July 7, 2014
Written by Shawn King
Petapixel:
(This) time-lapse took 363 total hours of work between the 75 hours of logistics and travel, 31 hours of scouting locations, 78 hours of shooting and a whopping 179 hours of post-production spent dealing with 26,014 Camera Raw files that totaled up to some 817GB of data. Gear used included four Nikon DSLRs (a D800, D7100, D7100 and D3200), six separate Nikon lenses (10.5mm f/2.8G ED AF DX Fisheye, 10-24mm f/3.5-4.5G ED AF-S DX, 16-35mm f/4G AF-S VR, 28mm AF f/2.8D, 50mm f/1.4G AF-S, 70-200mm f/2.8G) and a Promote Control.
Gorgeous video made amazing knowing the tech details behind it.
Written by Dave Mark
The Cleveland Clinic:
Precise measurement of neurological and neuropsychological impairment and disability in multiple sclerosis is challenging. We report a new test, the Multiple Sclerosis Performance Test (MSPT), which represents a new approach to quantifying MS related disability. The MSPT takes advantage of advances in computer technology, information technology, biomechanics, and clinical measurement science. The resulting MSPT represents a computer-based platform for precise, valid measurement of MS severity.
In a nutshell, The Cleveland Clinic has developed a series of tests that measure a variety of factors identified with Multiple Sclerosis. The data is gathered on an iPad:
The MSPT application uses the iPad as a data collection platform to assess balance, walking speed, manual dexterity, visual function, and cognition. The MSPT can be performed in a clinical setting, or by the MS patient themself in a home setting. Data can be transmitted from a distance and entered directly into a clinical or research database, potentially obviating the need for a clinic visit.
This is a vision of the future. The iPad gives patients the ability to do a home assessment and send that data to the clinic remotely. Less visits is less stress on the patient, less crowding at the clinic, cost savings for everyone, and more precise diagnostic data.
Written by Dave Mark
A news story you’ll see bouncing around the blogs this morning says you’ll need to charge your devices before you can get through security. In other words, make sure your phone can boot or you’ll have to leave it behind.
Close, but not quite right.
First off, here’s the original statement (in part) from the head of Homeland Security that started all this off:
DHS continually assesses the global threat environment and reevaluates the measures we take to promote aviation security. As part of this ongoing process, I have directed TSA to implement enhanced security measures in the coming days at certain overseas airports with direct flights to the United States.
The key focus here is, “certain overseas airports with direct flight to the United States”. So this does not apply to any flights originating in the US. And, presumably, a call to your airport will tell you about their policy. Worth checking in if you are flying to the US from abroad. Or just charge all your devices first.
For completeness, here’s the language the TSA site put up in response to the new directive:
As the traveling public knows, all electronic devices are screened by security officers. During the security examination, officers may also ask that owners power up some devices, including cell phones. Powerless devices will not be permitted onboard the aircraft. The traveler may also undergo additional screening.
Written by Dave Mark
The Washington Post is taking steps to isolate their sources from their normal means of data collection, protecting both the Post and the source from any audits that might pick up their IP address or other identifying information.
Nearly all digital communications can leave a trail. The Washington Post’s SecureDrop is designed to minimize these digital trails using best practices, such as:
• limiting collection of information logged about your browser, computer or operating system;
• using Tor to encrypt and anonymize your communications with us;
• storing submissions in encrypted form on our systems;
• physically isolating SecureDrop from the rest of our network.
They are promoting SecureDrop on the front page of their web site. Interesting times.
Written by Dave Mark
Boing Boing:
Thanks to an anonymous benefactor, Boing Boing is pleased to present the first-ever look at the original Disneyland prospectus. These extremely high-resolution scans were made from one of the three sets of pitch-documents Roy and Walt Disney used to raise the money to build Disneyland. There are no archive copies of this document.
Neither the Walt Disney Company nor the Walt Disney Family Museum have it. But we certainly hope both organizations will download these documents for inclusion in their collections.
I still find it amazing that Walt Disney has this vision and that it continues to survive after all these years, though good economic times and bad.
Vinod Khosla, one of the founders of Sun Microsystems, interviews Google founders Page and Brin for about forty minutes.
Some good stuff, some obvious stuff, but fascinating to watch them interact, hear them talk about their vision of the future.
Written by Dave Mark
Ever wonder what makes you fall asleep, or puts you out when you get anesthesia?
