How a Lone Coder Cloned Google Reader | Gizmodo


When Google Reader announced it was shutting down a few months ago, most of us stamped our feet, panicked, and went running into the arms of another RSS reader. But Matt Jibson is different. Unlike most of us, he can crunch code. So he built a Google Reader of his very own own.

And last week, the effort paid off. Last Thursday, just weeks before Google was set to pull the plug, Jibson flipped on the lights to Go Read, his open-source response to Google abandonment. He posted the project on Hacker News and his code on GitHub. 

See the full article: via How a Lone Coder Cloned Google Reader | Gizmodo.

go read rss reader

“Game Consoles” Are the Final Key to Digital Domination | Gizmodo


Game consoles have historically been their own little colony off to the side of technology. For a while that’s because they were seen mainly as an expensive kids’ toy, and later because they weren’t germane to the music sales or laptops or iPods battles of the time. Now, though, as we’re digitizing everything in our lives, that TV-connected box in the middle of every family’s living room is suddenly looking pretty important.

Google, Apple, and Microsoft want to be your one-stop digital shop. All three have a desktop OS and a mobile OS. All three are making their own hardware now. They all have stores where you can buy movies and music, and they all have their own music streaming service. They are all branching out, increasingly, into more and more parts of your life. Apple’s in your car. Google’s on your face. Microsoft is already in your living room. But their offerings are too spread out, too fragmented.

The ultimate for all of these companies, and for you, is One Device. It’ll control your music system and TV, and it will shepherd all your messages and access all of your photos and movies. It will also probably play your video games.

See the full article: “Game Consoles” Are the Final Key to Digital Domination | Gizmodo.

A Computer To Teach You Not To Act Like A Computer | Co.Exist


Technology enthusiasts who spend their days playing with computers and robots often have the amount of social graces of the machines they’re programming. So it’s either a brilliant or incredibly off-base intervention that an MIT graduate student has designed computer software to attempt to teach the socially-maladjusted how to be more sociable, via a Siri-like virtual conversation coach.

The program, called My Automated Conversation Coach (MACH), “uses a computer-generated onscreen face, along with facial, speech, and behavior analysis and synthesis software, to simulate face-to-face conversations,” according to a press release. “It then provides users with feedback on their interactions,” for example, how good was their eye contact, which words did they emphasize, how did their voice rise and fall.

via A Computer To Teach You Not To Act Like A Computer | Co.Exist: World changing ideas and innovation.

Podcasts for Libraries (Video) – Stephen’s Lighthouse


Podcasts for Libraries (Video) – Stephen’s Lighthouse.

This Just In: Young Adults Love Libraries | The Digital Shift


A brand-spanking-new Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life study (just released this morning) has found some surprising information about young people and their opinions of libraries and print books.

Here’s the lead:

Belying the stereotype that younger Americans completely eschew print for digital, those ages 16-29 have wide-ranging media and technology behaviors that straddle the traditional paper-based world of books and digital access to information.

One major surprise in a new report from the Pew Research Center is that even in an age of increasing digital resources, those in this under-30 cohort are more likely than older Americans to use and appreciate libraries as physical spaces – places to study for class, go online, or just hang out. [emphasis added]

See the full article: This Just In: Young Adults Love Libraries | The Digital Shift.

Medieval book in unknown language contains message | Crave – CNET


The Voynich Manuscript has eluded every attempt at deciphering. But new computerized statistical analysis suggests it has a genuine message and is not a hoax.

via Medieval book in unknown language contains message | Crave – CNET.

Voynich

How to Create an Instagram Video in 7 Simple Steps | Mashable


How to Create an Instagram Video in 7 Simple Steps | Mashable

See the article for the step-by-step guide, with pictures! Its Instagram…so guess what!…of course you can filter(ize), frame and caption your videos for that personal touch. Instagram will record from 3s to 15s.

Instagram Video

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30 Twitter Accounts to Follow for Technology News and Insights | Ellyssa Kroski – OEDB.org


30 Twitter Accounts to Follow for Technology News and Insights Ellyssa Kroski – OEDB.org

Categorized into either people or publications.

12 Ideas About The Future Of Media (From New York Times, Digg, and The New School) ⚙ Co.Labs


For the full article: 12 Ideas About The Future Of Media (From New York Times, Digg, and The New School) ⚙ Co.Labs ⚙ code + community

Ideas discussed include:

  1. The medium is (part of) the message
  2. Content windowing–are you kidding?
  3. Readers are filters
  4. Where’s the value lie?
  5. The new news team
  6. Misunderstandings are inevitable for innovators
  7. The challenge for media now is volume
  8. Build creative technology teams
  9. Transparency is the ultimate recruiting tool
  10. Community breaks stories
  11. Look to the East for consumption habits
  12. Renaissance of the maker

Throwing the Books at Each Other | Inside Higher Ed


“…a large percentage of the library’s non-fiction collection was being removed in a hasty and ill-considered project driven by an awkward glitch in planning. Some temporary workers had been hired to insert RFID tags into the books and it seemed foolish not to remove outdated books from the collection first, particularly since the RFID tags had yet to arrive. So to make use of the workers who were already on the clock, that removal project was suddenly shifted into high gear, and soon the whole thing was smoking and the wheels fell off, but not before thousands of books were discarded.”

via Throwing the Books at Each Other | Inside Higher Ed

Urbana Free Library Scrutinized Over Book Weeding | Illinois Public Media

Illinois: “Library Director Says Mistake Was Made in Book ‘Weeding’” | InfoDocket – LibraryJournal

I’m sure the Annoyed Librarian is going to have a comment about this one!