Data: Raleigh Taking Steps to Publish Open Source Data

Raleigh Public Record

Later this year, Raleigh residents could have access to city information and data in an accessible and usable format.

As part of its plan to become an “open-source” city, staff presented information Tuesday to the Council’s Technology Committee about plans to publish more data on the city’s website.

The first step will be to create a website where the information can live. The site will link from the city’s website and provide a “one-stop shop for how the public can engage in conversation,” according to Chief Technology Officer Jonathan Minter. He said that step will be complete in April.

City staff will then create an open data and open source policy, Minter said, to guide language in future requests for proposals and how the city will “put data out there so it can be used by constituents.”

Other cities already have such policies, from which staff can draw elements. Minter said City Camp and other similar groups will also provide a forum for policy ideas.

“The vision here is these aren’t going to be policies we as staff do and push out,” he said. “We want to have collaborative partnerships with folks.”

Those groups and other residents can also help prioritize what data is published on the site, he said. The goal is to prioritize data sets by June.

“There’s literally thousands … to choose from,” he said. “[We can ask] department heads. They know what they get public records requests for.”

Finally, the city will publish the data. Minter said the goal is to publish by September. Staff is considering several solutions for hosting the data, which Minter estimates will cost up to $50,000 per year.

Minter said that figure is at the “high end of the spectrum.”

He demonstrated one possible platform, called Socrata, used by the federal government, along with city governments such as Austin and Chicago. The platform not only hosts the information, but lists it in multiple ways. It enables users to see the data, export it in a variety of formats, create charts, graphs and maps and even has an interface for developers who want to create apps.


#more 

Members of the technology committee questioned the use of this data by the city’s less technology-savvy residents.

“You don’t have to be a developer to interact with the data,” Minter said, showing some of the charts. “A typical user with some level of computer proficiency should be able to brose the data and look for things of interest to them.”

Councilor Mary-Ann Baldwin asked about other, non-technological, ways to make the city open source.

“In talking about open source … one of the things we know is that a number of our citizens do not have access to Internet,” she said. “When I look at this open source thing, it’s only focused online. What about others? How do we engage them in this process as well? I hate to use this term, but it’s almost like ‘analog’ open source.”

City Public Affairs Director Jayne Kirkpatrick said that outreach continues.

“Everything that we do today to reach any of the residents, I like to make sure we use every resource we have,” she said, naming off such “old fashioned” methods as Citizens Advisory Councils. “This should not be any different in anything else we do.”

Councilor Bonner Gaylord said it’s about adding access.

“This is not about removing access the analog; way. It’s about adding access,” he said. “It’s just adding to what’s already there.”

The steps are already in motion, and required no approval from the committee. The final publishing step will require approval for the software. Councilors agreed to recommend the cost be considered as part of the next fiscal year’s budget. The next fiscal year begins July 1.Similar Posts:

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Experiment: visualizing imdb on mobiles -- earn participation credit and $20 by helping out

Hey folks,

We are running some experiments today, tomorrow, and perhaps Friday, and could use your help as participants. The experiment should take about one hour, and you will be paid $20 for your time.

You can also earn some class participation credit for your help.

The experiment tests a new interface for visualizing graphs on mobile devices, or more specifically, accessing IMDb with them.

If you would like to participate, please contact my student Ju Hee Bae. You can reach her using her email, jbae3@ncsu.edu, using our lab's phone, 919 513 0847, or just by coming to our lab at room 2244 of eb2.

Thanks,

Ben

Find: 5 Minutes on The Verge: Loren Brichter

Hmm, seems he invented pull to refresh. 

The Verge - All Posts
loren brichter

Loren Brichter is the man behind Tweetie, arguably the best Twitter app ever built. The app was so good that Twitter bought Brichter's company, Atebits, in April 2010 and turned the app into Twitter for iPhone. In this way, he has directly or indirectly inspired many of our favorite apps, and even advises the Sparrow team. Brichter took a few minutes to talk to The Verge about what he's been up to since he left Twitter, how he solves complicated problems, and why the world has gone app crazy. You can find him online at @lorenb.

We haven't heard much from you since you left Twitter in late 2011 and tweeted "taking some time to figure out what's next." Where are you now, and what are you working on? Have you been bored?

Never bored! The...

Find: One Step Closer to a Cashless Future

Only 3% of finance is cash in Sweden. Read the post story for a discussion of the downside: less privacy. 

Freakonomics

(Photo: Timo Arnall)

If you’re wondering what our cash-free future may look like — what will it do, e.g., to panhandling? — consider a trip to Sweden. The Associated Press reports on that country’s progress towards phasing out hard currency:

“In most Swedish cities, public buses don’t accept cash; tickets are prepaid or purchased with a cell phone text message. A small but growing number of businesses only take cards, and some bank offices — which make money on electronic transactions — have stopped handling cash altogether.”

Advocates of the shift claim that the transition has decreased crime, bank robberies, and graft. “If people use more cards, they are less involved in shadow economy activities,” says Friedrich Schneider, an economics professor at Johannes Kepler University in Austria. Opponents cite concerns over credit card transaction fees, privacy, and cybercrimes.

(HT: Marginal Revolution)

App: Recargo

Locate electric vehicle charging points intelligently filtered for your needs.

Recargo provides essential functionality required by electric vehicle owners. It combines this functionality with news from PluginCars.com, mutually serving both the application and the blog. 

On launching the application, it immediately searches and lists the nearest electric vehicle charging stations to the user. This menu is under the "Nearest" tab in the picture below. Each item is clickable, revealing a new page with details on the station: name, location, parking, hours, charger type, and ability to check in. 

Users can select the map tab to view the nearest charging points presented on a map interface. Chargers are represented by pins, which when clicked allow the user to navigate to the already mentioned station detail page which can be seen below. 


One of the apps most useful features is the filtering options in the settings tab. These options allow you to filter your search results by charger type, greatly increasing the relevance of the results returned. The settings tabs also lets users filter by charging network, allowing users registered with these networks to find their charging points efficiently. 

Creating an account, although optional, allows users to save favorite charging stations. 

