Monday, February 28, 2011

Creepy app uses Twitter and Flickr data to track anyone on a map

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When you post a photo online -- especially from a phone with a built-in camera -- you're likely sharing more than the picture itself. The same is true for updates you post on Twitter. Location data is commonly included, and crafty types can do all kinds of creepy things with that information.

A good example of what's possible is Creepy, a desktop app which lets you track a Flickr or Twitter user's position on a map. Just pop in a Twitter or Flickr ID, and if the person has posted any geocoded data Creepy will pin the corresponding locations on a map. Satellite, street, and hybrid maps from Google and Virtual Earth are available, as are OpenAerialMap and OpenStreetMap.

Above, you can see where @scobleizer has been puttering around. Pop in anyone you want and then wait patiently -- Creepy analyzes quite a bit of data, so it can take a while for your results to appear. The mapping magic works as long as the user you search for has enabled geolocation features -- and that likely includes the vast majority of Twitter and Flickr users using a mobile app.

Creepy is available for Windows, Mac, and Linux, and the application's source code is also downloadable.

Creepy app uses Twitter and Flickr data to track anyone on a map originally appeared on Download Squad on Fri, 25 Feb 2011 11:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Clippers Owner Donald Sterling to Celebrate Black History Month in March

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Another Racial Goof Up From Clippers Donald Sterling


It's hard to believe that a man closely associated with a sport dominated by black players like professional basketball would be so ignorant when it comes to matters of race.

But believe it. Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald Sterling (pictured above) is that ignorant.

The latest example comes from a report today that the Clippers are going to celebrate Black History Month in March. That's right. The annual celebration of black achievement held every February since 1976 will start a few days late for the Clippers.

In an ad published in the Los Angeles Times, the March 2 game against the Houston Rockets will admit 1,000 underprivileged children for free "in honor of Black History Month."


The ad has the intentionally hilarious line that "tickets are subject to availability" as if tickets to two losing clubs are a hot commodity in a town with more than a few entertainment options like Los Angeles.

One might be willing to give Sterling, one of the largest real estate owners in Southern California, the benefit of the doubt on the Black History Month screw-up if it weren't for his earlier missteps on race.

Sterling paid $2.73 million to settle a federal-housing bias lawsuit. Sterling was accused by one of his property managers of having said he didn't like renting to blacks because they smelled nor Mexican-Americans because they drank liquor all day.

To his credit, he said he liked renting to Korean-Americans, because they would accept any living conditions and still pay the rent.

Sterling was also accused of telling a coaching candidate that he would prefer to have a white Southern coach leading a team of poor black players.

Sterling's racial views are just part of the story. His poor management of the Clippers over the past 30 years has made the franchise the posterchild for dysfunction in professional American sports.

Sterling's latest gaffe makes you wonder when and if NBA Commissioner David Stern will consider nudging Sterling from the owners' box in the same way baseball overlords did with Cincinnati Reds owner Marge Schott during the 1990s.

No doubt Schott's comments, like calling two of her players, Eric Davis and Dave Parker, "million-dollar n*ggers," are far worse than anything Sterling has been charged with to date.

But when any owner of a professional sports team allows his ignorant racial views to get aired publicly, as Sterling has, it threatens the bottom line for the entire sport. And that's when league managers should get involved.

 

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What would it take to create a British orchestra of the stature of the Berlin Philharmonic?

Simple. Pay them more and work them less

A piece by me in today's Comment pages and on CiF ponders the unpopular question of why no British orchestra quite reaches the dizzy heights of the Berlin Phil. And it's not to do with the quality of the players. A lively debate has ensued over on CiF.


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How Talk Talk spoke to today's artists

Often overlooked in favour of their contemporaries, Mark Hollis and co were one of the most influential English bands of the 80s

In his weighty 2010 tome Electric Eden: Unearthing Britain's Visionary Music, Rob Young charted a century's worth of musicians who helped define British folk. In the latter stages he rightly identifies and aligns the often-overlooked Talk Talk with the likes of Kate Bush and Julian Cope as genuine outsiders whose music belongs to a deep-rooted British tradition ? artists who "sought to kick their way free of expectations and create hybrid, idiosyncratic sound environments ... [to] maintain a distinctively British voice".

