How Benjamin Franklin Jokingly Invented Daylight Saving Time

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In 1784, Benjamin Franklin wrote a letter to the publishers of The Journal of Paris. The whole thing was a bit of a laugh–a story about how a sudden noise woke the diplomat at the six in the morning, startled to discover that there was light outside at that earlier hour. Upon further investigation via the almanac (something that Franklin knew a thing or two about), he found that, indeed, it gets light earlier in the morning, as we push forward to summer. 

Perhaps, he reasoned, forcing the citizens of Paris to awaken earlier would help curb the burdensome expense of lighting homes that everyone seemed to be complaining about. Franklin offered a few tongue-in-cheek solutions to the problem, including  stationing soldiers in front of candle stores to limit sales, keeping non-emergency cars off the street after sunset, and using either church bells or cannons to rouse the sleeping at dawn. The whole thing would require some getting used to, he reasoned, but that transition would likely only take a couple of days.
Of course, Franklin was just having a bit of fun with the whole thing. Back then people were more or less working on their own schedules. It wasn’t until the railways really entered the picture that time standardization became a serious concern across broad geographies. 

Car2go test drive: RFID, GPS, and mobile apps make for a smarter Smart

As you read this (assuming you’re reading this sometime before March 20th) zillions of music, movie, and tech mavens and moguls have descended on Austin, Texas for SXSW. We made a run through the city just before festivities kicked off, stopping by to check out the Car2Go carsharing service that launched last summer and that, as of March 19th, will expand its coverage area to include 52 square miles worth of the heart of Texas. We took one of the company’s customized Smart Fortwos for a ride and also test drove the new iPad app that makes finding cars as easy as pie. Pie, as it turns out, is also quite easy to find in Austin.

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Car2go test drive: RFID, GPS, and mobile apps make for a smarter Smart originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 Mar 2011 12:24:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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NicoNico Douga Harnesses Points for Tsunami Relief

Since the earthquake and tsunami struck on March 11th many Japanese companies and organisations have been quick to develop new and innovative ways for the public to donate funds such as the Tsuytaya point scheme. One such company NicoNico Douga, a popular video sharing website in Japan, has found a unique way of harnessing its points system from its large user base.

NicoNico

The system works by allowing pre purchased points, normally used to view videos or buy games, to “like” a video through their Niko Niko Koukoku system, simply translated as “advertising system”. Each point is the equivalent of ¥1 and users may spend a minimum of 100 points in “liking” their chosen piece. Once “liked” those who donated can add their name and personal message to the video which becomes more prominently featured on the website . Popular Avex J-Pop artists and Japanese celebrities have also uploaded original messages accompanying many videos directly praising fans who have donated, and appealing to others to use their points.

Already, within just 48 hours of being launched the system has generated a staggering ¥89,354,200 from 97,721 users ($1.1 million) and is increasing rapidly each hour. With around 50% of Japanese males in their 20’s registered with Nico Nico Douga the potential for raising significant sums to help those affected in the North of Japan is tremendous. The CEO of Dwango, NicoNico Douga’s parent company Nobuo Kawakami personally commented on Twitter urging the sites users to log on and use their left over points to contribute to the cause.

At present all donations are being collected for Japan Red Cross, however as more charities begin to set up designated Earthquake appeals users will soon get the choice of which charity their donation actually goes to.

iPhone Daylight Saving Shenanigans Are Back

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The iPhone 4 does a lot of things really well, so one might, perhaps, be able to forgive it for falling short at a few simple tasks. Perhaps, that is, if those tasks were quite so simple as making phone calls and telling the proper time. While most the rest of the country was springing ahead, Apple’s handset fell back an hour, assuring that users relying on the device as a handset were two hours late for work, instead of the customary one.

The majority of the reports about the bug are coming via Twitter and other social networks. Apple has yet to actually comment on the issue. The company’s “magical” handsets have run into similar time keeping issues before, having failed to fall back an hour during the last time change.
Thankfully, there’s an easy fix if you’re one of the affected–just restart the phone or put it into Airplane Mode and switch it back. The handset should correct itself from there. 