The application has several competitors: CarStations, ChargePoint, PlugShare, ChargeMap. Many of the competing apps unfortunately are owned and operated by private charging networks and thus display only the network charging locations. Recargo is not affiliated with any network and displays all charging points. The map and directions interface is simple and native, unlike some apps which embed a web-app version of google maps. It has a simple design which isn't distracting or dysfunctional. While it doesn't have some of the features of private network apps such as charge monitoring, it does have an effective search filtering system that many apps lack. 

Find: A first look at the Sony Xperia Sola 'floating touch' display

Senses fingers a bit less than 1/4 inch above screen. Works for hover events on phone in browser (a first), but it may be most useful for adding precision to user finger positioning with early feedback. 

Click through to sony's primer on the tech, it's worthwhile. 

The Verge - All Posts
Sony Xperia Sola floating touch

The Sony Xperia Sola isn't a particularly unusual phone save for one feature: a 'floating touch' display that lets you operate the screen by hovering your finger over it. Yesterday, The Unwired got their hands on (as well as over) a Sola, giving us our first look at how well this technology actually works. Although it's apparently difficult to refrain from instinctively touching the phone, the sensor seems to work fairly well, letting users hover over a link before tapping to click it.

So far, The Unwired says that only Sony's browser supports floating touch — even the home screen is tap-only, and no other apps have been rebuilt to support it. However, it seems to work well for precision pointing and adds an extra dimension of control...

Find: Microsoft readying Windows 8 for "resolutionary" tablets

As displays begin to vary widely in resolution, the physical size of icons and other content varies, and scaling becomes a real problem. 

The beginning of the move to a resolution independent image representation? Certainly developers would be happy not to have to quadruple their app size again when apple's next tablet appears....

Ars Technica

The Windows 8 user interface is designed to scale to systems of all sizes. Like Windows versions of old, it will have to scale all the way from 1366×768 10-inch tablets up to 2560×1440 30-inch desktop monitors and beyond. But it's not just different numbers of pixels that Windows 8 will have to cope with: different sizes of pixels matter too. Windows 8 will have to scale from screens with around 96 dots per inch all the way to screens with almost 300 dpi, as system vendors are finally starting to increase pixel densities (no doubt inspired by the launch of a rather successful new tablet). An explanation of how this has been done is the subject of a new post on Microsoft's Building Windows 8 blog.

Windows has long had support for both different resolutions and pixel densities. The former are easy to handle; run Windows on a system with a high screen resolution and you'll fit a lot more stuff on screen. Traditionally, monitors have all offered about 96 dots per inch, so no matter what resolution you used, the objects on screen (buttons, text, images, and so on) have more or less maintained their physical size.

Find: how safe is my data stored in iCloud?

Good review of cloud security issues. 

Ars Technica

Apple's iCloud service lets users sync a staggering amount of data between Macs, Windows PCs, iPhones, and iPads. Though Apple says it stores this data securely in an encrypted format, just how safe is it? An Ars reader wrote in to ask us this question, so we decided to investigate.

The simple answer is that your data is at least as safe as it is when stored on any remote server, if not more so. All data is transferred to computers and mobile devices using secure sockets layer via WebDAV, IMAP, or HTTP. All data except e-mail and notes—more on that later—are stored and encrypted on disk on Apple's servers. And secure authentication tokens are created on mobile devices to retrieve information without constantly transmitting a password.

Find: The current state of styli and the iPad: does the stylus still blow it?

App: Clear

Tagline: an interesting UI, but missing necessary functionality

Link: Clear

My team is working on Silence, the Android app that will automatically silence or set your phone to vibrate on a schedule. Apps that mimic this behavior on iOS are essentially glorified reminder apps, as iOS does not allow apps to run in the background or run on startup. For my example app, I decided to go with Clear, a popular iOS reminders app.

When this app launched in late January, there was a large amount of hype surrounding it. Despite missing a few key parts of a to-do app, its button-free UI received a large amount of critical acclaim. I was interested in seeing what progress the app has made since it launch over a month ago. Unfortunately, there has only been one update since launch, version 1.0.1, which added a tutorial. In its time on the App Store, no new functionality has been added, and its price doubled from $0.99 to $1.99. Clear is still a largely incomplete reminders app that only serves as an interesting UI demo.

The hype surrounding this app was focused on the interface, and it was largely deserved. The app has no actual buttons, and instead relies entirely on gestures. The example to-do list that greets the user as they first boot the app is a useful hands-on tutorial. Also, the app’s sound effects enforce a fun, playful feel for the app. Problems arise with this app once a user actually integrates the app into their life. It does not work with Siri, you cannot dictate a reminder, reminders do not sync across devices, and reminders are limited to seventeen characters.

Each iPhone comes with “Reminders” and “Notes,” both of which are infinitely more useful than Clear. Still, the near-brilliance of this app’s user interface serves as an interesting tech demo, and each app creator should experience it. Just don’t plan on actually using the app for its intended purpose.

-Spencer Guy

Find: A new home for Google Maps API developers

Looks handy. 

Google Code Blog
Author Photo
By Carlos Cuesta, Product Marketing Manager, Google Maps API

Cross-posted with the Google Geo Developers Blog

When we first launched the Google Maps API, it was all about a map, a pin, and a dream. Back then our technical documentation was relatively simple, consisting of a couple of developer docs and some code samples. Since then the Google Maps API has expanded far beyond our expectations, due in large part to the diverse and innovative developer ecosystem that has grown with us.

With the continuing evolution of the Google Maps API, it became clear that we needed more than just code documentation to convey what’s possible with the Google Maps API. Thus, developers.google.com/maps was born.

In addition to having all the same developer content that was previously available on code.google.com, the site is designed to highlight and illustrate new features of the Google Maps API through fun and interactive demos. Our goal with developers.google.com/maps is to inspire the next wave of innovation on the Google Maps API, and to connect developers and decision makers with the tools and services that can make their products better.


#more 

One of the features of the Google Developers site we’re most excited about is the 3rd party developer showcase, which allows us to celebrate a selection of innovative sites in the Google Maps API ecosystem. Showcase content is carefully curated by the Google Maps API team.

In order to help users discover relevant apps and topics in the showcase, we’ve devised a tagging system that allows you to filter examples both by theme, and by Google Maps API features used.

We hope that the showcase and the interactive examples on the new Google Maps API Developers capture your imagination and inspire you with what’s possible using the platform. The imagination of Google Maps API developers has always been what makes the product great and we’re looking forward to seeing what you come up with next.


