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Posts from the ‘Web’ Category

OnLive to go live today!

OnLive, a new company founded by Steve Perlman, will announce a new game service which makes it possible to play advanced video games on almost any PC and certain specially equipped TVs via a standard home broadband connection.  This service eliminates the game console and the need for never ending PC upgrades to support the latest games.  In fact, it appears OnLive may also jump into the console fray with a device called the OnLive MicroConsole.

OnLive will manage a datacenter of high-end servers where the games will run and the images will be compressed using OnLive’s proprietary technology and delivered to the player over a broadband connection.  Details will be available at OnLive’s website tonight at 7 PM PST.

Because I know some of the folks behind OnLive, I am really exited to test this service.

Related articles:

WSJ Online article
CNN/CNET
Endgadget

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New broadband connection at work

After almost a month after first ordering service with Verizon, our FIOS Internet connection was finally installed at work this morning.

Some informal bandwidth testing tonight yielded some great results. As you can see, at a maximum we achieved a little over 38Mbps down and 11.5Mbps upstream (we ordered a 50/20 business plan from Verizon). Testing was done on a MacBookPro running OS X 10.5.5 with Firefox 3.03, directly connected (100Mbps/Full-duplex) to a Netgear FVS114 router.

While we did not achieve a full 50 Mbps, that is the maximum our account should support,  we are please with close to 40Mbps.  The weak link here might actually be the FVS114 router.  We will try some additional testing tomorrow and see if we get a significant change. Read more

Gizmodo’s Ultimate Water Gun Battlemodo Royale

Water gunsThere are few things more enjoyable on a hot summer’s day than an epic water gun battle with some friends. In the end, everybody wins, because everybody gets soaked and cools down. But you don’t want to be caught with a crappy gun; then you’ll just be the guy that everyone else gangs up on. We don’t want that to happen to you; we’re here to help. read more

Lessig Bets ‘Wikipedia’ Approach Will Transform Congress

This is one of those “crossover” posts that fits somewhere between Xlog and Politalogue.

Lawrence Lessig, a prominent Stanford law professor has worked tirelessly to free content from restrictive right management (DRM) schemes employed by content owners and distributors.

On Thursday Lessig launched an ambitious project that aims to use collaborative software to harness the extraordinary levels of pent-up political energy and dissatisfaction that voters have shown over the past two years with their members of congress.

Lessig, known for his decade-long role in trying to loosen the entertainment industry’s vise-like grip on popular culture by shaping copyright law, is betting that the energy and dissatisfaction exhibited by voters against the status-quo in Washington DC, and the emergence of collaborative software that enables vast numbers of geographically-dispersed citizens to become politically active on their own schedule, will enable a new kind of transparency and accountability in political campaigns.

“The problem we face is … the problem of crony capitalism using money to capture government,” he said on Monday during the launch of his project in Washington, DC. “The challenge is whether in fact we can change this. The political experts tell you that it can’t be done, that process always win over substance.”

Lessig and Joe Trippi hope that their project will bring the beginnings of this change by getting voters to challenge their members of congress to commit to Change Congress’ four pledges. The project will rely on engaged voters to record and map both the responses by, and the positions of candidates who are running for open seats. The idea is to make what seems like an abstract idea visually tangible through a Google mash-up.

The professor wants legislators to promise to do four things which he says will reduce the influence of money on policymaking: To promise not to accept money from lobbyists and political action committees; support public financing of elections; commit to passing legislation to permanently ban the funneling of money to their districts’ projects of questionable worth; and to commit to “compel transparency in the functioning of congress.”

Candidates can signal their intentions to take any one or all of the pledges by filling out a form at the organization’s web site, which then formulates code that provides a graphic that the candidates can then place on their election campaign web sites.

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100 Things to do with Google Maps Mashups

100 cool things you can do with Google Maps Mashups. My favorites:

  1. Find Fast Food in the US
  2. Find a WiFi Hotspot in the US
  3. Map US telephone area codes
  4. Google Map your blog or website visitors
  5. Check the time in a world location.

What are yours?

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How To Find Your Rotten Neighbors

Rotten NeighborDoesn’t this just seems like a very bad idea in today’s litigious society? RottenNeighbors is a basic Google mashup allowing users to post comments about their “rotten” neighbors.  Check it out and see if you have made the list.

From the rottenneighbor.com website:

We are the first real estate search engine of its kind that helps you find bad neighbors before you move so you don’t regret the purchase of your new house, home, condo or apartment.

Our goal is to be an exceptionally smart assistant when you are looking to move into a new neighborhood. We hope that you will be able to find your dream home in your dream neighborhood by using our data and information provided by other users such as yourself. We then hope you will return the favor to other home buyers by adding to our database.

It doesn’t matter if you are moving down the street or all the way across the county, we are here to help you find and discover bad neighbors no matter where you are thinking about relocating. When you are going to make one of the biggest decisions in your life we are here to help you make a choice you won’t regret later when you might discover a bad neighbor living right next door. We show you detailed maps of states, counties, cities and neighborhoods all searchable by ZIP code.

We depend on users like you to submit bad neighbors to our maps. By doing so you will be adding to our real estate search engine and improving the home buying experience for thousands of people.

http://www.rottenneighbor.com/

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Excellent Web Instruction site

Thanks to my friend Kelly Smith for posting a link to this instructional website. As Kelly says, the web and especially the video enhanced web is the perfect medium for instruction of all types. I especially like this site because with my laptop, I can practice right outside in my wifi enabled yard.

VideoJug: How To Perform The Perfect Golf Swing

Please check the other great instructional videos at VideoJug. There is an amazing and eclectic mix of instruction videos.

Who will bring the Internet to your TV?

As the hype builds for CES, the New York Times divides the competitors for your living room into three categories. The Incumbents like HBO already have a stake in America’s TV market. Latching on to them are the Extenders, who provide the actual devices to link up with your PC. Finally, the Straight Shooters bridge the gap with software.

Get ready: we’re about to hear a confusing array of new plans to bring the boundless realm of the Internet to the 83-year-old TV. The companies involved are taking one of three markedly different approaches. So before we head into the geeks’ version of Super Bowl week, let’s do a quick and dirty review of the three kinds of contenders.

The Incumbents: cable and satellite firms try to get hip.
They are the favorites in this battle to bring Internet-style choice to the TV. Not because companies like Comcast are great innovators (they’re not), but because their boxes already sit in millions of homes. But they have an Achilles heel: their sacred relationships with programmers. If Comcast were to allow customers to download any movie from the Web, HBO and Showtime would be furious. Expect them to move slowly, which opens the door for…

The Extenders: sending video from the PC to the TV.
We can now download all this great video our PCs. But it really belongs on our TVs. What’s the answer? Send it from point A to point B. This is what Apple hopes to accomplish with its upcoming iTV, which Steve Jobs will unveil on Tuesday at Macworld. The biggest problem with this approach: it is indirect, and home networks are tough to set up. Apple might crack the code, but so far these products haven’t really flown.

The Straight Shooters: new Internet services for the living room.
These companies (like Akimbo and other startups) attack the problem more directly, giving couch potatoes a new set-top box, remote-control and connection from the Internet to the TV. Microsoft and Sony could also try this approach by retrofitting their gaming consoles, the PlayStation 3 and xBox 360, for Web downloads. The biggest challenge: getting average couch potatoes to bring a whole new piece of electricity-guzzling machinery into their living room.

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