Aug 24

I keep hearing about how the LP is having a comeback, and that’s great, but Jerry’s Records has been keeping the faith for more than thirty-three years selling used vinyl in Pittsburgh, PA. I spoke with Jerry (Weber) himself last week to learn more about his shop.

Jerry buys 2,000 to 5,000 LPs a week, cleans each one, and puts them in new plastic inner sleeves. Scratched and beat up records are weeded out, packed in boxes of 100 and given away for free. Sounds like good fodder for vinyl art or sculpture.

Jerry's looks small on the outside…

It’s a big place, with 13,000 square feet filled with LPs and there’s a 16,000 square foot off-site warehouse with even more stuff. Jerry says 70 to 80 percent of his inventory is priced around $3. So clearly, he’s not dealing in the rarities or the collector market, no, Jerry just likes selling vinyl. In fact, he never sold new vinyl. BTW, the store doesn’t buy, sell or play CDs, Jerry’s is all-analog, all the time.

But it's BIG on the inside

Need a turntable, cassette deck or speakers?

(Credit:
Paul DiComo)

There’s tonnage of $3-a-pop rock, jazz, blues, country, bluegrass, gospel, E-Z listening, Latin, soul, funk, R&B, folk, comedy, soundtracks, etc. Jerry said, “It looks like I’m going to be the last man standing (selling affordable used LPs), a lot of guys don’t want to sell the $3 records anymore. I want people to come here and look at records, that’s what it’s all about.”

(Credit:
Paul DiComo)

(Credit:
Paul DiComo)

Thanks go out to my friend Paul for shooting the photos.

Jerry says if you really love music and don’t have a turntable you’re missing out. I agree. So if you’re in the neighborhood, drop by Jerry’s Records at 2136 Murray Ave, Pittsburgh, PA, or phone: 412-421-4533. Jerry also auctions LPs from his website, scroll down to the bottom of the page and click on “View Auctions.”

Aug 24

“It is also possible to combine link graph and user behavior data to compute page importance,” the researchers said. “We will not discuss more about this possibility in this paper, and simply leave it as future work.”

Microsoft likes the results BrowseRank, which assigning Web page priority based on how people actually use the site.

Essentially, the researchers tested out a system that replaces PageRanks’ link graph–a mathematical model of the hyperlinked connections of the Internet–with what they call a user browsing graph that ranks Web pages by people’s behavior.

PageRank shortcomings
The Microsoft researchers argue that PageRank has a number of problems. For one thing, people can game the system by building bogus Web sites called link farms. Those sites feature hyperlinks point to a Web page whose importance a person wants to inflate so it appears higher in search results. Another PageRank issue is that the indexing process doesn’t take into account the time a user spends on a particular site.

Google isn’t putting all its eggs in the PageRank basket, though.

And Google invests heavily, too. Its biggest research team is devoted to search, and the company updated its search formula more than 100 times in the second quarter. And researchers have huge infrastructure at their disposal to try new ideas.

(Credit:
Microsoft ResearchA Asia)

Bringing research to fruition
It can be a long time before research comes to fruition, but funding a group of researchers can be much less expensive than acquiring other companies. No doubt Microsoft, especially after years of effort and its thwarted overtures to Yahoo, would like to see its in-house search efforts bring Google to its knees.

When accused of being dominant, Google representatives often argue the company could lose its search dominance if somebody else builds a better mousetrap and Internet users divert their path to that other door door. “If Microsoft or Yahoo are successful in providing similar or better web search results or more relevant advertisements, or in leveraging their platforms or products to make their Web search or advertising services easier to access, we could experience a significant decline in user traffic or the size of the Google (ad) Network,” it said in its most recent quarterly report.

Though a distant third place to Google, Microsoft thinks it can teach its rival a thing or two about searching the Internet.

Search is of tremendous importance to the Internet for many reasons. For one thing, search engines are highly influential middlemen that steer users to Web sites they may not be able to find on their own. For another, queries typed into search engines can be powerful–and in Google’s case highly profitable–indications of what type of advertisement to place next to the search results.

“It’s important to keep in mind that PageRank is just one of more than 200 signals we use to determine the ranking of a Web site,” the company said in a statement. “Search remains at the core of everything Google does, and we are always working to improve it.”

