Koan

Ideas and thoughts

Mark Twain & the Sheep Majority

Sounds like the US & the Tea Party Movement.

From:  Mark Twain's THE MYSTERIOUS STRANGER

Oh, it’s true. I know your race. It is made up of sheep. It is governed by minorities, seldom or never by majorities. It suppresses its feelings and its beliefs and follows the handful that makes the most noise. Sometimes the noisy handful is right, sometimes wrong; but no matter, the crowd follows it. The vast majority of the race, whether savage or civilized, are secretly kind-hearted and shrink from inflicting pain, but in the presence of the aggressive and pitiless minority they don’t dare to assert themselves.

(via SHSU)

Slashdot Science Story | First Black Hole For Light Created On Earth

Such a device could be used to harvest solar energy in places where the light is too diffuse for mirrors to concentrate it onto a solar cell. An optical black hole would suck it all in and direct it at a solar cell sitting at the core. "If that works, you will no longer require these huge parabolic mirrors to collect light," says Narimanov.

Whoa. Talk about advances in science.

Filed under  //   blackholes   science   slashdot   wow  

PhotoSketch: Internet Image Montage

Wow, this is really impressive. So many useful applications come to mind.

Weird Hovering Helicopter

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Parse.ly releases new version on Sunday, Sept. 20 at Cog Tree

Parse.ly releases new version on Sunday, Sept. 20

Written by Andrew

September 21st, 2009 at 3:10 am

Posted in Cog Tree, DreamItVentures, Parse.ly

Tagged with

If you were trying to log into Parse.ly between 11pm-1am this Sunday, you may have noticed that it was intermittently down for maintenance.  Over the last several weeks, we’ve been working hard to roll out some new features, polish some rough edges, and improve our infrastructure after our launch last month.  Our first beta users have been amazing in providing us with detailed and specific feedback on what works and doesn’t work well within Parse.ly.  We’ve diligently addressed many of the issues raised by these users and rolled out a new version of Parse.ly this weekend.

So, what’s new in Parse.ly?

  • Faster archiving and deleting: many users have complained that archiving and deleting items in Parse.ly was extremely slow.  This was a shortcoming of the beta release we pushed out in August, and we have now rectified this issue.  Archiving and deleting should be very speedy, and bulk archives/deletes are just as fast as single ones now.
  • Keyboard shortcuts: we bill Parse.ly as the most productive way to read the news, but our initial beta users noticed that one productivity feature we are sorely lacking is keyboard shortcuts.  We have implemented an experimental cut of keyboard shortcuts in the latest release.  Simply click inside the article grid (under “Current Items”) and press the question mark key (?).  This will bring up a message box with a list of our keyboard shortcuts.  They are very similar to GMail’s; for example, e archives an item, and shift+i marks an item as read.
  • Username casing problems: we had a silly bug where your username was case-sensitive, even though we use e-mail addresses for usernames.  This has been addressed and so now you can use any case you like for your username.
  • Better De-duplication: we did include a deduplicator in our initial beta release, and we thought it was working pretty well: nearly 50% of the articles processed by our crawler were being deduped.  However, many users reported duplicates in their accounts, and when we investigated, we saw that there were many scenarios that fooled our deduper and resulted in an unpleasant reading experience.  In particular, resyndicated articles (e.g., those republished after a press release) often had similar titles/summaries but were not exactly the same.  So we have included a more aggressive deduper that makes use of fuzzy string matching and seems to work better in the testing we have done so far.
  • Better sources: we are continuing to improve the breadth and depth of Parse.ly’s sources.  We have restructured our crawler so that it gets access to sources that weren’t available before, and also better delivers content based upon your interests.
  • More frequent crawls: many users were reporting that crawls wouldn’t happen often enough for them, so they wouldn’t see articles published e.g. in their twitter feed right away in Parse.ly.  We have re-engineered our crawl infrastructure to be much more performant, which will mean fresher content inside Parse.ly for you.
  • You can kill the Parse.ly share bar: when you click a link inside Parse.ly, we top-frame it to allow you to share it easily with your friends.  However, users rightfully complained that they wanted the ability to easily remove this bar from any page.  You spoke, we listened! :-)
  • Password recovery: some users forgot their passwords and we simply forgot to implement a password recovery feature in our initial release.  It’s there now.
  • User profile editing: users can now change their password from inside the UI.  This was an obvious feature just plain missing from the initial release.

We also made some improvements to our Interest Setup Wizard, but this will mostly affect users who first sign up for the system.  (You did remember to invite your friends to join Parse.ly, right? :-))  These include:

  • Better performance when adding new interests: before, there was a bit of a lag when you entered in interests.  This should be fixed now.
  • E-mail is sent to user upon initial setup: some of our users were rightfully confused when they entered in their interests and … nothing happened.  We aren’t activating accounts right away, but at the very least, we should send you an e-mail to let you know that your interest entry actually worked!  This is fixed now.

We are also working on some big changes within the Parse.ly engineering team to take our product to the next level.  We have partnered with our excellent hosting company, The New York NOC (NYNoc), to scale out our infrastructure and process more content than ever before.  We are also planning our future iterations where we hope to innovate and deliver more features to save you time and let you discover the content that best matches your interests.

A Personal Note from Andrew

As the lead developer for Parse.ly, I just want to say “Thanks!” to all our awesome users.  The thing that has impressed me most about Parse.ly’s users so far is how detailed, intelligent and thoughtful their feedback has been.  We want our company to be driven by your feedback, so please, do not hesitate to provide more of it on our Cog Tree Get Satisfaction Page, on Twitter, or directly via e-mail.

This last few weeks reminds me of something Jim Young, the founder of HotOrNot.com, said to us at DreamIt this summer: “when the site became successful, we were left having to figure out how to change the engine while the car was still running.”  It’s going to be a lot of work evolving Parse.ly even while providing the service to our existing users, but I’m looking forward to the challenge.

Thanks again to all our users for their feedback so far, and I hope you enjoy the new version of Parse.ly!  (Also, don’t forget to report any bugs or tell us what is working well for you.)  And if you haven’t signed up for Parse.ly yet, what are you waiting for?  Do it now at http://parse.ly

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Arggh GMail!

I've been such a fan of GMail since before it was even released to the public.  I knew that Google would be able to take frustrating e-mail clients to the next level, and I was right.

GMail is (was) awesome.  I've used desktop and web-based clients in the past, but GMail, by far, is (was) the best solution for email than any I've used. 

That all changed today, when GMail went completely MIA for me.  I could not receive any new mail, use GChat, or see any contacts.  It was terrible.  Using GMail for my startup and being completely in the dark about whether someone was trying to contact me was excruciating and unacceptable.  For over 24hrs I was without my GMail account!

Finally, after doing some digging, I found that I was not the only one with this problem.  Apparently it affected a group of users, and someone actually had a solution.  Get this though: the solution was to export all of your contacts, delete all of your contacts and import them back in.  And, amazingly enough, it worked! I was blown away. 

I can't imagine what bug on Google's side caused this crazy error, but what was even more frustrating was that they were unable to help me at all.  They have no phone support, their e-mail support gets a response in days, and they refused to publicize the hack that works!

ARGGH GMail, ARGGH!

Filed under  //   frustration   gmail   support