Mahalo Opens-Up, More Like Wikipedia…

This article was written on June 02, 2008 by CyberNet.

mahalo.pngIt looks as though Mahalo is opening up a bit more and taking advantage of all of the knowledge and writing talent that is out there. A recent change now allows all registered users to contribute to the site by creating and editing pages. Previously, only chosen, paid editors were given the right to do this. In the year or so since they’ve launched, they have managed to write over 50,000 different pages but now this change will allow for many, many more pages to be written. In other words, Mahalo is definitely taking advantage of the public to help their site grow. For that reason, it reminds us of Wikipedia, but there are some differences which Jason Calacanis points out.

Calacanis who is quite well-known around the web, particularly for co-founding Weblogs, Inc., and founded Mahalo says:

Now, it’s not going to be as freewheeling as Wikipedia day one. We’ve got three major differences:

1. You have to register and be logged in to edit a Guide Note. This is a major throttle on people contributing since the signup process takes a couple of minutes and an email address.

2. Our staff is going to check every edit made and confirm it is correct. We have three full-time folks on this right now and our expectation is we will only get 10-50 editors per day.

3. You can edit your own pages, or a page about your company. Our thinking is since we’re checking all the facts that’s an OK thing to do. (Wikipedia does not let you edit your own page).

It’ll definitely take some time and effort for their staff to check every edit that has been made, but this will generally keep the information on Mahalo accurate, something that Wikipedia has had a hard time with. The only problem we could see Mahalo having is something that one commenter mentioned as “revision control” on hot topics. “Edit Wars” could easily break out in which case Calacanis says, “if there is an edit war we will come in and manage it by requiring folks to use their real names, debate the issue in public, and with some editorial intelligence applied. Similar to the Wikipedia style, but with real names and more brains.”

The only criticism we have is that Mahalo is “for-profit” while Wikipedia is non-profit. Those who are passionate about making knowledge available to the public may be more willing to provide it to Wikipedia instead. Regardless, this is an interesting route for Mahalo to take, and one that could help them grow tremendously.

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iPhone nabs 46 percent of Japanese smartphone market, the tiny Japanese smartphone market

So you read a headline like “iPhone grabs 46 percent of the Japanese smartphone market” and the first thing you’re likely to think is, “wow, Apple is really doing well for itself.” Well, it is and it isn’t. While it has made some considerable gains in the smartphone market at the expense of phones like Sharp’s W-ZERO3 and the Willcom 03, it still hasn’t gained nearly the same total mindshare or market share that it has over here. That’s because “smartphones” as we know them are still a relatively small market in Japan, where carriers’ lineups consist of a whole range of offerings including everything from mobile TV-equipped phones to true camera phones to perfume holders. For a bit more context, check out the pie chart after the break courtesy of IDC Japan, which shows cellphone vendors’ market share in Japan as of October of this year. The leaders by a wide margin are Sharp, Panasonic, Fujitsu and NEC with a combined 72.8% of the market, while Apple is lumped in with “Others,” which add up to 22.6%. It’s making inroads, to be sure, but just that at the moment.

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iPhone nabs 46 percent of Japanese smartphone market, the tiny Japanese smartphone market originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 18 Dec 2009 12:36:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Glitches mar launch of Livescribe app store

In an e-mail to customers, Livescribe’s chief executive apologizes for the problems and says the company is working on fixes that it can post in the coming days. pOriginally posted at a href=”http://news.cnet.com/8301-13860_3-10418361-56.html” class=”origPostedBlog”Beyond Binary/a/p

Hulu to stream reality show internationally, incessantly

See this forlorn-looking male model? He’s got a lot on his mind. Really, he’s just like the rest of us — a starry-eyed dreamer who’s headed to Hollywood in search of fame and fortune. To this end, he’s shacked up with four fellow photogenic wannabes in a Hollywood crash pad where they’ll be webcast 24-7 for Simon Fuller’s new Internet-only talent show, If I Can Dream. In addition to weekly episodes broadcast on Hulu, voyeurs viewers will be able to watch the action in the house live, as it goes down. You see, Hulu (who’s not had much luck getting a foothold outside of the states) will be streaming the thing to select international markets in an attempt to spread their brand and influence worldwide. Will it work? Who knows? Besides, Jersey Shore is more our speed. PR, video after the break.

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Hulu to stream reality show internationally, incessantly originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 18 Dec 2009 12:07:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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University of Tokyo Unveils Flexible Organic Flash Memory

Flexible_Memory.jpgThe photo to the left shows an example of non-volatile, flexible organic flash memory developed at the University of Toyko–something that could lead the way to a slew of flexible computing gadgets, such as large-area sensors and electronic paper devices, Engadget reports.

