Posts Tagged ‘flight’

PostHeaderIcon Pentagon Partially Blames The Internet For That Christmas Shoe Bomber

This is the lede, verbatim, from a story that appeared in The Hill yesterday: “The Internet allowed extremists to contact, recruit, train and equip the suspect responsible for the attempted Flight 253 bombing on Christmas Day ‘within weeks,’ a top Pentagon official told lawmakers Wednesday.” What’s the implication, that because someone used the Internet to plan something, something bad, we should get rid of it? Fine by me, believe me.




PostHeaderIcon Adidas Finale Madrid: This is the fancy ball that will be used at the Champions League final

The convergence of sport and technology ! I don’t know, I think it’s cool. So, here’s another

Continued here:
Adidas Finale Madrid: This is the fancy ball that will be used at the Champions League final

PostHeaderIcon Even as tiny blocks, you’ll recognize Super Mario Bros. in this Arduino project

Funny thing, isn’t it? That you can watch some little blocks moving on an 8

PostHeaderIcon MetaLab Accuses Mozilla Of Plagiarizing Its Design

Andrew Wilkinson of MetaLab Design has just written a blog post accusing Mozilla of plagiarizing the design of its FlightDeck editor. To make matters worse, Wilkinson says that MetaLabs actually bid on creating the design for FlightDeck months ago, but was turned down by Mozilla.

While Wilkinson is understandably upset, at this point,it looks like the plagiarized image is just a mockup on the Mozilla wiki — not the actual product (though it’s obviously still in bad taste). We’ve reached out to Mozilla for a comment.

On its wiki, Mozilla describes FlightDeck as a tool to “enable the community to rapidly, collaboratively develop both extensions that utilize the Jetpack framework and Jetpack Capabilities crucial to the expansion of the Jetpack framework’s core.




PostHeaderIcon MetaLab Accuses Mozilla Of Plagiarizing Its Design

Andrew Wilkinson of MetaLab Design has just written a blog post accusing Mozilla of plagiarizing the design of its FlightDeck editor. To make matters worse, Wilkinson says that MetaLabs actually bid on creating the design for FlightDeck months ago, but was turned down by Mozilla.

While Wilkinson is understandably upset, at this point,it looks like the plagiarized image is just a mockup on the Mozilla wiki — not the actual product (though it’s obviously still in bad taste). We’ve reached out to Mozilla for a comment.

On its wiki, Mozilla describes FlightDeck as a tool to “enable the community to rapidly, collaboratively develop both extensions that utilize the Jetpack framework and Jetpack Capabilities crucial to the expansion of the Jetpack framework’s core.




PostHeaderIcon MetaLab Accuses Mozilla Of Plagiarizing Its Design

Andrew Wilkinson of MetaLab Design has just written a blog post accusing Mozilla of plagiarizing the design of its FlightDeck editor. To make matters worse, Wilkinson says that MetaLabs actually bid on creating the design for FlightDeck months ago, but was turned down by Mozilla.

While Wilkinson is understandably upset, at this point,it looks like the plagiarized image is just a mockup on the Mozilla wiki — not the actual product (though it’s obviously still in bad taste). We’ve reached out to Mozilla for a comment.

On its wiki, Mozilla describes FlightDeck as a tool to “enable the community to rapidly, collaboratively develop both extensions that utilize the Jetpack framework and Jetpack Capabilities crucial to the expansion of the Jetpack framework’s core.




PostHeaderIcon Live: Google Apps Marketplace Launches At Google Campfire One

Tonight, Google is hosting one of their Campfire One events at their headquarters in Mountain View, CA. They’re using the event to launch their new Google Apps Marketplace. This is the app store that business applications can use to reach the more than 25 million people and 2 million business that use Google Apps for their domains.

Below, find our live notes.