Carlos Cuesta is the Product Marketing Manager for Google Maps API. He also enjoys travelling, photography, and collecting vinyl.

Posted by Scott Knaster, Editor

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Spotted: Identifying Place Histories from Activity Traces with an Eye to Parameter Impact

Visualizing mobile usage in a specific place. Sounds intriguing... And a bit spooky. 

IEEE TVCG
Events that happened in the past are important for understanding the ongoing processes, predicting future developments, and making informed decisions. Important and/or interesting events tend to attract many people. Some people leave traces of their attendance in the form of computer-processable data, such as records in the databases of mobile phone operators or photos on photo sharing web sites. We developed a suite of visual analytics methods for reconstructing past events from these activity traces. Our tools combine geocomputations, interactive geovisualizations, and statistical methods to enable integrated analysis of the spatial, temporal, and thematic components of the data, including numeric attributes and texts. We also support interactive investigation of the sensitivity of the analysis results to the parameters used in the computations. For this purpose, statistical summaries of computation results obtained with different combinations of parameter values are visualized in a way facilitating comparisons. We demonstrate the utility of our approach on two large real data sets, mobile phone calls in Milano during 9 days and flickr photos made on British Isles during 5 years.

Annoucements: collaboration with Sousa e Silva today and tomorrow!

Folks,

Just a quick reminder that we will be visited today by Adriana Sousa e Silva, who will give us a guest lecture. You should already have read and reacted to the readings I mentioned in our earlier post.

Tomorrow, those of you who can should go to Adriana's class on main campus at 3p to earn participation credit. We'll be doing project critique of both class's projects. Adriana's class is at Winston Hall room 205 (23 on the map). Those of you who come should prepare to make an elevator pitch for your project in 4 minutes time (we'll do this once per project). You can bring along one page to plop onto an overhead projector.

Best,

Ben

Job: Web programmers at the City of Raleigh

A colleague at the city of Raleigh is looking for a web developer.

Best,

Ben

Benjamin Watson
Director, Design Graphics Lab | Associate Professor, Computer Science, NC State Univ.
919-513-0325 | designgraphics.ncsu.edu | @dgllab


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Minter, Jonathan <Jonathan.Minter@raleighnc.gov>
Date: Tue, Mar 20, 2012 at 2:46 PM
Subject: Web programmers
To: Ben Watson <bwatson@ncsu.edu>
Cc: "Stagner, Beth" <Beth.Stagner@raleighnc.gov>


Ben,

Another topic for you - we are in the process of hiring a web developer to work on www.raleighnc.gov<http://www.raleighnc.gov>.  Could you point us to any faculty that might know of some good solid students that are graduating this spring with skills in web development?

Jonathan Minter
City of Raleigh
222 W. Hargett Street, Suite 502
Post Office Box 590
Raleigh, North Carolina 27602-0590
Tel: 919.996.5462 Mob: 919.238.9429
Email: Jonathan.Minter@raleighnc.gov<mailto:Jonathan.Minter@raleighnc.gov>
Website: www.raleighnc.gov<http://www.raleighnc.gov>

Customer Support Center:  919.996.6000


 “E-mail correspondence to and from this address may be subject to the North Carolina Public Records Law and may be disclosed to third parties by an authorized City or Law Enforcement official.”


Find: Google Nexus tablet: a 7-inch $199 Kindle Fire killer?

Rumours of a google branded play for the low end tablet market grow. 

The Verge - All Posts
Gallery Photo: Asus Eee Pad MeMO ME370T hands-on

"If at first you don't succeed, try, try again," the saying goes.

Or in the words of Android boss Andy Rubin, "double down."

The Verge has learned from sources that Google intends to launch a 7-inch tablet in the coming months for $199, echoing several other reports in recent days.

Rubin has made it clear that Google intends to make another run at penetrating the consumer tablet market this year — a market that Apple utterly dominates by every metric — and in order to do that, it's going to need a game plan. "The educated consumer realizes it now that they're either picking the Apple ecosystem or the Microsoft ecosystem or the Google ecosystem... we're going to do a better job at making people understand what ecosystem they're buying...

Find: Steve Wozniak comes out in support of Mike Daisey, says 'his method succeeded'

Woz says performer daisey's technique worked, and that it's end effect was positive.

The Verge - All Posts
Steve Wozniak image from Flickr

The furor over performance artist Mike Daisey's misrepresentation of facts in an episode of This American Life has led to a retraction from TAL and a back-and-forth between all parties involved — but one individual that's standing by Daisey is Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak. In an interview with CNET today, Woz stated that he thought Daisey's work was a positive force that had steered the public conversation in the right direction, comparing it to informative political satire like The Colbert Report and The Daily Show. "I think his monologue has influenced Apple to take steps in that direction the best they can," Wozniak said of Daisey. "Because people must know there are workers who can't get medical coverage and are underage and are...

Find: Without ads, Android apps could be more than twice as power-efficient

70% of app power use is ads? If true, I see ad blocking or real change in our ad future. If nothing else, such change would allow more ads!!

The Verge - All Posts
Galaxy Note battery_555

A team of researchers from Purdue University and Microsoft has discovered that up to 75 percent of app-related battery drain in Android can be caused by ad-serving processes. Led by Abhinav Pathak, the team developed an energy profiler named EProf, which is able to perform fine-grained analysis of the battery use of any Android app, separating each thread inside and recording its energy use. The team tested five popular Android applications including Angry Birds, FreeChess, and the New York Times app using a HTC Passion (Nexus One) running Android 2.3.

In testing Angry Birds, Pathak recorded energy usage for one level of gameplay, and found that less than 30 percent of the app's battery drain was caused by the game itself. The other 70...

Find: 5 Minutes on The Verge: Shaun Inman

His comments on virtual vs physical interface are insightful. 

The Verge - All Posts
shuan inman

The web aficionados among you may know Shaun Inman from his web design site experiments, the Mint analytics package, Fever feed reading app, or more recently, iOS games like The Last Rocket. He took some time to talk to The Verge about the difficulty of implementing touch-based controls, why Super Mario Bros. still works so well, and his favorite pixel art designers. You can find him online at shauninman.com and on Twitter at @shauninman.

