Entries tagged with “events” from O'Reilly Radar

Fri

Oct 30
2009

Nat Torkington

Four short links: 30 October 2009

Three Minute Theses, Google Wave RPGs, Public Metadata, and The Finitely-Zoomable Natural World

by Nat Torkington@gnatcomments: 0

  1. The3is In Three -- PhD students must explain their thesis topic in three minutes and one Powerpoint slide. Winner had written on the last words of Shakespearean characters as they met unlikely ends. No video alas, but what a great idea for an Ignite! (via sciblogs)
  2. Google Wave: We Came, We Saw, We Played D&D (ArsTechnica) -- gamers using Wave to play RPGs. This can't be the killer app, however, because it is not pornographic. (via BoingBoing)
  3. Metadata is Public Record (ArsTechnica) -- Arizone State Supreme Court rules that metadata on the public record is itself in the public record. The test case was a cop who suspected his performance reports had been created when he asked for them and then backdated. His employer had argued the inode info wasn't part of the public record, even though his report was. Sanity prevailed. (via glynmoody on Twitter)
  4. Cell Size and Scale -- sweet zoomable interface to show the different relationships in size between everything from Times Regular 12pt to a Carbon atom (via salt, E. coli, hemoglobin, etc.). (via Tom Carden on Delicious)

tags: education, events, google wave, metadata, open data, research, science, uicomments: 0
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Mon

Sep 14
2009

Nat Torkington

Four short links: 14 September 2009

NoSQL, Gov 2.0 Videos, Linux Conf, Geodata Grump

by Nat Torkington@gnatcomments: 3

  1. WTF Is A Supercolumn? -- Cassandra is a NoSQL database, a triplestore that scales superwell. Because it's not the usual relational thing we're accustomed to, the language can be a barrier to learning: ColumnFamily, SuperColumns, and more. This post explains what's what, with examples. (via joshua on Delicious)
  2. Gov 2.0 Summit Videos -- When I grow up, I want to be Clay Shirky, Tom Steinberg, and Carl Malamud. Some videos are up, others coming up soon--stay tuned for Carl's, which received the only standing O of the show. [updated with link to Carl's talk when it was released]
  3. linux.conf.au Schedule Posted -- bring the thunda down unda in 2010. The schedule was just released.
  4. Transport for London Does Not Like the Ordnance Survey -- an Official Information Request yielded the Transport for London response to an Ordnance Survey "strategy consultation". The OS should appoint an independent body to review their licence documents and pay them based on the number of words deleted. Sound advice too--OS have crippled the geospatial industry in the UK by charging for their (admittedly finely-detailed) data. (via mattb on delicious)

tags: events, geodata, gov2.0, linux, nosqlcomments: 3
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Mon

Aug 10
2009

Nat Torkington

Four short links: 10 August 2009

Propaganda, Computer Science, Web Science, CS History

by Nat Torkington@gnatcomments: 0

  1. The Propaganda Newspapers -- London councils increasingly providing their own newspapers, masquerading as mass-market popular appeal newspapers but without anything critical of the council that produces it. This is an evolutionary dead-end for reinventing newspapers, and is why the non-profit/trust structure works so well.
  2. Time for Computer Science to Grow Up -- publish in journals so conferences can be community events. I've seen academics at Sci Foo look around at the unconference structure, or lightning talks, and say "why can't my normal conferences be like this?!", and not just in computer science too. Science conferences need a heart transplant. (via David Pennock)
  3. Science Online 2010 -- conference on science and the Web. Our goal is to bring together scientists, physicians, patients, educators, students, publishers, editors, bloggers, journalists, writers, web developers, programmers and others to discuss, demonstrate and debate online strategies and tools for doing science, publishing science, teaching science, and promoting the public understanding of science. (via kubke on Twitter)
  4. E.W. Dijkstra Archive -- a collection of over 1,000 manuscripts that EWD sent around during his career. EWD 1036, "On the cruelty of really teaching computing science". "From a bit to a few hundred megabytes, from a microsecond to a half an hour of computing confronts us with completely baffling ratio of 109" (via S. Lott)

tags: education, events, history, newspapers, people, publishing, science, webcomments: 0
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Mon

Jul 27
2009

Nat Torkington

Four short links: 27 July 2009

by Nat Torkington@gnatcomments: 1

  1. Ignite OSCON -- 56m of video from Ignite OSCON. They're all great, but Dan Meyer remains the highlight for me.
  2. gheat -- a maptile server in Python, delivering heatmaps to be superimposed on Google Maps. Handy for visualization fiends.
  3. CaDNAno -- open source software for design of 3-dimensional DNA origami. One of George Church's projects. I love the combination of math, biology, and whimsy in open-source giftwrap. (via timoreilly on Twitter)
  4. CommentPress -- an open source theme for the WordPress blogging engine that allows readers to comment paragraph by paragraph in the margins of a text. Annotate, gloss, workshop, debate: with CommentPress you can do all of these things on a finer-grained level, turning a document into a conversation. It can be applied to a fixed document (paper/essay/book etc.) or to a running blog. I'm taking a greater interest in tools that channel and focus participation rather than simply providing "edit this page". (via gov2.net.au's issues paper)

tags: biology, crowdsourcing, events, google maps, ignite, oscon, oscon2009, visualizationcomments: 1
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Fri

