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  • 18Dec
    Google Dictionary has an undocumented API that's used in Google Docs. You can obtain a JSON output using a URL like:

    http://www.google.com/dictionary/json?callback=dict_api.callbacks.id100&q=test&sl=en&tl=en&restrict=pr%2Cde&client=te

    (replace test with your favorite keyword).

    A developer built a Chrome extension that used Google Dictionary API to display the definitions of a word without opening a new page.


    A few days after releasing the extension, Google asked the developer to stop using the API.

    "Until recently, this extension was known as Google Dictionary Lookup and used as its data source the Google Dictionary. Unfortunately, due to Google's contracts with their data providers, they are not legally allowed to expose the Dictionary API to third parties, and as such, I was forced to switch providers. (...) In the spirit of FOSS, I'm leaving the source code of the previous version available at my site until Dec 25, but you are solely responsible for its use, and I urge you not to abuse the Google Dictionary API," explains Max.

    If you'd like to see an official API for Google Dictionary, star this issue.


  • 18Dec
    Google Browser Size is an experimental service that shows if a web page has interface elements that can't be viewed by a significant amount of people. "Google Browser Size is a visualization of browser window sizes for people who visit Google. For example, the 90% contour means that 90% of people visiting Google have their browser window open to at least this size or larger."

    The service can be used for any web page, but the data is obtained from the visitors of google.com. As you can see from the screenshot, Google's top result can be viewed by more than 99% of the visitors if no ad is displayed above the results.


    Google Browser Size is one of the many Google tools that help you optimize web sites:

    * Google Website Optimizer - testing and optimization tool
    * Google Analytics - web analytics
    * Google Webmaster Tools - site performance, crawl errors, top search queries
    * Page Speed - an open-source Firebug add-on that helps you evaluate the performance of a web page.
    * Speed Tracer - a Chrome extension that helps you fix performance problems in your web applications.
    * Closure Compiler - a tool for making JavaScript download and run faster.
    * "Let's make the web faster" tutorials.

    { Thanks, Kevin. }


  • 18Dec
    Dion Almaer
    @mwinton super proud of that team. btw was hoping to see you at the campfire one last week. really need to get together & catch up!
  • 18Dec
    Dion Almaer
    @admob thanks! We are impressed with your webOS APIs. 2010 is going to be a fun ride!
  • 18Dec

    wiimote

    It appears as if the field of  science and technology is the next great battleground for the games console war. Following creative uses for the Xbox 360 and PS3, two scientists have developed new ways to use the Wii’s controller.

    Hydrologist Willem Luxemburg and physicist Rolf Hut, both from the Dutch university Delft, showed off their work to the American Geophysical Union this week. Wired magazine reports that they both took advantage of the Wiimote sensor which can detect movement to closer than the nearest millimeter.

    Hut created a relatively simple wind sensor: nothing more than a pole with the sensor from the Wiimote at its top. Luxemberg created a solution to a more complex problem: measuring evaporation, which normally requires equipment costing more than $500. To make things even more complex, he tried to find a method of doing so on a large body of water such as a lake.

    His solution involves putting a LED on a floating device (a toy boat in the demo) and then pointing the Wiimote at it. The movement of the sensor tells you how high the water level is and thus indicates evaporation. The real beauty of the system is that the remote can take data from up to four LEDs, meaning much more accurate results without drastic increases in costs.

    The pair believe that with a longer battery life and a way of storing data locally, the controller could be used for a much wider variety of purposes, particularly if you also make use of the in-built accelerometer.

    Earlier this year, medical researchers revealed they are using the graphics chip from an Xbox 360 to investigate a heart condition. The parallel processing capability of the chip makes it ideal for simulating the way electrical signals move around damaged cells. Because the sheer number of cells means the number of possible routes is enormous, a standard computer chip which could only simulate and calculate one route at a time would take too long to make the work viable.

    And in late 2008, security researchers used 200 PS3s to prove that the encryption system then used by Verizon, which had originally been thought to be so complex that it was unimaginable a machine could ever crack it, had now been made obsolete by increased computing power.

    [Picture source: Make]

    Related posts:

    1. XBox 360 graphics chip helps cardiac researchers
    2. Sixense Truemotion 3D System Makes Nintendo’s Wiimote Look Like Junk
    3. PC games on Sony PS3 using Game Streams


  • 18Dec

    Bumpbox - a MooTools based lightbox clone with a few advantages - it supports not only all common media types like FLV, SWF, images or HTML content, but also MP3 audio files and PDF’s.

