j’s blog

April 5, 2005

Google Feature Incorporates Satellite Maps

Yahoo! News - Google Feature Incorporates Satellite Maps

By MICHAEL LIEDTKE, AP Business Writer

SAN FRANCISCO - Online search engine leader Google has unveiled a new feature that will enable its users to zoom in on homes and businesses using satellite images, an advance that may raise privacy concerns as well as intensify the competitive pressures on its rivals.

The satellite technology, which Google began offering late Monday at http://maps.google.com, is part of the package that the Mountain View-based company acquired when it bought digital map maker Keyhole Corp. for an undisclosed amount nearly six months ago.

This marks the first time since the deal closed that Google has offered free access to Keyhole’s high-tech maps through its search engine. Users previously had to pay $29.95 to download a version of Keyhole’s basic software package.

A more traditional map will continue to be the first choice served up by Google’s search engine. Users will have the option of retrieving a satellite picture by clicking on a button.

The satellite maps could unnerve some people, even as the technology impresses others. That’s because the Keyhole technology is designed to provide close-up perspective of specific addresses.

Keyhole’s previous government ties also have raised anxieties.

Founded in 2001, Keyhole raised some money in 2003 from In-Q-Tel, a venture capital firm backed by the Central Intelligence Agency. Leading up to the Google sale, Keyhole’s roughly 10,000 customers included a cross-section of government agencies.

There is little reason for people to be paranoid about the satellite maps because the images generally are six to 12 months old, said John Hanke, Keyhole’s general manager. “And it’s not like you are going to be able to read a license plate on a car or see what an individual was doing when a particular image was taken,” he said.

Google believes most people will like the convenience of generating a satellite image with a few clicks of a computer mouse. The company envisions people using the service as a way to scout a hotel’s proximity to the beach for a possible vacation or size up the neighborhood where an apartment is for rent.

Google’s free satellite maps initially will be limited to North America, with images covering roughly half the United States, Hanke said.

Although Google is offering the satellite maps on a test basis, the feature will probably force its other online rivals to upgrade their technology, predicted search industry analyst Greg Sterling of the Kelsey Group. “To play in this space, you are going to need some robust mapping capabilities.”

Sterling said Google’s satellite maps pose the biggest threat to Mapquest, a service owned by Time Warner Corp. that has long operated the most popular Web site for finding directions.

The satellite maps also up the ante for the many challengers chipping away at Google’s share of the lucrative Internet search engine market by adding more bells and whistles. For instance, Amazon.com Inc.’s A9 search engine earlier this year introduced a feature that includes an index containing 20 million street-level photographs of building exteriors in 10 major U.S. cities.
___

On the Net:

http://maps.google.com

April 4, 2005

Fax your Doctor using MDhub.com

I use this service to make refill requests and it actually works, with my Doctor anyway, don’t know about anyone elses. I fill out the refill request online and its faxed to my Doctor’s office. Pretty handy if you don’t have fax capability. If they have any questions on the request they call me. Very few Doctors have or allow email requests, unfortunately, so if you can’t get through on the phone or don’t want to call, fax is the next best thing.

MDhub.com Revolutionizing the Way Doctors and Patients Communicate. MDhub allows patients to send fax messages to their doctor, using the Little Blue Book Physician database directory, by entering your doc phone number.

Contacting Your Doctor Has Never Been Easier!
Reaching your doctor by phone these days can be an enormous challenge: busy signals, music on hold, press 1 for press 2 for…, telephone tag and even having your personal calls overheard by co-workers. Finally there’s an alternative to using the phone.

MDhub is a FREE service of THE LITTLE BLUE BOOK. There’s no setup, registration or fee. Every medical practice has an MDhub Internet MessageCenter already up and running for NON-URGENT requests. Use your doctor’s MDhub Internet MessageCenter instead of the phone for requesting or canceling appointments, renewing prescriptions, requesting test results and referrals, etc. Since most doctors don’t use the Internet, your message will automatically be sent to his or her FAX machine.

If you’re seeing a doctor for the first time, you can even fill out the paperwork before your visit. That way your new chart will be ready when you arrive.

