| Using Market Samurai For Keyword Research - 1627 sec http://www.thirtydaychallenge.com/tdc/day02/ Market Samurai is a fantastic tool for keyword research and keyword marketing research: http://www.thirtydaychallenge.com/tdc/day02/ Auteur : eddale Tags: "keyword research" marketing search tool" "free keyword analysis research  |
| Confidential Google Research on YouTube - 189 sec For internal use by Google only. Confidential. Video deliverable of 31.9.06 by Jean-Claude Claris, MBA, Ph.D. ETHNOGRAPHIC research of YouTube community to assist in valuation of YouTube for Google. NOT FOR PUBLIC DISTRIBUTION as it contains proprietary methodology and findings. Auteur : nalts Tags:youtube google research ethnographic nalts cubebreak community confidential proprietary  |
| Graffiti Research Lab L.A.S.E.R Tag - 239 sec http://GraffitiResearchLab.com
Awesome video from the boys at graffiti research labs. Projecting graffiti with a laser pointer on the side of a building... CRAZY
The song is Don Carlos - Pass Me The Laser Beam
and heres how it works
"In its simplest form the Laser Tag system is a camera and laptop setup, tracking a green laser point across
the face of a building and generating graphics based on the laser's position which then get projected back
onto the building with a high power projector." Auteur : harborwolf22 Tags: awesome laser graffiti research lab tag cool new street art  |
| Multi-Touch Interaction Research - 210 sec Multi-Touch Interaction Research,Jeff Han (2006)
While touch sensing is commonplace for single points of contact, multi-touch sensing enables a user to interact with a system with more than one finger at a time, as in chording and bi-manual operations. Such sensing devices are inherently also able to accommodate multiple users simultaneously, which is especially useful for larger interaction scenarios such as interactive walls and tabletops.
Since refining the FTIR (frustrated total internal reflection) sensing technique, we've been experimenting with a wide variety of application scenarios and interaction modalities that utilize multi-touch input information. These go far beyond the "poking" actions you get with a typical touchscreen, or the gross gesturing found in video-based interactive interfaces. It is a rich area for research, and we are extremely excited by its potential for advances in efficiency, usability, and intuitiveness. It's also just so much fun!
Our technique is force-sensitive, and provides unprecedented resolution and scalability, allowing us to create sophisticated multi-point widgets for applications large enough to accommodate both hands and multiple users.
The drafting table style implementation shown here measures 36"x27", is rear-projected, and has a sensing resolution of better than 0.1" at 50Hz. Stroke event information is sent to applications using the lightweight OSC protocol over UDP.
http://mrl.nyu.edu/~jhan/ftirtouch/ Auteur : ffokt Tags:Multi-Touch Interaction Research Jeff Han  |
| Microsoft Research : The vision - 143 sec Microsoft Vision of different users interfaces.
Extract from techdays 2007.
Détails on http://mtoo.spaces.live.com Auteur : mtoofr Tags: mtoo microsoft research techdays surface interface device photo  |
| Introduction To Market And Keyword Research - 930 sec http://www.thirtydaychallenge.com/tdc/day02/ Key concepts regarding keyword and keyword marketing research from the Thirty Day Challenge: http://www.thirtydaychallenge.com/tdc/day02/ Auteur : eddale Tags: "keyword research" marketing search tool" "free keyword analysis "thirty day challenge"  |
| RESEARCH: Interactive 360º Light Field Display - 285 sec School of Cinematic Arts professor Mark Bolas, along with Andrew Jones, Paul Debevec from ICT, Ian McDowall (Fakespace Labs), and Hideshi Yamada (Sony), are awarded "Best Emerging Technology" at Siggraph 2007 for their display that provides a stereoscopic image that can viewed as a person walks around the display.
http://www.ict.usc.edu/content/view/158/2/
More information and higher quality video available here:
http://gl.ict.usc.edu/Research/3DDisplay/ Auteur : USCCinematicArts Tags: university of southern california usc interactive media division institute for creative technologies  |
| FLIP marine research vessel - 221 sec The FLIP (FLoating Instrument Platform) is a research vessel that can rotate to a vertical position. It is currently owned by the Scripps Institution of Oceanography. http://sio.ucsd.edu/voyager/flip/index.html Auteur : jazfresh Tags:FLIP rotate marine vessel research oceanography  |
| Research Scientist - ROMAIN THIBAUX - 3504 sec Google Tech Talks
June, 11 2008
Title: "Levy Processes and Applications to Machine Learning"
ABSTRACT:
Nonparametric Bayesian methods are a generalization of probabilistic models where the prior distribution can be a stochastic process, a distribution over a possibly uncountably infinite number of random variables. The great flexibility of these methods has led to applications in natural language processing, machine vision, computational biology and other fields.