The design uses a polyethylene naphthalate (PEN) resin sheet arrayed with memory cells, the report said; data can be written to it and erased over 1,000 times. The university claims it can be bent up to six millimeters without any degradation.

So far, it only retains data for about a day–but researchers expect to improve that drastically over time.

Zune HD Twitter app updated, dirty words no longer censored

Microsoft promised us it would remove the silly content censorship from the Zune HD Twitter app ASAP, and here we are a day later with version 1.1, which lets you see all the schoolyard swears you could ever want. High five, assholes. Unfortunately, we’re not seeing a huge performance improvement: it’s a tiny bit snappier, but we’re still seeing unresponsive buttons, laggy scrolling, and random WiFi disconnects. On to version 1.2!

P.S.- Screenshot of the new non-censoring app in action after the break. Be careful, it could damage more delicate constitutions.

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Zune HD Twitter app updated, dirty words no longer censored originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 18 Dec 2009 11:43:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Notion Launching Smartpad Android Tablet at CES

notionsmartpad.jpg

Is 2010 the year of the tablet? All sources–leaked or otherwise–seem to point to “yes.” There are plenty of rumors surfacing around such device emerging from known quantities like Apple and Microsoft, but the real news is coming from dark horse such as Fusion Garage, which has been touring around the country showing its JooJoo pad to anyone who will take notice.

The JooJoo tablet (formerly known as the CrunchPad) may have some stiff competition this coming month, however. A company called Notion Ink is reportedly launching a still-unnamed tablet “smartpad.” It’s a snazzy-looking piece of hardware running an NVidia Tegra T20 chipset. The tablet features 1080p HD video, built-in Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and a Pixel Qi display.

The Notion Ink tablet will run Android and feature full gesture support. It weighs 1.7 pounds and comes with either 16GB or 32GB of storage built in, plus an SD slot, so you won’t have to rely solely on cloud-based computing, as with the JooJoo.

The device is set to debut at CES in Las Vegas next month.

Avatar Review: Yes, It Changed Everything After All

Put simply, Avatar is the most visually fantastic film I’ve ever seen. It will be hailed as the groundbreaking 3D release of its time while setting a new standard by which all blockbusters are measured. Yes, it’s that good.

I’m not going to talk about plot (or that I thought to myself, Dances with Wolves in space more than once). I’m not going to talk about dialog or pacing (or that the limited narration was totally unnecessary). There are other reviews, more reviewy type reviews, that have all that covered. I’m not going to spoil anything, either. Heck, I’m not even going to talk about Avatar…not just yet.

I want to talk about Jurassic Park.

Jurassic Park was the first movie I remember being excited to an unhealthily obsessive level. My dad, a huge Michael Crichton fan, did his best to tempt my young self into reading the full-out book. So he told me a sort of good parts version, filling my head with tales of dinosaur resurrection from amber dug up deep in the Earth, all while I would do my best to get more and more out of him without actually having to crack open a book.

So when I heard Jurassic Park was becoming a movie, not only did that dash any chance of me reading the story, but I literally could not fathom a world in which I’d be patient enough to wait to see it (not that I had any other option). I mean, dinosaurs, theme parks, and terror? Jurassic Park was biologically engineered for young boys.

All of this is nice background, but my point is simpler. When I saw those dinosaurs on screen, knowing that, in many cases, they’d been modeled purely by computers—computers!—I felt like anything was possible. Yes, it’s a cliche feeling. That’s actually why I’m sharing it. Because ultimately, we all have that movie—be it Star Wars or Terminator or whatever—that movie we actually felt a bit humbled, even challenged, watching because it was was an amuse-bouche of the future, even if a bit cheesy at heart.

Avatar is that movie for the new generation.

I don’t expect you to believe me if you haven’t seen the film yet. I, myself, was a huge skeptic until a few hours ago. Blue people? Papyrus font?? What the fuck happened to dinosaurs and light sabers and killer robots from the future? Did we use all the cool stuff up?

But about 30 minutes in to the film, you realize that the marketing has undersold the movie. In an era when every great moment of a film makes its way to a trailer, Avatar surprised me with an endless amount of unparalleled optical overload. Every single shot is just so full of detail that you literally open your eyes wider to take as much in as you can before each cut.

Gizmodo readers will love the tech, especially as that about 50% of the film’s budget apparently went to rendering badass 3D curved displays and absurdly awesome cockpits. But sequences from Pandora’s woods at night…let’s just say they’re the first luminescent visual effects I’ve seen that made 1982’s Tron look like a 27-year-old movie.

Also, while shots of the Na’vi (the blue dudes) clearly deviate from a 50/50 balance between real footage and CGI depending on the scene, their body animation, even for motion capture, is unparalleled. While their faces and eyes especially can appear a tad cartoony at times, the overall effect is not done justice by YouTube trailers or that shot pasted above. Call the effect hyperreal or even unreal, but it’s certainly doesn’t look “fake.” I don’t know that I’ve ever witnessed complete humanoid models move so realistically, especially given their exposure (in both screen time and skin).