It was a reminder of a band who, though they may have slipped from public consciousness in the two decades since their split, are being felt more as an influence than ever. Talk Talk are one of a few genuine pioneers of their era not to have succumbed to the oxymoronically named Don't Look Back reunion circuit. Though their name may now be more synonymous with a broadband package, there was time ? the 80s ? when Talk Talk were surging forward into experimental new territories. This is also a band who divide opinion and remain nigh-on impossible to categorise; canvassing opinions online this week, retrospective reactions ranged from "Amazing!" to "Humourless, wafty and loved only by Balearic DJs".

A reminder of such influence came via an unlikely source in 2003, when Gwen Stefani's Californian ska-pop crew No Doubt scored a chart hit with a fairly faithful cover of It's My Life. But the band's influence is most obviously evident in the output of Wild Beasts. Like Talk Talk, Wild Beasts are an inherently English band preoccupied with the possibilities of space and atmospherics (and falsetto) in their sounds. "All the best bands change shape," says Wild Beast's Benny Little of their love of Talk Talk, ahead of the Beasts' new album, Smother, released in May. "The best parts are unquantifiable," agrees bassist/singer Hayden Thorpe.

A rarity in the 80s pop milieu, Talk Talk treated pop not as a shallow medium through which to get laid/rich/a sports car but, thanks mainly to frontman Mark Hollis, a conduit through which to explore uncharted waters, often in painstakingly detailed production. And unlike contemporaries such as Scritti Politti, who went from politicised squat-dwelling post-punk to lightweight winebar soul music of the mid-80s, Talk Talk went in the opposite direction: from new romantic synthpop to the avant garde by way of chart success.

Though EMI had hopes for them to follow the success of tourmates Duran Duran, Hollis was less inspired by the staple early-80s influences of Bowie and/or punk that had gone before and instead preferred everything from Satie to the Seeds to the modal jazz of Miles Davis. This was cerebral pop that refused to stand still, and as the decade progressed ? and producer/keyboard player Tim Friese-Greene joined ? Talk Talk released a series of wilfully diverse records that drew on jazz, classical, folk and pop without falling strongly to any one camp.

With its rolling piano riff, 1985's Life's What You Make It remains their best known song and has since been covered by various people (including Weezer). The success of the subsequent 1986 album Colour of Spring gained them enough commercial success for EMI to stump a hefty budget for their next album. Retreating to a church in Suffolk, Talk Talk lost themselves in their music, overshooting all deadlines and budgets. The result was 1988's Spirit of Eden, now considered a classic, albeit one that was initially commercially unsuccessful.

The influence of the layered texturing (the close-miking of individual instruments ensured an air of intimacy) and ambient leanings of the album is now evident in a disparate array of artists: from the post-rock of Tortoise and others that emerged in the 90s to associated Talk Talk bands such as Bark Psychosis and Catherine Wheel, through the trip-hop of Portishead, DJ Shadow and Unkle (whose 1998 debut Hollis played on) to the vocal fragility of Antony and the Johnsons and the natural world references of British Sea Power, finally arriving at latter-day Radiohead ? and Wild Beasts.

There's always something reassuring about a band whose ending really is a full stop; this way, there is no opportunity to taint the legacy. Hollis retired from music in the late-90s ? explaining: "I can't go on tour and be a good dad at the same time" ? and has shown little wish to return. Perhaps the best thing he can do is sit back and watch as the small shoots that he helped plant now blossom in strange new forms.


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Man Who Attacked Female Shoppers with Semen Gets Probation

Man Who Attacked Female Shoppers with Semen Gets Probation

The Maryland man who squirted semen from a squeeze bottle last summer on unsuspecting female shoppers had his sentence suspended Thursday from three years in prison to three years probation.

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Michael Wayne Edwards Jr., allegedly broke up with his girlfriend of 10 years and reportedly decided to take out his anger on female shoppers by squirting them with semen as they strolled the aisles of Giant Food supermarket and Michael's craft store in Gaithersburg.

One woman, who was in a check-out line at Giant last summer, noticed a man staring oddly at her. As she began to leave the store, he walked quickly behind her, pulled out his squeeze bottle and squirted a liquid substance on to her back. Police investigators analyzed the substance and determined that it was human semen.

The 28-year-old's semen attacks can be traced back to November 2009. Edwards would follow the victims throughout the stores, then as they began to exit, squirt semen onto their backs.