I will introduce Levy processes, which generalize several of these methods. Levy processes are random measures that give independent mass to independent increments. As an example I will show how they can be used to model various types of data such as binary vectors or vectors of counts, with applications to text and images. These techniques are related to the better known Dirichlet process.
Speaker: Research Scientist - ROMAIN THIBAUX Auteur : googletechtalks Tags: google techtalks techtalk engedu talk talks googletechtalks education  |
| Microsoft Research Worldwide Telescope - 442 sec Esse é o vídeo da palestra no TED onde o Roy Gould (Harvard University) demonstrou pela primeira vez o Worldwide Telescope da Microsoft Research. Ele é um programa que integra centenas de fontes de dados, imagens e ínformações espaciais em uma interface rica e interativa. Auteur : GalileuV Tags: microsoft research worldwide telescope  |
| Leukemia research-Susan Eastwood - 600 sec A TEESSIDE FAMILY'S GIFT TO THOUSANDS.
There can be few things more soberingly unfair than a child born to die young, but when Susan Eastwood from Middlesbrough died aged 7, her parents chose to do something exceptional and have changed tens of thousands of lives in the process.
SUSAN EASTWOOD got ill in the late 1950s, but the local community gathered around in support, even though, back then, most people had never heard of leukaemia.
SUSANS FRIENDS gave her a music box, locals at the nearby pub had a whip round and bought her a dog Whiskey, when they learnt of her illness.
IN 1960, Susan was due to open a local garden fete. Her parents had bought her a new dress, which she loved, but shortly beforehand, her health began to fail and she wasn't well enough to open the fete.
Susan was buried in the clothes bought for the fete. HER SISTER SYLVIA was 19 when Susan died. She spoke to Alistair Campbell, Tony Blair's former special adviser and fundraising chairman of Leukaemia Research, for the BBC's Inside Out programme.
She told how she remembers her brown eyes, how she was a "little giggly" girl who used to love going on the swing in the back garden and being pushed as high as she could go.
The drugs made her face puff out and she'd get tired with all the treatment, she'd say "I think I will have a little sleep on my bed."
Her parents would do anything to make her feel better, or be happy. They used to go on trips to the lake district and the seaside. Much of her time was spent playing with Whiskey the dog.
AFTER SUSAN
Susan's parents wanted something good to come out of their daughter's death and dedicated the rest of their lives to raising money for a cure.
The family were constantly thinking of new ways to raise money. The music box bought by her friends was the first thing to be auctioned off.
Sylvia and her mum working on their handkerchiefs.
Hankerchiefs in a "peak formation" were all the rage for men to wear in the breast pockets of their suits at the time.
Sylvia and her mum used to spend the evening stitching these to bits of card so they could look smart in suits.
In one money raising venture her father dressed as a baby with a dummy in his mouth and was pushed around in a pram to get donations. They also sold Christmas cards before charity cards were commonplace. Their parents' aim was always to spend as little money as possible on administration, so the maximum amount could be put toward research, a rule that stills applies today at the fund.
HOW THE FUND STARTED.
The Eastwoods read an article in "The People" highlighting the importance of research into childhood diseases at Great Ormond Street Hospital.
David and Hilda wrote to the Director of the Institute saying "If we can achieve something then we shall know that our daughter died for a reason."
A year after Susan died, her parents had raised £3000 for the fund. On the 9th of December 1961 David and Hilda Eastwood attended the official opening of the first unit in the country dedicated to childhood leukaemia research at Great Ormond Street.
THE WORK TODAY.
As part of the Inside Out programme, Alistair Campbell met 10 year old Rachel Paul from Teesside, who has survived 2 bouts of leukaemia.
Rachael Paul and her teddy, Belgium.
Her mum Pamela's instinct that something wasn't quite right went back to when Rachel was 14 months old.
She was diagnosed with leukaemia (AML) in 1999 and spent the following months receiving treatment in hospital. She then relapsed in November 2000.
Doctors tried everything to get Rachel into remission again and she was having so much chemotherapy and radiotherapy that she had to be given growth hormones.
Once in remission, a donor was found on the Anthony Nolan register. Pamela remembers the 70 ml of "pink liquid" - the bone marrow - that was injected into Rachel. She and her husband started off the syringe that put her back on the road to recovery. Rachel also received a teddy from the anonymous Belgian donor. Auteur : phoben Tags: Inside Out Leukemia Research BBC Susan Eastwood  |
| Research Scientist - Assaf schuster - 3796 sec Google Tech Talks
June, 13 2008
ABSTRACT
Research Scientist - Assaf schuster
Title: "A Geometric Approach to Detecting Global Properties over Distributed Data"
Abstract:
A basic construct in many distributed systems is the detection of global properties over distributed data.
