Google launches Constitute, a tool for creating and comparing governments (video)

Google launches Constitute, a tool for creating and comparing governments video

Countries frequently amend or draft constitutions, but they can’t always find example constitutions to work from — not every country publishes its founding documents in accessible formats. So, Google’s simplifying nation building by launching Constitute, a website that puts all the world’s constitutions in one place. The tool indexes both basic details as well as policies. It’s easy to filter charters by their creation date, for example, or to find countries that protect equality based on gender. Whether you’re forming a government or just like to dabble in political science, you can try Constitute at the source link.

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Via: Google Official Blog

Source: Constitute

Chew to reload: Light-gun concept game tries to make eating vegetables fun (video)

Chew'emup concept game tries to make eating vegetables fun at TGS 2013

The Tokyo Game Show isn’t just triple-A console titles and new hardware. Oh no, there’s Food Practice Shooter too. It’s the work of Takayuki Kosaka from Kanagawa’s Institute of Technology, with the noble aim of getting kids to eat more vegetables. How? By making vegetable eating an integral part of a light-gun game. The shooting part is pretty standard: you pull the trigger and shoot the veggie enemies on screen just like any point-and-shoot game you’ve played in the arcade. However, to reload, you need to pluck one of three vegetable-based snacks from the cups on the surface in front of you. (We’d assume real-life tests would use vibrant, fresh carrot sticks — these snack substitutes were a little too tasty in their own right). Then you chew. The PC running the concept game connects to a head-set with a distance sensor pointing at your cheek — you calibrate your chewing before you get into the game itself.

As you chew on each snack, it recharges one of three ammo category, whether it’s green peppers, tomatoes or carrots. Gnaw faster and you’ll recharge more ammo. The game also snaps a brief shot of the player once they’ve finished reloading — it’s also another opportunity to calibrate the sensor to your (non-masticating) face. Catch our test subject’s smile on the high score screen — you’ll find it at the end of our video, which is right after the break. %Gallery-slideshow89880%

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NASA ends Deep Impact comet-hunting mission after eight years

NASA says Deep Impact's comethunting mission is over, eight years later

After more than eight years, NASA’s comet-hunting Deep Impact mission has come to an abrupt close. The agency has stopped trying to communicate with the mission probe after losing contact on August 8th. It’s not clear what went wrong, but NASA suspects that it may have lost orientation control, guaranteeing that the Deep Impact vehicle would lose power and freeze. It’s going out on a good note, however. Like NASA’s Mars rovers, Deep Impact easily outlasted its intended lifespan — after successfully intercepting the comet Tempel 1 in 2005, it went on to study three more comets as well as numerous exoplanets. We’ll miss the probe’s continued research, but its legacy should live on through other projects.

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Source: NASA

Life on Mars cast into doubt as Curiosity fails to find methane

Life on Mars less likely after Curiosity Rover disproves methane theory

[Click] Hi, is that David Bowie?

[Silence] …

It’s NASA here. We’ve got some news. While it’s not a conclusive answer, the Curiosity Rover wasn’t able to detect any traces of methane in the Gale Crater. Presence of the gas is one of the things that we were hoping would support our theories about life on Mars, so this comes as a bit of a blow. Now, there *are* terrestrial microbes that don’t generate methane, so it’s not as if this is a firm “no,” but it’s not looking anywhere near as likely as it was before. So, uh, does that help at all?

[Silence] …

Uh, well, thanks. Bye!

[Click]

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NC State develops personalized web search without the usual server strain

NC State develops extraefficient contextual web search

The notion of personalized, contextually aware search is nothing new, but it can put a tremendous strain on servers by asking for a lot of data at once. NC State has developed a search technique that could ease that burden. Its code prioritizes results based solely on the “ambient query context,” or the concepts related to a person’s recent search history. Look for politicians, for example, and a search for Ford is more likely to bring up Gerald Ford than the car company. By focusing on just a fraction of a user’s search habits, the university can customize results using far fewer processor cycles: while a test server could only handle 17 active searchers with an old approach, it can manage 2,900 with the new method. The query engine won’t be confined to the lab, either. NC State tells us that a community-driven search beta is due within several months, and there are plans to commercialize the technology in the long run.

