Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Square gets $100M, valued at $1B

via GigaOM — Tech News, Analysis and Trends

One thing is clear: Investors love Square, the payments company co-founded by Jack Dorsey, the co-creator of Twitter. The ... Read More >>

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Tuesday, June 28, 2011

StumbleUpon Lets Bloggers Share Content With New Widget

via Mashable!

StumbleUpon just launched a new widget maker for bloggers that allows them to showcase content found on StumbleUpon on their ... Read More >>

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Monday, June 27, 2011

HOW TO: Claim Your Business On Facebook Places

via Mashable!

Facebook Places is essentially free word-of-mouth advertising for your business. When customers check in, they’ll ... Read More >>

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Sunday, June 26, 2011

Telcos could be the key to Twitter’s revenue model

via GigaOM — Tech News, Analysis and Trends

Twitter is using a service provided by a telco spin out to access telco APIs for its new photo service. As part of this move ... Read More >>

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Friday, June 24, 2011

Build Mobile Apps for Android Devices, BlackBerry PlayBook, iPhone and iPad Today!

via Adobe Flash Platform Blog

Since our April news announcing Adobe Flash Builder 4.5 and Flex 4.5, we began with support for building mobile apps across ... Read More >>

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Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Former U.S. Treasury Secretary Larry Summers Joins Square’s Board

via Mashable!

Mobile payments startup Square has added some economic muscle to its board of directors with Larry Summers, the former U.S. ... Read More >>

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How PARC wants to reinvent the Internet

via GigaOM — Tech News, Analysis and Trends

PARC is working on a new networking technology that would make it possible for end users to connect with each other through "a ... Read More >>

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Monday, June 20, 2011

Re-posting from Fast Company: 4 Persuasive Presentation Preparation Tips

Bubbling Up - Again

From OmegaSDG Project Wiki

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Following are the details of a project to create a completely autonomous "second layer" of the Internet, completely free of the influence of or need for Internet Service Providers, and untouchable by the government. This plan is named after Leonard Kleinrock, inventor of the Internet Packet. It has been enacted after news of a bill entering the United States Senate which would allow a President to disable all Internet connectivity within the United States. (We later heard that this bill doesn't do quite that, but that the President has had the power to shut down any telecommunications network (as defined by the FCC) for over 70 years.)

Current Stage: Discretionary

Contents

[hide]

Abstract

Project Kleinrock is an attempt to create an autonomous and decentralized "second layer" of the Internet, which can operate without the use of Internet Service Providers. This network can be set up using nothing more than common household wifi routers. It works by creating a web of routers, connected to each other by switching them into repeater mode, a mode that most routers are capable of. In repeater mode, routers can act as relays, amplifying and rebroadcasting the signal of the router they are connected to, and preserving that router's connections. Each router is connected to a computer which acts as a server, hosting documents which can be accessed from anywhere along the network.

With enough cooperation, and a large number of open "Kleinrock Nodes", an entire neighborhood, or even an entire city, can become networked by stringing all of the routers together, and the Kleinrock layer will be accessible to anyone with a wifi-enabled device. From here, it is trivial to connect multiple Kleinrock networks to each other. Since the network is entirely wifi-based, no ISP connections are necessary, and the network cannot be destroyed without the deactivation of every Kleinrock router.

Reasons

  • The President of the United States has had, for more than 70 years, the power to shut down all Internet connections (or in fact any communications network) within the United States during times of "National Crisis".
  • The new bill entering the senate will give the President the power to shut down these connections for at least 4 months WITHOUT congress approval.
  • The Internet is currently completely controlled by the government and a small number of self-interested corporations.
  • The Internet is one of the most important communications networks in existence.
  • The shutdown of the Internet, even within a single country, would be absolutely devastating.
  • Project Kleinrock is relatively easy to set up, and will create a new Internet controlled by no-one.
  • With Kleinrock, the Internet can become a free service, with free access and free hosting. The only cost to access the Kleinrock Network will be that of purchasing a router, laptop, or any wifi-capable device.
  • Kleinrock is a super cool name.

Procedure

Following are the procedures for setting up a successful Kleinrock network.

Setting up the Network

A Kleinrock Network can be set up easily with the cooperation of a few people over an area. Only 2 or 3 routers are required to enable an entire neighborhood block, and an entire neighborhood or even a town or city can be enabled just as easily. Most common household routers are capable of becoming Kleinrock Nodes.

Router Setup

  • Using your router's instruction manual, find out if your router is capable of repeater mode.
  • Rename your router using the naming scheme discussed in the "Router Identification" section.
  • Switch your router into open mode (no password or encryption).
  • Switch your router into repeater mode, and connect it to any nearby Kleinrock Router.
  • Your router is now a Kleinrock Router!

Notes

  • If the router you are setting up as a Kleinrock Router is the same router you use for your Internet Subscription, others will be able to access the Internet through your Kleinrock Router, and this will slow down your Internet use. If you do not want to provide this kind of Internet access, there are 2 solutions:

1) Buy a second router, and use it as a Kleinrock Router without modifying your existing router.
2) Install a firewall to limit Internet connections to the users within your local network.

Kleinrock Servers

While routers are essential, and extremely helpful in increasing the range of a Kleinrock Network, the network also requires servers to host documents, websites and services, and to broadcast information required for the operation of the network. If you want to help even more, you should download and install the Kleinrock Server Package for your operating system. (Not yet available).

Server Package Components

  • Lighttpd web server (For the Kleinrock Site Indexer)
  • Kleinrock Site Indexer (version 1 almost finished)
  • Dot-P2P DNS Node client/server (For .klein decentralized domain names)
  • SQLite (For the Kleinrock Site Indexer)
  • Python (For the Kleinrock Site Indexer)
  • Instruction Manual

Cluster Nodes

By acquiring several routers and connecting them together by cables inside your own home, you can create a "Kleinrock Cluster", a super router that can repeat several nearby routers at once. By connecting them to each other and setting each to repeat a different router, you can drastically increase the redundancy and stability of the Kleinrock Network with little effort.

