August 2008 Archives

http://groups.google.com/group/gears-users/browse_thread/thread/36537d4f47c5495c


From Gears Group LIst, August 2008

We are excited to share a beta version of Gears for Safari with you!!  We 
would love for you to install it and test it and file bug reports so we can 
polish it and find all the corner cases. 

Please note a few important points before you download: 

1. This is BETA, it is not an official release, it might break your browser. 
Chances are it will break your browser. Please proceed with caution. 

2. Please do not forward the download, since it's still in beta, we would 
like to make sure we patch up any issues before we officially release it. 

3. Minimum system requirements: Safari 3.1.1 on Tiger 10.4.11 or Leopard 
10.5.3. 

4. Make sure you have Gears 0.4.16.0 before you file bugs. You can check 
your version on http://gears.google.com

5. You can see a list of known bugs at: 
http://code.google.com/p/gears/issues/list?can=2&q=Safari 
<http://code.google.com/p/gears/issues/list?can=2&q=Safari%20
                         New bugs can be filed on our public tracker at: 
http://code.google.com/p/gears/issues/list 

6. This version will autoupdate, so once you have it installed you'll 
automagically get new versions as we release them. 

I want to reiterate that you are likely to have bugs and/or instability so 
please be aware of this before you install. 

You can download here: http://dl.google.com/gears/current/gears-osx-opt.dmg 

Thank you and we look forward to your feedback!! 

http://www.midasoracle.org/2008/05/07/final-intrade-v-zogby-showdown-results/

Chris Massey evaluated results of 21 2008 presidential primary elections, and compared predicted outcomes of InTrade vs. Zogby polls. 


The InTrade predictions average success 71.3% vs. 40.7% for the pollster.


Says Massey, "Unsurprising to those who know a little bit about the scholarship, economics, and/or track record of prediction markets, the traders of Intrade provided us much better data this election season than the respondents to the Zogby polls."

Prediction Markets - Barak Obama will Win


New from InTrade - a self-updating Obama/McCain prediction market close chart.

Even though the polls may say the election will be close, the Obama/McCain outcome shows a 20 point share gap for Obama. To see the effect on recent events, customize the chart.


Prediction Markets Podcast: Wolfers Interview


Often polls and pundits are often outperformed by a prediction market in which investors trade on the outcomes with real money. Prediction markets are a common subject of Wharton economics professor Justin Wolfers, often referenced by the authors of Freakonomics. Wolters defines Prediction Markets this way: 

Prediction Markets, sometimes referred to as “information markets,” “idea futures” or “event futures”, are markets where participants trade contracts whose payoffs are tied to a future event, thereby yielding prices that can be interpreted as market-aggregated forecasts.   Empirical applications show that market-generated forecasts typically outperform most moderately sophisticated benchmarks.  


Other Prediction market references: 



Attached, OPML file for my Feedburner rss feeds, including:

http://members.aol.com/rrcahtml/rrcacal.htm

From friend John Steinberg, RRCA US Master Runner of the Year, 2007


DateEventTimeLocationContact
September 2008
Sept. 13Jack's 50K Trail Race
& 25K Trail Race
8:00 a.m.Gamble Rogers State Park, Flagler BeachDawn Lisenby
(386) 986-8572
Register Online
Sept. 20Run for the Kids 5K7:70 a.m.Ponte Vedra Beach(904) 731-1900 
Expanded Race Info
First Place Sports
Sept. 27Children's Way 5K8:00 a.m.San Marco(904) 731-1900 
Expanded Race Info
First Place Sports

    



DateEventTimeLocationContact
October 2008
Oct. 4Marine Corps
Half Marathon & Freedom 5K
7:00 a.m.Memorial Wall
Jax Municipal Stadium
Jax
(904) 731-1900 
Expanded Race Info
First Place Sports
Oct. 11RITA St. John's Town Center 5K  (904) 731-1900 
Expanded Race Info
First Place Sports
Oct. 18Race for the Cure  (904) 731-1900 
Expanded Race Info
First Place Sports
Oct. 26Evergreen Pumpkin
Run, 10 mile & 5K
  (904) 731-1900 
Expanded Race Info
First Place Sports

    



DateEventTimeLocationContact
November 2008
Nov. 1Native Sun Mandarin Run 10K  (904) 731-1900 
Expanded Race Info
First Place Sports
Nov. 8Hog Jog   
Nov. 27Outback Steakhouse
Distance Classic
Half Marathon & 6K
8:00 a.m.9773 San Jose Blvd.
Jacksonville
(904) 731-1900 
Expanded Race Info
First Place Sports

    