Apple’s Schiller: White iPhone will debut in spring

Responding to a question from a teenage Twitter user, Apple marketing VP Phil Schiller says that the elusive white iPhone is coming soon.

Originally posted at News – Apple

MIT’s Junkyard Jumbotron turns your motley collection of devices into one large display (video)

Got a handful of mobile devices layin’ ’round when what you actually need is one large display? The kids at the MIT Center for Future Civic Media got you covered! The Junkyard Jumbotron, designed by Rick Borovoy, Ph.D. and Brian Knep, is an ingenious project that makes stretching an image across damn near any collection of displays with web browsers. When you assemble the displays (such as in the picture above), the Junkyard Jumbotron website will ask you to point them all to the same URL. This will cause each device to load the same QR code, which — once you snap a digital pic and email it to the project — will allow it to calibrate and stretch a JPEG across your assemblage. It certainly does look like something scrounged up at a junkyard, doesn’t it? Well, sometimes that’s part of the fun. Hit the source link to try it for yourself. Video after the break.

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MIT’s Junkyard Jumbotron turns your motley collection of devices into one large display (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 Mar 2011 11:56:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Vista SP1 Download Available

This article was written on March 18, 2008 by CyberNet.

Microsoft has done it! After a month and a half of being completed Vista SP1 has been posted to the servers for anyone and everyone to download. There are all kinds of performance improvements included in this Service Pack that will make the operating system more appealing to users who have been holding out on an upgrade. Although I’m skeptical as to whether this, and only this, would sway someone to jump on the Vista bandwagon.

Shortly after Vista SP1 had been completed we decided to give it a whirl and see if Microsoft had actually prevented the use of the cracks that they said they did. We installed a copy of Vista with SP1, and one OEM BIOS crack did not work. It only took us a few minutes to find another crack that did work though, and I’m sure Microsoft is walking around with their heads down since they didn’t patch more of the cracks in time for SP1. I don’t expect them to patch every crack, but something is wrong if it only took me a few minutes to find another working crack. Since then they’ve pushed out an update that correctly checks whether the cracks are installed and notifies the user, but does nothing else.

So it looks like piraters and genuine users alike will be enjoying the benefits that Vista Service Pack 1 has to offer. The download will be available via Windows Update at some point (I don’t see it yet), but you can download the standalone packages if you don’t want to wait. These are, however, quite large in size and may take awhile for the download to complete:

Microsoft has quite an extensive list of improvements in Vista SP1, and instead of listing them all I pulled out the ones that I find to be the most significant:

  • An improved SRT (Startup Repair Tool), which is part of the Windows Recovery environment (WinRE), can now fix PCs unbootable due to certain missing OS files.
  • Improves the performance of browsing network file shares by consuming less bandwidth.
  • Improves power consumption and battery life by addressing an issue that causes a hard disk to continue spinning when it should spin down, in certain circumstances.
  • Improves the speed of adding and extracting files to and from a compressed (zipped) folder.
  • Improves performance over Windows Vista’s current performance across the following scenarios:
    • 25% faster when copying files locally on the same disk on the same machine
    • 45% faster when copying files from a remote non-Windows Vista system to a SP1 system
    • 50% faster when copying files from a remote SP1 system to a local SP1 system
  • Improves the copy progress estimation when copying files within Windows Explorer to about two seconds.
  • Includes improvements to Windows Superfetch that help to further improve resume times, in many environments.
  • Windows Vista SP1 includes a new compression algorithm for the RDP (Remote Desktop Protocol) that helps reduce network bandwidth required to send bitmaps or images via RDP. The compression, which can be selected by administrators via Group Policy settings, is transparent to all RDP traffic, and typically reduces the size of the RDP stream by as much as 25-60%, based on preliminary test results.
  • Enables support for hotpatching, a reboot-reduction servicing technology designed to maximize uptime. It works by allowing Windows components to be updated (or “patched”) while they are still in use by a running process. Hotpatch-enabled update packages are installed via the same methods as traditional update packages, and will not trigger a system reboot.
  • SP1 includes a number of changes which allow computer manufacturers and consumers to select a default desktop search program similar to the way they currently select defaults for third-party web browsers and media players. That means that in addition to the numerous ways a user could access a third party search solution in Windows Vista, they can now get to their preferred search results from additional entry points in the Start Menu and Explorer Windows in Windows Vista with SP1. 3rd party software vendors simply need to register their search application using the newly provided protocol in Windows Vista SP1 to enable these options for their customers.
  • With SP1, Windows Vista will report the amount of system memory installed rather than report the amount of system memory available to the OS. Therefore 32-bit systems equipped with 4GB of RAM will report all 4GB in many places throughout the OS, such as the System Control Panel. However, this behavior is dependent on having a compatible BIOS, so not all users may notice this change.