How Does It Work?
All you have to do is enter your doctor’s name or phone number in one of the text boxes above and you’re on your way. It’s that easy to send your doctor’s office a message that will automatically pop up on the office fax machine.

March 26, 2005

Trip Gas Price AAA Fuel Cost Calculator

Trip Gas Price

Calculate The Estimated Fuel Cost Of Your Trip

Using current gasoline prices from AAA’s daily, online Fuel Gauge Report, as well as the latest highway fuel economy ratings from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the AAA Fuel Cost Calculator estimates the amount and cost of gasoline needed to complete a vacation trip. Although the total number of miles driven and prices paid for gasoline during your trip may vary from the estimates provided, the AAA Fuel Cost Calculator is intended to help you determine the cost of fuel needed to complete a vacation drive.

Wikipedia Plus Dynamic Search Term Suggestions = WikiWax

Wikipedia Plus Dynamic Search Term Suggestions = WikiWax

Wikipedia Plus Dynamic Search Term Suggestions = WikiWax

Surfwax has just launched its LookAhead search term suggestion technology combined with Wikipedia into a new site calledWikiWax. Over 600,000 Wikipedia index terms are listed with more than 2,000,000 LookAhead rotations available. Remember, you’ll see LookAhead offering suggested entries prior to clicking the search button.

What’s a term rotation?

LookAhead automatically rotates Wikipedia index terms, so you can find Abraham Lincoln under both Abraham Lincoln and Lincoln, Abraham. LookAhead automatically inserts a comma after the first word on topics that are rotated, e.g., Abraham, Lincoln.

Another example. A term rotation could also help find the entry for the Boston Tea Party. Of course, it would be found if the searcher enters Boston Tea Party. However, term rotation will also point out the entry if the searcher begins their search by first typing the words “tea party.”

By the way, after clicking the search button, you’re taken directly to the article on the Wikipedia.org site.

Also, should you find LookAhead oddly familiar to Google Suggest, be aware that Surfwas was actually offering this technology months before Google Suggest, combined with with their news search engine. I blogged about LookAhead and something similar from AOL in this January post.

Posted by Gary Price on Mar. 21, 2005

March 21, 2005

Yahoo buys photo-sharing site Flickr

Category: Blogging, Internet

Yahoo buys photo-sharing site Flickr | CNET News.com

Published: March 20, 2005, 7:10 PM PST
By Jim Hu
Staff Writer, CNET News.com

Yahoo has purchased online photo-sharing service Flickr, less than a week after the Internet giant launched a beta test of a new blogging tool.

Vancouver, British Columbia-based Flickr lets users upload digital photos from computers and camera phones, put together photo albums, and post photos to blogs, among other things.

Joanna Stevens, a spokeswoman for Sunnyvale, Calif.-based Yahoo, confirmed the deal Sunday but did not disclose the terms.

“We look forward to working with them for their innovation and product development across the Yahoo Network in the coming months,” she said.

Stevens said Flickr will remain a standalone site for now. The company’s employees, however, will relocate to Sunnyvale later this year.

Earlier this week, Yahoo announced Yahoo 360. The service combines a new blogging tool, along with several longtime Yahoo products, including instant messaging, photo storage and sharing, and Internet radio. It also offers tools for sharing recommendations about places to eat, favorite movies, music and so on.

Both the 360 move and the acquisition of Flickr and parent company Ludicorp Research & Development come as social networking and blogging draw increased interest from rivals. Microsoft in December added a blog product for its MSN Web service, called MSN Spaces. Google, meanwhile, owns Web log service Blogger and social networking site Orkut.

CNET News.com’s Evan Hansen contributed to this report.

March 20, 2005

Podato - won’t you butter me up!

Podato - won’t you butter me up!

I received this comment on an interesting online dating site that offers podcasting:

Hi, I read your blog from time to time and notice you have an interest in listening to podcast. Maybe with your on-line dating profile you may want to not only write it but record it?

We just launched podato.com last week and are looking for people to start it off.

Basically it’s a dating sinlge for singles. They record a sound clip from their mobile phone and send it to podato@gmail.com via MMS, it’s placed on our site so people can download to their MP3 player.

I think it’s very handy for busy people who are always on the go.