DateEventTimeLocationContact
December 2008
Dec. 7Festival of Lights 5K  (904) 731-1900 
Expanded Race Info
First Place Sports
Dec. 13Reindeer Run 10K / 5K  (904) 731-1900 
Expanded Race Info
First Place Sports
Dec. 21Jacksonville Bank
Marathon/Half Marathon
7:00 a.m.Bolles School
7400 San Jose Blvd
Jax
(904) 731-1900 
Expanded Race Info
First Place Sports
Dec. 31Vystar Gator Bowl 5K  (904) 731-1900 
Expanded Race Info
First Place Sports



I often hear the statement, "you can't change the apps on the iPhone / iTouch". Not true. In August 2008, The group i-Phone Dev has published "Quick Pwn" software that releases the lock for the iTouch / iPhone. Still pending - 3G. Here is a March 2008 article about the controversial group:

Apple's Control of iPhone Software Targeted by Rogue Program

SAN FRANCISCO (Dow Jones)--The iPhone Dev Team, a group of independent software developers, say they are close to unleashing a new product that undoes the tight control Apple plans to have over the flow of the software to its iPhone.

The developer team is working on a feature it's calling Pwnage, which lets iPhones download and run other software programs that haven't gone through any official, Apple-controlled software distribution channels.

"You can do things like installing custom-made files, straight from (Apple's) iTunes," according to comments attributed to one of the iPhone Dev Team's developers, who goes by the name MuscleNerd, posted on the team's Web site, iphone-dev.org. "The tools are undergoing intensive developing and soon will be ready for public consumption."

Pwnage is the latest example of how disruptive software developers have been to Apple's best-laid plans for its iPhone, a key product for Apple. Once distributed, the Pwnage feature means Apple may no longer be able to count on taking a 30% share of every iPhone software program sold, as it said it would. Meanwhile, the Pwnage software also weakens the steps Apple is taking to rein in a developer community regarding iPhone software sales, which are expected to blossom into hundreds of millions of dollars, if not $1 billion a year, in annual sales.

As outlined by Apple about 10 days ago, starting sometime in June Apple plans to begin distributing iPhone software made by outside developers. But it first will inspect iPhone software programs from third parties, then distribute them either through Apple's iTunes Web store, or directly to the phone via an Apple-controlled "Apps Store."

Meanwhile, Pwnage may also weigh on Apple's plans to sell more iPhones to businesses, steps it announced two weeks ago when it said every iPhone will soon be able to access Microsoft's Outlook email. But Apple also plans to make business software providers like SAP or Oracle distribute their iPhone software through official Apple channels, a move that rankled an industry not used to having to deal with an intermediary. It remains to be seen, though, if enterprises would see the new Pwnage software as a decent workaround to the issue.

An Apple spokeswoman did not comment for this story, citing company policy not to talk about products in development at other companies. A representative for iPhone Dev Team, which rarely grants interviews, did not return several emails seeking comment.

The iPhone, a combination phone and digital media player with a touch-screen interface, was introduced last June, and has since become Apple's fastest selling device. As of two weeks ago, Apple was the No. 2 seller of smart phones, with a 28% share, behind No. 1-ranked Research In Motion, the maker of the BlackBerry wireless email device and cell phone.

Shortly after the iPhone was released, Apple promised to open the iPhone so developers could create and distribute software programs for the device. From the start, Apple has allowed developers to create Web-based features for the iPhone to use.

But lots of developers didn't wait for official channels. Within a few days of the iPhone's release, they came up with their first substantial, market-changing development: software to unlock the iPhone so it will work on any GSM-based cellphone network, rather than just AT&T's, which at the time was the only iPhone service provider.

Even though Apple wiped out those programs with an iPhone software update of its own, unlocking software still exists and its sales have thrived. Nearly 25% of all the iPhones sold, according to various estimates, are now unlocked, thus depriving Apple and its carrier partners the fees they would normally have collected from phone service revenue.

The popularity of the unlocking software is also putting more pressure on Apple to do away with its strategy of picking a single carrier per country to exclusively sell the device.

-By Ben Charny, Dow Jones Newswires; 415-765-8230; ben.charny@dowjones.com

My location

Instamapper iPhone app - more popular than the New York Times. GPS tracking powered by InstaMapper.com

Macosxhints.com Tech Tip

Sorry Grommit - if you want an easy way to move that widget, you've got the, er, wrong OS browser... 

Apple's Mac operating system is easier than Windows in many ways - in others, far more arcane and tricky. I have found several commonplace tasks difficult to complete. The beef here lies in poor extended OS functionality for common tasks, and very murky (read: none) documentation from Apple. 