Vic Gundotra, Vice President of Engineering

  • Two million businesses have “gone Google”
  • 25 million users.
  • Everything you need is now in the cloud for businesses
  • Tonight we’re launching the new Google Apps Marketplace
  • It’s great for developers – who get access to these 25 million users instantly
  • It’s also great for users.
  • It’s simple to integrate.
  • Build your app. And you don’t have to use App Engine. You can use whatever you want.
  • And you can sell your app in the Marketplace.
  • What does Google ask in return? A one-time fee of $100. And a low 20% rev share.
  • Over 50 launch partners.

David Glazer, Engineering Director

  • I want to walk you through the “how” now – build, integrate, and sell.
  • Google Apps now has a large and growing number of extension points (we’ll be adding more over time)
  • there is a central management system
  • Universal integration to Google Apps navigation system.
  • We use OpenID to manage authentication. Single sign-on.
  • And we use OAuth for secure access to data. The OAuth grant of trust is built into the Marketplace.

  • We have a complete manifest.
  • Time for a demo. Here’s a developer showing off a “hello world” application.
  • Easy step-by-step process to get your application in the Marketplace.

  • It might take a couple of days for the app to show up in the Marketplace when you submit it.
  • A domain admin simply then clicks the “Add it now” button.
  • Then just three clicks left – 1) agree to terms of service 2) grant data access (such as to your calendar) 3) enable the app
  • You can even see it in the apps drop down if you’re in, say, Gmail.

  • Here’s Intuit now showing how to take a real app – for payroll – to show how easy it is to itegrate.
  • Intuit is the largest payroll provider in the nation.
  • We usually serve small companies, many are less than 20 employees.
  • Another demo, this time from Atlassian – a software development company
  • You can easily embed your information inside of Gmail.

  • The thing I’m most excited about is the studio activity bar.
  • With this, Google Talk can be used for instant collaboration.
  • All of this is available today. In fact it’s being used by 40 developers in a bus traveling from SF to SXSW in Austin, TX.

  • Another demo, Manymoon – a social productivity app.
  • We used open standards to convert free users to paid users.
  • Everything you’ve seen so far will be live later tonight – for this next demo, it will be coming soon.
  • Gmail contextual gadgets – like when a YouTube video is embedded in Gmails – soon third-parties will be able to use this.

  • Here’s a demo from Appirio.




PostHeaderIcon Live: Google Apps Marketplace Launches At Google Campfire One

Tonight, Google is hosting one of their Campfire One events at their headquarters in Mountain View, CA. They’re using the event to launch their new Google Apps Marketplace. This is the app store that business applications can use to reach the more than 25 million people and 2 million business that use Google Apps for their domains.

Below, find our live notes.

Vic Gundotra, Vice President of Engineering

  • Two million businesses have “gone Google”
  • 25 million users.
  • Everything you need is now in the cloud for businesses
  • Tonight we’re launching the new Google Apps Marketplace
  • It’s great for developers – who get access to these 25 million users instantly
  • It’s also great for users.
  • It’s simple to integrate.
  • Build your app. And you don’t have to use App Engine. You can use whatever you want.
  • And you can sell your app in the Marketplace.
  • What does Google ask in return? A one-time fee of $100. And a low 20% rev share.
  • Over 50 launch partners.

David Glazer, Engineering Director

  • I want to walk you through the “how” now – build, integrate, and sell.
  • Google Apps now has a large and growing number of extension points (we’ll be adding more over time)
  • there is a central management system
  • Universal integration to Google Apps navigation system.
  • We use OpenID to manage authentication. Single sign-on.
  • And we use OAuth for secure access to data. The OAuth grant of trust is built into the Marketplace.

  • We have a complete manifest.
  • Time for a demo. Here’s a developer showing off a “hello world” application.
  • Easy step-by-step process to get your application in the Marketplace.

  • It might take a couple of days for the app to show up in the Marketplace when you submit it.
  • A domain admin simply then clicks the “Add it now” button.
  • Then just three clicks left – 1) agree to terms of service 2) grant data access (such as to your calendar) 3) enable the app
  • You can even see it in the apps drop down if you’re in, say, Gmail.

