50 Things Cortana Can Do Right Now (Compared To Siri and Google Now)

Cortana is Windows Phone’s answer to Siri and Google Now : A voice-activated artificially intelligent personal assistant with an only slightly off-putting robot voice. Technically , she’s still in beta on Windows 8.1, but PhoneBuff is here to show us 50 things Cortana can already do . Read more…

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50 Things Cortana Can Do Right Now (Compared To Siri and Google Now)

49ers’ stadium Wi-Fi served 25,000 concurrent users, 2.13TB in all

Levi’s Stadium crowd on August 17, 2014. Jim Bahn The San Francisco 49ers’ heralded Wi-Fi network  served its first NFL crowd in a preseason game on Sunday, and the team has now released statistics showing that it was able to serve lots of data to lots of fans, just as intended. “We offloaded 2.13 terabytes during the event,” 49ers VP of Technology Dan Williams told Mobile Sports Report . The newly built Levi’s Stadium has 68,500 seats and more than a third of attendees used the Wi-Fi network simultaneously. “We peaked at 24,775 (roughly 38 percent of attendance) concurrent connections with an average of 16,862 (roughly 25 percent of attendance),” Williams said. Read 5 remaining paragraphs | Comments

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49ers’ stadium Wi-Fi served 25,000 concurrent users, 2.13TB in all

Crowdfunded project uses 3D motion capture to catalog ancient Kung Fu styles

The influence of Hong Kong action cinema stars like Bruce Lee lives on in today’s cinema, but the ancient styles they based their techniques on are slowly dying out. But there’s now a crowdfuding project aimed at preserving the heritage of different Kung Fu fighting styles, called the Hong Kong Martial Arts Living Archive . It’s a collaboration between a martial arts society called the International Guoshu Association (IGU) and the City University of Hong Kong. The goal is to use photos, high-speed video, panoptic video and motion capture to capture and quantize the different techniques. The project organizers believe that fighting styles like Hung Kuen and Wing Kong from the south of China, along with various northern styles, are best preserved in Hong Kong. That’s because many of the Kung Fu masters from the nation’s north and south converged on Hong Kong due to political instability on the mainland around the turn of the 20th century. Rather than preserve such techniques in traditional 2D forms as shown above, the group wants to preserve a complete 4D analysis of the forms. On top of storing images, video and mocap data, it plans to include physical data like speed, torque, torsion and force data. That’s because different Kung Fu techniques use different body mechanics, which can’t be conveyed by mere drawings or oral descriptions. It’s also capturing a large amount of 3D panoptic camera data shot from six different angles. While a large amount of motion capture has already been performed by the City University of Hong Kong, its funds are starting to run dry. As a result, they’ve launched a crowdfunding campaign on FringeFunder , with the hope of raising $47, 000 to hire motion capture experts. The minimum pledge is about $39, which will get you perks like a framed certificate and project poster, with higher level pledges snagging Kung Fu tours in Hong Kong and even dinner with local celebrities. Check the video below for more information — and as a reminder of what they’re trying to preserve, watch Bruce Lee single-handedly transform US television. Filed under: Misc , Home Entertainment Comments Via: Off the Reservation Source: FringeBacker

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Crowdfunded project uses 3D motion capture to catalog ancient Kung Fu styles

California DMV says Google’s self-driving car must have a steering wheel

Left: Google’s prototype car. Right: the eventual final design. Google Traditionally, Google’s self-driving car prototypes have taken existing cars from manufacturers like Toyota and Lexus and bolted on the self-driving car components. This is less than ideal, since it limits the design possibilities of the car’s “vision” system and includes (eventually) unnecessary components, like a steering wheel and pedals. However, Google recently built a self-driving car of its own design, which had no human control system other than a “go” button. The California DMV has now thrown a speed bump in Google’s car design, though, in the form of  new rules  that require that all self-driving cars allow a driver to take “immediate physical control” if needed. The new law means Google’s self-designed car will need to have a steering wheel and gas and brake pedals any time it hits the public road. According to  The Wall Street Journal , Google will comply with the law by building a “small, temporary steering wheel and pedal system that drivers can use during testing” into the prototype cars. The report says California officials are working on rules for cars without a steering wheel and pedals, but for now, a human control system is mandatory. Read 4 remaining paragraphs | Comments