There’s no denying PageRank is useful, though, and such algorithms could be added into a larger formula for determining which sites come out on top of search results.

The top players are a moving target, though. Yahoo is hoping to improve search with three efforts: BOSS (build your own search service), which lets others employ Yahoo search results along with its search ads; SearchMonkey, which lets content publishers build elaborate mini-Web pages into search results; and Glue Pages, which present a smorgasbord of related content alongside search results.

“My group at Google has at its disposal many thousands of machines, with storage measured in petabytes,” Udi Manber, head of Google’s search quality, said of Google’s search research infrastructure in a June talk. And, he added, engineers are empowered to try their results, with meetings once or twice a week to see how well they worked: “There is no separation of research and development. Everyone does both.”

But user behavior, monitored in anonymous form by Web servers and Web browser plug-ins, can be better, the authors argue.

“Experimental results show that BrowseRank can achieve better performance than existing methods, including PageRank…in important page finding, spam page fighting, and relevance ranking.

But Microsoft lags leader Google and No. 2 Yahoo in search. It’s trying hard to catch up, for example with unsuccessful proposals to acquire Yahoo or its search business that would cost the company billions of dollars. And Microsoft just bought search start-up Powerset.

The researchers gathered their data from “an extremely large group of users under legal agreements with them,” according to the paper.

“The more visits of the page made by the users and the longer time periods spent by the users on the page, the more likely the page is important. We can leverage hundreds of millions of users’ implicit voting on page importance,” the researchers said in BrowseRank: Letting Web Users Vote for Page Importance, a paper from the SIGIR (Special Interest Group on Information Retrieval) conference this week in Singapore. Authors are Bin Gao, Tie-Yan Liu, and Hang Li from Microsoft Research Asia and Ying Zhang of Nankai University, Zhiming Ma of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, and Shuyuan He of Peking University.

A big part of Google’s rise to search engine leadership was an algorithm called PageRank that assesses a specific page’s importance by how many other Web pages link to it and by the importance of those linking pages. Microsoft researchers and academic collaborators, though, detailed an idea this week it calls BrowseRank that seeks to bring more of a human touch to that assessment.

Aug 24

Avengina’s project page lets you take the engine for a run on your machine as long as you have a recent version of Java installed and meet the minimum hardware requirements. I found it to chug a little bit on my laptop, but that’s only because it has a pretty ragged graphics card. Users with gaming rigs should have it running as smooth as silk–or at least as well as the demo video on this page.

Daniel Seifert, the creator and sole developer for the Avengina Project, insists it’s not being built for gaming purposes, but instead for “presentations.” As the demo shows off, you can cram a lot of text and billboards within one of these virtual worlds, but sorely missing was anything to shoot at, or platforms to jump on–two things that make first-person environments immensely fun to be in.

Related: Java-based MMOG RuneScape goes HD

One of the things that makes it stand out among other browser-based graphics engines is that it handles lighting particularly well. You get things like halos around light bulbs, and shadows that move depending on where the light source is coming from–it’s very pretty, and the kind of stuff we’ve seen in install-based PC games for the last 10-15 years.

No it won’t run Crysis, but damn if the Avengina Project is not impressive. This Java-based graphics engine harnesses both the power of your Internet connection and your graphics card to run incredibly detailed 3D environments right inside the confines of your browser. It integrates lighting and graphics filters that can scale up depending on the hardware quality of your system.

(Credit: mep3d.de)

The Avengina engine adds things like drop shadows and graphics filters to make settings more realistic. (click to enlarge)

Aug 24

A report in The Minnesota Independent quotes an IT professional who says she was testing the security of the campaign’s Web site in January and was easily able to access data without hacking.

Supporters received an e-mail from the nonprofit Wikileaks site on Tuesday night saying the Coleman campaign had leaked donor information and that it was on the Wikileaks Web site, as well as another e-mail providing some of the data in a spreadsheet as evidence, the report says. The spreadsheet contained information for more than 4,700 donors. But Wikileaks said it has data on more than 51,600 Coleman contacts.

This is a screenshot of the e-mail Coleman's campaign sent to supporters warning them about the data leak.

Richards began her investigative computer work after Coleman’s campaign was accused of falsely claiming that its Web site crashed after being overwhelmed by traffic from people who were allegedly disenfranchised voters.

