Oct 122011
 


 

You know that scene in CSI and its ilk where the detective says, “Can you enhance the image?” and some faceless tech hits a few keys and suddenly the license plate is clear and readable? Nerds have been mocking those scenes for decades, but it might be time to stop.

Last week at its Max Conference Adobe showed off a new Photoshop tool the company calls unblur. Unblur does exactly what the cliche detective is asking for — it makes blurry photos sharp.

via Adobe’s New ‘Unblur’ Filter Makes CSI-Style Effects Real | Webmonkey | Wired.com.

Oct 102011
 

 

 

Google debuted an “early preview” version of a programming language called Dart today for building Web applications in the way JavaScript is used right now.

Programmer Lars Bak detailed the project in a talk today at the Goto conference conference today in Denmark and in a blog post. In it, he said Dart is geared for everything from small, unstructured projects to large, complicated efforts.

via Google debuts Dart, a JavaScript alternative | Deep Tech – CNET News.

Oct 072011
 

 

 

First it was solving a complex protein puzzle related to the HIV virus, and this time it is the 40,000 registered users of the game Planet Hunters who have identified 69 potential new planets and two very strong candidate planets outside the Earth’s solar system. We think we see a new trend in the making.

This latest breakthrough involved taking data retrieved from NASA’s Kepler space telescope that has been recording images at the mind-boggling pace of one image every 30 seconds since 2009. The goal? To find potential habitable planets outside our solar system. Trained on the Cygnus constellation — located on the northern plane of the Milky Way — the telescope recorded over 200,000 stars. That’s a lot of space people.

The good scientists over at NASA know a problem when they see one. That amount of data is simply too much for a small group to handle, so like others before them they cried, “Houston, we have a…” wait! Let’s change that to “Gentlemen, to the gamers!”

Planet Hunters challenges players to analyze data by viewing the actions of stars over time.

via Gamers are at it again, this time discovering new worlds | DVICE.

Oct 042011
 

 

 

You don’t have to worry so much about the QR codes you find in magazines and television commercials; the malevolent codes are located squarely on the Internet. When people are looking for new apps for their phones, they often use their desktop computers to search the Web for what they’re looking for. Rather than forcing users to hen-peck the URL into their smartphone’s browser, many sites now include a QR code linking directly to the app to make things easier all around.

Scammers have begun redirecting QR codes away from the given URL and pointing them towards malware, Kapersky reports.

via Maximum PC | Poisoned QR Codes Spreading Malware To Android Phones.

Oct 042011
 

 

 

Need more motivation for your next run? How about a pack of snarling zombies snapping at your heels?

Zombies, Run!, to be released early next year for iPhone and Android, is an app in the style of Runkeeper, with an exciting undead twist.

You start up the app, plug in your headphones and go for a run. As you begin to sprint, jog or walk to your destination of choice, you’ll hear the narrated story of a zombie-infested, dystopian future. You’re a “runner” in this world, which means that your job is to go out and collect supplies like ammo, medicine and batteries for your ragtag base of human survivors. The more you run, the more stuff you’ll acquire.

via Zombies, Run! Makes Your Workout a Race for Survival | GameLife | Wired.com.

Oct 032011
 

 

 

If you ever wondered what was going on at the summit of Mount Everest, now you can find out instantly using the world’s highest webcam. Installed by climate scientists to monitor weather patterns, the camera gives a clear view of the summit as long as it isn’t socked in by clouds or a blizzard.

via World’s highest webcam shows what’s up at the top of the world | DVICE.

Sep 302011
 

 

 

One of two lamps released by Crealev, the $1,196 Silhouette lamp is comprised of two pieces, one which levitates and illuminates above the second base piece using LED and electromagnetic technology. Still confused? Watch the video below…

via Final Frame: The Levitating Silhouette Lamp | Apartment Therapy Unplggd.

Sep 232011
 

 

 

All your e-books are belong to us. That sums up Amazon’s Library Lending service pretty well. Get ready to borrow all the free e-books your Kindle (or Kindle app) can handle, because the service is live, as of today.

Going to the library is something of a trip, or adventure, depending on how you look at it. Our generation doesn’t go to library because we have the Internet and we read most of our books on e-readers or through e-book apps on tablets, smartphones and laptops.

Back in April, Amazon unveiled its plan to allow Kindle and Kindle apps to borrow books from libraries. The only downside was having to actually go to a physical library.

That’s no more. Borrowing an e-book from a local library requires only a visit to its website and a working library card.

via Borrowing Kindle e-books at over 11,000 libraries begins today | DVICE.

Sep 222011
 

If you have even a vague recollection of the era that these ads represent, it’s well worth clicking through these pages. Come for the 8x CD-ROM Drive for $149 and the 33,600 bps internal modem from $139, stay for the Apple inkjet printer for a staggering $379 and the Sega Genesis, which was apparently some ancient gaming device, for an equally staggering $122. All this and more, in the gallery below.

via Best Buy ad from 15 years ago reminds us how far we’ve come | DVICE.

Sep 202011
 

 

 

We always knew gamers had serious smarts, but now the rest of the world knows it, too. Gamers have been listed alongside scientists as responsible for cracking the code of how an enzyme of an AIDS-like virus is put together.

The accomplishment, chronicled in a recent issue of Nature Structural & Molecular Biology, is a puzzle that has stumped science for well over 10 years. The enzyme M-PMV, in the protease family, is key in the molecular structure of retroviruses that causes AIDS in simians and includes HIV. Understanding how a virus is put together is a major leap towards understanding how to construct drugs to combat disease.

via Scientists unravel AIDS virus mystery with unlikely ally: gamers | DVICE.