Thursday, 30 June 2011

Want To See Which Ads Perform Best? YC-Backed MixRank Is A Spy Tool For AdSense

Online advertising is growing, and much of that growth is happening in display advertising. While search ads still make up 46 percent of the total over display's 38 percent, display grew twice as fast as search in 2010. Many online businesses rely on advertising as a supplemental revenue stream in support of their business model -- if not the sole source -- especially from AdSense. As such, companies and startups spend a lot of time testing out different ad iterations, looks, and copy in an effort to find the most clickable ad content and the most lucrative campaigns. And, interestingly, relatively tiny tweaks to wording and content in ads can have a fairly dramatic effect on clickthrough rates, increasing them as much as tenfold.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/d7pNf97a3sg/

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Star Wars fans want Sony sued over game shutdown

Fear of loss, a path to the dark side is

Fans of the LucasArts' MMOG, Star Wars Galaxies, are so upset by Sony Online Entertainment's decision to axe the title this December, that they claim they're planning to file a lawsuit.?

Source: http://go.theregister.com/feed/www.reghardware.com/2011/06/30/star_wars_fans_want_to_sue_sony_for_game_closure/

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Righthaven: Blame Our Clueless Lawyer, But Don't Sanction Us, For Failing To Name Stephens Media As An Interested Party

The flailing disaster that is Righthaven just got that much more desperate and ridiculous. As you may recall, when Judge Roger Hunt ruled that the Stephens Media/Righthaven copyright transfer was a sham, the part that he got really incensed about (and it seems he was already pretty upset about the bogus transfer), was the fact that Righthaven totally failed to name Stephens Media as having an interest in the outcome of the lawsuit, as required by the law. This is pretty basic stuff that any trial lawyer knows. Judge Hunt called this "factually brazen" and demanded that Righthaven provide an explanation why it shouldn't be sanctioned:
As shown in the preceding pages, the Court believes that Righthaven has made multiple inaccurate and likely dishonest statements to the Court. Here, however, the Court will only focus on the most factually brazen: Righthaven’s failure to disclose Stephens Media as an interested party in Righthaven’s Certificate of Interested Parties. (Dkt. #5.) Rule 7.1-1 of the Local Rules of Practice for the District of Nevada requires parties to disclose “all persons, associations of persons, firms, partnerships or corporations (including parent corporations) which have a direct, pecuniary interest in the outcome of the case.” This Local Rule requires greater disclosure than Federal Rule 7.1, which only requires non-governmental corporate parties to disclose parent corporations or corporations owning more than 10% of the party’s stock. Frankly, if receiving 50% of litigation proceeds minus costs (Dkt. #79, SAA Section 5) does not create a pecuniary interest under Local Rule 7.1-1, the Court isn’t sure what would.

Making this failure more egregious, not only did Righthaven fail to identify Stephens Media as an interested party in this suit, the Court believes that Righthaven failed to disclose Stephens Media as an interested party in any of its approximately 200 cases filed in this District. Accordingly, the Court orders Righthaven to show cause, in writing, no later than two (2) weeks from the date of this order, why it should not be sanctioned for this flagrant misrepresentation to the Court.
So, now, Righthaven has filed its response, and I get the feeling it's not going to satisfy Judge Hunt at all. The response, written by Righthaven lawyer Shawn Mangano, basically throws an unnamed "former in house counsel for Righthaven" under the bus, claiming that he "failed to consider the full scope" of the rules that meant he had to disclose Stephens Media's monetary interest. This is, frankly speaking, ridiculous. The law is pretty clear:
Unless otherwise ordered, in all cases except habeas corpus cases counsel for private (non-governmental) parties shall identify in the disclosure statement required by Fed. R. Civ. P. 7.1 all persons, associations of persons, firms, partnerships or corporations (including parent corporations) which have a direct, pecuniary interest in the outcome of the case.
The filing insists that Righthaven was not willfully trying to avoid complying with the law and suggests that reasonable minds could differ over the interpretation of the above, because the monetary interest Stephens Media had in the case was "indirect" because money gets paid to Righthaven first, and then Righthaven paid Stephens Media. That may be the most tortured reading of "direct" I've ever seen:
Rather, former in house counsel for Righthaven apparently failed to consider the full scope of the "direct, pecuniary interest" language under Local Rule 7.1-1 in failing to list Stephens Media on its Certificate of Interested Parties.... Unlike its federal rule counterpart, Local Rule 7.1-1 does not define what constitutes a direct, pecuniary interest and there is an absence of case law addressing the scope of the required disclosures. While the Court has concluded otherwise, it is certainly understandable how Local Rule 7.1-1 could have arguably been reasonably construed to not require the disclosure of Stephens Media’s interest in any recovery in excess of costs under the Strategic Alliance Agreement (the "SAA").