Coleman is challenging Franken’s lead of 225 votes, following a recount. The case is being heard by a special three-judge panel. Closing arguments are expected to begin Friday in the trial, which has gone on for seven weeks.

(Credit: Minnesota Independent)

IT consultant Adria Richards said she got the site’s IP address by entering “colemanforsenate.com” into an OpenDNS cache-check tool, and then copied the IP address into a
Firefox browser to reveal the Web site directories for colemanforsenate.com, the report says. She then posted a screen capture of what she found online and wrote about the security problems on her blog.

The campaign of Republican Norm Coleman, who is engaged in a fierce legal battle to keep his Senate seat from Democrat Al Franken, has warned supporters that their credit card numbers may have been exposed on the Internet.

His campaign manager, Cullen Sheehan, said the office became aware of a possible security breach of the donor database in January, however an investigation found the data had not been accessed by an unauthorized party, according to a report on Wednesday in the Minneapolis-St. Paul Star Tribune.

Sheehan e-mailed supporters on Wednesday urging them to cancel their credit cards and hinted at political espionage. Coleman has asked federal authorities to investigate, according to the Star Tribune.

Aug 24

Meg Whitman, chief executive of auction giant eBay, is planning to retire, according to a report in The Wall Street Journal.

An eBay representative declined to comment, The Journal said. The San Jose, Calif., company announces fourth-quarter earnings Wednesday.

According to the newspaper’s sources, the decision about her retirement could happen within a matter of weeks, but “the situation remains fluid.” The report named John Donahoe, president of eBay’s auction business unit, as the most likely person to succeed her. Donahoe, 47, has been with the company since 2005.

Whitman, 51, recently has been entrusting more of the day-to-day responsibilities to others and “is completing her succession planning, say people familiar with the matter,” The Journal said. She has held the top post since 1998.

Aug 24

Prior to the move, Nazario found that on January 19, there were 488 DDoS events, all of which appear to come from one IP address, “indicating,” said Nazario, “that this is not a huge, broadly sourced attack (i.e. it may not have registered on other ISPs systems).” He also notes that the types of attacks he saw on Saturday were “common, garden-variety DDoS attacks.”

Maximum PPS rates seen: nearly 20,000 pps (packets per second), with an average attack size of 15,000 pps.
Maximum bandwidth seen per attack: 220 Mbps, with an average attack size of 168 Mbps. This is on the high side of an attack, but significantly smaller than the largest ones we commonly see nowadays.
Maximum duration of a single attack: 1.8 hours, which is on the long end of common, but the average attack lasted just under half an hour.

Dr. Jose Nazario of Arbor Networks has been looking at the technical side of the distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks upon domain registered to the Church of Scientology International. In general he finds that while there have been a lot of DDoS attacks, the early ones were mild. They were, however, stronger than the DDoS attacks upon various Estonian sites last spring. As a protective measure, the Church of Scientology has since moved its domain to a more protected space.

Nazario’s other findings include:

On January 21, the Church of Scientology moved its domain to Prolexic Technologies, a company that protects Web sites from DDoS attacks. Attacks against the site have increased, with a major assault on Thursday night at 6 p.m. EST.

Nazario says “I went looking and was unable to detect attacks against the Scientology Web site in particular. The new IP address of the CoS Web site is located within the Prolexic DDoS service network. It’s difficult for (Arbor Networks) to detect these attacks in particular from the milleiu of DDoS attacks” inside the Prolexic service.

Aug 24

YouTube defended its efforts to protect copyright.

A copy of Google CEO Eric Schmidt's speech is available at YouTube

(Credit:
YouTube)

LAS VEGAS–A year ago Wednesday, Google CEO Eric Schmidt delighted an audience of TV and radio broadcasters when he promised to roll out a system that would mean the end of piracy at YouTube.

While copyright videos are still plentiful on YouTube, there are seemingly fewer complaints from Hollywood. The sources who are part of YouTube’s testing say the entertainment industry has shown a willingness to give YouTube time to improve filtering.

Copyright clips abound
Certainly at this point, it’s hard to see much change at YouTube since launching Video ID.

Google execs continue to say they respect copyright and are working to protect it. Schmidt said protecting copyright was in Google’s best interest.