Of course, Avatar‘s 3D is the basis of my obnoxious zeal for the aesthetics. I viewed the film in a full-sized IMAX theater. And while I knew that a fair share of missiles would fly off the screen (and ZOMG the mechs look amazing), I couldn’t have expected the sheer tangibility that 3D—what I once supposed a gimmick—added to the experience. I mean, I saw textures in this film that I’ve never seen in a movie before, like wet, rubbery skin on the wildcats of Pandora that made people around me gasp more than once. There’s a more understated moment, too, when Sam Worthington shaves and you realize, wow, stubble is pretty remarkable in 3D. The jagged hairs bring a level of humanity to his character, adding something unexpectedly corporeal to what’s really a 30-foot-tall head in closeup.

So yes, 3D is more than a gimmick. The glasses are still a pain, but 3D is here to stay.

Avatar doesn’t handle this new technology perfectly, however, and I hope that other filmmakers learn from its mistakes. Especially early in the film during shots in close quarters, the direction allowed many objects to break frame (think of a person walking from one end of the screen to the other). For my untrained eyes, seeing a figure go from 2D to 3D to 2D was not only distracting, it was tiring. And the same can be said for a constantly shifting depth of field—based upon where the camera is focusing, you’ll need to figure out whether to look deep into the screen or right in front of you.

An out of focus shoulder breaking the corner of the frame is pretty much the worst implementation of 3D I could imagine. Luckily, the forest sequences that make up the majority of the film seemed to have been planned with a wider depth of field—more of the shot is in focus.

After 2 1/2 hours in the theater, I am exhausted far more than the same amount of time playing an FPS would make me, but Avatar was so remarkable that it was well-worth the work of watching it.

I still can’t imagine popping on a pair of glasses to watch the evening news after a long day of work, and I sympathized for the guy sitting beside me as he started rubbing his eyes about halfway through. As someone with a slight uncorrected astigmatism, my left eye was ready to fall out of its socket by the final climactic sequence.

But as viewers, we’ll adapt to the new tech. And as technicians, Hollywood will learn the rules of 3D as it writes them.

So for now, I’m not quite ready to see every piece of the world’s media in 3D. But Avatar? Yeah, I’ll be seeing it again…and maybe again…just in hopes of absorbing a bit more of the visual splendor.

Bowers & Wilkins Zeppelin Mini impressions

Bowers & Wilkins isn’t a name that’s generally associated with “mere mortals.” Sure, you’ll find B&W gear within palatial mansions and the drool-worthy motorcars, but by and large, these guys stick to the high-end and never bother coming down to the level of the layperson. Thanks to Apple, it seems that even this company couldn’t resist the temptation of pumping out its own iPod sound system, with the Zeppelin Mini being the second that it has sold. At $399.99 (MSRP), this one is positioned alongside more pricey options like Bose’s SoundDock, JBL’s On Stage 400P, Altec Lansing’s Mix iMT800, iHome’s iP1 and Boston Acoustics’ i-DS3. As is typical with B&W gear, the Zeppelin Mini is nothing short of beautiful, but do the acoustics really match the design? Read on for a few of our impressions.

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Bowers & Wilkins Zeppelin Mini impressions originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 18 Dec 2009 11:19:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Tiki’Labs virtual keyboard for iPhone takes shot at Swype, one-handed typing wars commence

One-handed touchscreen typing is the hip new thing, apparently, since mere weeks after getting our first whiff of Swype, Tiki’Labs has debuted its own free TikiNotes app for the iPhone with a proprietary “large target” sort of keyboard. We’ve seen the idea before, specifically with some accessibility devices, which lets the user drill down into one of six alphabet sectors, and then pick one of six characters. TikiNotes improves upon that by not only predicting the word you’re currently typing, but also often correctly guessing the next word you were planning on typing. To be honest, we find that second feature just a little depressing — all that money the government spent on our two years of high school education and we still form sentences like everybody else — but certainly useful (Tiki’Labs claims a 40% success rate). We tried out the free app for a couple of minutes and found it more akin to a Brain Age-type exercise than a typing utility, but we’re sure we could get used to it. What we can’t get used to, however, is how hilariously great it is that Tiki’Labs spliced a Swype demo video (originally pitted against the iPhone keyboard) to serve as a typing race example… and still only barely squeaked through with the victory. It can be found after the break, naturally. The app will be available on Windows Mobile and Android soon.

Continue reading Tiki’Labs virtual keyboard for iPhone takes shot at Swype, one-handed typing wars commence

Tiki’Labs virtual keyboard for iPhone takes shot at Swype, one-handed typing wars commence originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 18 Dec 2009 10:55:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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