Monday, December 31, 2012
Which rookies are the most anticipated for 2013?
The Chemistry of Snowflakes
olive oil leaf extract benefits lip blisters treatment olive oil leaf
As Italy elections approach, players get into position
LONDON — First, Silvio Berlusconi, who was driven from power last year by Italy's economic woes and his own scandals, said he wanted back his old job as prime minister. Then Mario Monti, an appointed technocrat who succeeded him at the head of an unelected government, kept the nation guessing for weeks before suddenly declaring that he would dive into politics and seek to lead the next government.
australian olive leaf extract olive leaf extract for children olive leaf extract children
Sunday, December 30, 2012
The Ultimate Poker Guide: Preparing To Play
Best Time to Plant Roses
remede anti aging deep lines around mouth olive tree extract
Smartphone airbags on the cards
Originally posted here: Smartphone airbags on the cards
at Techwatch Tech News - Digital & Satellite TV, 3DTV, HDTV, IPTV, Computers, Mobiles, Gaming, Internet, and Telecoms
NEW! Also see the Techwatch Glossary
treatments for fever blisters fever blisters treatments fever blister treatments
War Cries: Restoring Compassion in Homes and Communities
treatments for fever blisters fever blisters treatments fever blister treatments
Saturday, December 29, 2012
Grosjean knows he must raise his game
Bridal Shower Etiquette: How to Make a Bridal Shower Special
treatment for lip lines lip lines treatment best treatment for lip lines
Here's What A 3D-Printed Record Sounds Like [Video]
If you ever wanted to print out your favorite albums at home, that weird little itch of yours may soon be scratched. Amanda Ghassaei, an editor at Instructables and DIY audio hardware geek, recently succeeded in 3D printing 12-inch records containing music by artists like Nirvana, The Pixies and Daft Punk. It sounds terrible, but the achievement is still pretty impressive.
Ghassaei used Processing to write a program that translates digital audio into 3D models, which can then be printed on a plastic material using a high-resolution 3D printer. The end result can be played on any turntable, although as you can hear in the video below, it doesn't sound very good.
That's because even at the highest resolutions available in 3D printing, you can print audio grooves only fine enough to capture a fraction of the resolution and sampling rate of a even decent-sounding MP3. There's also a very tiny grain and residue on 3D printed objects that interferes with the turntable stylus' ability to pick up a clean audio signal. Still, the songs are clearly recognizable, making what Ghassaei has pulled off from a technical standpoint very impressive.
Don't Get Too Excited, Hipsters
Just be careful about envisioning a not-too-distant future in which we can all print out our favorite albums on vinyl-like material and listen to them in high-fidelity stereo. Music-industry executives jazzed about the recent resurgence in vinyl record sales should also take a chill pill.
For one thing, this method of creating records is pretty expensive. Between printer usage time and the raw materials needed to print a 12-inch disc, it probably costs several hundred dollars per record. For the price tag of two or three 3D-printed records, you could press 100 real vinyl albums.
Resolution is the biggest stumbling block. Although the cost of 3D printing has been dropping into more consumer-accessible territory, the resolution of the printers hasn't changed much in the last few years. The types of things people use 3D printers today for just don't demand the super-high resolution required to print tiny, clean grooves like the ones created by pressing an aluminum master disc into hot vinyl - the old-fashioned way to make a record. Ghassaei might be able to get that Daft Punk song to sound clearer on 3D-printed records than it does right now, but it's not going to be a viable, listenable alternative anytime soon.
Who knows, though? Maybe in a few years we'll see lo-fi experimental noise bands in Brooklyn selling limited edition, 3D-printed LPs. They won't come cheap, though.
Discover Ways To Keep Your Storage Shed Looking Good
Friday, December 28, 2012
Looking to Start an eBay Business? You Must Read This!
Best Times for a Beach Wedding
Hot Water Dispensers for Your Home
Yes, Randi Zuckerberg, Please Lecture Us About 'Human Decency'
Interwebs drama of the day: Randi Zuckerberg, sister of Mark Zuckerberg, threw a fit when someone tweeted a copy of a Zuckerberg family photo (see above) that Randi herself had posted to Facebook, the confusing-to-use social Web site created by her strange, reclusive brother. Randi was furious because she wanted the photo to be seen only by her friends, but someone who is friends with Randi's sister saw the photo on Facebook, assumed it was public, and spread it on Twitter.