When the team zapped the area with high frequency electrical impulses, the woman lost consciousness. She stopped reading and stared blankly into space, she didn’t respond to auditory or visual commands and her breathing slowed. As soon as the stimulation stopped, she immediately regained consciousness with no memory of the event. The same thing happened every time the area was stimulated during two days of experiments (Epilepsy and Behavior, doi.org/tgn).
To confirm that they were affecting the woman’s consciousness rather than just her ability to speak or move, the team asked her to repeat the word “house” or snap her fingers before the stimulation began. If the stimulation was disrupting a brain region responsible for movement or language she would have stopped moving or talking almost immediately. Instead, she gradually spoke more quietly or moved less and less until she drifted into unconsciousness. Since there was no sign of epileptic brain activity during or after the stimulation, the team is sure that it wasn’t a side effect of a seizure.
Fantastic!
July 5, 2014
Written by Shawn King
io9:
Wizards of the Coast has released the Basic Rules for the new edition of Dungeons & Dragons as a free PDF right here. The 100-page document details how to make a character, play the game, and covers magic, too. Specifically, the Basic Rules “covers the core of the game. It runs from levels 1 to 20 and covers the cleric, fighter, rogue, and wizard, presenting what we view as the essential subclass for each. It also provides the dwarf, elf, halfling, and human as race options; in addition, the rules contain 120 spells, 5 backgrounds, and character sheets.”
How many of you will download these rules with no intention of playing but just for old time’s sake? I did.
Written by Shawn King
Al Arabiya News:
In the first deal of its kind in the Middle East, Apple has inked an agreement with Saudi bookshop Jarir to supply all Apple products through the outlet, as well as providing an after-sales service. In an interview with Al Arabiya News Channel, Jarir’s chairman, Mohammad al-Aqeel, said that this agreement will allow the prices of Apple products sold at Jarir branches to be slightly reduced.
The question many ask is, “Why doesn’t Apple open their own retail outlet?” Remember, this kind of “store within a store” idea is what Apple initially did to test the retail concept before the first US Apple Retail Stores opened. They are likely doing the same in the Middle East.
Written by Shawn King
Luc Vandal:
It is now much harder to make it into the market and it requires more planning, financial investment and time. The App Store market is now mature and near 7 years old. I have spoken with other successful developers and many told me the same: sales are generally down. They are still doing great but there are more and more competitors are also taking a slice of the same pie.
Media attention is also harder to get as they get overwhelmed with review requests and press releases.
Interesting look at the challenges faced by independent developers.
This is an example of careful handwork. The result is subtle and beautiful.
From Google translate:
I make a brute parquet craftsman, and Honma Noboru.
Blog to introduce handicrafts of Japan world-class “HAND”. It was visited this time, Hakone. This town is surrounded by scenic nature, it is the workshop of Honma Noboru that inherits traditional craft that follows from the late Edo period to “Hakone parquet”. Process which is said to be at least 10 years and, takes to master the technology a series of many complex. Workshop drifting incense tree, the tradition has been spun today.
My sense of this is that he is creating laminates he glues to a piece of plain wood to create the box you see at the end of the video.
If you liked the video, check out these vases made out of glued and lathed pencils. Beautfiul.
July 4, 2014
Written by Dave Mark
CNBC:
Apple has hired the sales director of luxury Swiss watch maker TAG Heuer to help with the launch of its new iWatch, as the technology group intend on using the prestigious “Swiss made” label to market its new gadget, the head of LVMH’s watch brands Jean-Claude Biver told CNBC.
Check out the video below, in which Biver talks about the importance of talent. I think Biver has the right attitude here. He regrets losing a talented person, but he recognizes the value in moving on for a better opportunity.
Written by Dave Mark
The Guardian:
German car manufacturer BMW has turned to 3D printing to physically augment its car-plant workers, giving them stronger, augmented thumbs.
The 3D-printed apparel acts like support brackets for the workers’ thumbs, reducing strain and helping them to fit certain parts into the cars more easily.
Each “thumb” is created as a custom orthotic device using a portable 3D camera, which captures the unique size and shape of each line-worker’s thumb.
You need to look at the pictures to truly get this. Really cool use of 3D printing technology.
Written by Dave Mark
This article was translated from Swedish using Google Translate.
After the financial crisis of 2008, the country has not recovered.