    Integration and implementation is very simple. The script works for local and remote files, automatically detects what kind of filetype you wish to show in the box with a nice bump effect, so you do not need to specify the type.

    lightbox with pdf and mp3 support


    Copyright © Visual-Blast Media 2007 - 2009 | ARTICLE | Visit the site for more Free web resources, Icons, Scripts, Photoshop Tutorials, Flash, CSS ...
  • 18Dec

    Crime dramas and other TV shows can sometimes be a bit boring. But someone on YouTube decided that it might be fun to “enhance” them. Check it out:

    Related posts:

    1. SysAdmin Humor: The Website is Down (Video)
    2. Grand Theft Auto: The Board Game (Video)
    3. Mario Eight Ways


  • 18Dec

    The first trailer was ok, but the second one is totally epic. Check it out:

    Clash of the Titans is an upcoming 2010 fantasy film which is a remake of the 1981 film of the same name, itself loosely based on the Greek myth of Perseus. The film is directed by Louis Leterrier and stars Sam Worthington. Filming began in April 2009 for release on March 26, 2010.[1] The music will be composed by Craig Armstrong.[2] Matthew Bellamy of Muse has also stated that he will be working on the music.

    Don’t forget to hit the full screen button after pressing play!

    Related posts:

    1. Full-Length Terminator Salvation Trailer Hits the Web
    2. Tron Legacy Movie Trailer
    3. New Harry Potter Trailer: Something for Fans to Nibble on While They Wait


  • 18Dec

    image of guy looking at a hamburger

    Earlier this week on TechCrunch, Michael Arrington wrote an alarmed post about “fast food content that will surely, over time, destroy the mom and pop operations that hand craft their content today.”

    Mom and pop operations and hand-crafted content sounds an awful lot like you and me, doesn’t it?

    So is this actually something we need to worry about? Is what Arrington calls “the rise of cheap, disposable content on a mass scale, force fed to us by the portals and search engines” going to destroy the businesses we’re building on a foundation of high-quality content?

    Arrington is deeply concerned about sites like AOL and Demand Media, which scrape and mash real content into something that’s theoretically legitimate (since it was compiled by a human being rather than a piece of software), but in practice gives no value to the reader.

    This “mainstream spam” can be efficiently optimized for search, or thrust onto the unsuspecting eyeballs of AOL users. (Haven’t the poor things suffered enough already?)

    Arrington believes there’s no hope against this onslaught of junk content, which is going to overwhelm all of the good stuff.

    Clearly, we’re all doomed

    Arrington advises content creators (that’s you and me) to:

    Figure out an even more disruptive way to win, or die. Or just give up on making money doing what you do. If you write for passion, not dollars, you’ll still have fun. Even if everything you write is immediately ripped off without attribution, and the search engines don’t give you the attention they used to. You may have to continue your hobby in the evening and get a real job, of course. But everyone has to face reality sometimes.

    Apart from the whining, the exaggeration, and the hysteria, the problem with Arrington’s argument is it’s based on a number of bad assumptions.

    Specifically:

    Bad assumption #1: Search engines and mega portals are the only way to get traffic

    AOL is feeding their content slop to their “massive” audience (which, in fact, is shrinking at rates that would make Biggest Loser proud). Arrington makes the assumption that those AOL customers won’t come find your non-crap content, because the fast food stuff is the only thing on their radar.

    This then leapfrogs to another bad assumption, that the only way anyone sees content is to find it on a mega site like AOL, or via a search engine like Google.

    Links from your favorite bloggers count for nothing. Tweets from a friend count for nothing. Facebook pointers count for nothing. Email from your mom counts for nothing. No one ever points a friend to genuinely valuable content and says, “Hey, you should check this out, you would like it.”

    The entire direction of social media and content sharing indicates otherwise.

    Bad assumption #2: Readers will keep reading crappy content

    AOL’s user base is still big enough that I’m sure they’ll get some readers at least skimming their stuff.

    But when it comes to content, Darwin rules. If content doesn’t meet the needs of users, it dies. We can’t even force grade-school kids to read what doesn’t engage them. What makes us think that AOL can “force feed” their users anything?

    And what makes us believe that even if those users do skim AOL’s lame content, that they’ll never read anything else, or that, when they have a particular need or concern, they won’t go actively looking for something more useful?