Edwards, Jr., who holds an undergraduate degree in criminal justice and who worked as an armed security guard at a government installation, actually turned himself in to police and admitted to squirting his semen on at least five random victims.

Last November, Edwards pleaded guilty to two counts of second-degree assault. With no previous criminal record, Edwards' current sentence means that he will not serve any more time in jail unless he violates probation.

Meanwhile, Edwards lawyer Barry Helfand contends that his client will be seeing a therapist while on probation. Helfand also went on to state that a doctor told the court that Edwards' actions were the result of misplaced anger after breaking up with his girlfriend.

If you buy that cockamamie excuse, then I have prime swampland to sell you in Florida!

But seriously, There are so many deviants in this society and they come in all shapes, sizes and from all walks of life. Churchgoers, scholars, law enforcement personnel, however you want to cloak it, anyone who breaks the law is a deviant and should be punished. Edwards and his legal team, can argue til the cows come home, that he has lead an immaculate existence but the act that he committed is downright dispicable and should be punishable to the fullest extent of the law. Edwards is a very sick man who has to have total disdain for women for him to have even conjured up what he did to them. Probation should resort back to jail time and the judge should order mandatory therapy for Edwards.

 

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GPS Prevents Kids From Playing Hooky

Liz Dwyer summarizes: [An Anaheim] city's school district has teamed up with local police for the ultimate Big-Brother-is-watching-you solution to truancy. They've embarked on a six-week pilot program where 75 students with four or more unexcused absences are carrying a...


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Hall�/Elder - review

Bridgewater Hall, Manchester

Marking the centenary of someone's retirement would doubtless be regarded as eccentric in some quarters. The Hall�, however, is currently commemorating one of its greats, the conductor Hans Richter, whose work with the orchestra between 1899 and 1911 was hugely influential in forging its identity. A friend and champion of Elgar, Richter gave the premiere of the composer's First Symphony in Manchester in 1908. Earlier this year, Richter's archive was placed in the Hall�'s care: Mark Elder and the orchestra are celebrating with performances of the First.

It is often said that the Hall� have Elgar's music in their blood ? an acknowledgement, perhaps, of their ongoing revitalisation of the tradition that Richter founded. You'd be hard pressed to find the First better done. Elder has an almost instinctual grasp of its mixture of grandeur and turmoil, laying out its emotional parameters early as the swelling majesty of the opening march gave way to the vehemence with which he launched the first movement's allegro. Everything that followed had a tense beauty and an inexorable momentum, until the march reasserted itself, bounding and elated, at the close.

The first half of the concert, meanwhile, was given over to Verdi's Overture to Luisa Miller and Mozart's G Major Piano Concerto, No 17, K 453. Serpentine yet tautly monothematic, Verdi's overture heaved with menace and excitement. Martin Helmchen, one of today's finest young pianists, was the well-nigh perfect soloist in the Mozart, playing with refined muscularity and wonderfully alert to the melancholy poetry that lurk beneath the work's gracious surface.

Rating: 5/5


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A Silver Lining To Sidewalk Rage

Maia Szalavitz sees one: While it sounds like an oxymoron, altruistic punishment is basically how social norms get enforced. So when you expel a huffy "Excuse me!" to the rude sidewalk clogger in front of you who has stopped midstride...


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Google updates search to massively bias original content

Google updates searchGoogle has just made a change to its search engine that noticeably impacts 12% of all queries. Yet again, it is aimed at reducing the prevalence of non-original content farm content in search results. It also heavily biases sites with "original content and information such as research, in-depth reports, thoughtful analysis," increasing their chance of being at the top. This only affects google.com at the moment, but it will be rolled out to other domains in due course.

Last month Google publicised its first anti-content farm maneuver -- and while that only affected 2% of queries, we still noticed a significant increase of traffic here on Download Squad. Then, just a couple of weeks ago, Google launched the Personal Blocklist, an extension that lets you filter out content farms from your search results.

With today's massive alteration of Google's search algorithm, it really could mean the difference between life and death for ad-supported sites that produce original content. A quick look at our logs from last night suggest that it could be a very big boost indeed.

It should be noted that the results from the Personal Blocklist haven't been used yet -- but apparently, Google's search changes filter out 84% of the sites that users have been blocking with the extension; a sure sign that Google has hit the nail on the head.

Google updates search to massively bias original content originally appeared on Download Squad on Fri, 25 Feb 2011 06:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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