“We had two pillars that supported us. Nalle Wahlroos described it pretty well when he said that iPhone struck down Nokia and iPad hit the forest industry. “
So Steve Jobs struck Finland?
“Yes, Steve Jobs took our jobs,” said Alexander Stubb.
Nalle Wahlroos is chairman of Sampo Group, one of the largest insurance firms in Europe, based in Finland.
Alexander Stubb is the Prime Minister of Finland.
Nokia, now part of Microsoft, was certainly impacted heavily by the creation of the iPhone. As to the forest industry, interesting that the iPad has had such a major impact. I assume this is a reference to diminished paper usage.
From the Economic Times:
“Yes, Steve Jobs took our jobs, but this is beginning to change,” Stubb said.
“Our forestry is slowly but surely shifting from paper to bioenergy. Our IT industry is moving towards gaming, it’s not just about hardware like the Nokia mobiles.”
The main symbol for Finland’s economic difficulties was the fall of Nokia, the one-time world leader in mobile devices, which in April sold its loss-making handset business to US software giant Microsoft.
Written by Dave Mark
BBC:
After widespread criticism, Google has begun reinstating some links it had earlier removed under the controversial “right to be forgotten” ruling.
Articles posted online by the Guardian newspaper were removed earlier this week, but have now returned fully to the search engine.
Google has defended its actions, saying that it was a “difficult” process.
Google is in a tough position here. They are in the middle of two opposing factions, the people who want their privacy and the media who wants their coverage of the news to remain unaffected by those same privacy concerns. This one isn’t over.
Written by Dave Mark
TechCrunch:
Nielsen’s U.S. music report on the first half of 2014 shows digital music consumption rapidly shifting from downloads to streaming. On-demand streaming was up 42% over the first half of 2013, racking up 70 billion play in the first half of 2014. Meanwhile, digital track sales fell 13% to 593.6 million and album sales fell 11.6% to 53.8 million. The report on US trends (not international) makes Apple’s acquisition of Beats looks smart, as its iTunes download sales model is quickly dying out. As a whole, dismal digital and physical sales dragged total music sales plus streaming industry down 3.3%.
That’s a pretty good indicator of a shift in consumer habits. Streaming is clearly becoming more mainstream, and curated streams the next evolution.
Written by Dave Mark
How do you keep track of all the digital detritus in your life? I’ve got an encrypted file containing all my critical info, including account numbers, passwords, and lists of various things, like the location of my car title. My kids all know the location of this file and the password to decrypt the file.
Reading this article, I’m wondering if that’s enough.
Written by Dave Mark
Tech Crunch:
Amazon is refusing to comply with a request from the Federal Trade Commission to implement stricter controls that would prevent children from making in-app purchases.
The FTC is demanding Amazon implement a “consent” model similar to the one Apple conceded to earlier this year, according to a letter Amazon to the FTC Tuesday. Amazon believes it already has implemented effective parental controls consistent with the model the FTC settled on with Apple, and it says it refunded customers who complained of children making in-app purchases without their permission.
From Amazon’s letter to the FTC:
The main claim in the draft complaint is that we failed to get customers’ informed consent to in-app charges made by children and did not address that problem quickly or effectively enough in response to customer complaints. We have continuously improved our experience since launch, but even at launch, when customers told us their kids had made purchases they didn’t want we refunded those purchases.
A precedent has been set, by Apple, building a consistent, reasonable approach to controlling in-app purchases. The sense here is that Amazon does not want to take on the infrastructure associated with those controls.
If Amazon is basing their claim on refunding in-app purchases, no questions asked, they should make that a policy, as opposed to something they did at launch. If they don’t want to do that, then perhaps they should consider disallowing in-app purchases altogether. Or just go with the Apple thing.
Written by Dave Mark
US District Court Judge Lucy Koh oversees a case pitting Apple against GPNE. GPNE is suing Apple for infringing on one of its patents.
The case itself is important, in that GPNE is demanding payment for every iPhone sold. To my untrained eye, the claim seems laughable, were it not for the fact that much money is being spent to defend this case.
Judge Koh issued this order:
In an unusual order, a federal judge last week told Apple that it may not call a Hawaii-based company names like “patent troll” or “privateer” or “bandit,” nor tell a jury that the company is engaged in a “shakedown” or “playing the lawsuit lottery.”