Copyright © 2011 CyberNetNews.com

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Angry Birds Rio will be exclusive to Amazon Appstore on Android launch

Think you’ll be heading to the Android Market to get your next fix of Rovio Mobile’s insanely popular Angry Birds? Think again. The next installment in the aviary vengeance saga, Angry Birds Rio, will launch exclusively on Amazon’s upcoming Appstore for Android. That does sound like it will eventually achieve universal distribution via the Market, but in the interim Amazon has scored a pretty big scoop in its efforts to attract users to its own app repository. We’re also promised the Appstore is launching “very soon” and Amazon has just inaugurated an @amazonappstore account on Twitter to keep us abreast of when precisely that will happen.

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Angry Birds Rio will be exclusive to Amazon Appstore on Android launch originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 Mar 2011 11:19:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple Exec Confirms Spring Ship Date for iPhone 4 – Again

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Apple has confirmed what we already knew (thanks to past Apple confirmations). The white iPhone 4 is real, and it’s really coming this spring. For real. In response to a self-proclaimed “16-year-old kid from Albuquerque, future Engadget editor” on Twitter, Apple SVP Philip Schiller confirmed that the long awaited handset is arriving soon. “The white iPhone will be available this spring (and it is a beauty!),” wrote the exec.

That timeline squares with the one Apple has been repeating for a few months now. It’s still three-quarters of a year behind the original planned launch date. Apple first unveiled the handset last summer, alongside the launch of the black iPhone 4. Due to unspecified technical problems, however (most likely having to do with the amount of light a white case lets in while taking photos), the handset has been repeatedly delayed.
Interest in the phone resurfaced when Apple announced the launch of a white version of the iPad 2–a product that has already beaten the white iPhone to market.

Apple’s iPhone / iPod touch daylight saving time woes continue

If a broken clock is right twice a day, Apple’s is off twice a year these days — once each time Daylight Savings Time needs to be calculated in territories that depend on it. iPhone and iPod touch users are reporting on Twitter and the official Apple forums that the Clock app is been demonstrating all kinds of erratic behavior — regardless of phone model or AT&T / Verizon pedigree — with some alarms going off early, others late, and plenty of others working perfectly. Amusingly, still others report that DST adjustments occurred in places that don’t recognize DST at all: “My iPhone 4 had the wrong time this morning – in Phoenix,” reports user M Gnu, “We don’t do DST, but iPhone apparently thinks otherwise.”

Since DST went into effect on Sunday in the US, many didn’t notice issues until this morning, but even eagle-eyed iPhone owners could have a nasty surprise as one Engadget reader reports: “My iPhone 3GS changed time correctly yesterday, but for some reason over night it reverted back an hour, thus leaving me an hour late for work.” There doesn’t seem to be a single easy fix, but affected users report a variety of ideas might work — restarting the device, changing the Time and Date setting away from Automatic, calling the iPhone with another phone, or turning on and off Airplane Mode.

How’s your iDevice hanging? Let us know below.

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[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Apple’s iPhone / iPod touch daylight saving time woes continue originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 Mar 2011 10:50:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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