The obligation to disclose Stephens Media as an interested party pursuant to Local Rule 7.1-1 was certainly not appreciated by Righthaven's undersigned outside counsel, who has been licensed to practice before this Court since 1998.... Counsel reasonably viewed any contingent payment to Stephens Media under the SAA as constituting an indirect interest that required a two-step payment process assuming any case resulted in a recovery.... Simply put, receipt of settlement funds through settlement or recovery by the enforcement of a judgment would be made to Righthaven.... Righthaven would then be contractually obligated under the SAA to subsequently pay Stephens Media any recovered sums over and above costs incurred.... Thus, while counsel certainly appreciates the Court's guidance and will adhere to its decision, there is certainly an arguable and reasonable basis to construe Stephens Media's pecuniary interest as indirect, and not direct, under the SAA.
Somehow, I don't think that's going to fly, at all. The filing goes on to note that the court obviously should have just known about Stephens Media's interest in the case because there was so much press coverage about it. I'm not sure the point of that. Are they implying that if something is in the news, they don't have to follow the disclosure law?

Also, as Eric Goldman notes, the filing is extremely disingenuous in that in throwing the "former in house counsel" under the bus, it ignores the fact that Righthaven CEO Steve Gibson signed the complaint in this case (against Democratic Underground), meaning he was taking responsibility for the statements. Furthermore, it doesn't address the other 270 or so cases Righthaven has filed, all of which have the same problem, and not all of which were signed by the same "former in house counsel." Indeed, many of those were signed by Mangano himself. And Judge Hunt knows this -- which is why he mentioned the other 200+ cases in the question about sanctions.

This is characteristically weak from Righthaven, and it seems likely that the company is about to get slammed hard by Judge Hunt here.

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Source: http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20110630/10065514923/righthaven-blame-our-clueless-lawyer-dont-sanction-us-failing-to-name-stephens-media-as-interested-party.shtml

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Peter Diamond withdraws 3rd Fed nomination

STAFF REPORTER
On June 5 Peter A. Diamond PhD ?63 announced that he would withdraw his nomination to the Federal Reserve Board of Governors. Senate Republicans had repeatedly blocked President Barack Obama?s nomination of Diamond, an MIT professor of economics and the 2010 Nobel Prize winner. Diamond explained his decision and delivered an indictment to partisan politics in his June 6 New York Times opinion column ?When a Nobel Prize Isn?t Enough.? Obama first named Diamond as a candidate to fill one of three long-standing vacancies on the Federal Reserve Board in April 2010.

Source: http://tech.mit.edu/V131/N28/diamond.html

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Men?s track and field team captures 11th straight title Competes in NCAA Division III National Championships, takes second place in New England

DAPER STAFF
The MIT men?s and women?s track teams competed at the NCAA Division III National Championships in Delaware, Ohio two weekends ago. The men?s team, which captured its 11th straight conference title and finished second in New England, had three representatives: Kenneth B. Cooper ?13, Paul D. Welle ?11, and Vladimir Sobes ?11. Cooper was the first competitor for MIT in the hammer throw. Mother nature was not cooperative, however, as a lightning delay postponed the meet during Cooper?s flight. After returning to action, Cooper fouled on two of his attempts, and his third was not enough to qualify for the final. He finished in 17th place with a throw of 176-00 feet.

