Search, book review: The new 'hinge' linking people and machines | ZDNet - http://www.zdnet.com/article...
"Summary:The traditional search engine will evolve into a digital personal assistant that tracks your activities and automatically delivers helpful information, according to Microsoft's Stefan Weitz, whose excellent book takes an optimistic view of this future while acknowledging the potential pitfalls." - Sean McBride
"In Search: How the Data Explosion Makes Us Smarter, Stefan Weitz, director of search at Bing, suggests that search could be the 'hinge' linking us and the technology that describes almost everything around us, and the implications of that are profound. Because if search can cover everything -- indexing and understanding everything in the world, gaining senses like hearing, touching and even smelling as well as seeing everything, and communicating in different way with us and with other systems on our behalf -- then we have a lot of questions to ask about how those systems are designed and what we want them to be able to do. If search is going to connect us to the world, then in some ways it will become our world." - Sean McBride
"The question is whether that's a good or bad thing, and Weitz notes some of the issues explicitly as he goes along. He devotes several chapters to covering the technical problems, the self-perpetuating business models and the privacy and security issues that could derail his idea of search as an ever-present assistant, gently improving your world without you doing anything more than living your life ("all watched over by machines of loving grace", as the poem puts it). That might be a nudge to order something healthy, drinks that get more expensive the drunker you get, an agent that shows you relevant messages and documents just before a meeting or any other way the system could anticipate your needs." - Sean McBride
"But Weitz admits that he's a techno-optimist and highlights the potential benefits along with the risks. And along the way, you get a detailed survey of key developments from the beginning of web search -- with one of the clearest explanations of what the graphs that connect information are really about -- to the way all our technologies are starting to matter to search. Images with metadata, video that gets automatically transcribed, identity information from social networks and the signals that clicking 'like' might represent, apps that drive services in the real world like Uber and IFTTT, smart devices and sensors, digital invitations to events, places where you check in, payment systems: Weitz shows you how much of the developed world is already digitized and looks at systems like Wolfram Alpha that pull together that information and turn it into answers. (For a book written by someone who works at Microsoft, there is very little Microsoft-specific technology here, apart from a few fascinating glimpses of experimental systems running at Microsoft Research)." - Sean McBride
"Prototype winner using ‘natural language processing’ to solve journalism’s commenting problem" http://prsm.tc/D9dJcW
"A Framework For Text Classification Using IBM SPSS Modeler" http://prsm.tc/B1nTL5
Expert System Brings its Semantic Intelligence Solution to Google Cloud Platform Through... -- MODENA, Italy, February 18, 2015 /PRNewswire/ - http://www.prnewswire.com/news-re...
"The importance of being semantic": Annotations vs Semantic Annotations" http://prsm.tc/foFhBO
Scientists say all the world’s data can fit on a DNA hard drive the size of a teaspoon http://zite.to/1E3FFyq
Machine Learning Goes Mainstream I: InboxVudu Prioritzes Your Email http://zite.to/1Bh5Xxn
vsChart.com – The Comparison Wiki - http://vschart.com/
Hackers rob US and global banks of millions in one of the largest heists ever http://zite.to/1A9e3oJ
o; nml; note; The specs for NML can be defined and written entirely in NML.
examples: - Sean McBride
o; nml; format; date; default template; (date; *date; *property; *value) - Sean McBride
DARPA's New Search Engine Puts Google in the Dust - Defense One - http://www.defenseone.com/technol...
"“How can I make the unseen seen?” Dan Kaufman, the director of DARPA’s information innovation office director, said last week in a feature on “60 Minutes.” The answer, Kaufman said, is Memex. Developed by DARPA, this search engine on steroids dives deep into the realm of the “Dark Web” and spits out a data-driven map detailing all of the patterns it’s unearthed." - Sean McBride
"Ontotext: Integrated Text Mining and Triplestores, a form graph database" http://prsm.tc/oeyCqP
Meta-Guide.com - http://meta-guide.com/
sort (*, blogs, email addresses, Facebook pages, feeds, forums, organizations, people, publications, Twitter pages, websites) by number of mentions of [*]
A Google-Backed Research Project Aims to Automate Data Analysis http://zite.to/173g7UT
Google's Vint Cerf warns of 'digital Dark Age' http://zite.to/1AiP85m
Which topics get the upvote on Hacker News? | Diving into data - http://blog.datadive.net/which-t...
# mining social trends -- a few key elements
1. Big Data mining 2. content analysis 3. culturomics 4. data science 5. elite opinion trends 6. event analysis 7. Internet articles 8. Internet comments 9. mass opinion trends 10. political science 11. sentiment mining 12. social media 13. social network analysis 14. social science 15. text mining 16. vanguard networks 17. vanguard opinion leaders 18. vanguard research fronts 19. vanguard thought leaders 20. vanguard topics 21. vanguard trends - Sean McBride
"Text Mining to Triplestores - The Full Semantic Circle" http://prsm.tc/jngwtr
How Lewis Carroll Invented Surrealism http://news360.com/article...
BBC News - US 'at risk of mega-drought future' - http://www.bbc.com/news...
"What’s a Readlist? A group of web pages—articles, recipes, course materials, anything—bundled into an e-book you can send to your Kindle, iPad, or iPhone." - Sean McBride
Tallying Up The High Costs Of Extreme Weather | On Point with Tom Ashbrook - http://onpoint.wbur.org/2015...
"Winter storms, now costing the economy billions. Summer storms, too. And spring. And fall. And drought. We’ll look at the economics of extreme weather." - Sean McBride
International network of experts on intelligent systems - http://phys.org/wire-ne...
"Equipping machines with the necessary intelligence that will enable them to recognize how to make life easier for their human users all by themselves: To further this research, Bielefeld University is strengthening its international ties with leading universities and research institutes on five continents. The German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) is providing more than 800,000 Euro for the new Thematic Network: Interactive Intelligent Systems. Bielefeld University's Cluster of Excellence Cognitive Information Technology (CITEC) will be running the programme. Bielefeld already has one Thematic Network in the theoretical sciences set up in 2013. The DAAD is funding a total of 28 Thematic Networks throughout Germany." - Sean McBride
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society: 350 years of science publishing - in pictures | Hig... http://smar.ws/lz8wE #SmartNews
Year of the Hack? A Billion Records Compromised in 2014 - NBC News http://smar.ws/s2F3L #SmartNews
Harvard scientists found a way to turn solar energy into liquid fuel http://news360.com/article...
2015 World Press Freedom Index - 2015 World Press Freedom Index http://index.rsf.org/#!... via @nuzzel thanks @jricole
The Startup That Helps You Analyze Twitter Chatter in Real Time http://news360.com/article...
Google Will Soon Use Wind Power to Run Its HQ | WIRED http://smar.ws/W6jez #SmartNews
Google's Time at the Top May Be Nearing Its End http://nzzl.me/1zwhqCc via @nuzzel
"archive.today is your personal Wayback Machine! It takes a "snapshot" of a webpage that will always be online even if the original page disappears. This can be useful if you want to take a "snapshot" a page which could change soon: price list, job offer, real estate listing, drunk blog post, ... It saves a text and a graphical copy of the page for better accuracy. It also shortens URLs much like tinyurl, goo.gl and bit.ly do." - Sean McBride