Hey Apple - widgets are for any conceivable purpose,  by their very open source nature. Yeah, we like that nifty reveal function key, but how about making giving the widget options? Do you expect your millions of consumer users to learn to open the Terminal window and type: defaults write com.apple.dashboard devmode YES just to put a widget on their desktop? That would be a rotten Apple.

That's the end of the editorial, and here's the solution to keep your widget revealed on the desktop instead of hitting your stylish widget F12 or F4 function key (laptop/desktop respectively) which is the only out-of-the-box way to show them:

If you'd like one of your Dashboard widgets to be available all the time, instead of only when you have activated Dashboard via F12, then activate the Dashboard dvelopment mode. Open the Terminal and type defaults write com.apple.dashboard devmode YES and press Return. Then logout and log back in again. Now debugging mode is activated. To get a widget off of the Dashboard and onto your desktop, just do the following:
    1. Activate Dashboard by pressing F4 (or whatever key you've assigned to Dashboard).
    2. Begin dragging the widget.
    3. Press F4 again, before letting up on the mouse button.
    4. Drop the widget wherever you want it.
You can do the same thing in reverse to drag the widget back onto the Dashboard. Also of interest: while a widget is frontmost, you can press Command-R to reload it. (This may be necessary if a widget is buggy and gets messed up somehow.) There's even a nifty Core Image-based twirl effect to accompany the reload.
Intrade.com
Obama commands a 20 point lead on McCain in the InTrade prediction market. August trading has Obama down from a peak 68 to 60.

McCain trades below 40 and is making little progress during August so far, despite sharpened assaults on Obama, both sanctioned and "black ops" (those election year republican start-ups aka swiftboating).

The results during the August - September period will clarify the impact of those Republican   attacks on Obama's vulnerabilities. Polls show that McCain can't win based on popularity, but hasn't the strength in any voter issue to overcome the deficit. 

So they'll attempt to alter the voter's mind-map, moving Obama's popularity and likeability to a scary, dangerous concept (celebrity => instability, shallowness, narcissism, etc.). Yes, the republicans have developed a surgical expertise for using words to drive perceptions of their opponents to the subjective, emotional realm of the voter's mind, where they can win based on fear and dread and not 'our higher nature'. Will the voters be fooled again? 

The Intrade market says, not this time around. Stay tuned.

obama 0815.png

http://jquery.com/

jQuery is a new type of JavaScript library.

jQuery is a fast, concise, JavaScript Library that simplifies how you traverse HTML documents, handle events, perform animations, and add Ajax interactions to your web pages. jQuery is designed to change the way that you write JavaScript.

"You start with 10 lines of jQuery that would have been 20 lines of tedious DOM JavaScript. By the time you are done it's down to two or three lines and it couldn't get any shorter unless it read your mind." - Dave Methvin
Turns out there is a nifty trick to find search engines that have been developed on any topic.

In the google search box, enter:

inurl:cse inurl:coop site:google.com

Add the topic, and you will get the list you need. 

Examples: SAP BWCycling


ConsumerAffairs.com

| | Comments (0)
http://www.consumeraffairs.com/consumerism/faq.html#who

This is a good site to search for consumer complaints against online merchants or retailers generally. From the FAQ: ConsumerAffairs.com is an independent Web-based consumer news and resource center. We are not a government agency, not affiliated with any other consumer organization and not affiliated with any of the corporations whose products are reviewed on our site.

They have a custom consumer complaint Google search engine that seems to work pretty well.

http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?hl=en&gl=us&ptab=2&ie=UTF8&oe=UTF8&msa=0&msid=109874795671707336218.000453932399ba53b9d7c

Cycling Route from Grand Rapids to Grand Haven


`
View Larger Map
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/18/movies/18kenn.html?_r=1

My favorite film this year.

18kenn-600.jpg

Don’t Call Him a Filmmaker, at Least Not First

THE paintings on broken plates that made Julian Schnabel an art-world star in the early 1980s seemed to announce their importance not just by their retrograde swagger but also by their sheer weight. Hanging one on a wall was like suspending a cabinet full of Buffalo china.

The other day in a former smelting factory near the Gowanus Canal in Brooklyn a bunch of new paintings that he had hanging on the walls seemed by contrast to be almost weightless, looking as if skeins of smoke had settled on the canvas. But they were actually digitally printed blow-ups of antique French hospital X-rays that he had come across last year in northern Normandy. And as such they were pieces not simply of art but of argument, Mr. Schnabel’s pointed way of saying that while his life as a filmmaker may be threatening to eclipse his life as a painter, he still has his palette firmly in hand.