Google Zeitgeist 2008

The title says it all. I wish we could dig in further, but this really tells you a lot about the collective intelligence...



Posted on Thu. December 11, 2008 by Ryan Guill #   (0 comments)
Photographs from Macy's Parade from the 50's and 60's

At least that's what it looks like. Does anyone have any more information on these images?



Posted on Thu. December 11, 2008 by Ryan Guill #   (0 comments)
JAXA wanting to release paper airplanes from the space station

Made of special paper, they actually expect the planes to make it all the way to the surface of the earth. This should be pretty cool. Lets just hope they hit populated land and not open ocean...



Posted on Thu. December 11, 2008 by Ryan Guill #   (0 comments)
Best of LIFE

Related to my previous entry about Google hosting LIFE images, this blog is finding the best of the best from those and the Flickr Commons.



Posted on Thu. December 11, 2008 by Ryan Guill #   (0 comments)
Genetic Programming: Evolution of Mona Lisa

A great example of evolutionary programming in action. I have always wanted to play with GA, but don't generally have the patience.



Posted on Thu. December 11, 2008 by Ryan Guill #   (0 comments)
Flex Sparklines

I have talked about sparklines before and this seems to be a very well done implementation of them in Flex. Putting this out there for me as much as anyone else. See also: Flex Spinner.



Posted on Wed. November 26, 2008 by Ryan Guill #   (0 comments)
How Soil Types Determined the 2008 Election in the Deep South

Pretty convincing arguments for an old sea making soil fertile for cotton production which made it more likely to have higher populations of slaves which translates into higher population of blacks today in these areas surrounded by higher population of whites. Worth a read.



Posted on Wed. November 26, 2008 by Ryan Guill #   (0 comments)
keyboardr

For those of us who suffer withdrawals when our hands leave the keyboard.



Posted on Tue. November 25, 2008 by Ryan Guill #   (0 comments)
Turgooduccochiqua

The description says it all: "A quail inside a cornish game hen inside a duck inside a chicken inside a turkey inside a goose. With bacon between layers." Click through for the picture.



Posted on Tue. November 25, 2008 by Ryan Guill #   (0 comments)
Then/Now, a photography series by the New York Times

David Dunlap is taking modern photographs of old photos and providing you a great way to see the present and past together and compare. I would love to do this with some old pictures of Memphis.



Posted on Fri. November 21, 2008 by Ryan Guill #   (0 comments)
Oblong g-speak

You have seen Minority Report, now see the real tech that it inspired. Slashdot has a discussion about it too, although in typical fashion the majority of that crowd seems unimpressed. I say this is some pretty cool tech with a lot of possibilities for large data set visualization. Bottom line, I want to play with it.



Posted on Fri. November 21, 2008 by Ryan Guill #   (0 comments)
Fecal Bacteriotherapy, otherwise known as a Fecal Transplant

I would like to start out by saying I am not making this up. If you check the wikipedia history you can see that I have not edited this article. I also submit the following Google Trends page as further evidence, along with my original source at buzzfeed.

That being said, this is fairly genius, although disgusting. And according to the wikipedia article, it seems to have a very high success rate.



Posted on Fri. November 21, 2008 by Ryan Guill #   (0 comments)
Google hosted LIFE images from the 1750s to today

Some awesome images in here, but its really surprising the wide variety of images that they have. For instance: They have images of Paducah, KY. I particularly like this aerial shot that is marked as April 1952.



Posted on Tue. November 18, 2008 by Ryan Guill #   (0 comments)
Wear Good Shoes: Advice to young Photographers

Alec Sloth asks a bunch of other photographers two questions. When did you first get excited about photography? And what advice would you give young photographers?



Posted on Tue. November 18, 2008 by Ryan Guill #   (0 comments)
ProTip: You can use the + sign with your gmail address to help filter your email

I am going to start a "ProTip" series on the blog to just share some tips and tricks I have learned along the way that might make your life easier. They will probably be few and far between but hopefully they will help when they come along.

So for my first ProTip, with gmail, you can add a + sign and then something else to the end of your username and it will still be sent to your address. For example, if your email address is johndoe@gmail.com, emails sent to johndoe+foo@gmail.com will still get delivered to your inbox. Why this is cool is because in gmail you can set your filters up based on the email address that the email was sent to. So you can filter on everything that gets delivered to johndoe+foo@gmail.com to be automatically flagged with the tag "foo" and marked as read for instance. You can make up whatever you want after the plus sign, as long as its not another plus sign, space or @ sign.

Now the bad news is a lot of sites don't follow the specs and don't like to accept a plus sign in an email address. But for those that do, it can be a great way to filter your email address and make sure that your email address isn't being handed off to the wrong people.



Posted on Mon. November 17, 2008 by Ryan Guill #   (0 comments)
Google Flu Trends

Google thinks it can tell us about flu outbreaks across the US quicker than the CDC. They have the data that shows they should be able to do just that. This could change a lot of things. I can imagine many other things being able to benefit from this. More discussion at slashdot



Posted on Wed. November 12, 2008 by Ryan Guill #   (0 comments)
Obamaland and McCainland

via kottke, a graphical representation by county of how the US voted. If the election was won by landmass only it would have been a much different outcome. It really helps you visualize too the vast difference of population density of the rural areas compared with the larger cities.



Posted on Wed. November 12, 2008 by Ryan Guill #   (0 comments)
In the coming days I will most likely be posting some data from this past presidential election cycle, mostly demographic in nature. If you notice I have tried not to become political on this website in any way and I hope to continue to be unbiased. I will not discuss policy or preference with anyone and will not reveal who I supported in the last election. I am only posting this information because it is interesting on several levels whether or not you agree with the conclusion. Please help me by keeping any discussions unbiased and civil. Again, this is not a place to voice your support for a party, candidate or policy, only to discuss the data surrounding the circumstances.