Jul 17
2009

Nat Torkington

Four short links: 17 July 2009

by Nat Torkington@gnatcomments: 0

  1. NodeXL: Network Overview, Discovery and Exploration in Excel -- Excel plugin for analysing graph data within Excel. Visualization and data wizardry come to the corporates who live in Excel.
  2. Managing the Environmental Crisis -- a comment by Edwin Winge: "Public involvement does offer long-range benefits, the most pragmatic of which is that it results in better decisions. Park Service managers have discovered through experience that when they are willing to modify their professional judgements by considering ideas and opinions (values) of concerned citizens, the final decision that results is not only more acceptable to the public, it is also more satisfying to the Service." A banner quote for Gov 2.0, from the father of O'Reilly's Sara Winge. (via timoreilly on Twitter)
  3. Dopplr Social Atlas for iPhone -- an iPhone app that gives you the recommendations by Dopplr users for places to eat, things to do, places to stay around the world.
  4. Microformats Dev Camp -- July 25-6 (weekend following OSCON), in San Francisco at the Automattic offices. (via Tantek)

tags: data, dopplr, events, gov2.0, iphone app, microformats, visualizationcomments: 0
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Thu

Jul 16
2009

Nat Torkington

Four short links: 16 July 2009

Transparency Camp, Wasted Time, Advertising Hypocrisy, Maker Skills

by Nat Torkington@gnatcomments: 1

  1. Transparency Camp West -- a few more slots left for Google-hosted Aug 8 and 9 Bar Camp on open government.
  2. Meeting Ticker -- count the cost of a meeting in real time, just enter the number of people, the time it started, and the average salary. (via make on Twitter)
  3. More Creative Shops Are Commercializing Their Own Product Lines -- Tellingly, ad companies don't run ads for their products. "[W]e haven't bought a single ad in support of any of our brands. Not one. Why would we? You can do so much if you know what you're doing with product placement, sponsorship, digital PR. It's that whole "I haven't got any money, so I'll have to think." It makes you much better at grinding out media without paying. (via someone on Twitter, apologies for forgetting whom)
  4. 18 Essential Skills for a Maker -- 13. Strip, splice, and terminate wire- Trickier than it sounds. You should be able to splice wire using a crimp splice, a wire nut, and heat shrink + solder (note: electrical tape is NOT on that list). You should know how to use a wire stripper to strip stranded wire without cutting more than one or two strands. You should be able to attach a wire to your project in such a way that it will still be attached in two weeks, two months, or two years. (via Makezine)

tags: advertising, business, events, gov2.0, make, transparencycomments: 1
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Mon

Jul 13
2009

Nat Torkington

Four short links: 13 July 2009

by Nat Torkington@gnatcomments: 1

  1. IDEO's Human Centered Design Toolkit -- methodology and toolkit for inspiring new solutions to difficult challenges within communities of need. Full PDF of manual and cards available for free download.
  2. Bentham and the Privacy of the Grave -- [M]uch of what Bentham meant to address in the context of his Panoptic structures we now take for granted. In Bentham’s lifetime, Parliamentary deliberations were confidential. Bentham’s arguments forced them into the sunlight. Legal decisions and statute books were accessible only to lawyers and judges. Bentham’s arguments led to codification of the law, and increasingly accessible legal rules. Bentham was far ahead of his time — the first modern information theorist. The idea that all actions of government would be presumptively available for public review did not become part of U.S. law until the passage of the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) in 1967. As we speak, it appears the English parliament is only now learning Bentham’s message about publicity. Bentham was an early transparency advocate, economist, and character. I first read of him in the excellent A Brief History of Economics: Artful Approaches to the Dismal Science. (via carlmalamud on Twitter)
  3. Curated Twitter Feed for Projecting Over Speakers -- Guardian developed it for their "Activate Summit" and it's since been used in two other events. They've open sourced it.
  4. Android Market Problems -- take heed, all ye who would build "the iPhone App Store of ...", it's not easy to deliver a great customer experience.

tags: android, appstore, design, events, google, history, twitter, usabilitycomments: 1
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Mon

Jun 8
2009

Jesse Robbins

Ignite! comes to San Jose June 22nd - Submit your talks now!

by Jesse Robbins@jesserobbinscomments: 0

Ignite! VelocityIgnite! is coming to San Jose on Monday June 22, 2009 at 8:00 pm, attached to the Velocity Conference. Admission is free, open to all, and there will be a cash bar.

The deadline for talks is May 11th, so submit your talks now!

