| |
|
RadioLabs | Mobile Wireless Antennas | High Gain 802.11 Omni Directional Amplified WiFi Antenna - |
|
|
Topic: Technology |
3:54 am EDT, May 1, 2007 |
Trucker WiFi Antenna The RadioLabs Trucker Wireless Internet Antenna Kit has the maximum legal power for the most range. This omni directional mobile wifi antenna allows you to connect with distant truck stops at internet access points from long distances.
RadioLabs | Mobile Wireless Antennas | High Gain 802.11 Omni Directional Amplified WiFi Antenna - |
|
Venture Hacks — Term Sheet Hacks |
|
|
Topic: Business |
4:33 am EDT, Apr 30, 2007 |
An entrepreneur’s guide to negotiating a Series A investment. For optimal results, apply these hacks liberally before you sign a term sheet. Apply regularly at each term sheet and startup thereafter. This is a work in progress…
Venture Hacks — Term Sheet Hacks |
|
Topic: Technology |
5:02 pm EDT, Apr 24, 2007 |
Perl Hash Howto This how-to comes with no guaratees other than the fact that these code segments were copy/pasted from code that I wrote and ran successfully.
Sometimes I forget how hashes work. Perl Hash Howto |
|
MySQL AB :: MySQL Workbench |
|
|
Topic: Technology |
9:52 pm EDT, Apr 22, 2007 |
MySQL Workbench is a database modeling tool for MySQL. You can use it to design and create new database schemas, document existing databases and even perform complex migrations to MySQL. Main features: View screenshot * fast OpenGL based canvas (requires hardware OpenGL) * database reverse-engineering * database/model synchronization * SQL script generation * quickly accessible 'Overview' mode, where the entire model is zoomed out to fit the canvas * design your database in conceptual, logical and physical levels * extensible architecture * export as SQL CREATE script * import/export DBDesigner4 models * visual representation of tables, views, stored procedure/functions * support for MySQL 5 features * selectable notations for diagram
Instant documentation for MySQL DB's? MySQL AB :: MySQL Workbench |
|
Topic: Technology |
4:29 pm EDT, Apr 18, 2007 |
52" Plasma in cube. Very conducive to group coding/debugging. 52' Plasma in Cube |
|
Translator List: Court Ordered Sex Change |
|
|
Topic: Miscellaneous |
11:43 am EDT, Apr 18, 2007 |
Below is list of documents that can be translated: (Certified Original and Translated version must be submitted): Birth Certificate Adoption Records Marriage License Marriage Application Court Ordered Name Change Court Ordered Sex Change Divorce Decree
Translator List: Court Ordered Sex Change |
|
bsdforums.org - FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD, MacOS X, Darwin, Linux, BSD Unix forums, message boards, discussions and news. - OSX Darwin NFS Mounting problem |
|
|
Topic: Technology |
2:14 pm EDT, Apr 11, 2007 |
I am trying to mount a remote filesystem hosted by a Linux machine. The filesystem is properly exported and can be mounted by other computers. I have tried entering the information into netinfo as instructed by: http://deaddog.duch.udel.edu/~frey/darwin/archive/DarwinAndNFS.pdf I have tried using mount -t nfs and tried mount_nfs. Example: mkdir /test1 sudo mount_nfs remotehost:/local /test1 cd /test1 bash:cd: /test1: Operation not permitted In all cases, the mount succeeds, but when trying to access the directory, I get Operation not permitted. I have used su to login as root with the same results. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
NFS in insecure mode... only over teh vpnage. bsdforums.org - FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD, MacOS X, Darwin, Linux, BSD Unix forums, message boards, discussions and news. - OSX Darwin NFS Mounting problem |
|
Topic: Technology |
11:27 am EDT, Apr 11, 2007 |
In this project, we examined ways to help present/depict hierarchical (tree) information structures in order to help people understand them and access the data in them. The Treemap visualization technique developed by Ben Shneiderman and Brian Johnson at Maryland is a well-known technique for depicting hierarchies. It uses a rectangular, space-filling slice-and-dice technique to visualize objects in the different levels of a hierarchy. The area and color of each item corresponds to an attribute of the item as well. The SunBurst technique is an alternative, space-filling visualization that uses a radial rather than a rectangular layout. In SunBurst, items in a hierarchy are