Source: http://tech.mit.edu/V131/N28/track.html

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Wednesday, 29 June 2011

Ariz. cops' personal emails hacked by AntiSec

Arizona state police have once again been targeted in a hacking attack, but this time their personal emails have been breached, an official confirmed Wednesday.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/43581038/ns/technology_and_science-security/

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'World of Warcraft' ... your first hit is now free

In an attempt to woo more "World of Warcraft" players into the fold, the folks at Blizzard Entertainment have made the first 20 levels of the massively popular online fantasy game free to play. It's a move that comes as the game gears up to face its biggest competition yet.In an attempt to woo more "World of Warcraft" players into the fold, the folks at Blizzard Entertainment have made the first 20 levels of the massively popular online fantasy game free to play. It's a move that comes as the game gears up to face its biggest competition yet.


Source: http://ingame.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/06/29/6974935-world-of-warcraft-your-first-hit-is-now-free

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Ubellacker ?13 swims to win Earns spot on Academic All-America program

DAPER STAFF
Wyatt L. Ubellacker ?13 was named to the third team of COSIDA?s Academic All-America program. As a swimmer, Wyatt earned a spot on the at-large team ? the most competitive team that includes student athletes who compete in a variety of sports, including swimming and diving, men?s volleyball, tennis, lacrosse, field hockey, and fencing. He was named to the First Team All-District, which includes all New England states, New York, and several Canadian provinces.

Source: http://tech.mit.edu/V131/N28/swimming.html

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Capcom Blocks Resident Evil Game Reset, Resale Value Reduced

Capcom Blocks Resident Evil Game Reset, Resale Value Reduced

Game publisher Capcom has added a new and infuriating feature to its new Resident Evil: The Mercenaries 3D game for Nintendo 3DS that prevents consumers from reselling the game.

Source: http://www.itproportal.com/2011/06/29/capcom-blocks-resident-evil-game-reset-resale-value-reduced/

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Gmail Contacts auto-save can now be disabled plus myriad of small updates

Gmail auto-contact settings
The Gmail team has been busy behind the scenes of late addressing a plentiful supply of little niggles. First up on the chopping block is the annoying (or amazing, depending on how you look at it) auto-save contacts feature, which has been the bane of many-a-contact neat-freak (myself included) since its inception. Now Google has finally added an option to turn off the auto-save contacts feature. It's available in the 'General' tab of Gmail settings going forward, and should please anyone who syncs their phone contacts with Gmail contacts.

Gmail will also now point out any incorrectly entered email addresses visually, rather than simply telling you something was wrong. This will be handy for anyone addressing emails to a long list of recipients, as it'll be a lot easier to spot the typo. A few of Gmail's error messages have also migrated from pop-ups to in-window messages that allow you to action things more easily, while still getting on with the task in hand. Gmail will also now send you back to the message you were looking at if you happen to create a filter for 'messages like these,' a nice tweak that should save you some time.

If you're into your keyboard shortcuts, Gmail now has one turned on by default and that's the shortcut help key. Hit 'shift' and '?' together and you'll be presented with an overlay detailing all the keyboard shortcuts available to boost your productivity. Last but not least, the 'refresh' link is now a button on to match the rest of the buttons on the toolbar. Consistency in UI is important for a decent user experience, and now Gmail conforms just a little bit more.

To check out these little changes, all you have to do is head to your Gmail and have a look around the UI. Many people rely daily on Gmail in the browser, and these small, but important changes, can make the difference between a slick and productive experience, and a sluggish and frustrating one.

