New 360 degree video surveillance system gives criminals nowhere to hide

By (author unknown), Gizmag Emerging Technology MagazineJune 08, 2010 at 01:52AM

ISIS overcomes the shortfalls of traditional fish-eye surveillance cameras to provide perf...

It might be a sad indictment on today’s society but surveillance cameras are an increasingly common sight on city streets around the world. Most of these systems employ a fish-eye lens to capture a wide field of view, but such lenses distort the image and can only provide limited resolution. A new video surveillance system currently being developed by the Department of Homeland Security’s Science and Technology Directorate (S&T) overcomes these shortfalls to provide perfectly detailed, edge-to-edge images that could prove to be of great assistance to law enforcement…
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10 Ways to Use Google Books for Lifelong Learning and Research

By Saikat Basu, MakeUseOfJune 07, 2010 at 05:30PM

using google booksThe great thing about Google is that you can take any of its services and extend it to uses that are not so obvious. We have seen the uncounted ways you can use Google Search. Now, take Google Books for instance.

Google Books is a Google service that makes discovering book content easier for us on the web. It started way back in 2004 and since then its mission has been to digitally scan and archive tons of book.

Knowing the breakneck pace that Google sets, one day it could become the absolute knowledge tank as far as books go. The ongoing Partner Program and the Library Project are helping to rocket things along.

But Google Books does not allow you to download whole books unless it’s in the Public Domain. It also does not display the entire text of other books. What’s the point of using google books, you might say?


Plenty, if you can ‘exploit’ the information that’s freely available. Just think, there are more than a million books in the Public Domain alone. If you have a yen for information and a zest for lifelong learning, here are ten ideas for using Google Books.

Build Your Own Personal Library for Lifelong Learning

using google books

Building your own reference library (My Library) with Google Books is a good way to start off. Google Books allows you to read an entire book that’s out of copyright in Full View. Then for some books you can flip a few selected pages to have a Limited Preview. Even with Snippet View and books tagged with No Preview Available, you can get some idea what the book is all about.

Looking at the contents of an index for a particular book, gives me some ideas for further reading. Use the index like a keyword list and you can dive into the web for more information.

using google books

Also, think of your bookshelf on Google Books as a reading list for lifelong learning. To own a book you can take the help of the links provided alongside the book excerpt. From casual reading to serious research, the snippets of information are like untapped wealth.

You can do the reverse bit of adding the books on your physical bookshelf to the My Library in Google Books. Here’s how someone did it with a simple barcode scanner.

Your Very Own Magazine Stand

Of late, Google Books has started cataloging magazine too. Personally, I find Google Books a great place to look for magazines I wouldn’t have got at my corner store (Imagine going back to 1926 and reading Popular Science). Unlike books, each magazine in Google Books is fully viewable. Here’s how to read complete magazines online in Google Books.

Try the Advanced Book Search

Try out the Advanced Book Search when you are building your personal bookshelf on Google Books. You can search by language, or search more specifically, by ISBN/ISSN number, search between dates, etc. The date range search is useful when searching for magazines and periodicals.

A great use of the Advanced Book Search crops up when you go out to search for a book without knowing the title or author.

Reminder: You can now search for books directly from the Search Options panel on the new Google search page.

Share Your Library with Others

You can mark your bookshelves as Public and share it with others. The library’s URL can be sent to friends or posted on blogs. You can also refer to a single book (or any of its parts) by linking to it. You can even export your bookshelf as an XML file and share the exported file.

Exporting as XML is useful when you want to import the information into any desktop book manager or digital catalog.

Search for Specific Text within Your Own Collection

Once you have your personal bookshelf filled with choice material, it is easy to reference information as you can search within your own collection. Searching within a book is user friendly with the little hints that appear in the margin to indicate where you results are located. You can jump straight to that part with a click.

Find Copycats

You can put a piece of text within quotes and do a quick plagiarism check in Google Search. The search feature of Google Books is a Google Search child and can be similarly used to find copied text taken from published works.

Get the Meanings of Words in Context

How exactly do I use a word like ‘Morton’s fork’ in a sentence and be in sync with the context? Perform a Google Book search with the word as a keyword and get to the book texts where the word has been used.

Online dictionaries can also do the job, but this is just to show that Google Books has little uses like these too.

Search for Other Editions or Related Books

There have been instances when I have found a useful bit of information in an edition different to the one I was searching on. Going over to Related Books also helps to understand the different angles to a specific topic.