Viacom, parent company of MTV and Paramount Pictures, filed a $1 billion lawsuit against Google last year. That case is expected to last years before being resolved and it could help decide what, if anything, a Web site’s responsibilities are when it comes to policing for copyright violations.

“We are critically dependent upon the production of copyright content,” Schmidt told the NAB audience a year ago. “Literally, people come to Google to get to somewhere where there is something of value. It’s very important that we not violate copyright.”

Key into YouTube’s search field the names of the last five Academy Award winners in the best picture category and scenes from each will appear. Want to watch the first 10 minutes of the gangster flick, The Departed? They’re there. Someone else posted a series of 12 separate scenes from the film, presumably to get around YouTube’s 10-minute clip limit.

Executives with two entertainment companies that provide YouTube with feedback on its Video Identification system said the company’s filtering technology has fared well at times but is nowhere near perfect and overall test results are “inconclusive.” The sources, who requested anonymity because of the ongoing relationship with YouTube, added that managers at the video-sharing site continue to try and refine the system.

For a long time, numerous copyright owners accused YouTube and Google of profiting from piracy and deliberately dragging their feet in developing a way to cleanse the site. They argued that the availability of professionally created content–uploaded by users–is what draws people to YouTube and without that the site would lose much of its luster. YouTube has always denied the accusations.

Some content owners may have also concluded that some degree of piracy is inevitable.

“We are in the process of developing tools which are called ‘Claim Your Content,’” Schmidt said at the National Association of Broadcasters 2007 conference. “If people tell us this is a licensed copy, our computers will automatically detect that an illegal copy has been uploaded and then automatically delete it.”

Identifying video is not easy, YouTube execs have long said. About 10 hours of video is uploaded to the site every minute. In addition to policing an enormous volume of video, YouTube must first obtain high-quality copies so it can create a digital fingerprint of the film or show. Ideally, the automated system will recognize when someone uploads an unauthorized copy.

“Since launching in October, our Video Identification system has shown terrific results in its comprehensiveness, accuracy, and scalability,” a YouTube spokeswoman said in an e-mail. “Over 100 partners from independent content creators to large media companies are currently using Video ID to easily manage their content. Many have found it to be a helpful tool in generating revenue and exposure for their content in the world’s largest online video community.”

Available on the site are literally countless clips from feature films and TV shows produced by small production companies as well as the largest entertainment conglomerates–including Viacom.

“We still see our content pop up on YouTube,” CNN.com Executive Producer Sandy Malcolm told the Associated Press this week. “You deal with it. You try to work with them on rights and things, but I don’t think you can completely stop it. You just try to beat the tide and try to get your content out as fast as you can.”

Nonetheless, the controversy has damaged some of Google’s relationships in Hollywood.

Schmidt went on to say YouTube was “close to turning this (system) on” and once that happened, copyright violation at the site “becomes a moot issue.” But following through on that promise has proven a challenge.

“Key into YouTube’s search field the names of the last five Academy Award winners in the best picture category and scenes from each will appear. Want to watch the first 10 minutes of the gangster flick, The Departed? They’re there.”

Fans of Clint Eastwood’s Million Dollar Baby can watch the “Mo cuishle” episode on YouTube as well as the coin toss scene from last year’s best picture winner No Country For Old Men.

Aug 24

Writing on the JQuery blog, John Resig said that mobile phone heavyweight Nokia also is adopting JQuery as part of its application development platform. As is the case with Microsoft, he said, Nokia isn’t looking to make any changes to the library, and its developers will contribute to the JQuery project.

The announcement came in a blog post by Scott Guthrie, a vice president in Microsoft’s developer division, who described the library’s attraction:

Sample JavaScript using JQuery.

Guthrie also pointed to a newly posted tutorial on Scott Hanselman’s Computerzen blog about integrating JQuery with ASP.net Ajax.

Microsoft said Sunday that it plans to ship the JQuery JavaScript library with its Visual Studio developer tool suite.

Nokia is looking to use jQuery to develop applications for their WebKit-based Web Run-Time. The run-time is a stripped-down browser rendering engine that allows for easy, but powerful, application development. This means that jQuery will be distributed on all Nokia phones that include the web run-time…

…The jQuery test suite is already integrated into the test suites of Mozilla and Opera and this move will see a significant level of extra testing being done on Internet Explorer and WebKit - above-and-beyond what is already done by the jQuery team.