Find: The iPad's Retina Display goes under the microscope in screen comparison

Nice images of different display layouts. 

The Verge - All Posts
New iPad and iPad 3 screen comparison from Lukas Mathis

Before Apple's latest iPad was announced, we saw some early comparisons of an unpowered version of the device's display panel. Now that the iPad is out, the logical next step was to do the same with the real deal, and UI designer Lukas Mathis has taken on the challenge, comparing the display's pixels to several other devices on his blog. Using a USB microscope, Mathis examined the quadrupled pixel count on the new iPad, while also putting it up against the iPad 2, iPhone 4S, Blackberry PlayBook, and the Kindle Fire, amongst many others. While obviously demonstrating the iPad's superiority on the pixel front, it's also a primer on different screen technologies themselves, from the unique pixel arrangement of the Nintendo 3DS's 3D panel,...

Find: Sony SmartWatch review

Verge doesn't like this one: and it hasn't been done right yet. I think it's a good idea: how to do it right?  

The Verge - All Posts
Sony SmartWatch Head 1020px

The Sony SmartWatch is an intriguing device — a secondary display for your Android-powered handset that provides quick access to notifications from select apps and services on your phone. It’s also able to show you who's calling or texting, control music, and even tell the time. There's been a growing trend for products like this over the past few months, from the WIMM One to Fossil’s MetaWatch, but Sony’s is one of the first of this latest wave (along with the inPulse) to make it to the general public.

Sony’s range of LiveWare accessories certainly offer a unique take on connected headsets and wearable interfaces for your Android phone, but they've previously been hit-and-miss-affairs, generally seen as great ideas that...

Find: The new iPad: Retina Display Analysis

Find: My smartphone, the spy: protecting privacy in a mobile age

They aren't very private, at least not from the government. We need protection for cloud data, local data, and location data. Current options: don't use your phone (unrealistic), encrypt your phone (possible), use better passwords (open research problem).

Feature: My smartphone, the spy: protecting privacy in a mobile age




Around the turn of the century, the FBI was pursuing a case against a suspect—rumored to be Las Vegas strip-club tycoon Michael Galardi, though documents in the case are still sealed—when it hit upon a novel surveillance strategy.

The suspect owned a luxury car equipped with an OnStar-like system that allowed customers to "phone home" to the manufacturer for roadside assistance. The system included an eavesdropping mode designed to help the police recover the vehicle if it was stolen, but the FBI realized this same anti-theft capability could also be used to spy on the vehicle's owner.

Competition: The world codes for NASA in International Space Apps Challenge


The world codes for NASA in International Space Apps Challenge




An international code-a-thon is set to take place in April on seven continents. And in space. From April 21-23, the 48-hour International Space Apps Challenge (ISAC) will take place in tech hubs and other spaces from San Francisco to Sao Paolo, Jakarta to Antarctica—and aboard the International Space Station. Crew members of the McMurdo Station in Antarctica and the ISS will participate, depending on the days’ work demands. Those who cannot attend at one of the code-a-thon locations are able to register independently to participate online.

#more 

ISAC is sponsored by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) in conjunction with the Second Muse think tank, and in cooperation with other space agencies. During the event, "citizens from around the world will work together to solve current challenges relevant to both space exploration and social need... using minimal resources and maximum brainpower to create outside-the-box solutions in response to interesting problems," according to the organizers.

Participants will form teams and tackle a set of pre-determined challenges that include creating an interface for NASA's planetary data, developing an HTLM5 tablet app for citizen scientists using earth science data from NASA's Earth Observations site, and an open data challenge that will use information from the Kepler space observatory.

One of the intriguing elements of the challenge is the goal to "(e)ngage citizens in countries with little or no investments in space exploration to contribute to space exploration through open source, open data, and code development." This is one of the reasons the challenge is being hosted by, among others, Nairobi, Kenya's iHub. Kenyans are not renowned for their space program but they are well known for their coding chops.

“We recognize that there are skilled and talented developers, makers and creators all around the world and we are excited to see what they...

Find: FAA to revisit the use of certain personal electronics on flights

About time!

Ars Technica

Laura J. Brown, deputy assistant administrator for public affairs for the Federal Aviation Administration, told the New York Times the agency will take a “fresh look” at electronics use on planes.

Bits Blog writer Nick Bilton called the F.A.A. last week ready to pester them about travelers' inability to use personal electronic devices during take-off, taxi, and landing. Instead Brown revealed the FAA will revisit their policy—which last had the necessary testing in 2006 (well before 2010's unveiling of the iPad). "With the advent of new and evolving electronic technology, and because the airlines have not conducted the testing necessary to approve the use of new devices, the FAA is taking a fresh look at the use of personal electronic devices, other than cellphones, on aircraft,” she said.


#more 

Even without the inclusion of smart phones, this revisit could benefit the masses. According to Forrester Research, more than 40 million e-readers and 60 million iPads and other tablets will have been purchased by the end of 2012.

Current FAA regulations allow airlines to request the use of electronic devices “once the airline demonstrated the devices would not interfere with aircraft avionics.” But, naturally, it costs a good deal of money to create that research. Bilton reached out to Abby Lunardini, vice president of corporate communications at Virgin America, who explained the current guidelines required for an airline when testing devices.

Each version of a single device must be tested before it can be approved by the FAA. Each airline would need to test the original iPad, the iPad 2 and the new third generation iPad before receiving approval, and each airline needs to test every plane model in its fleet. The tests would need to each be done on a separate flight with no passengers on the plane. (Imagine the scale of each airline testing with each iteration of each device, ugh).

It may take some time and resources, but if e-readers, tablets, laptops, etc. gain approval it would be a welcomed addition for all. Should the FAA pursue testing (or make it easier for airlines to do so), we could finally see some additions to the FAA's list of electric devices approved during take-off and landing—currently including electric razors and audio recorders.

Find: Google I/O 2012 Student Discount

Google Student Blog

Do you build apps using Google tools like Android, App Engine, and Google APIs?

As a student you qualify for Google I/O’s discounted ticket price of $300 (regular price is $900!)

Google I/O is Google’s annual developer conference that brings together thousands of developers for three days of deep technical content, focused on building the next generation of web, mobile, and enterprise applications with Google and open web technologies such as Android, Google Chrome, Google APIs, Google+, App Engine, and more.

