fossil fuels. They’re heavy and bulky, and they provide far less power per unit of weight than gasoline, ethanol, or hydrogen.

Solution: The EV1 overcame this by being a truly little automobile, and having a fairly low top speed. But still it could only travel less than 100 miles on a charge. Now cars are being updated with lithium-ion batteries which can carry far more power per pound (though still not as much as gasoline).

And range-extended EVs like the Chevy Volt grant the battery to remain small, while the on-board ICE can recharge the batteries when they get low.

And, even more fascinating, an ultra-stealth company called EEStor says they have a new ultra-capacitor technology that could store far more energy than batteries and charge in just a few minutes

Problem #3: Filling a gas tank takes five minutes, but charging a battery can take as long as 12 hours.

Solution: I’ll begin with EEStor again, who says that its ultracapacitors can charge in minutes but still power a vehicle for over 300 miles. Phoenix Motorcars has a nanotech based li-ion battery that can also be charged in a matter of minutes.

Unfortunately, both of these technologies require extremely high voltage, so the automobiles couldn’t be charged swiftly at home. Extra infrastructure in the form of charging stations would be necessary to allow these batteries to charge quickly.

Other solutions to the long charge time include Project Better Place’s plan to have battery swapping stations (instead of gas stations). The idea being that this company owns the batteries and charges them at stations. A car-wash-like facility swaps out a freshly charged battery for your used one. This, as well, requires a ton of new infrastructure though.

The Chevy Volt, finally, takes a middle road, and basically lets you charge the battery with gasoline when you really need it. So you can charge at home with electricity over long periods, but if you need a boost NOW the gasoline option is always available.

Without overcoming those obstacles, there would indeed never be a cheap, convenient, mass-market electric car. But the good news is, we’re on the verge of overcoming (or, in some cases, have already overcome) the limitations of previous eelectric cars.

For more visit Source:[green.yahoo]

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SEC Extends Emergency Short-Sale Order Thru August 12 Last Update: 7/30/2008 7:40:20 AM (This article was originally published Tuesday) By Judith Burns Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES WASHINGTON (Dow Jones)–Emergency restrictions on short-sales in 17 Wall Street firms and housing-finance giants Fannie Mae (FNM) and Freddie Mac (FRE), due to expire just before midnight Tuesday, have […] For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

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