laid out radially, with the top of the hierarchy at the center and deeper leves farther away from the center. The angle swept out by an item and its color correspond to some atttribute of the data. For instance, in a visualization of a file system, the angle may correspond to the file/directory size and the color may correspond to the file type. An example Sunburst display is shown below. In one study, we compared use of SunBurst to use of a Treemap. We created two UNIX file/directory browser tools that use the Treemap and SunBurst visualization techniques, respectively. We then used the two tools in an experiment in which 60 students performed a series of typical file/directory-related tasks. We measured both correct task completion rates and time to complete the tasks. Results of the study appear in a technical report and in an article in the International Journal of Human-Computer Studies, both listed above. In general, the participants preferred the Sunburst tool, primarily due to its more explicit portrayal of the hierarchy structure. We found that performance with the Treemap tool benefited when a participant used the Sunbust tool earlier, suggesting a learning effect. Performance with both tools, in terms of correct task completions and times, was relatively comparable on a "small" hierarchy consisting of about 500 files. Performance on a "large" hierarchy of about 3000 files favored the Sunburst, particularly when comparing initial uses of each tool. In another research effort, we developed a series of techniques for helping viewers to examine the small, peripheral files that often appear in a SunBurst display when it shows many files. The three techniques we developed are called Angular Detail, Detail Inside and Detail Outside. All use smooth animation and a focus context display methodology to help present small files for close examination within the context of an overview of the entire hierarchy. An article at InfoVis 2000 and a technical report, both listed above, describe this research. To most clearly understand the techniques, view a 4-minute video that we prepared for the InfoVis 200 Conference. 40 megabyte MPEG video.
SunBurst Page |
|
Surf*Mind*Musings » How web 1.0 — Accepting the Hierarchy |
|
|
Topic: Technology |
10:16 am EDT, Apr 11, 2007 |
In If You Don’t Use Del.icio.us, You Will Now at TechCrunch, the venerable web 2.0 buzz site, shows a cluelessness that’s quite remarkable. I’ve already missed the WWW ticket give-away and don’t care since I’m speaking, but really Mike, could you be more web 1.0? Cramming delicious bookmarks into a hierarchy kills all that’s good about the service. Admittedly, speed is sometimes an issue, but the power of del.icio.us is the (personal and global) folksonomy, rejection of explicit hierarchy, and popularity mechanisms, along with the networking aspects of shared links. The data is in, and has been for years, browser based, hierarchical bookmarks don’t work. There’s a lot of innovation in this space, but the Flock originated embedding of delicious cloud bookmarks in the browser is not innovative, it’s commercialization. http://surfmind.com/musings/gems/linkdelizoomer_v01.gif I mentioned some hacking I’m doing on the all.xml output from del.icio.us’ API in Firefox chrome. I’ve saved a static version an early rendering that supports browsing my many of my 1200 links at del.icio.us/andyed. The image at the right shows the system state where analytics is being hovered. The coloring of the other keywords shows the co-occurence of the tag analytics with google, ajax, screencasts, blogging, and usability. The “weighted list” of the tag cloud shows the quantity of links with the tag, while the coloring of related tags shows the percent of urls with the second tag that co-occur. This is a dual coding of the tag weight, but produces a nice aesthetic. In addition, the order of the tags is random currently. I’m working on packing more information into the view… there’s lots of it in the tag data, unlike a traditional hierarchy. Anyway, have fun with the demo (Firefox only probably), click a tag to view the URLs, and send any good ideas my way for a true alternative to del.icio.us in the browser.
This analyzes the relationships between Andy's meta tags on del.icio.us. Demo is here: http://surfmind.com/lab/linkdeli/demo_zoomer/index.html Surf*Mind*Musings » How web 1.0 — Accepting the Hierarchy |
|