Registration opens at 7am PDT on March 27, 2012.
https://developers.google.com/io

Last year Google I/O sold out in just 59 minutes, so be prepared at 7am PDT on March 27th this year!

Learn more about the event from the official blog post.

Play the Input/Output HTML5 game!

Posted by Robert Do, Associate Product Marketing Manager

Competition: Narrow the Gapp: Code as Activism

Smarterware

A couple of weeks ago on an episode of TWiG, I argued that code is one of the best kinds of activism. Time to put my money where my mouth is. My new project, Narrow the Gapp, is a single-serving web site which displays the pay gap between men and women on average across over 100 occupations in the United States.

The purpose of Narrow the Gapp is twofold. First, it highlights and personalizes the problem of the gender pay gap in brief talking points that are easy to share on social media networks. Second, it promotes The Department of Labor's Equal Pay App Challenge, a call to developers to build apps that address the pay gap using government data. I had the privilege to help the White House's Equal Pay Task Force plan this challenge, so while I can't submit an entry myself, I wanted to do what I could to promote it. April 17th is Equal Pay Day, so I look forward to seeing more pay gap-focused apps help men and women demand fair pay during the job offer and performance review process.

Thanks to everyone who has tweeted, shared, pinned, blogged, and +1ed pages from Narrow the Gapp, and in many cases, braved misogynist trolls in the process. Thanks also to the blogs who covered the launch of the site:

Thanks to Anil Dash, Adam Pash, Andy Baio, and Kevin Purdy for their suggestions while I built Narrow the Gapp. Narrow The Gapp's source code is available on GitHub. Please copy and repurpose it.

Find: Pressure on Apple Builds Over App Store Fraud

Where there is money, there is fraud. The real question is, how does app fraud compare to other fraud? 

NYT
Complaints about mysterious transactions on iTunes are undermining the store’s reputation as the safest of online shopping environments.

Find: 'This American Life' Retracts Episode on Apple's Suppliers in China

Taml withdraws its apple in china show, the first time it's ever done a withdrawal. 

NYT
The show says it was misled by Mike Daisey, whose one-man show "The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs" was the basis of a program shown in January. Mr. Daisey responded, "I stand by my work."

Find: Does this smartphone make me look stupid? Meet the "ladyphones"

Interesting piece on women and devices. Bottom line: don't assume that looks mean lightweight. Maybe it's time someone actually learned what women need and want. 

Ars Technica

Women are accosted everywhere by pink: pink toys when they're young, pink clothes when they're teenagers, pink beer when they're adults. That wasn't the case in tech, which for decades created a black and chrome world, but as even advanced gadgets have gone mainstream in the last decade, pink has followed. 


Talk: Thursday 10:00 AM -- Games talk

Games talk.

Thursday March 15, 2012, 10:00 AM
How do we make interactive narratives and what would that even mean?
http://research.csc.ncsu.edu/colloquia/seminar-post.php?id=452

----------------

Homework: example app

Folks,

I'd like each of you to prepare to present one example app by March 26. This means you will need to post a description of that app on our class blog by that day -- which means you will need to ensure you turn in your posting permission form before then, if you haven't already.

The app should be as directly related to your project as possible. You can learn more about good app examples here. We may take a few class days to get through all of your examples.

Best,

Ben

Readings: catching up on topics so far

Folks,

On Wednesday, I'll be out of town, but my graduate student Ju Hee Bae will come to lead discussion of three readings that address topics we've already discussed:

Please read and react to each of these papers on the class forum. You need not have reactions online until noon Wednesday.

Best,

Ben

Projects: final project assignments

Hey folks,

Below are the project assignments for the remainder of the semester. I will send each group an email with further detail:

  • Approved student generated projects:
    • Car Juice: Jason Brown, Richard Parsons & Dan Perjar
    • Silence: Giulio Frasca, Spencer Guy & Alton Walston
    • Assassin: Carson Holgate & Joshua Mohundro
  • Assignments to existing projects:
    • BioJam: The sustainability game, with collaborators at the Institute of Forest Biotechnology. Khiry Arnold, Matthew Gray, Christopher Kampe & Daniel Morgan
    • SeeingGreen: Visualizing Raleigh sustainability in augmented reality, with collaborators at the City of Raleigh. William Cross, Ben Fitzgerald, Michael Lee & Jonathan Morgan
    • CrowdFarm: creating a virtual farmer's market, with collaborators at two local companies and NCSU coop extenstion. Ryan Davis, Ryan Graham, Scott Graham & Ethan Steinman
    • WalkRaleigh: encouraging and supporting Raleigh pedestrians, with Matt Tomasulo of City Fabric. Dale Jackson, David Johnson & Benjamin Murray.
Those of you who had your projects approved should prepare to present your projects in critique on Monday the 19th, when we will be visited by Billy Houghteling of our tech transfer office. You can learn more about critique presentations here.

The rest of you will not begin presentations for critique until Monday 26th. (We will be visited again by Adriana Sousa e Silva on Wednesday 23rd). You should immediately begin thinking about drafting a modest proposal for your assigned project, and arrange a meeting with your external collaborators. I will send you details about how to reach them shortly. If you don't meet with them this week, try to include me. If you can meet with them this week, make sure to send me a report of your meeting, so that I iterate on it.

Best,

Ben

Find: Physical Impressions of the New iPad, Retina Display Shots

Nice comparisons of new vs old ipad display. 

AnandTech

We just got some time with the new iPad, have a look at the gallery below for some shots of the device including macro shots of the new Retina Display.

Find: The iOS 5.1 update, "4G", AT&T, and the 3G Toggle

Details on the hspa/4g debate about iPhone. 

AnandTech

When the iPhone 4S first launched, AT&T ominously noted (through a document leaked to The Verge) that it was "working with Apple" to update the 3G indicator to 4G in the status bar. Back then, the extent of just how much AT&T was working with Apple on a regular basis to both build carrier.ipcc bundles and beyond was unknown, but the two have worked together in the past to make UI related changes, going all the way back to the iPhone 3G's signal to bars mapping. In addition, obviously the carrier works with Apple to both validate baseband behavior and respective updates. However, having the carrier dictate changes to UI seemed like new territory.

