Archive for August, 2009

Guitar Legend Les Paul Dies at Age 94

Les Paul, the guitarist and inventor who changed the course of music with the electric guitar and multitrack recording and had a string of hits, many with wife Mary Ford, died on Thursday. He was 94.

According to Gibson Guitar, Paul died of complications from pneumonia at White Plains Hospital. His family and friends were by his side.

He had been hospitalized in February 2006 when he learned he won two Grammys for an album he released after his 90th birthday, “Les Paul & Friends: American Made, World Played.”

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Energy Department eyes superfast Ethernet

Scientists will collaborate with as-yet-unnamed hardware and software vendors to develop a prototype 100Gbps Ethernet network, which will be used to connect U.S. Department of Energy supercomputer centers.

The aim is to develop a network capable of handling 1Tb (terabit) per second, according to Michael Strayer, head of the Department of Energy’s office of advanced scientific computing research.

“This network will serve as a pilot for a future network-wide deployment of 100Gbps Ethernet in research and commercial networks, and represents a major step toward the DOE’s vision of a 1Tb–1,000 times faster than 1Gb–network interconnecting DOE Office of Science supercomputer centers,” Strayer was quoted as saying in a statement.

The network will be used by scientists to share data and research in such areas as climate-change modeling, and for collaborative projects such as the Large Hadron Collider, the world’s largest particle accelerator. Businesses will benefit as 10Gbps and 1Gbps networks will become more affordable, said the statement.

Source :

CNETNews Energy Department eyes superfast Ethernet http://bit.ly/PfwK

Open Social gadgets now available on iGoogle

Google is ready to open up its iGoogle home page to the social world.

The company is expected to announce Wednesday that gadgets for iGoogle can now take advantage of the Open Social API to build social-networking features into the small little software programs that iGoogle users can use to customize their home pages, according to Marissa Mayer, vice president for search products and experience. For example, gadgets will now be available for Flickr, YouTube, and social games like Scrabble.

Google opened up the Open Social API to iGoogle developers last year, but only in the “sandbox,” a protected area for experimentation. If developers like what they see, it could help turn iGoogle from a personalized home page for “tens of millions of users,” according to Mayer, into sort of a mini social network.

For example, friends (who have to be iGoogle users) can share YouTube videos that will appear automatically on the iGoogle home screen if you choose to embed that gadget on your home page. You can also access a “stream” of updates and see all the different types of content your friends have shared recently.

That’s exactly what Facebook’s News Feed does for folks on that social network. Google downplayed attempts to compare this service directly to other sites like Facebook, but “we’d like people to see all of the ‘push’ content that they would like to see on this page,” Mayer said. She was referring to content that is regularly updated and delivered to the user, as opposed to search, where a user “pulls” information from Google.

iGoogle users in Australia have been using these social gadgets for about a week. Games and news dominate the first crop of Open Social gadgets on iGoogle, with chess, Scrabble, The New York Times, Huffington Post, and NPR represented among the initial 14 applications from third parties.

Source :

CNETNews Open Social gadgets now available on iGoogle http://bit.ly/TrsQb

Some 400+ Google Checkout stores offer discounts for back-to-school shopping

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Another school year is just around the corner, and Google Checkout is here to help you save time and money on all of your back-to-school shopping.

Over 400 Checkout stores are now offering exclusive discounts of $5, $10, or $20 on purchases made through September 1st. You can get a head start on your shopping by checking out our product gadget that features school gear from participating stores.

After you’ve stocked up on your back-to-school essentials, Google Checkout can also help you shop smarter all year long with one secure login for thousands of stores across the web.

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Source :

google Some 400+ Google Checkout stores offer discounts for back-to-school shopping: http://bit.ly/D4X3F

Perseid meteor shower to light up night sky for a week

Did you notice hundreds of necks craned to the sky Tuesday night?

They were gawking at the annual Perseid meteor shower, which every year brings up to 100 meteors per hour blazing fiery streaks across the sky as the Earth passes through the dust trail of Comet Swift-Tuttle, said Mark Hammergren, an astronomer at Adler Planetarium.

The bright spectacle isn’t over yet. The meteor shower is expected to peak between 12:30 and 3 p.m. Wednesday but sky watchers only can see the meteors in the dark, Hammergren said. So sit tight until the sun sets, then look up. You could see up to one meteor a minute, Hammergren said. The show should continue for at least a week, he said.

Discovered in 1862, the comet is a giant iceberg made up of ice, rock and dust particles that likely has been in orbit for thousands of years, Hammergren said. Particles — about the size of a sesame seed when clustered together — slowly have been eroding from the comet every time it has approached the sun, leaving a trail of debris that the Earth’s orbit intersects once a year, Hammergren said.

The particles, known as meteoroids, create a meteor shower when they collide with the Earth’s atmosphere and burn up, forming fiery streaks across the sky.

A bright meteor glows as much as the brightest stars in the sky, Hammergren said. And pay close attention: They zip across the sky at about 132,000 m.p.h., leaving a gazer’s sight in a second or two, he said.

The best viewing place? Get away from the city lights and look northeast.

klschorsch@tribune.com

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