Posted on Wed. November 12, 2008 by Ryan Guill #   (0 comments)
Wedding Photos

Sorry for the lack of updates still but I still haven't gotten my groove back since the wedding. But we have finally started uploading some of the wedding photos. So far we have just done the after wedding photos but we will have the rest up soon hopefully.



Posted on Tue. November 11, 2008 by Ryan Guill #   (0 comments)
Honeymoon in Jamaica

Posting has been light around here lately because on October 25th I was married to the love of my life and I had the privilege of taking her to Jamaica for our honeymoon. We stayed at the Sandal's Dunn's River Resort. It was a great time, beautiful weather and a trip we will never forget. I'm sure I will have more about the trip and Jamaica in general later on, but for now enjoy the pictures we took.



Posted on Wed. November 05, 2008 by Ryan Guill #   (0 comments)
Chris O'Shea - Audience

Awesome project using mirrors, cameras and programming. The mirrors "chat amongst themselves" until something catches their eye, then as an audience they all track that thing until they become disinterested and either track something else or go back to talking to each other. Make sure to check out the videos. I would love to be involved with something like this.



Posted on Tue. October 21, 2008 by Ryan Guill #   (0 comments)
Banjo used in Brain Surgery

Okay, this is just nuts. This guy was having trouble with a hand tremor caused by a brain problem. While they have his head cut open, he plays the banjo so they can make sure they have the right spot on the brain. Like a weird episode of House or something. Make sure to watch the video. Just crazy.



Posted on Thu. October 16, 2008 by Ryan Guill #   (3 comments)
Tilt Shift lenses have been around for a long time but are starting to become popular lately because of some high-profile examples. Basically, a tilt-shift lens allows control of perspective and focus in a very precise way. A lot of times it has the effect of making the scene look like a scale model, as these pictures show. Here is another example of the model look and an article about the technique.

Recently though, Keith Loutit created some time-lapse videos using tilt-shift that came out great. Make sure to check out his other two videos on the right. It's really like you are looking at miniatures moving around in fast-forward.

If you are interested in getting into tilt-shift photography, you can buy some very expensive lenses, but lensbaby lenses are a great substitute. They are considerably cheaper than the professional counterparts but still offer a wide array of objects. They have also recently released three new versions.



Posted on Mon. October 13, 2008 by Ryan Guill #   (0 comments)
Russian Experiment with Headless Dog

They somehow remove the head of a dog and keep the dog alive for a while by pumping blood through it. No telling how much pain the dog is in (if any) but it still responds to external stimulus like noise and touch. I don't think it could bark though. Sad, but still interesting.



Posted on Mon. October 13, 2008 by Ryan Guill #   (0 comments)
Flickr Photos tagged "Banksy"

Just a quick followup to a previous post.



Posted on Thu. October 09, 2008 by Ryan Guill #   (0 comments)
Envelope Paradox

This is not the Two Envelopes Problem that I am familiar with, but still a good one overall. Say you have an adversary. The adversary has two envelopes and in each envelop writes a number. It can be any kind of number as long as its real. You get to open on of the envelopes and see the number that is written, and then you must guess if the other envelope contains a number larger or smaller than the one you opened. Is there any strategy that you can employ to raise your probability of winning to better than half? Think about the answer for a while and then click the link above to see his solution.



Posted on Wed. October 08, 2008 by Ryan Guill #   (0 comments)
PDF Pad

For all of your uber-geeky graph paper needs, PDF Paper allows you to get a PDF that you can print out to make just about any kind of graph paper, calendar, flag, whatever you need. It may not be the most economical way but where else can you get 5mm Isometric graph paper?



Posted on Wed. October 08, 2008 by Ryan Guill #   (0 comments)
Oh, don't forget...

Nifty little service that will let you put in your cell phone number, a date and time and message and it will send you that message when you scheduled it for. A lot easier than tying a string around your finger to forget what the string was for.

Disclaimer: I have not yet used this service and cannot vouch for it. I am only listing it here because of the idea not the service itself. If you do use it though, let us know how it went in the comments.



Posted on Wed. October 08, 2008 by Ryan Guill #   (0 comments)
Earth From Above

The French photographer Yann Arthus-Bertrand is bringing his work to NYC in May 2009. Beautiful photography from the air, some of these views are unlike any other. Some of his website is in French but it is still worth checking out just for the pictures. There are many books of his work out there and he also had a TV Show apparently. (Video here). The first link is probably the best place to start with large views of his work. Via Kottke

Posted on Wed. October 08, 2008 by Ryan Guill #   (0 comments)
Small Asteroid hit Earth Last Night

From the site:

A tiny asteroid discovered just hours ago at an Arizona observatory will enter Earth's atmosphere harmlessly at approximately 10:46 p.m. Eastern time tonight (2:46 a.m. Greenwich Mean Time). There is no danger to people or property since the asteroid will not reach the ground. It is between 3 and 15 feet (1-5 m) in diameter and will burn up in the upper atmosphere, well above aircraft heights. A brilliant fireball will be visible as a result.

Apparently, it did happen last night. This marks the first time that we have recognized that an asteroid this small was going to hit the earth before it did, which is quite an achievement. Although it was only about 12 hours notice, its something to build on.

UPDATE: Looks like its been picked up by a few other places: Slashdot, CNN and NASA



Posted on Tue. October 07, 2008 by Ryan Guill #   (0 comments)
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