Gmail Contacts auto-save can now be disabled plus myriad of small updates originally appeared on Download Squad on Thu, 07 Apr 2011 04:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://downloadsquad.switched.com/2011/04/07/gmail-contacts-auto-save-can-now-be-disabled-plus-myriad-of-smal/

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Sony CEO asked to step down after hacking fiasco

It hasn't been a good day for Sony CEO Howard Stringer. At a shareholders meeting Tuesday, the executive found himself in the hot seat over the PlayStation Network hacking fiasco and he found himself taking a pay cut as well.It hasn't been a good day for Sony CEO Howard Stringer. At a shareholders meeting Tuesday, the executive found himself in the hot seat over the PlayStation Network hacking fiasco and he found himself taking a pay cut as well.


Source: http://ingame.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/06/28/6965607-sony-ceo-asked-to-step-down-on-heels-of-hacking-fiasco

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Google Gets All Designy With Updated Homepage, Search Results And Free Fonts

Oh, so you thought Google was done after it rolled out Google+, Circles, Sparks, Huddle, and Hangouts? No, no, no. Google will be done when that's Google-brand oxygen you're breathing. This afternoon, the Google rollout announcements have continued, as the official Google blog quietly declared (relatively speaking) that the Google Search page (and products across the Google empire) will be getting "a bit of a makeover" over the next few months. And there are new web fonts, too. OMGoogle!

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/E_8IYVIBbEs/

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Black Eyed Pea Fergie goes on stage with an OLED outfit

American hip-hop group Black Eyed Peas went on stage on Paris on three shows, wearing clothes embroidered with LEDs and OLED lighting panels from Philips. Fergie had a 'leather cat woman' outfit that has 75 white Lumiblade OLED panels. The panels were controlled remotely - and were synchronized to the music and lighting sequences.

Black Eyed Peas Fergie OLED outfit photo

Philips' OLED panels (Lumiblades) were the first to be released back in 2009. Philips' panels come in different sizes, shapes and colors, not just white squares. Check out our hands-on review of the Lumiblade OLED lighting panels.

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/%7Er/oled-info/%7E3/JKR3MJeilWw/black-eyed-peass-fergie-goes-stage-oled-dress

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Tuesday, 28 June 2011

The Royal Society wants kids to make graphene, puts the miracle material in games

Graphene GamesIf we were more musically inclined we might write a ballad singing the praises of graphene -- the magical material that can be used in everything from super-fast CPUs to ultra-efficient solar panels. Sadly, the truth is, we're bloggers and not rock stars for a reason, so we'll just entertain ourselves with the Royal Society's Summer Science exhibition on the carbon nano-structure instead. From July 5th through 10th the London-based science center will run a major hands-on exhibit where participants will get a chance to see graphene under a microscope and create their own single layers of of the stuff with nothing more than a pencil and some scotch tape. If getting to the Trafalgar Square-adjacent academy is out of the question, you can always fire up the promotional and educational Graphene Games, which you can download for both Android and iOS at the more coverage links.

The Royal Society wants kids to make graphene, puts the miracle material in games originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 28 Jun 2011 13:16:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/06/28/the-royal-society-wants-kids-to-make-graphene-puts-the-miracle/

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�Torrent 3.0: How to Enable Streaming

The new version of the popular Bit Torrent client allows you to watch videos with progressive downloads which means you can preview a file before waiting for it to fully download. You need to enable the feature and set the video player to be used.
(...)Read the rest of �Torrent 3.0: How to Enable Streaming [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Tech-RecipesMain/~3/-s3bXlnBKsQ/

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Chromosome ends tied to life history, chronic diseases

University of California-San Francisco's Liz Blackburn got her Nobel Prize for studies that identified the specialized bit of machinery, called telomerase, that maintains the ends of chromosomes, which would otherwise be expected to shrink every time the cell divides. That shrinkage is thought to set a limit on the number of cell divisions that can occur in normal cells, and the Prize recognized that its reactivation appears to be a necessary step in the transformation to cancerous growth. But Blackburn used her talk at the Lindau Nobel Laureates meeting to argue that all sorts of diseases were associated with changes in telomerase activity, and that the chromosome ends provide a readout of a person's life history. And she's got a robot that's busy generating data to back her up.