  • Here’s Intuit now showing how to take a real app – for payroll – to show how easy it is to itegrate.
  • Intuit is the largest payroll provider in the nation.
  • We usually serve small companies, many are less than 20 employees.
  • Another demo, this time from Atlassian – a software development company
  • You can easily embed your information inside of Gmail.

  • The thing I’m most excited about is the studio activity bar.
  • With this, Google Talk can be used for instant collaboration.
  • All of this is available today. In fact it’s being used by 40 developers in a bus traveling from SF to SXSW in Austin, TX.

  • Another demo, Manymoon – a social productivity app.
  • We used open standards to convert free users to paid users.
  • Everything you’ve seen so far will be live later tonight – for this next demo, it will be coming soon.
  • Gmail contextual gadgets – like when a YouTube video is embedded in Gmails – soon third-parties will be able to use this.

  • Here’s a demo from Appirio.




PostHeaderIcon Amazon Wields $25 Gift Certificates To Pacify Frustrated Comic Book Fans

Over the last few days, a strange situation has been brewing between Amazon and a sizable number of comic book fans. On March 7, Bleeding Cool broke the news of an apparent Amazon sale featuring high quality hardcover Marvel graphic novels at bargain-basement prices of $14.99, when their retail prices were more along the lines of $125. Alas, it turned out to be a pricing error. Amazon could have simply canceled the orders (which is common practice for online retailers), but instead, it tried to do right by its users and said it would honor some of the orders. Except it didn’t actually have enough books in stock to do what it promised, leading to another wave of frustration from the comics fans. Now Amazon is looking to smooth things over with some $25 dollar gift certificates.

The tale is a bit complicated. After word of the apparent sale began to spread, plenty of comics fans began to snatch up the books as quickly as they could, causing some of the graphic novels to climb toward the top of Amazon’s best seller lists. Within hours Amazon fixed the pricing glitches (which affected multiple items), and told some customers that rather than canceling their entire orders, they’d still receive a single copy of the books they purchased at the heavily discounted price. The only catch was that they’d only get one copy apiece (many people had purchased multiple copies). Quite a nice gesture considering that Amazon could have simply canceled the orders outright.

Unfortunately, something went wrong. This morning, Bleeding Cool reported that many (and perhaps all) of these single-copy orders had been canceled as well, without any kind of notice or email from Amazon. As it turns out, Amazon simply doesn’t have enough books in inventory to fulfill all the orders it promised, so it’s handing out $25 gift certificates as an apology for the inconvenience.

Not everyone who bought a Marvel book is getting a certificate — if you placed an order that was immediately canceled, then it sounds like you won’t get one. Some people should be actually getting their books in the mail. If you got an email saying your order was cancelled, you should be hearing from Amazon about this shortly.

It’s hard to really fault Amazon for this. Obviously there were some errors in miscommunication, but it really didn’t have to do any of this — every online retailer has a clause in their Terms of Service that doesn’t make them liable for pricing mistakes.




PostHeaderIcon SXSW Interactive: Because hell doesn’t have enough promotional stickers

Later this week, thousands of ironic t-shirts will be arriving in Austin for the 16th annual South By Southwest Interactive festival.

At about this time, it’s traditional for tech publications to publish handy guides to “surviving SXSWi” – packed with useful advice that’s basically interchangeable with that for any other festival since the beginning of time.

“Drink plenty of water!” “Prepare for some late nights!” “Plan ahead to make sure you don’t miss anything!” “Pack sturdy shoes!” “Always use a condom!”. Useful advice for SXSWi, certainly, but also applicable for Oktoberfest, Glastonbury, Woodstock and the ancient Roman festival of Lupercalia (although for the latter, replace ’shoes’ with ’sandals’ and ‘condom’ with ’sprig of silphium’).

This year, though, I decided to use my experience of past SXSWi’s to produce something more useful. A very specific and completely foolproof guide on surviving this year’s event. And here it is…

Tip One: Don’t go to South by Southwest Interactive.

