Tuesday, August 25, 2009

App: Crime Spotting San Francisco & Oakland

Ever wonder what kind of crime is going on in SF and Oakland? This site shows a great map of crime reports in SF and Oakland!

http://sanfrancisco.crimespotting.org/

http://oakland.crimespotting.org/

App: Pimp My Gun

You can make some pretty wacky guns outta this Flash App. It's alot of fun!

http://pimpmygun.doctornoob.com/app.html

Monday, August 24, 2009

Article: NetFlix's corporate culture

This is a really interesting presentation put together by NetFlix on their corporate culture. Some of it you may not agree with, and some of it would not work at every organization, however, there's some great stuff in here.

http://gregverdino.typepad.com/greg_verdinos_blog/2009/08/netflix.html

Article: Game Theory Predictions

Bueno de Mesquita is one of the world’s most prominent applied game theorists. A professor at New York University and a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford, he is well known academically for his work on “political survival,” or how leaders build coalitions to stay in power. But among national-security types and corporate decision makers, he is even better known for his prognostications. For 29 years, Bueno de Mesquita has been developing and honing a computer model that predicts the outcome of any situation in which parties can be described as trying to persuade or coerce one another. Since the early 1980s, C.I.A. officials have hired him to perform more than a thousand predictions; a study by the C.I.A., now declassified, found that Bueno de Mesquita’s predictions “hit the bull’s-eye” twice as often as its own analysts did.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/16/magazine/16Bruce-t.html?_r=1

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Interactive: 3d Pixel Art Creator

Create 3d art by putting pixels together!

http://kyucon.com/qblock/

Chart: How Different Groups Spend Their Day

The American Time Use Survey asks thousands of American residents to recall every minute of a day. Here is how people over age 15 spent their time in 2008

http://www.nytimes.com//interactive/2009/07/31/business/20080801-metrics-graphic.html?hp

I really like how this information is visualized!

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Video: Chicago Travelogue 1948



So many of these buildings still exist, though they are now towered over by skyscrapers. Infact, the thing I really noticed about this is how light and bright the city was without such tall buildings obstructing the sun!

Very short twitter stories

Very short stories on Twitter @VeryShortStory

I used my second wish to undo the first. Your body sprang back to life. The third wish I'm keeping, in case you get out of line again.

Sheila liked Ken, in the same way she liked a Fillet O Fish sandwich when she was thinking of lobster. He was right here, right now.

She was the kind that made you forget other women, pretty & crazy. Dish throwing, steal your dog, don't dare look at other woman crazy

I turned the hose on Steph. She’d gone to Burning Man and come home filthy. I hoped somehow, the things she did, could be washed away

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Article: Dogs as Smart as 2-year-old Kids

Jeanna Bryner
Senior Writer
LiveScience.com – Sat Aug 8, 2:05 pm ET

The canine IQ test results are in: Even the average dog has the mental abilities of a 2-year-old child.

The finding is based on a language development test, revealing average dogs can learn 165 words (similar to a 2-year-old child), including signals and gestures, and dogs in the top 20 percent in intelligence can learn 250 words.

And the smartest?

Border collies, poodles, and German shepherds, in that order, says Stanley Coren, a canine expert and professor emeritus at the University of British Columbia. Those breeds have been created recently compared with other dog breeds and may be smarter in part because we've trained and bred them to be so, Coren said. The dogs at the top of the pack are on par with a 2.5-year-old.

Better at math and socializing

While dogs ranked with the 2-year-olds in language, they would trump a 3- or 4-year-old in basic arithmetic, Coren found. In terms of social smarts, our drooling furballs fare even better.

"The social life of dogs is much more complex, much more like human teenagers at that stage, interested in who is moving up in the pack and who is sleeping with who and that sort of thing," Coren told LiveScience.

Coren, who has written more than a half-dozen books on dogs and dog behavior, will present an overview of various studies on dog smarts at the American Psychological Association's annual meeting in Toronto.

"We all want insight into how our furry companions think, and we want to understand the silly, quirky and apparently irrational behaviors [that] Lassie or Rover demonstrate," Coren said. "Their stunning flashes of brilliance and creativity are reminders that they may not be Einsteins but are sure closer to humans than we thought."

Math test

To get inside the noggin of man's best friend, scientists are modifying tests for dogs that were originally developed to measure skills in children.

Here's one: In an arithmetic test, dogs watch as one treat and then another treat are lowered down behind a screen. When the screen gets lifted, the dogs, if they get arithmetic (1+1=2), will expect to see two treats. (For toddlers, other objects would be used.)

But say the scientist swipes one of the treats, or adds another so the end result is one, or three treats, respectively. "Now we're giving him the wrong equation which is 1+1=1, or 1+1=3," Coren said. Sure enough, studies show the dogs get it. "The dog acts surprised and stares at it for a longer period of time, just like a human kid would," he said.

These studies suggest dogs have a basic understanding of arithmetic, and they can count to four or five.

Basic emotions

Other studies Coren notes have found that dogs show spatial problem-solving skills. For instance, they can locate valued items, such as treats, find better routes in the environment, such as the fastest way to a favorite chair, and figure out how to operate latches and simple machines.

Like human toddlers, dogs also show some basic emotions, such as happiness, anger and disgust. But more complex emotions, such as guilt, are not in a dog's toolbox. (What humans once thought was guilt was found to be doggy fear, Coren noted.)

And while dogs know whether they're being treated fairly, they don't grasp the concept of equity. Coren recalls a study in which dogs get a treat for "giving a paw."

When one dog gets a treat and the other doesn't, the unrewarded dog stops performing the trick and avoids making eye contact with the trainer. But if one dog, say, gets rewarded with a juicy steak while the other snags a measly piece of bread, on average the dogs don't care about the inequality of the treats.

Top dogs

To find out which dogs had the top school smarts, Coren collected data from more than 200 dog obedience judges from the United States and Canada.

He found the top dogs, in order of their doggy IQ are:

Border collies Poodles German shepherds Golden retrievers Dobermans Shetland sheepdogs Labrador retrievers
At the bottom of the intelligence barrel, Coren would include many of the hounds, such as the bassett hound and the Afghan hound, along with the bulldog, beagle and basenji (a hunting dog).

"It's important to note that these breeds which don't do as well tend to be considerably older breeds," he said. "They were developed when the task of a hound was to find something by smell or sight." These dogs might fare better on tests of so-called instinctive intelligence, which measure how well dogs do what they are bred to do.

"The dogs that are the brightest dogs in terms of school learning ability tend to be the dogs that are much more recently developed," Coren said. He added that there's a "high probability that we've been breeding dogsso they're more responsive to human beings and human signals." So the most recently bred dogs would be more human-friendly and rank higher on school smarts.

Many of these smarty-pants are also the most popular pets. "We like dogs that understand us," Coren said.

We also love the beagle, which made it to the top 10 list of most popular dog breeds in 2008 by the American Kennel Club. That's because they are so sweet and socialable, Coren said. "Sometimes people love the dumb blonde," Coren said.

And sometimes the dim-wits make better pets. While a smart dog will figure out everything you want it to know, your super pet will also learn everything it can get away with, Coren warns.

Saturday, August 08, 2009

Video: Song made entirely of Win 98/XP sounds

Video: Giant Water Slide

Evolutionary Gif


I found this gif at this site: http://www.changethethought.com/evolution-gif/


It’s the ending to “Mission to Mars”