Bacteria and Archaea have circular chromosomes, which ensures that the DNA has no loose ends in these cells. The complex cells of eukaryotes have linear chromosomes in their nucleus. This creates two problems. The DNA repair abilities of the cells should view the ends, or telomeres, of the chromosomes as a site where a chromosome has broken, and attempt to repair it. In addition, the enzymes that copy DNA are unable to start copying at the end of a piece of DNA. Thus, whenever a cell has to copy the DNA, the copying process will necessarily ignore some of the ends of the chromosome.

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Source: http://feeds.arstechnica.com/~r/arstechnica/index/~3/PWxgLMM-k1Q/chromosome-ends-tied-to-life-history-chronic-diseases.ars

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Apple offers $49 Thunderbolt cable, $1500 RAID array

Apple has released a US$49 Thunderbolt cable, following yesterday's Thunderbolt firmware update. The cable lets you connect Thunderbolt-capable peripherals to your MacBook Pro or iMac, use target disk mode between two compatible Macs or use an iMac as a display with a Thunderbolt-equipped MacBook Pro.

Those with compatible Macs will want to pick this up and start transferring data ... to other compatible Macs. If, however, you've got a cool grand or two burning a hole in your equipment budget, the Apple Store is also now shipping Promise's Pegasus R6 Thunderbolt RAID system. The tower unit offers 6 TB of fast storage for $1,499 or a 12 TB option for $1,999.

Apple offers $49 Thunderbolt cable, $1500 RAID array originally appeared on TUAW - The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Tue, 28 Jun 2011 09:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.tuaw.com/2011/06/28/apple-offers-49-thunderbolt-cable-1500-raid-array/

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Digital Agency MartinJAY Acquires Assets Of Social Media Analyst SocialBlaze

MartinJAY Digital this morning announced that it has acquired the assets of Social Blaze, a Los Angeles, California-based developer of social media management and analytics service. The digital agency purchased all of the company's intellectual assets, including patent rights, source code and domain names, for an undisclosed sum. MartinJAY says it acquired the social media management application developer, which was founded in 2009, to expand its ability to provide social web strategies and ROI to its clients.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/Qj2Ifen2ptc/

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SPORTS SHORT

Source: http://tech.mit.edu/V131/N28/halloffame.html

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Lifetime access to up-to-date info—is this the future of the textbook?

As an undergraduate student majoring in chemistry and biochemistry, I spent a lot of money on science textbooks. When classes ended, I kept all of my books instead of selling them back for pennies on the dollar. I thought that I would be able to use those books as references in graduate school and beyond. Sadly, I never cracked open most of them again, and now they’re too outdated to sell. 

The main problem is that textbooks are not research-oriented, nor are they up-to-date. Most are already behind the times by the time you buy them. Of course, the relevance of having an updated textbook is field-dependent. Topics in biochemistry and molecular biology change much more quickly than those in general chemistry. Nevertheless, for many fields, an up-to-date textbook could be a useful tool, both for the professors who have to teach from it and for any students that continue in the field.

Textbooks are also falling behind when it comes to technology, as any interactive content has to be provided via separate media. Thus, it was exciting to see the implementation of what's being claimed as the “first interactive textbook” called Principles of Biology. Introductory biology courses in the California State University (CSU) system will use Principles of Biology as the primary text for the 2011/2012 academic year. We got in touch with Vikram Savkar, senior vice president and publishing director at Nature Publishing Group (NPG), to get the details on how students can benefit from interactive, digital textbooks.

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Source: http://feeds.arstechnica.com/~r/arstechnica/index/~3/IJHrF341Otc/textbooks-of-the-future-will-be-born-digital-and-accessible.ars

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