Resig, a lead developer of JQuery, wrote:

(Credit:
Microsoft)

In addition, Microsoft said that it would contribute tests, bug fixes, and patches to the JQuery open-source project and that later this year it would extend product support to JQuery.

The software powerhouse said that jQuery would be one of the libraries used to implement higher-level controls in the ASP.net Ajax Control Toolkit, and would also have a role in new Ajax server-side helper methods. The 15KB JQuery JavaScript library will be distributed as is, with no forking, and files will continue to adhere to the JQuery MIT license.

A big part of the appeal of jQuery is that it allows you to elegantly (and efficiently) find and manipulate HTML elements with minimum lines of code. jQuery supports this via a nice “selector” API that allows developers to query for HTML elements, and then apply “commands” to them. One of the characteristics of jQuery commands is that they can be “chained” together - so that the result of one command can feed into another. jQuery also includes a built-in set of animation APIs that can be used as commands. The combination allows you to do some really cool things with only a few keystrokes.

Aug 24

In a move that could rival Google’s upcoming health initiatives, the Apple screenshots show that health information could also be shared with a user’s authorized physicians.

The product appears to be an application that would require both a personal computer (reportedly both
Mac and Windows) and one of
Apple’s iPod Touch and iPhone devices. The desktop-based software would initially ask the user to fill out an extensive survey pertaining to health and lifestyle, as well as workout goals and preferences, and then determine a workout regimen that would then synchronize to the mobile handset for trips to the gym.

The iPhone/iPod Touch interface in Apple's new patent filing.

A peek at an Apple patent filing that seems to indicate the company is working on a 'digital lifestyle' product.

Are you disappointed that your
iPhone still hasn’t made you sexier in the eyes of potential mates? Hey, don’t give up yet. AppleInsider has unearthed a series of patent filings that seem to indicate the company is working on a new “digital lifestyle” product to help track and manage a fitness routine.

Privacy wonks might freak out when (and if) this new product hits: according to the AppleInsider post, the survey in the desktop software includes questions about occupation, religious belief, identity, income level, familial status, and other things that go far beyond what the average Facebook profile discloses. Apple could potentially have a whole lot of information on a whole lot of people–right on down to whether they think they’re fat.

(Credit:
AppleInsider)

Also in the filings were hints that there may be some new hardware components, too, as with the Nike+ iPod add-on that Apple released back in 2006. Like that product, this one could allow users to challenge their friends to workout competitions, and then keep track of rank with a points system.

On the bright side, maybe it really does take Steve Jobs & Co. to turn thousands of pasty geeks into toned, buff gym rats.

(Credit:
AppleInsider)

The filings were submitted on Thursday.

Aug 24

The University of Twente (UT) has devised a concrete capable of converting the nitrogen oxide from
car exhaust–the source of smog and acid rain–into a nitrate, another chemical that will wash away in the rain.

The researchers came up with the air-purifying paving stones by tapping the properties of titanium dioxide, a chemical that catalyzes chemical reactions when exposed to light.

The results of how much the stones reduce air pollution should be ready by next year. If successful, the tests could be expanded further, the university said.

By the end of this year, researchers expect to complete construction of a road where one side is built with the specially coated paving stones. The other half will have tradition materials.

Green chemistry: how green bricks convert nitrogen oxide air pollution into nitrates with the sun.

It’s not the first time that the Dutch have been inventive with road construction. A civil engineering firm has devised a paving technique to absorb heat from asphalt to melt ice and heat neighboring buildings.

When fertilizers are applied heavily, high levels of nitrates can enter the soil or water and be toxic to humans or livestock. Jos Brouwers from the University of Twente said that the nitrate production from its paving stones will be “harmless” and well below Dutch water standards.

The top layer of the University of Twente paving stones contains the material mixed with concrete. So when sun shines, smog-producing pollutants will convert into nitrates and then wash away, keeping the stones surface clean in the process.

A Dutch University will see if chemically tricked-out paving stones can clean the air.

(Credit:
University of Twente)

The university received a sustainability grant to test its invention in the municipality of Hengelo.

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