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California DMV says Google’s self-driving car must have a steering wheel

Google’s ‘Knowledge Vault’ seeks the answer to life, the universe and everything

Google’s Knowledge Graph is pretty good at telling you who was the 37th president of the US , or what the square root of 342345 is. Ask it more complex questions, like “why does the sun set at night?” and it’ll still send you off to find the answer yourself. Next week in New York, Google researchers will present a paper on its “Knowledge Vault, ” which Kevin Murphy of Google Research, describes as “the largest repository of automatically extracted structured knowledge on the planet.” Knowledge Vault applies machine learning (unlike Knowledge Graph which is an extension of community supported tools) to automatically trawl webpages, assimilating their facts, information and connections therein. Not only does this mean it’s faster, it can continually grow and update itself. The net result will be a huge database of knowledge, the likes of which would have been unimaginable just years ago. The real-world implications are that services like Google Now (or Siri et al) could get a huge boost in smarts — tapping into a much deeper well of understanding, knowing what, how and why things are related. This could lead to much more intelligent web services, or truly explode any limits of augmented reality (“ah, you’re in Berlin, and sent an email last week about museums, perhaps you want to visit the Museum Berggruen “). Unsurprisingly this comes at a privacy cost; analysts are expecting Google to leverage services like Gmail that contain your data (plus the data that’s public/online) bundled in with the rest of the world wide web. While there are no timelines on when we might see this implemented in live services, don’t be surprised when it’s not just your proximity to Sir Bacon that freaks you out, but how and why you’re so close, plus favorite films you have in common, and where you can go and see them locally. Filed under: Science , Software , Google Comments Via: New Scientist Source: CIKM

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Google’s ‘Knowledge Vault’ seeks the answer to life, the universe and everything

Set a Video as Your Desktop Wallpaper With VLC

Since the demise of DreamScene with Windows Vista, users have been denied the option of having moving pictures as their desktop backdrop, but the hugely useful VLC Media Player provides something of a workaround. Open up a movie then choose Video and Set as Wallpaper to place it behind your program windows, audio and all. Read more…

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Set a Video as Your Desktop Wallpaper With VLC

California requires manual controls before Google’s car hits public roads

One of the unique features inside Google’s self-driving car is that it doesn’t sport a steering wheel or a set of pedals. That won’t fly on public roads in California though, so the folks in Mountain View are faced with adding them or sticking to closed-course testing . New regulations that go into effect next month require autonomous vehicles to let the driver take “immediate physical control” should the need arise. Google says it’ll adhere to the rule by installing a temporary steering wheel and pedals in its 100 prototype cars set to begin testing on private roads in September. Filed under: Transportation , Google Comments Source: Wall Street Journal

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California requires manual controls before Google’s car hits public roads

​The $1.5 Million Indiegogo Smartwatch Horror Story

Crowdfunding, like any gamble, preys on your hopes and dreams. Sometimes, you get the wonderful dream device you deserve . Other times, you get a million dollar pile of shit, like a smartwatch that can’t tell time. The Kreyos Meteor seems to fall into that second category. Read more…

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​The $1.5 Million Indiegogo Smartwatch Horror Story

Space station cosmonauts find life in the vacuum of space

The Russian press agency ITAR-TASS is reporting something so surprising that I’m having a hard time believing it: Cosmonauts have found microorganisms on the exterior of the International Space Station. Russian scientists are shocked by this discovery and can’t really explain how it is possible. Read more…

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Space station cosmonauts find life in the vacuum of space