Randi complained that this was "way uncool." The friend apologized for her mistake. Lots of people had a laugh about how this just shows again how stupid and confusing Facebook's privacy settings are, as in, "Hey, even the Zuckerbergs can't figure this stuff out!"
Out Of Proportion?
But then Randi took everything to a whole new level of mental when she summed the whole thing up with a tweet: "Digital etiquette: always ask permission before posting a friend's photo publicly. It's not about privacy settings, it's about human decency."
Yes, she said that: human decency. Because this dumb issue about her dumb photograph is that important.
It's so important, in fact, that now Randi Zuckerberg, a not-universally-acclaimed aspiring chanteuse who rocks Silicon Valley with an awesome band called Feedbomb, as well as producer of a terrible reality series about Silicon Valley (See Bravo's Silicon Valley: The Painful Truth Behind A Caricature Of Excess), as well as sister of the guy who created that beacon of morality known as Facebook, would like to use this as a teaching moment in which she can instruct the world about basic human decency.
Let's acknowledge that Randi Zuckerberg is not Mark Zuckerberg. But let's also acknowledge that she has benefited tremendously from her brother's creation.
And what is that creation?
- A company that has made billions by gathering people's personal information and using it to sell ads;
- A company whose original privacy statement was a simple sentence but now is longer than the U.S. Constitution and requires a law degree to understand;
- A company that has continually pushed people to "share" more of their private information in order to use Facebook;
- A company that just four days ago was criticized by the Electronic Frontier Foundation for yet another creepy experiment that would let people pay money to send mail to your inbox, which is just the latest in a long line of criticisms brought by the EFF;
- A company that once claimed it wasn't tracking users when they were logged off, only to turn around and admit that it was, just before someone reported that Facebook in fact had applied for and received a patent on technology that would do exactly that;
- A company that once got caught trying to run a clumsy covert smear campaign against Google;
- A company that once settled claims brought by the FTC that charged Facebook had deceived consumers and violated federal law;
- A company that ran a scuzzy IPO marred by allegations of self-dealing, one in which insiders got info about weak revenues and backed away from the deal even as Facebook was touting the stock to suckers, raising both the price of the shares and the number of shares for sale;
- A company that has since been the subject of an investigation by the state of Massachusetts. which led to fines levied against its bankers and fears that authorities "will throw the book at Facebook" in 2013 and that "the real liability to Facebook and Morgan Stanley is yet to come";
- A company whose Instagram subsidiary recently caused outrage by changing its terms of service but then walked those changes back.
Yes, Randi Zuckerberg, speak to us about human decency.
Because a photo that you posted on Facebook got shared on the Internet.
How awful this must have been for you! How... invasive. What a violation. How terrible that someone might take something that belongs to you and use it in ways that you had not anticipated, and for which you had not given explicit permission!
What kind of world are we living in when just because you post something on a website someone else can just take your stuff and do things with it?
Oh wait.
shingles alternative treatments blister printing the original olive leaf extract
Thursday, December 27, 2012
3 Types Of Banner Stands That Are Ideal For Any Company
What to Look for in a Web Host - Customer Support
Cheap and Hassle-Free Stress Reliever
Life Presents Obstacles, None Which God Can't Remove
Wednesday, December 26, 2012
A Guide to Athens City
olive leaf extract liquid liquid olive leaf extract olive leaf liquid extract
Thousands sign U.S. petition to deport Piers Morgan over gun comments
Selecting WP Hosting For High Traffic Websites
Understanding Fees for a Live Answering Service
Tuesday, December 25, 2012
Exploring the Historical Sites of Sicily on School Trips
Goodfellows: Mom focuses on children's happiness
Updated 10:21 pm, Thursday, December 20, 2012
To ensure her 3-year-old has presents to open on Christmas, Twanna Davis turned to Goodfellows.
The year of John Cage
Once, when asked how he thought history would consider his work, John Cage responded that he had made so much, getting rid of it all would be very difficult. Twenty years after his death he has been spectacularly proven right. This year marked the 100th anniversary of the composer's birth in Los Angeles on Sept. 5. As part of an international celebration, Cage's work appeared and continues to appear in concert halls, opera houses, museums, galleries, clubs, alternative spaces, reconverted industrial buildings, parks, street corners, atria and even a dock or two by the bay.
All Affiliate Marketers Need These 3 Things To Survive Online
Chuggington Die-Cast 10-in-1 Layout Track Pack review
fever blister treatment treatment for fever blister treatment fever blister