Comment by Liam Burke — March 19, 2005

March 18, 2005

Podcasting News: iPodder Version 2.0 Released

Category: Podcasting

Podcasting News: iPodder Version 2.0 Released

The iPodder Lemon team has released iPodder Version 2.0. The application has evolved from its basic beginnings as the world’s first podcasting software to a mature, fully featured application.

iPodder lets users to capture and listen to Internet audio programs anytime, anywhere. It allows users to select and download shows and music and to play whenever they want on their iPods, portable digital media players, or computers automatically, after specifying which music or shows they want to listen to.

iPodder has been downloaded over 125,000 times since it was introduced last August, letting users tap into the growing popularity of podcasts. iPodder continues to be free and cross-platform, available on Windows, Macintosh and Linux platforms.

Changes in Version 2.0:
- Total redefined, fully-featured GUI (user interface)
- New streamlined subscription process with an ability to check and uncheck items for download
- New cleanup section allowing quick cleanup
- History of downloads and click to play abilities
- Proxy support
- Threaded scans/downloads and resumable downloads
- Import and Export functionalities (OPML) to enable easy transport of data between other applications
- Many new smaller features including small add-ons like spotlight search, catch-up functionality, coralizing, and shortcuts enabled.

iPodder Features:
- It’s Free
- Cross-Platform
- Multi-language supported
- GPL’ed — it operates under a public license for the public good
- Fast (even with a lot of subscriptions)

To Download
iPodder 2.0 is available at the iPodder SourceForge site.

March 16, 2005

Podcasting from Linux

Category: Linux, Podcasting

Linux.com | Podcasting from Linux

Tuesday March 01, 2005

By: Johnathon Williams

Podcasts are reinventing talk radio on the Web. These homemade audio downloads have become popular since they were introduced last year. Pontificate on your political opinions, praise your favorite bands, interview your hero — the possibilities are limitless.

Podcasts were created by fans of the Apple iPod, but you don’t need an iPod or a Mac to make your own. Properly configured, the average Linux distribution can podcast with the best of them. Here’s how.

Before you start practicing your radio voice, make sure that your system includes the following programs:

* Audacity (sound recorder and editor, included by default with most distributions)
* Lame (MP3 encoder, available through RPM or APT)
* iPodder (subscription tool — see install instructions below)
* Skype (VOIP client, optional for recording interviews through VOIP, available through RPM or APT)

On the hardware side, you’ll need:

* A microphone
* A pair of headphones
* A sound card with a line-in port

If your distribution can handle these modest requirements, it can handle podcasting.

Listening with iPodder

Essentially, a podcast is an MP3 file paired with a syndication feed. iPodder is the most popular subscription tool for these feeds. The program incorporates an RSS (Really Simple Syndication) reader and a simple download agent to grab the feeds that you select.

The Linux version has come a long way, but it is still in beta. An RPM package is available directly from iPodder. Before you install it, make sure your machine is running the latest version of wxpython.

For Debian-based distributions, iPodder installation is a little more complicated. iPodder isn’t available through APT, but an alien conversion worked straightaway on my Mepis Linux machine. Open a terminal, move to the RPM’s directory, and type the commands:

alien –to-deb ipodder-1.1.2-1cl.noarch.rpm
dpkg -i ipodder_1.1.2-2_all.deb

To start listening, run iPodder and select the Preferences tab. Click Browse, and select a folder for your downloads. You can subscribe to podcast feeds by browsing iPodder’s directory or entering URLs on your own. To browse, select the Status tab and click the button labeled "Select feeds from the podcast directory." To add a URL of your own, type or paste the address into the text box at the top of the Status window and click Add.

Download your subscriptions by clicking the button labeled "Check for new podcasts." To listen to your downloaded feeds, go to your download directory and open the files in your favorite media player.

Configuring Audacity

Enough listening. Let’s start recording. The Audacity sound editor offers twice the features of many commercial programs and more power than most podcasters will ever need.

To begin, first make sure that Audacity has MP3 support enabled. Open Audacity and click File > Preferences. Select the File Format tab. Find the section labeled MP3 Export Setup. If this says "MP3 exporting plugin not found," then click Find Library, and select the location of libmp3lame.so. (On my machine, the path is /usr/lib/libmp3lame.so.)