With respect to the iPhone 4S there was also some confusion about whether the device was HSPA+, and whether that met ITU-R's earlier 4G definitions. All of that we addressed in another post that I'd encourage you to take a look at as a primer for all this. I'm not going to go into that whole debate again since honestly the "4G" thing boils down to a matter of definition, and whether or not you subscribe to ITU-R or not is a matter of principle.

The iPhone 4S launched with a 3G indicator on iOS 5.0, and later was updated to iOS 5.0.1 with the  indicator unchanged. Even up through the iOS 5.1 betas, there was no sign that AT&T had worked with Apple to do anything more than slightly bump up the ATT_US.ipcc carrier bundle version. Today with iOS 5.1 going final, things have changed, and the 3G logo of the past now has been updated, and is sure to confuse at least some people about what really has indeed changed.


Find: Applications available for Engineering Trainee Summer Program in London, Munich, and Krakow

For undergraduates, sounds like fun. 

Google Student Blog
Google’s Engineering Practicum Internship Program (formerly known as BOLD Practicum) is now in its fourth year in four Google offices in the US. What may be even more exciting is that this will be the first summer that the program is offered in three of our European offices—London, Munich and Krakow. The Engineering Trainee Summer Program is aimed at increasing the pipeline of future computer scientists and software developers, particularly those who are historically underrepresented in the field.

The Engineering Trainee Summer Program offers the same three components as the Engineering Practicum, including a software project, skills-based training and professional development. An example of the type of project you may work on is working with the Geo pipeline diagnostics team, which is a team within Google Maps, partnering with other trainees and working together on creating a plug-in system for the new data debugger that was under development. You will be working on production level code throughout the Summer. The program will last for 10 weeks between July and September 2012.

Students who have completed their first year of their Bachelor studies by summer 2012 and are studying computer science or related subjects will be selected to participate in the program.

Launch something global: Your career at Google
The program is open to all qualified students, and students who are a member of a group that is historically underrepresented in the technology industry are especially encouraged to apply.

The application deadline is April 20, 2012. However, applications will be reviewed on a rolling basis and we encourage early applications.

Find: Nokia details history of 41-megapixel 808 PureView, image sensor inspired by satellites

Detail about a nice Nokia innovation. 

The Verge - All Posts
Nokia 808 PureView

Nokia's 41-megapixel 808 PureView was one of the highlights of Mobile World Congress 2012, and we managed to get a few details about the device's development from Nokia's head of imaging Damian Dinning at the event. But in a post on Nokia's Conversations blog, Dinning has written a more in-depth account of how the PureView technology went from concept to reality. It actually started back in 2006, when Nokia began experimenting with including optical zoom on its devices. With the constantly evolving expectations for screen size and image quality, the company went through a number of concepts that never actually made it to market.

The breakthrough moment came when one of the engineers stumbled across an article about how satellites use...

Find: New iPad introduction event video now available online

Watch at the source. 

The Verge - All Posts
2012 iPad event video screencapture

Well that didn't take long. It's been barely an hour since Apple wrapped up its event introducing the new iPad and a suite of apps to take advantage of that Retina Display — and the company already has video of the event up for streaming online. We're collecting all of our hands-on impressions and videos for you here, but if you'd like to see Tim Cook and company for yourself, you can head over to Apple's own website. If the company stays true to form, you can expect the same video to show up as one of Apple's video podcasts as well.

Find: Nvidia will put Apple's A5X claims to the test, says it's 'pleased' by Tegra 3 comparison

Nvidia not planning on taking apple's slam without a response. 
The Verge - All Posts
Apple A5X 4x Tegra 3 comparison
Remember a few hours ago, when Apple claimed its new A5X chip had four times the graphical prowess of Nvidia's Tegra 3? As you might imagine, Nvidia doesn't intend to simply let that be. The graphics firm told ZDNet that without specific benchmarks to back up that claim, "Apple has a very generic statement" right now, but that Nvidia would certainly be purchasing a third-generation iPad on March 16th to test those claims for itself. Citations or no, if the new iPad does indeed have twice the graphical potential of the iPad 2, the "4x" quote might not be too far off in certain applications: AnandTech ran the Tegra 3-powered Transformer Prime against the iPad 2 in a run of GLBenchmark, and found a few performance differences.

Find: Here are your winners of the 2012 Game Developers Choice Awards

Including best mobile games. 

The Verge - All Posts
Skyrim

The Game Developers Choice Awards are voted on by developers for developers. It's a chance for the members of the games industry to reward their peers, to say this is the best work happening in video games today. One would expect this to be the folks at flush AAA publishers but many of tonight's winners were indies as if to say: Finally, indies and mainstream games are on equal ground. Gamers deserve excellent games from both sectors, and the awards are one way of showing they're getting it.

The night's host was Cliff Blezinski, the director of the Gears of War trilogy, and the face of Epic Games. Cliff has a dry sense of humor that connected with pockets of the audience. Jokes involving fellow industry stars, like Geoff Keighley, host...

Find: iOS game devs react to new iPad specs

Memory clearly needed to support new hi res display. 4gb games within a year. (and 2 hour downloads). 
The Verge - All Posts
Infinity Blade Dungeons
Earlier today, Apple revealed the next generation iPad to the world. As many expected, the updated tablet, which will hit stores next week, will come with a higher resolution screen (2048x1536) and a more powerful, quad-core graphics processor. Gaming is likely to be affected the most by these increased specs, so we reached out to several well-known iOS developers to get their first impressions on the hardware.
Mike Capps of Epic (Infinity Blade, Infinity Blade Dungeons)
"The quad core [processor] makes a big difference in terms of what we can draw. When you think about it, they increased the resolution of the screen by a factor of four and they doubled the graphics performance, that wouldn't make you think, Great, we've got tons ...

Find: US smartphone subscribers top 100 million, Android accounts for nearly half

Android one half, iOS one third, bbos distant third. 

The Verge - All Posts
iPhone, Android, WindowsPhone7

According to figures released by ComScore, the smartphone market in the US has exceeded 100 million subscribers for the first time. The milestone was reached in January when the total smartphone userbase hit 101.3 million — this represents growth of 13 percent since October, so the figure is likely millions more now that we're in March. Google and Apple both saw small increases in marketshare to take 48.6 percent and 29.5 percent respectively, whereas RIM continued its decline and now accounts for just over 15 percent of the market. Microsoft also saw a fall in its numbers, though it looks like Windows Mobile and Windows Phone are combined in ComScore's figures. We'd obviously expect a decline in the former, but it's a little...