Download Google Books for Offline Reading

Books in the Public Domain can be downloaded to your desktop as PDF or EPUB files. A third party app called Google Book Downloader for Windows can download full view/limited view books, and magazines too.

Though it is no longer under active development, you can download Google Book Downloader from here. Downloading via this app does take some patience.

Mac users have their own Google Book Downloader for the Mac also available for download.

Using these two apps, you can work around the limitation of offline reading for some books and magazines.

Quench Your Hunger for Strange Knowledge

Let me cite the testimonial of Diane Gilleland as mentioned on Google Books’ User Stories. She stumbled on a forgotten knitting technique. For me, it could be something as mysterious as UFOs. A Google Books search gives me a lot of limited previews and snippet views. I can take it up from there. Just start doing a wild search, I am sure you will stumble on books (and topics) you never knew existed.

As the user stories show, the ten ways are just the few uses that we can put Google Books too. I am sure you have your own ideas for using Google Books too. There are some features that I haven’t covered. Definitely, Google Books deserve another post. For now, let us know how useful do you find this exhaustive Google service.

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Remembering D-Day, 66 years ago

By (author unknown), The Big PictureJune 07, 2010 at 02:06PM

Yesterday was June 6th, the 66th anniversary of the successful 1944 Allied invasion of France. Several operations were combined to carry out the largest amphibious invasion in history – over 160,000 troops landed on June 6th, assisted by over 5,000 ships, aerial bombardment, gliders and paratroopers. Thousands of soldiers lost their lives on those beaches on that day – many thousands more would follow as the invasion succeeded and troops began to push German forces eastward, eventually leading to the Allied victory in 1945. Collected here are some photographs of the preparation, execution and immediate aftermath of the 1944 D-Day invasion of Normandy, and a few images from 2010. (42 photos total)

U.S. troops disembark from a landing vehicle on Utah Beach on the coast of Normandy, France in June of 1944. Carcasses of destroyed vehicles litter the beach. (Regional Council of Basse-Normandie/U.S. National Archives)



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Studying the elusive fag hag : Women who like men who like men

By (author unknown), Scientific AmericanJune 07, 2010 at 01:30PM

As a decades-long fan of The Golden Girls , I was saddened to learn of the death of Rue McClanahan last week. In fact, I think I genuinely shed a palpable, detectable tear, which is something I can’t remember ever doing on the death of a celebrity, with the exception perhaps of Bea Arthur and Estelle Getty. It sounds rather homosexually cliché, I know, but my partner, Juan, and I have gotten into the habit of watching an episode of The Golden Girls every night before bed. And along with the other “girls,” as we call them, Rue’s character Blanche Devereaux–the libidinous southern belle with an insatiable appetite for rich cheesecake and rich men–has become something of an imaginary, smile-inducing friend in our home. Fortunately, Blanche’s carnal spirit is burned forever on our DVDs. But the news of McClanahan’s death inspired me to read more about her in real life–well, at least to expend enough finger energy to flitter over to her Wikipedia entry. I knew she’d been an outspoken advocate of gays and lesbians, as well as animals, but I didn’t realize that her support for the former went all the way back to 1971. Just a few short years after the Stonewall Riots, she co-starred in a movie set in a Greenwich gay bar called Some of My Best Friends Are … as a “vicious fag hag”. [More]

OSU aims to boost research revenue | The Columbus Dispatch

By Ben Blanquera, TechlifeJune 07, 2010 at 06:41AM

OSU aims to boost research revenue | The Columbus Dispatch

Ideas and discoveries are great, but they’re better if they can be put to work in the marketplace — and generate money for those who came up with them.

Ohio State University hasn’t done as well as its peers in this area, but it hopes to turn that around with the creation of a Technology Commercialization Center.

The center, to be housed within OSU’s Fisher College of Business, will bring together faculty inventors and business experts. They’ll evaluate the ideas coming out of the university — in varied areas that include engineering and health sciences as well as business and law — and help guide them toward the marketplace.

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IOGraph Makes Art from Your Mouse Tracks [Downloads]

By Adam Pash, LifehackerJune 04, 2010 at 01:00PM

IOGraphica.pngWindows/Mac/Linux: IOGraph is a free utility that tracks your mouse movements to create surprisingly beautiful works of computer art.

(Click the image above for a closer look.)

The app works simply: Download it, run it, and hit the big record button to get started. Just let it run while you work, check in occasionally to see how your work of art is coming along, and when you like where you’re at, just click the Save image button.

IOGraph-tool.png

IOGraph is a free download for Windows, Mac, and Linux. If you give it a try, share your results in the comments.