Now is also a good time to set the bitrate for MP3 encoding. The default is 128, which is probably a bit high for podcasting. (The smaller the download, the better.) Select your preference, and click OK to save your changes.

Recording with Audacity

Odds are, you’ll want to start your podcast with some music. Audacity makes this easy. Click Project > Import Audio, and select your audio file. Audacity includes native support for MP3, WAV, and OGG formats, among others. Click OK, and the program will import the file as a new track. Stereo tracks are displayed as two waveforms (two blue lines of dips and spikes). The time ruler at the top of the track window lets you know how long the track is.
Obligatory copyright warning
When including music in your podcasts, avoid store-bought CDs and other copyrighted works, or the artist’s lawyers may come knocking. Instead, run a search at Creative Commons to find free music and sound samples. Remember to return the favor by releasing your own productions under a friendly license.

The file that I imported was 4:12 in length — much too long for an intro. I wanted only the first 45 seconds or so. To trim a track, highlight the portion that you want to keep by clicking and dragging across its length. Then, click Edit > Trim. The excess disappears.

But now you have a new problem — the sound cuts off too abruptly. To fix this, highlight the last 15 seconds of the track, and select Effect > Fade Out. This result is a brief musical introduction that ends with a smooth fade, perfect for leading into the talk portion of your podcast.

Recording input from a microphone in Audacity is just as easy. Open your system’s sound mixer (KMix or equivalent), and select your microphone as the input. In Audacity, select Mic from the drop-down menu on the top right. Make sure you plug in your headphones if you haven’t already done so; external speakers will bleed into the microphone.

When you’re ready, click record, and Audacity will create a new voice track below the music track. If your microphone is working, the waveform on the track will spike and fall as you speak. When you’re finished, click stop.

If music and your own voice are all you want to record, skip to the Share Your Work section below. If you want to record an interview with someone else, read on.

Recording an interview over VOIP wth Skype

A good way to record a conversation for your podcast is to use Internet telephony software and save the sound directly to disk. Skype is the most popular voice over IP client out there, and it has become the gold standard for podcasts that include interviews. For Linux users, the good news is that Skype is available as a native binary. Version 1.0, released last month, includes most of the goodies available to Windows users.

Now for the bad news. To record both sides of a call, you need a second machine.

In my testing, I could find no combination of programs or settings that was able to record both sides of a Skype call on a single machine. I tried on both a Mepis and a Mandrake machine with no success. Using two machines together, however, solved the problem easily, with minimal setup time.

This method uses the first machine to conduct the interview, and the second to record it. The second machine doesn’t need to be anything fancy. If you don’t have an extra one, try enlisting a friend to help; the machines don’t even need to be at the same location.

To prepare the first machine, install Skype and set up a user account if you don’t already have one. When you’re done, leave Skype running.

To prepare the second machine, install both Skype and Vsound, a command-line program that writes the output from the sound card to a WAV file. It’s available in both RPM and APT packages. Next, run Skype and create a second user account. This account will act only as a passive recorder, so name it accordingly. (I called mine johnbot_recording.) Finally, quit Skype by clicking File > Close. (Merely closing the window leaves Skype running in the background.)

When you’re ready to conduct the interview, begin with the second machine. Open a terminal, and type:

vsound -f filename.wav -d -r 41000 Skype

Replace filename.wav with a name for your recorded interview. The -d option tells Vsound to both write the output to a file and pass it through the soundcard. The -r option resamples the recording to Audacity’s default quality. Depending on your installation, you may need to include the path to Skype in the command. Press Enter, and Vsound will launch Skype and begin recording its audio output.

Now, go to Skype and click Call > Start Conference Call. Invite your first machine and your interview subject to join.

Once the first machine and your interview subject join the conference call, you’re ready to go. Vsound will record everything received by the second machine. (It cannot, however, record any outgoing sound from its host machine, which is why the second machine is necessary in the first place.)

With this method, not only can you capture the entire interview, but the presence of the recorder in the call list reminds everyone that the call is being saved, so no one can cry foul when you post the interview online.

Obviously, this solution isn’t perfect. Podcasters are screaming for Skype to add a record feature.