Find: Siine Keyboard for Android lets you construct texts like Lego

New shortcut based text input. 

The Verge - All Posts
Siine keyboard HTC Desire 640px

A new alternative Android keyboard has yet another way of thinking about the way you type. Named Siine, it offers three different ways of entering text. Alongside the regular QWERTY keyboard, there are also a number of quick shortcut menus for times, dates, and regularly used words and expressions. Each of these is context-aware and so adjusts to help you form phrases by hiding words once you've used them already. It's designed with Android 4.0 in mind — the app fits in well with the Holo theme, even down to the Market-like Siine gallery. There's also a "stress" mode — if you can't speak to someone and need to generate a reply at speed, Siine has a menu with words and phrases like "sorry" and "can't talk now."

We downloaded the...

Find: In a triumph of marketing, AT&T upgrades Apple's iPhone to '4G'

Only the names have been changed to deceive the customer. 

The Verge - All Posts
iphone 4s vs 4 4g lies 1024

As he was introducing the iPhone 4S last October, Phil Schiller took care to note that while the device had dramatically improved cellular data speeds, Apple wasn't yet calling it a "4G" device. "This is what the majority of our competitors claim when they talk about 4G performance," he said, comparing the iPhone's data speeds to a number of AT&T smartphones listed as "4G" despite their lack of next-generation LTE radios. "We're not going to get into a debate in the industry about what's 4G and what isn't — we'll leave that for others to talk about."

How bout the new update to the iPhone for AT&T makes it 4g now #movinup

— Jake Goeckeritz (@JakeGoecks13) March 8, 2012

That debate has been conclusively decided. On Tuesday, Apple...

Find: An ode to the pocket calculator, one of the first mobile computing devices

The Verge - All Posts
iPhone calculator

In this day and age of tablets that have screens with over three million pixels, it's easy to forget the humble pocket calculator, one of the world's first examples of mobile computing. The New York Times remembers, though, and has published a nice look back at one of the major victims of digitalization. Most amusing among the stories told in this piece is probably the one about the Soviet diplomat whose Sinclair Executive calculator exploded in his shirt pocket after the batteries overheated — back then, you could only leave your calculator on for a few hours at a time. Due to the "tense political climate," the Soviets supposedly established an official investigation into this incident to make sure there was no foul play afoot. While...

Find: New iPad LTE data plans: no mobile hotspot with AT&T at launch

The verizon month by month plan with free hotspot a uniquely good deal. 

The Verge - All Posts
Gallery Photo: New iPad hands-on photos

Apple has been shuffling the data plans that it shows for the Verizon and AT&T versions of the new iPad with LTE service in the past day, and it's a little confusing — AT&T's $30 plan was originally indicated as 2GB instead of 3, and buyers still can't see all four Verizon plans that are available. Here's the definitive word on the commitment-free offerings from both operators:

AT&T (3 plans total)

  • 250MB $14.99, overage $14.99 per 250MB
  • 3GB $30, overage $10 per 1GB
  • 5GB $50, overage $10 per 1GB

Verizon (4 plans total)

  • 1GB $20, overage $20 per 1GB
  • 2GB $30, overage $10 per 1GB
  • 5GB $50, overage $10 per 1GB
  • 10GB $80, overage $10 per 1GB

Perhaps more notably, Verizon's plans include hotspot service across the board at no additional ...

Find: iA Writer for iPhone hands-on

first alternative iPhone keyboard I've heard of. 

The Verge - All Posts
EMBARGO ia writer iphone

iA Writer for iPad, Mac, and now iPhone is a minimalist text editor that has turned design agency Information Architects into a full-blown app developer. Like WriteRoom, PlainText, and other similar text editors, its main feature is an absence of features, designed to remove distractions and aid focus on the task in hand. Writer offers a few twists, though — a modified iOS keyboard, seamless iCloud and Dropbox syncing, and a single, beautiful monospaced font (a modified version of Nitti Light) in a non-adjustable point. It makes for a great writing experience, and I can tell you personally that almost all my posts on this site start out as a blank fullscreen on Writer for Mac or iPad. An update adding iPhone support to the latter...

Find: Google-branded 7-inch Asus tablet coming as early as May, says DigiTimes

A tablet Prime in May?

The Verge - All Posts
Gallery Photo: Asus Eee Pad MeMO ME370T hands-on

Asus wants the world to know how close it is to Google, but that could be closer than we'd ever imagined if reports from DigiTimes are to be believed. The site's sources claim that the two companies are to collaborate on a 7-inch tablet aimed at the Kindle Fire with a price tag of $199-$249. It's said to be the first tablet to run the Google Play store, and is set to debut in May. Google apparently selected Asus for its quality and ODM capabilities, and the company has indeed been working on similar-sounding products. Asus showed off the MeMO ME370T at CES this year, a 7-inch tablet with a Tegra 3 SoC, 1280 x 800 resolution display and $249 price point, though we haven't heard much about it since — could Google be thinking along...

Find: Imagination Technologies GPU face-off: PowerVR SGX540 vs. SGX544

Need to find out which gpu is in the new iPad. we'll be seeing more of these mobile gpu faceoffs as mobile computing becomes more dominant. 
The Verge - All Posts
imagination technologies sgx540 sgx544 test stock 1024
Curious how today's middle-of-the-road mobile graphics compares against next year's tech? Look no further than this comparison video we shot at the 2012 Game Developers Conference in San Francisco this week. We pit the Intel Medfield Reference Platform, with Imagination Technologies' wildly popular PowerVR SGX540 GPU, against the new PowerVR SGX544 graphics in ST-Ericsson's Novathor L9540 prototype design. Not only does the new GPU manage around double the framerate in this particular demo, it does it at a higher 720p resolution and with more visual effects. Mind you, that's perhaps to be expected given that the SGX540 dates back to 2008 and SGX544 silicon like the Novathor may not be in devices until next year. There's also CPU...

