Thursday, November 19, 2009

Yahoo Goes...


Yahoo, sadly, has discontinued their "Go" service for mobile phones. This is quite disappointing to those of us that enjoyed accessing Ebay, Caltrain schedules and Flickr via an interface reminiscent of an early Palm pda.
To quote Yahoo on their departure from the web-portal-in-your-pocket game:
"November 18, 2009,
There are many reasons. There are more sophisticated mobile devices and browsers available to you, and your needs are changing. You need easier ways to access your favorite Yahoo! content and services from your mobile phone. To respond to these changes, we have created a new mobile homepage. It is available across more than 3,000 devices at http://m.yahoo.com. In addition, we have feature-rich applications for a variety of devices. We will make mobile versions of more Yahoo! services, improve existing offerings, and develop new and engaging experiences that integrate Yahoo! Mobile services and reach many mobile devices and browsers."

I guess the eggheads in Sunnyvale saw the writing on the wall in Cupertino (or Palo Alto!) and figured that competing against the iPhone onslaught whilst simultaneously facing the rising of the Androids was a losing battle. Especially when their offering was akin to a circa 1994 Apple Newton, in color.

The idea behind "Go" was essentially a portal type environment, not unlike a My-Yahoo page, with various widgets thrown together by independent developers on their own initiative. None of the widgets I used had any cost attached, so there was the added benefit of adding functionality to my mobile device without having to visit some "app store", negotiating multiple pages of an end user liscense agreement, giving a pound of flesh, and agreeing to be billed on my cell providers bill. (wait was that a one time charge or recurring?).Okay I won't lie. I used Yahoo Go to access Ebay from my blackberry. Frequently. It also had some nifty little widgets for several San Francisco Bay area transit agencies.
Of course Yahoo Go went nowhere. The initial offerings by Yahoo brand sites like Flickr were joined by a few others that are strategic partners like Ebay, and a few more that overachieving Stanford students found useful, like Caltrain ans sports scores. Then nothing. The Carousel interface was just silly. Once you had more than 5 or 6 items in there it became a pain in the ass. There was also the opaque functionality of it. It took me a couple of days to figure out how to properly exit from Go so my Blackberry's battery wouldn't die quite as fast.
So basically Yahoo realized, our mobile presence sucks.

Monday, November 16, 2009

Most Stylish Supercomputer


Jaguar



The Jaguar Supercomputer takes home the best dressed supercomputer in the petaflop or better division.


The Jaguar Supercomputer, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, US. (1.759 petaflops; 224,162 processors).
Though the color coordination may seem a bit out touch for a happening number crunching monster of the late 00's, the nearest competition is quite a bit dowdier in comparison. Both sartorially and in terms of brute hexadecimal obliteration.

IBM Roadrunner

Sporting the traditional IBM powder-coat black and Prussian blue, which of course dates back to the 80's and beyond, the IBM Roadrunner (Los Alamos National Laboratory, US ,1.042 petaflops; 122,400 processors) may be a heavy hitter in terms of numbers, but is not easy on the eyes.

The Chinese fielded an entry for the first time this year. Of course the Chinese entry Tianhe-1, National SuperComputer Center, China (563.1 teraflops; 71,680 processors), failed on both parts. Being neither a petaflop capable system, nor very well dressed at all.

Thursday, November 5, 2009

Windows 7 tricks

Geeky Shortcuts

Big one and little one If you are eyesight challenged (like me) pressing the Windows key and the + key will zoom in on your display. To make it smaller again, Windows key and the - key.

the fun one-press the windows key + tab. Windows will show a 3D rotating view of your open windows.

Snappy one. Try pressing the Windows key plus any of the arrow keys. This causes your open windows to snap open or closed or...

Invisible one. moving the mouse cursor over the small rectangle at the lower right of the screen will make all open windows transparent. To do this without your mouse, press the Windows key + space bar.

Sunday, November 1, 2009

Bass







I was just working on my
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