Importing the interview into Audacity

When the interview is over, quit Skype by selecting File > Close. (Merely closing the window will leave Skype active in the toolbar and prevent Vsound from writing the finished file.) Vsound will then resample and write the file in short order.

To add your interview to the rest of your podcast, move the WAV file to your primary machine. You can import it into Audacity the same way you imported the previous file. Then, you can use Audacity’s editing tools to place the interview within the rest of your show.

Share your work

When your project is ready to share, click File > Export as MP3. Select a name and save location, and the program will prompt you to edit the file’s ID3 tag. These tags store artist, album, and genre information for MP3 files. You may complete the form or leave it blank. Click OK, and your podcast will be written to disk. Finally, upload the MP3 to your Web space. If you need space, Rizzn’s Podcaster offers free hosting and easy uploading.

The last thing you need is a syndication file. If you use Rizzn’s Podcaster, its upload form will create one automatically. Otherwiwse, this easy Web form will help you generate your own. Enter all of the requested information, taking particular care with the URL to your MP3. Submit the form, and copy the XML code it returns from the next page. This code is everything that you need to syndicate your podcast.

To create your syndication file, paste the code into a new document in your favorite text editor. Save the file in plain text format as podcast.xml. (Feel free to change the file name, but keep the XML extension.) Finally, upload the XML file to your Web space.

Your podcast is now ready to go. To subscribe to your feed, listeners can paste the link to this file into iPodder.

To update your feed with a new podcast, simply upload the new MP3 with a different file name, then return to the Web form and generate new XML code with the new podcast’s URL. This time, however, you only need part of the XML code. Copy everything from to . Open your original XML file and paste that code above the existing section. Finally, upload the modified file, replacing the original.

Of course, people have to know about your podcast before they can download it. Post the link to your XML feed to your blog or Web site. To get listed at popular podcast sites, visit these submission forms:

* iPodder
* Podcast Alley
* audio.weblogs.com

Related Links
· Audacity
· Lame
· iPodder
· Skype
· wxpython
· Creative Commons
· Vsound
· Rizzn’s Podcaster
· Web form
· iPodder
· Podcast Alley
· audio.weblogs.com

orkut’s signup - kindergarten all over again

This is another one of those ’social’ sites, but you’ve gotta know someone on the inside to get in. If the insider approves of you, then they can let you in. This reminds me of those elitist, ‘exclusive’ clubs that only the acceptable people can join. Google appears to own or operate the site, so this doesn’t surprise me, they used a similar approach with Gmail. If I remember correctly Livejournal requires an invite too. ok, enough time wasted on these people.

orkut - help

orkut is unique, because it’s an organically growing network of trusted friends. That way we won’t grow too large, too quickly and everyone will have at least one person to vouch for them.

If you know someone who is a member of orkut, that person can invite you to join as well. If you don’t know an orkut member, wait a bit and most likely you soon will.

We look forward to having you as part of the orkut community.

March 14, 2005

SpywareBlaster 3.3 Update Available

SpywareBlaster Update Available

This is a good spyware blocker program for windows and its free.

March 12, 2005

Internet Archive

Internet Archive
The Internet Archive is building a digital library of Internet sites and other cultural artifacts in digital form. Like a paper library, we provide free access to researchers, historians, scholars, and the general public.

March 11, 2005

Nextaris Overview and Learning Center

Nextaris Overview and Learning Center
Purpose of Nextaris [Top]
In simple terms the purpose of Nextaris is to save you time, make your online life easier, and open new vistas for your use of information on the Internet. In other words, to take you beyond search — to function as your personal Internet information toolkit — to help you search the Web, save what you find, share what you find, create journals (blogs), comment on what you find and have saved, and to optionally publish the information you have gathered — a one-stop process; seamless, simple — taking you to the "other side of search".

Studies show that over 80% of Internet users rely on search to find information. Most use major search engines such as Google, while more sophisticated users rely on specialized engines for searching specific content such as blogs, news, and databases. As a result, the major search engines (Google, MSN, Yahoo, Ask Jeeves) are moving to incorporate additional features such as personalization and localization into their search capabilities. But these major engines have yet to address what users actually do with search results.

Enter Nextaris — achieving the next level (terrace) in efficient use of information on the Internet.

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