Router Identification

The current convention is that all Kleinrock Routers should be named "Kleinrock-Node" and be open and without password. Giving all routers the same name allows most wifi-enabled devices to automatically reconnect when they move out of the range of one router and into the range of another.

Evangelism

The more Kleinrock Routers active, and the wider their range, the bigger and better the network will become. Once project Kleinrock is put underway, please inform everyone you know, and even people you don't know, about the benefits and ease of setting up a Kleinrock Router. It is especially important to get routers activated within range of each other, and in areas least dense with Kleinrock Routers. An "Evangelist Guide" and a pamphlet for prospective router owners will be prepared in the future.

Diagrams

In repeater mode, routers can connect to each other and rebroadcast the signal, preserving the network structure. Each router can only repeat one other router, but a router can be repeated by several routers. Following is a diagram of an example Kleinrock Network.

C = Client
R = Router
S = Server

The arrows indicate the router being repeated.
A router can have multiple servers.
Routers can be connected to each other by wires to create a Kleinrock Cluster. This effectively creates a super-router which can repeat multiple routers.

Kleinrock Network Ex1.png

Initiatives like Bitcoin and this one called Project Kleinrock are emerging with increasing frequency from more obscure-seeming corners into more mainstream news streams. Again. Combined with increased white hat hacking (Sony, Congess, CIA), we see that there's a rising tide of unrest in not-so-dark corners of the interwebs. All of these share one thing: the defining principle that calls for decentralizing the operation and control of such vital resources as money and the global internet from a small group of companies and powerful interests and replacing that power structure with one that is ostensibly more open and democratic.

Question: who cares who runs it, if it's run with the same disregard for basic safeguards, rights, and equalities. What makes one master any more attractive than any other?

Posted via email from thinblog

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Why All The Daily Deal Hate?

via TechCrunch

Some people have been asking me why I've spent the last 10 days writing about Groupon. What's my hidden agenda? I'm tired of ... Read More >>

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Monday, June 13, 2011

(Founder Stories) How Mike McCue Came Up With Flipboard: “What If We Accidentally Deleted The Web”

via TechCrunch

How did Mike McCue come up with the idea for Flipboard, the iPad reader that's seeing more than 10 million flips a day? In ... Read More >>

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Saturday, June 11, 2011

5 Ways To Raise Funds for Your Startup

via Mashable!

Raising capital can be the hardest step in launching a startup. You can be passionate about your idea and convince a lot of ... Read More >>

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Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Recollection: A Collaborative Tool For Sharing And Visualizing Cultural Data

via Fast Company

A new service from the Library of Congress lets you build maps, graphs, timelines, and trees from the collective digital and ... Read More >>

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Stealthy Startup SnapGuide Closes $2 Million Round

via TechCrunch

Talk about a happy birthday. SnapGuide, a stealthy mobile startup founded by Daniel Raffel and Steve Krulewitz, has just closed ... Read More >>

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Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Square’s valuation soars to $1B

via Alltop RSS

Payment service startup Square is the latest company to hit a $1 billion valuation, reports TechCrunch. According to ... Read More >>

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Online Marketplaces Move to Location-Based Apps

via Mashable!

Sites like eBay, Amazon and Craigslist moved person-to-person marketplaces from people’s lawns to the Internet. Now a ... Read More >>

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Sunday, June 5, 2011

How To Embed Practically Anything On Your Blog or Website

via Mashable!

If you want the hands-down, easiest way to embed practically anything on your blog or website, have we got a tool for you! ... Read More >>

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The Kno Textbook App Hits The iPad

via TechCrunch

Last night, Kno quietly released its first digital textbook app for the iPad. It includes its own store of "over 70,000 ... Read More >>

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Business: The Next Daily-Deal Frontier

via GigaOM — Tech News, Analysis and Trends

While Groupon clones have saturated the consumer space, the enterprise sector has barely been tapped. GroupPrice offers daily ... Read More >>

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Friday, June 3, 2011

How Facebook Can Put Google Out of Business

via TechCrunch

I was surprised to hear former Google CEO Eric Schmidt publicly lament lost opportunities and missed chances to catch ... Read More >>

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Thursday, June 2, 2011

eBook of the Day only $9.99! Developing Android Applications with Flex 4.5

via EverythingFlex: Flex & AIR

Tweeturl='http://blog.everythingflex.com/2011/05/27/ebook-of-the-day-only-9-99-developing-android-applications-with-flex-4-5/';T Read More >>

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How the Adobe Evangelists Super Blog was Implemented

via Gregs Ramblings

Last week, we launched the Adobe Evangelists Super Blog (details here).  Several people have asked me how the Evangelists Super ... Read More >>

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How to set up Gmail to power through hundreds of messages each day

via Gmail Blog

Posted by Paul McDonald, Product Manager Gmail offers a ton of customization, and when you get hundreds of emails every day ... Read More >>

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Introducing schema.org: Search engines come together for a richer web

via The Official Google Blog

(Cross-posted on the Inside Search Blog) Today we’re announcing schema.org, a new initiative from Google, Bing and Yahoo! to ... Read More >>

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Need an API? Try Mashape’s Marketplace [INVITES]

via Mashable!

Startup Mashape launched a marketplace for APIs of all kinds Thursday. For startups looking to create or license their ... Read More >>

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What the Smart Watch of the Future Taught Me

via GigaOM · Tech News, Analysis and Trends

There are many visions of what a smart watch ought to do, but the more functionality added, the more complex and disruptive the ... Read More >>

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