I’m serious. It sucked last year, and it’s going to suck again this year. You’re kidding yourself if you think otherwise. The idea that SXSWi is a conference – or even a festival – for people doing interesting and useful things in technology is a fallacy. In reality, it’s just a non-stop orgy of bullshit fanboyism – a chance for people with stickers on their laptops to go and add more stickers to their laptops; an opportunity for sweaty dorks in Diggnation t-shirts to line up for two hours in the hope of getting Alex Albrecht to – I dunno – sign their laptop, I suppose, or maybe give them another freaking sticker. Even the parties – which are basically the only reason to go – are horrible: the free bars runs out too soon, and they’re always rammed with the kind of people who you could be forgiven for assuming have never been inside licenced premises before.

“But Pure Volume at 2am is pretty awesome!”

No it isn’t. You were just drunk. You’d lined up for three months to get in with your stupid plastic entry tag and you had to convince yourself that the experience was worthwhile because the only alternative was to kill yourself. Free vodka Red Bulls are not worth the hassle. Take your lead from the pros: buy a couple of bottles of vodka and a case of Red Bull and host your own party in your hotel room. Except you can’t, can you? Because you’re sharing with your friend Dan and he has to be up early for the “Google Hackathon”.

“But we’re launching a new app, and it’s going to be awesome.”

No it isn’t. But I completely understand why you think it will be. With all those fanboys in one place, where better than ‘South by’ to launch your awesome new location-based app?

Two years ago, Twitter was the undisputed hit of the festival. Everyone was using it – to find parties, to silently heckle panels, to do all the things that one can do with Twitter. Last year those same people were so desperate to find the new Twitter that they mistakenly handed that crown to Foursquare on the basis that a relatively small number of Web 2.0 scenesters used it to find out where their friends were partying. And yet, despite that auspicious start, and a shit-ton of publicity since, Foursquare has failed to capture the imagination of even most early adopters, particularly those outside of San Francisco and New York. Foursquare was resolutely not last year’s Twitter. Last year’s Twitter was Twitter.

That won’t, however, stop a billion start-ups blowing their entire launch budget on flying their whole team – armed with sacks of flyers and amusing stick-on bugs and branded candy and more fucking stickers – to Texas, confident in the knowledge that their app (with its stupid cutesy name) will be the hit of the festival. It won’t be. It will just be yet another location-based app sloshing about in a sea of location-based apps that may be temporarily useful while a thousand early adopters are crammed into an area of less than one square mile. The moment the festival is over, you’ll be dead.

Instead, this year’s hot location-based app will be… Twitter. You’re welcome. Call me Nostradamus.

Last year, while in Austin, I wrote a column for the Guardian talking about the awfulness of the event, saying..

“None of this is surprising, of course, as it all fits neatly into what social media has taught us – that the moment a service or community gets too big, too mainstream or too commercialised, the early adopters declare it “over” and move on to the next cool, niche thing. And it’s why I really hope that next year one or two of those early adopters will organise – and I mean that in the loosest sense – a user-generated unofficial fringe conference to sit alongside the main event. Ideally it will be a bit nerdier and more businessy, and a lot more fun, than SXSW and will have plenty of space for unofficial “core conversations” and a great product launch or two.”

Sadly, unless it’s a very well kept secret, there’s no such rival event and this year’s SXSWi will be more of the same bullshit. And for that reason, I’m totally serious when I say that you shouldn’t go. Instead – while your rivals are distracted in Texas, pissing their money up the wall and ejaculating over their laptop stickers during yet another Evan Williams keynote – you should use the time instead to stay at home and work on building your start-up.

Your liver will thank you, your investors will thank you, and most importantly so will millions of real-world users who really want you to create something new and innovative rather than being sucked into the hype and churning our just a better, prettier Twitter-meets-Gowalla clone for the approbation of your peers.

Yeah?

Yeah.

I’m moderating the “Unsexy & Profitable: Making $$ Without Hype” panel on Saturday at 3:30pm in Hilton A/B.

See you in Austin.

(Photo of Gary Vaynerchuk and Kathy Sierra by Randy Stewart)




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