As with all Ignites each speaker will only get 20 slides that each auto-advance every 15 seconds for a total of five minutes. We'll be looking for fun geek topics like hacks, how-to's, and insights. (Talks don't have to be Velocity-related!) If you're not sure what an Ignite talk looks like check out the Ignite Show.

You can RSVP for the event on Upcoming or Facebook.

tags: events, ignite, operations, san jose, velocity, velocityconf, web2.0, webopscomments: 0
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Mon

Apr 20
2009

Jesse Robbins

Importance of Innovation in Finance & BarCampBank

by Jesse Robbins@jesserobbinscomments: 2

“Progress is not the mere correction of evils. Progress is the constant replacing of the best there is with something still better.” -Edward Filene

logobarcampbank.pngTwo years ago, when we were organizing the first BarCampBank in the US, many people found it hard to believe that banks & credit unions could a place for meaningful grassroots innovation. Even crazier was the idea of organizing an unconference to begin bringing open source, transparency, identity, and community into the very closed world of banking & finance.

Since then the BarCampBank idea has turned into a movement. There have been over 14 events all over the world, and many of the ideas generated are beginning to turn into action.

To me, the global financial system is a platform that exists to “create more value than it captures”. Tim explained this in his Work on Stuff that Matters post, saying:

“A bank that loans money to a small business sees that business grow, perhaps borrow more money, hire employees who make deposits and take out loans, and so on. The power of this cycle to lift people out of poverty has been demonstrated by microfinance institutions like the Grameen Bank. Grameen is clearly focused on creating more value than they capture; not so the like of Fannie Mae and Freddy Mac, or WaMu, or many of the other failed financial institutions involved in the current financial meltdown.”

There has never been a more important time to bring meaningful innovation into the financial system, and there has never been more opportunity for our community to make it happen.

The next event is occurring this weekend (April 25-26, 2009) on Treasure Island in San Francisco.

sfbarcamplogo-med.jpg After that, the following events are planned:

tags: barcamp, barcampbank, barcampbanksf, events, finance, financial crisis, moneytech, open source, platform plays, platforms, stuff that matters, web 2.0comments: 2
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Wed

Mar 11
2009

Nat Torkington

Four short links: 11 Mar 2009

by Nat Torkington@gnatcomments: 0

Four ETech-related links, from your humble author who is following the action from afar:

  1. Criminals Are "Targeting Basic Blocks of the Internet" (Guardian) -- writeup of Alex Stamos's talk. "Basic infrastructure failure is what we're going to see over the next few years," he said. "The most interesting research is either taking things that we thought were unexploitable and exploiting them, and also the breaking of the basic building blocks of the internet from the 1970s and 1980s." For another "we're all so boned" moment on Internet security, read Peter Gutmann's overview of the commercial malware industry.
  2. Phil Gyford's ETech 09 Posts -- Phil takes notes and attends a lot of the sessions I'd have wanted to be in, like Tim's "Work on Stuff that Matters".
  3. Mary Lou Jepsen's Talk (Guardian) -- interesting bit for me was a low powered television set that can display high definition video but can run without being plugged in. "We've had a lot of pull," she said. "People want TV even if they don't have power… an HDTV that's under 10W and can be human-powered. We've figured out a way to do that." Not that I'm in love with television, but the technology that gets mass-produced for cud-chewing couch-butts gets cheaper for the likes of you and me. See her new company, Pixel Qi.
  4. ETech on Hashtags -- see the latest tweets tagged with "#etech". E.g., @fortunebird's Rebecca Allegar: Don't predict the future, design it., and @Technomadia's We just controlled a chocolate lab live via iPhone. Now.. we eat more chocolate! I like this presentation lots!

tags: etech09, events, hardware, mary lou jepsen, phil gyford, securitycomments: 0
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Tue

Feb 17
2009

Nat Torkington

Four short links: 17 Feb 2009

by Nat Torkington@gnatcomments: 1

Four Tuesday quickies:

  1. The Technology Behind Coraline -- 3D stop-motion movie used a 3D printer to make the dolls and things like drops of water.
  2. Some OSCON Proposal Tips (Alex Russell) -- good advice for anyone submitting a talk to a technical conference.
  3. Oscar Predictions You Can Bet On -- Nate Silver of FiveThirtyEight turns his attention to the Oscars.
  4. Web Hooks and the Programmable Web of Tomorrow -- a epic presentation of different ways to offer and use callbacks, URLs on your site that a remote service can hit when something happens on their service. (via Stinky)

tags: 3d printing, data, events, oscon, programming, webcomments: 1
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Fri

Oct 17
2008

Nat Torkington

World Plone Day

by Nat Torkington@gnatcomments: 1

November 7th is World Plone Day, when the Plone community will run outreach events around the world to "promote and educate the worldwide public about of the benefits of using Plone in education, government, ngos, and in business". Look for your local community in their list of planned events. I see there's even going to be activities in Auckland, Wellington, and Christchurch in New Zealand, so your home town has no excuse!

tags: community, events, opensourcecomments: 1
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