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Source: NC State

Google keeps it green, purchases 240MW of wind power in Texas

Google’s goal of meeting its electrical needs with renewable sources got another big boost today. The Happy Hereford wind farm in Texas will produce 240 megawatts of juice, and all of that output has been bought by Big G. That power won’t flow directly from the turbines into Google’s data centers, instead it’ll be fed into the regional grid when Google sells the energy on the wholesale market. The 240 renewable energy certificates (REC) acquired in the deal will be retired in support of mother earth, and any additional REC’s created by the wind farm will be used to “reduce our [Google’s] carbon footprint elsewhere.” According to Google, this is similar to other green energy deals it’s done in Iowa and Oklahoma, so it’s highly likely we’ll be seeing more such deals in the not-so-distant future. Of course, no one will be receiving any of that Happy Hereford wind power just yet — the farm won’t be sending out any renewably-sourced electrons until late 2014.

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Source: Google Official Blog

Engadget Giveaway: win one of two gaming prizes, courtesy of Diamond Multimedia!

Engadget Giveaway win one of two gaming prizes, courtesy of Diamond Multimedia!

You love gaming. We love gaming. It’s a great match, then, when our lives converge here in the weekly Engadget giveaway. This time Diamond Multimedia has returned to offer a couple of its Radeon HD 7790 Video Graphics Cards (a $150 value each), along with a pair of DS3900 Docking Stations. The sets go out to two lucky winners, so you’ll just need to head below and toss your name into the Rafflecopter Goblet of Fire. Good luck!

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First grid-scale compressed air battery now operational

SustainX activates first megawattscale air battery

Compressed air batteries have long promised truly clean energy storage, but they haven’t scaled large enough in recent years to be viable companions to renewable power sources. That changes now that SustainX has switched on the first modern air battery large enough to join an electrical grid. The company’s new ICAES (Isothermal Compressed Air Energy Storage) system in Seabrook, New Hampshire can hold 1.5 megawatts of power versus the kilowatt-level capacities of its rivals. Despite its size, ICAES is sustainable; it doesn’t require ‘dirty’ energy for either compression or releasing air to its generator, and the supply won’t degrade like that of a chemical battery. The New Hampshire system is just a demonstrator to attract interest, but SustainX expects to have its first commercial battery running in China next year. If ICAES (and technology like it) proves successful, we could see more solar and wind farms that keep delivering electricity when they’re otherwise idle.

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Via: GigaOM

Source: SustainX

Study finds that anger spreads further than joy on social networks

Study finds that anger spreads further than joy on social networks

Want to get your message heard on a social network? Try raging about it. China’s Beihang University has published a study of Sina Weibo users which suggests that anger-fueled online posts have more of an influence than those reflecting other emotions. During the research period, a typical bitter comment would affect posts three degrees removed from the original; joy had a muted impact, while disgust and sadness hardly got any traction. Don’t be too quick to lament the human condition, though. As researchers note, many of the angry posts were triggered by politics in Weibo’s native China. There’s a chance that internet denizens on other social networks have a rosier outlook on life.

[Image credit: Wayne Marshall, Flickr]

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Via: MIT Technology Review

Source: Cornell University Library

Alt-week 09.15.13: Record-breaking glass, nature’s gears, and Hubble’s huge find

Alt-week takes a look at the best science and alternative tech stories from the last seven days.

Altweek 091513 Recordbreaking glass, nature's gears, and Hubble's huge find

This week’s alternative roundup focuses on exploration, experimentation and discovery — both on land and in space. Here on Earth, Cornell’s stumbled upon a new glass that breaks records and researchers in Europe have discovered an insect with cob wheel-styled gear joints for movement. Meanwhile, above our atmosphere, NASA’s Hubble telescope made a large discovery of its own. This is alt-week.

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