Find: Sencha updates framework for building native-looking mobile Web apps

Toolkit for developing mobile web apps, bad on old yahoo tech. Includes conversion to native apps. 

Ars Technica

Sencha, a company that develops JavaScript libraries, announced this morning the availability Sencha Touch 2, a major new version of the company's framework for building mobile Web applications. The new version brings improved performance, broader platform support, and additional functionality.

We discussed the update with Aditya Bansod, the senior director of product management at Sencha. He described how Sencha Touch fits into the company's product roadmap, which includes an evolving suite of tools, frameworks, and services for building applications with standards-based Web technologies. We also conducted some hands-on tests with the new version of the Sencha Touch framework and used it to build a simple mobile application.

Find: Android fragmentation also a challenge for Web developers

Slow carriers updates of android are pushing google to update browser independent of carriers, and developers to move to the browser as a universal platform. 
Ars Technica

Fragmentation remains an issue for third-party Android application developers. The wide spread and slow rate of adoption for new versions of the operating system prevent developers from being able to use the latest APIs. But native application developers aren't the only ones who are feeling the pain. A prominent Web developer has recently drawn attention to the challenges that Android version fragmentation poses for mobile Web development.
As we explained in some of our recent Android browser coverage, the platform's default Web browser has historically not been very good at handling the most intensive application-like Web experiences. It lacks support for many modern Web standards and has difficulty handling things like animated transitions. Google is finally correcting the problem by bringing a full port of its excellent Chrome Web browser to the Android platform.

Find: Apple's iPad with retina display, quad core graphics ships March 16

Cool display, graphics claimed to be 4x tegra3!
Ars Technica

Apple announced a new version of the iPad at an event today in San Francisco. The new hardware will have a retina display, a 5-megapixel rear camera, access to 4G LTE networks, and an A5 X chip with quad-core graphics.
"To this day, no one has yet matched that display technology on any mobile device," Phil Schiller said of the 2048x1536 display (that works out to 264 pixels per inch). The new A5X chip is meant to excel at graphics, and has four times the performance of NVIDIA's quad-core Tegra 3 chip, said Schiller.

State of the Handset Art, Part One

A designer's perspective on mwc. 
frog design mind
The major announcements at this year's Mobile World Congress have mostly revolved around Android handsets. The heavy competition is pushing companies to be more adventurous with their designs both aesthetically and functionally. A common theme this year has also been the emphasis on photography and music quality out of the handsets. Let's look at the style, imaging, and sound trends in more depth. In this post I'll talk about the handset design highlights, and in Part Two I'll look at imaging and sound.
Style, Baby
After years of me-too look-alike phones (mimicking you-know-what in many cases), or just plain ugly phones, Android is finally getting some handsets that try to be a bit different and a more stylish. We are seeing more interesting uses of materials, shapes that try to break out of the basic rounded rectangle (at least within the tight constraints of such a small device dominated by a flat display on one side), and nice detailing that again breaks out of the minimalist mold. Overall build quality is better too.
Asus - The maker of netbooks is rapidly transitioning into an innovative maker of tablets. Maybe too innovative - it's new Padphone is made up of modular smartphone, tablet (really just a display which the phone plugs into to provide the smarts), keyboard dock, and stylus...but wait, there's more, because the stylus is also a Bluetooth headset! This maybe a bit too much, but if you look at the less complex Transformer Prime, you will see a beautifully executed, very thin and light tablet that also plugs sturdily into a keyboard dock, so it can be used like a mini laptop. The aluminum case comes in subtly-chosen colors, and has a lovely spun metal pattern that is not only attractive but functional, as it makes the case fairly grippy.


Find: Innovation or hype? Ars examines Nokia's 41 megapixel smartphone camera

Excellent explainer of nokia's innovative new smartphone camera, and digital photography in general. 

Ars Technica

Nokia ignited a bit of a controversy on Monday when it unveiled a smartphone with a 41 megapixel camera sensor dubbed the 808 PureView. Yes, you read that right—41 megapixels, not 14, or 4.1. It will soon be possible to buy a smartphone with as many megapixels as some low-end, medium-format digital SLRs.

Has Nokia completely succumbed to the megapixel myth? Well, no. Instead of positioning the PureView as the smartphone equivalent of a professional digital camera, Nokia is turning the conventional thinking that originally drove the increasing pixel counts of digital cameras on its head, and developing novel ways to exploit an overabundance of pixel data.

While we think there is room to criticize Nokia's specific implementation, there are plenty of good ideas wrapped in the "PureView technology" rubric that we think other smartphone makers—or for that matter, digital camera manufacturers—should consider.

Find: City planner proposes to resurrect guerrilla Walk Raleigh signs

Walk raleigh lives on. 

n&o crosstown

Planning Director Mitchell Silver pulled down Matt Tomasulo’s pedestrian navigation signs last week because they broke city rules. Now he wants to put them up again.

Tomasulo has agreed to give the city 27 signs he posted at three downtown street corners to promote shoe-leather transportation, in a civic-minded guerrilla campaign called “Walk Raleigh.”

Silver will ask permission from the City Council next week to resurrect Tomasulo’s idea in the form of an official 90-day city pilot project.

Each sign is simple: an arrow, a destination and the time it takes to walk there. A special scan code on each sign provides online directions for pedestrians equipped with smart phones.

One sign at Hargett and Wilmington streets said, “It’s an 18 minute walk to Glenwood South.” Other signs announced walk times to parks, museums, the Amtrak station and shopping areas.

Tomasulo posted them in January. Citing the city sign ordinance, Silver personally removed some of them last week. He said he hoped to channel Tomasulo’s motives in a city-sponsored project.

“It’s just a public awareness and public education campaign to promote walking, and it’s a simple as that,” Silver said Friday. After three months, he said, he would evaluate the signs and the public response.

If the council rejects Silver’s suggestion, Tomasulo will have the option to apply for an encroachment permit – permission to post signs in the public right of way. City inspectors regularly remove signs, usually with commercial advertising, that have been erected without permits.

Tomasulo, a 29-year-old graduate student, said he hoped the council would approve what he called a public-private partnership. He hopes to build public support for the effort with an online petition posted at http://walk-raleigh.org.

“It’s been a great experience, and I look forward to continuing the conversation with the city about it,” Tomasulo said.