Interesting to me that Judge Lucy Koh’s name continues to be tightly linked to Apple. There are 15 judges in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California (Apple’s district), yet Koh seems to be the pick for every high profile case involving Apple. Presumably, there’s a reason for this. Perhaps the selection is based on expertise, familiarity with Apple. I’ve got no problem with that, just musing.
I’ve taken much longer to write about OS X Yosemite than any other modern Mac operating system that I can remember. Part of the reason for the delay is that I’m quite taken with the new design and wanted to see if I like it over the long term, but I also think this is one of the most important OS X releases ever.
One of the biggest changes users will notice about OS X Yosemite is its redesigned interface. Honestly, it’s absolutely gorgeous. I’ve loved everything about the new interface from the moment I turned on the computer I picked up from Apple after the WWDC keynote.
In fact, I liked it so much, I’ve been using it as my main machine since the week after WWDC.1 The system font is much easier to read—no, it’s actually a delight to read—so much so that I don’t really like going back to my older MacBook Air with OS X Mavericks.
Yosemite brings a level of crispness and cleanness to OS X that I don’t think has ever existed before. I was a bit worried about the transparencies in the apps themselves, but my worry was misplaced. Color transitions and movements underneath existing apps is done in such a way that it can be noticed, but it’s not distracting when you are focused on getting work done.
I know a lot of people were worried about the so-called “flat design” in Yosemite, and to be honest, so was I. I guess like a lot of people, I’m a bit protective of OS X—it’s like a member of the family and I want to see it treated well, protected even.
If Yosemite is any indication of what’s to come, Apple is treating OS X like royalty. I really do love the design overall, and I’m glad Apple chose to update the operating system like this.2
I feel the same way about Yosemite that I felt when I first saw iOS 7. A bit startled at first, but quickly taken with how clean the interface was. Shortly after, I found it difficult to work in iOS 6 because it was kind of ugly. That’s where I am with OS X Yosemite. I actually don’t like going back to my MacBook Air and Mavericks anymore.
OS X Yosemite continues Apple’s tradition of linking apps and data from its iOS counterpart, giving users a seamless experience between devices. In practical terms, that means that if you take a note, add a reminder, snap a picture or collect data in some other way, that data will be available across all of your devices. That is incredibly important.
It’s important for two reasons. First, Apple is giving users access to all of their data no matter where they are. We all want that, right? We don’t want to manually sync devices in order to get documents or data, it should just happen automatically, and it does. The second reason is that Apple is moving beyond the data and bringing the experience across devices. Also incredibly important.
Familiarity between devices for users can only be a good thing. You want users to be comfortable when moving from one device to another, so when they do change, they are able to pick right back up with what they were doing. And Apple built some of those things right into both operating systems.
I’m not going to talk about many of the upcoming features, because it’s not really fair to review beta software.3 However, there are two features that I want to mention to illustrate the point of iOS and OS X working together in new ways: Handoff and Instant Hotspot.
These are two ridiculously cool features that people will be using all the time:
Hotspot description from Apple:
No Wi‑Fi? No problem. Your Mac can automatically use the personal hotspot on your iPhone when they’re within range of each other.* No setup is required. Your iPhone will automatically appear in the Wi‑Fi menu on your Mac — just select it to turn on your hotspot. Your Mac even displays the signal strength and battery life of your iPhone. And you never have to take your iPhone out of your pocket or bag.
Handoff:
When your Mac and iOS devices are near each other, they can automatically pass whatever you’re doing from one device to another. Say you start writing a report on your Mac, but you want to continue on your iPad as you head to your meeting. Handoff lets you switch over and pick up instantly where you left off. Or maybe you start writing an email on your iPhone, but you want to finish it on your Mac. You can do that, too. Handoff works with Mail, Safari, Pages, Numbers, Keynote, Maps, Messages, Reminders, Calendar, and Contacts. And app developers can easily build Handoff into their apps.
Yes, those are exactly the types of features I want out my mobile and desktop operating systems. I want them to interact with each other when it benefits me, the user. The rest of the time, just sit in the background and wait—be aware, but wait.
Apple is moving the right way with OS X Yosemite. I couldn’t be more behind an OS X update if I was sitting in the company’s headquarters designing this myself. Apple focused on design choices that make sense, and added features that help users get things done.
Seems like a hard combination to beat.
Chris Hadfield:
For fun this Canada Day, my brother and I set out to make the most Canadian music video ever. How’d we do?
I’d say you did right some good my son.