Examples include a wireless sensor network where we would like to be alerted whenever the average
of the temperature readings taken by the sensors exceeds a given threshold, or a distributed search engine
where the set of search terms whose frequency of use is above a given threshold must be determined.
Until recently, research has focused on detecting global properties that are defined by simple aggregates
(e.g., sum, average, or minimum) over the distributed data. In many cases, however, global properties
of interest are expressed by more complex functions. This is the case, for instance, when the goal is to
detect when the variance in sensor-network readings is in excess of a threshold, or when the set of pairs
of search terms whose correlation exceeds a threshold is to be determined. Such tasks typically require
that all the data be collected to a central location, incurring very high communication costs.
In this talk I present a novel geometric approach for efficiently detecting a wide family of global properties
that are defined by the value of an arbitrary function on the distributed data vis-a-vis a given threshold.
The global property is split into a set of constraints applied locally at each node. As long as the local
constraints at all the nodes are satisfied, the global property is guaranteed to be satisfied as well,
and no communication is required.
I begin by presenting the geometric detection method and show how it is applied for efficient detection
of complex events in a distributed streaming setting. Time permitting, I will also show how it can be
used for determining top-k queries over distributed databases.
Speaker: Research Scientist - Assaf Schuster Auteur : googletechtalks Tags: google techtalks techtalk engedu talk talks googletechtalks education  |
| Trailer for Mapping Stem Cell Research: Terra Incognita - 255 sec Premieres Tuesday, January 15, 2008 on Independent Lens, a weekly series airing on PBS.
Terra Incognita is a feature length documentary featuring the story of Dr. Jack Kessler, the current chair of Northwestern University's Department of Neurology and Clinical Neurological Sciences. When Kessler was invited to head up the Neurology Department at Northwestern, his focus was on using stem cells to help cure diabetes. However, soon after his move to Chicago, Allison -- then age 15, was injured in a skiing accident and paralyzed from the waist down. In the moments following the accident, Dr. Kessler made the decision to change the focus of his research to begin looking for a cure for spinal cord injuries using embryonic stem cells. Through Kessler's story, we bring the stem cell debate to the public for discussion. The film follows the constantly evolving interplay between the promise of new discoveries, the controversy of modern science and the resilience and courage of people living every day with devastating disease and injury. Auteur : Kartemquin Tags: Kartemquin stem cell research PBS Independent Lens Documentary spinal cord injury chicago Northwestern University  |
| SEO Keyword Research Basics - 538 sec Tips on how to do keyword research for search engine optimization to help ensure your site ranks well in search engines like Google. Auteur : seobook Tags:seo keyword keywords research google  |
| The Politics of Stem Cell Research - 205 sec A fertility clinic asks President Bush for advice on Stem Cell Research. Auteur : garveydg Tags:jerry zucker stem cell research president bush veto national banana white house hollywood  |
| Job: Research Engineer - 186 sec What does a "research engineer" do all day? We get to play with exotic devices, usually repairing them but sometimes redesigning. (Jeeze, I need to repair the huge broken filling. I didn't realize that I looked so snaggle-toothed.) Auteur : wbeaty Tags:science physics electron paramagnetic resonance university amasci  |
| James Dobson distorts research...again! - 304 sec Focus on the Family's James Dobson has once again disorted research and "cherry-picked" quotes to support his views. This interview with one of the authors he misquoted in Time Magazine clarifies what she really said and how she feels about Dobson's tactics. Auteur : wbesen Tags:James Dobson Focus on the Family Time lies misquote gay marriage Mary Cheney Carol Gilligan distort research  |
| Jim Cramer Called "The Bottom"? 1 Out of 10 Ain't Bad! - 576 sec http://www.donharrold.net
So, Jim Cramer called "the bottom"? Maybe this time he's got it right! Cramericans around the world hold their breath in anticipation! Auteur : donharrold Tags: jim cramer don harrold cnbc stocks market money cramerica booyah mad gotcha!  |
| The Top 10 SEO Mistakes ~ #1: Keyword Research - 400 sec This video demonstrates how to conduct your own keyword research for your own website SEO (Search Engine Optimization), explaining how to use one of the best free keyword research tools (Wordtracker) and showing how you should choose your keywords. Visit Top10SEOMistakes.com to find out more. Auteur : seomistakes Tags:seo search engine optimization keyword research keywords  |
| Billy Currington - Must Be Doin' Somethin' Right - 252 sec Music video by Billy Currington performing Must Be Doin' Somethin' Right
with Roger Pistole, Clarke Gallivan, Mark Stepp
(C) 2005 Mercury Records, a Division of UMG Recordings, Inc. Auteur : universalmusicgroup Tags: Billy Currington Must Be Doin' Somethin' Right Country Mercury Nashville Roger Pistole Clarke Gallivan Mark Stepp  |