    Business tip for TechCrunch: when you find yourself afraid of a stumbling dinosaur like AOL, there’s something gravely wrong with your thinking, your business model, or both.

    Bad assumption #3: Google would rather serve fast food content than your content

    Now I hold no illusions that Google is a benevolent, all-knowing deity that rewards the just and punishes the wicked. But based on observation, it’s pretty clear that Google would rather serve good content than scraped and mashed junk content.

    Google wants their searchers to find a good experience on the other side of their search result. If sites like Demand Media, a video producer that slaps together 4,000 videos a day in what amounts to content sweat shops, can deliver content worth watching, they’ll do well.

    If they don’t deliver something worth watching, they don’t give Google’s searchers the experience Google wants to deliver. Which means Google becomes less valuable.

    Google can’t be “force-fed” any more than readers can. There’s no reason to believe they’ll treat this “hand assembled” spam more kindly than the bot-created kind.

    Bad assumption #4: Content means news

    Arrington also says that sites like the New York Times are “outright stealing” his content and passing it off as their own. (And he warns you, little mom and pop, that your content’s going to be stolen without attribution as well.)

    By “stealing,” Arrington apparently means that when TechCrunch publishes a breaking story, the New York Times often writes a story on the same topic, using their own reporters and neglecting to thank him for his tireless journalistic efforts.

    If you’re not TechCrunch, this is not a problem that you need to spend even four seconds thinking about. You already know from hanging out on Twitter and reading blogs that news spreads more quickly than anyone’s ability to control it, and that nobody “owns” a breaking story.

    For those of us who create “hand-crafted” content, what we say isn’t nearly as important as how we say it. We rarely break news (although occasionally we become the news.)

    If readers want the latest news, they rightly go to a site like TechCrunch, the Times, or, increasingly often, Twitter.

    It’s when they want useful knowledge, insight, or analysis that they come back to us. Plus, there’s a reason we get you to focus on delivering educational content versus commodity news, right?

    We’re valuable precisely because we can cut through the noise and give them only what’s useful and relevant to them.

    I’m sure it’s irritating to Arrington not to get a linkback from the Times, but that’s his headache, not ours. He seems to be doing ok without it.

    Bad assumption #5: You need millions of eyeballs to make a living

    There’s an implicit bad assumption behind all of the explicit bad assumptions in Arrington’s post, which is that the only way you’ll be able to make a living with content is to attract huge amounts of traffic.

    In other words, the only possible model is to attract enough attention (via search engines, for your breaking news) to monetize your site with advertising.

    But you already know that’s not a business model for the real world.

    Let’s say you have a blog that gives business advice to yoga teachers. You’ve paired that with a simple but effective marketing system to sell group coaching, individual consulting, and information products to readers who want to go further with what you’re teaching. You only need to find a few hundred customers a year to make a very nice living.

    • No fast food content generator on earth is going to outrank you for “how to run a yoga studio.”
    • If a cheap, scratch-the-surface video or post does outrank you for that #1 spot, the reader quickly finds out that the fast food content doesn’t meet her needs at all. Click goes the back button, and she’s looking for you again.
    • Your content collects links from like-minded people, because it’s cool and valuable.
    • Other yoga teachers (and herbalists and organic co-ops and past-life regression therapists) will spread the word about you faster than Google ever could.
    • You have no reason to run advertising for anything other than your own products. So you don’t need to pull hundreds of thousands of “eyeballs” to make a decent living. You just need to make a great connection with the right 300 people.

    So what should a “whole food” content producer do?

    Exactly what you were doing yesterday.

    Keep your eyes on your audience, not Chicken Little pundits telling you (again) that you can’t make a living.

    Keep following the First Rule of Copyblogger. Keep creating content that rewards the reader for consuming it. Keep cutting through the clutter and noise by being smarter, more relevant, and more interesting.

    Fast food content is just the latest incarnation of an old affliction — spam. If it hasn’t killed us yet, this new version isn’t likely to make much of a dent.

    For content-based marketing strategies that work in the real world, sign up for the free Copyblogger email newsletter, Internet Marketing for Smart People. It’s packed with the information and advice you need to create real business success, and it’s 100% hysteria-free.

    About the Author: Sonia Simone is Senior Editor of Copyblogger and the founder of Remarkable Communication.


    Thesis Theme for WordPress

  • 18Dec
    Dion Almaer
    The Mr Men Show theme song remix (US) - http://www.youtube.com/watch...
    The Mr Men Show theme song remix (US)