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Yahoo! Tech is live as of today. See the product selection complemented by Consumer Reports (for free!), read the blogs, add products to your lists, ask questions, get answers, and read complete chapters from tech books.
Yahoo! Tech is live as of today. See the product selection complemented by Consumer Reports (for free!), read the blogs, add products to your lists, ask questions, get answers, and read complete chapters from tech books.
FirefoxFlicks competition announced the winners of the Firefox video promo campaign. The winning videos are DareDevil, Wheee!, Fox Fever, This is Hot and Give me the the soap.
Even people who are picky about the restaurants generally have some specific requirements that concern the quality of the food, its presentation, the interior and cleanliness of the restaurant, and the quality of service. At Elephant Bar & Restaurant it seems that they took care of everything.
The menu is available online at http://www.elephantbar.com/ourmenumain.htm and from the looks of it, Elephant Bar is primarily an Asian Fusion restaurant with the desire to please a little bit of both tastes, which justifies having cheeseburgers and fish with salsa.
We had to wait for about 10 minutes before getting into the place on Saturday evening, and the parking lot on Stevens Creek Boulevard was full. The drink menu is what one would expect from a restaurant that has a full bar in place, but they also serve a variety of specialty drinks mostly prefixed by the word “Jungle”. The drinks are mostly in $4-7 range, with the meals ranging from $8 to $15.
The menu is quite vivid and full of pictures, and the presentation of the food at Elephant Bar Restaurant is great as well - they do really make sure the food looks good before it’s served.
The service was bit hectic with the restaurant packed on Saturday, but nevertheless the waiters were courteous and expeditious. The place itself looks very clean, quite new, and has an African theme to it, which explains the sculptures of giraffes and large variety of plants inside.
The lunch menu varies from $6 to $9 and also features some of their excellent fish dishes.
New York Times Sunday Edition has an excellent piece of investigative reporting by John Markoff. When NTP received a hefty payoff of $612.5 million from Research in Motion, not all of their patents might have described the original inventions. Geoff Goodfellow, formerly of Stanford Research Institute and then RadioMail, have had a working wireless data paging system working a decade before NTP patents were filed for. However, Goodfellow intentionally decided to skip on patents, thinking that technology might grow into a larger industry if there were no patents and licenses involved. NTP hired Goodfellow as a consultant before suing RIM in order to “clarify” the nature of his inventions, according to New York Times article.
So far in 2006 domain name on.com fetched $635,000, Macau.com was sold for $550,000, blue.com was sold for half a million, and Jasmin.com was bought for $310,000. With the exception of the last domain name, which is currently used for erotic video chat, the rest of the domains run some sort of domain parking ads. USA Today talks about revived interest to domain name trade, and companies like Marchex, a “leader in vertical and local traffic”, which happens to own a .com domain for every single zip code in the United States. There’s also a report that in the few days that .eu domain names were made available, 1,454,218 European domains were registered.
New DVR Anywhere package from Orb Networks will make content of any Series 2 TiVo available online, PC Magazine writes. The TiVo has to be connected to a PC that has Orb software installed. The software itself is free, and by registering at Orb site the user gets a my.orb.com account with access to photos, audio and video stored on the PCs. As the multimedia data is not uploaded to the Orb servers, one should make sure the content resides on a broadband-connected PC. The Orb player converts to video to compatible Microsoft or Real formats and makes it available to any PC that access the my.orb.com account.
IBM and Computer Science Teachers Association have teamed up to offer lesson plans and other materials for K-12 students in the field of Computer Science. The project is available on IBM and CSTA Web sites.
April SearchSIG MapOFF was both informative and educational. Even though Microsoft missed the SearchSIG due to Seattle weather (Sunnyvale was rained in as well), and Ask.com Maps did not have any APIs, while 70% of the discussion rotated around APIs, the panel participants and the audience became quite involved in the subject. Yahoo!, which hosted the event in its Sunnyvale office, came prepared and announced satellite imagery on Yahoo! Maps beta (currently live) with worldwide coverage and better resolution in the United States than competing offerings. Jeremy Kreitler from Yahoo! Maps also spent a great deal of time on talking about Yahoo’s Maps API offering, which currently supports a variety of formats, including AJAX and Flash.

Andy Yang from Ask.com Maps presented what seemed to be the cleanest and most intuitive map interface, which had one killer feature - ability to change the directions provided to the user originally. While Navteq-supplied driving directions tens to favor large highways and busy intersections, the locals quite often know that those are rarely the best way around, especially if your trip happens to be during the commute hour. Ask.com Maps allows the user to reroute the map and driving directions by placing an additional marker on the map.

Thai Tran of Google Maps did not demo anything that the audience didn’t see before. However, the mashups created on top of Google Maps and Google Earth were quite impressive. Quite a few interesting factoids: while Google Maps is considered to be a prime example of AJAX at large, neither Thai nor his team at Google knew what AJAX was, neither was thinking about using a special technology or coining a term for it - the task was just to build a usable interface, for which JavaScript+XML combo seemed to work well. Also, Google team had all sorts of ideas when launching the first version of Maps, and one of the idea included real estate data from different sources such as Craigslist. When HousingMaps came along, Google Maps team was quite impressed - not only Paul Rademacher reverse-engineered the JavaScript and XML sent back to Google server, he also managed to come up with a working application over the weekend. As a result, Rademacher got an offer from Google.
Neither Yahoo! nor Google currently impose any practical limits on Maps API usage. There’s a 500,000 limitation in Google’s terms of services, but Thai Tran characterized it as "lawyers being overprotective", not Maps team actually willing to keep their product usage locked up.
The idea of acquiring mapping providers, brought up by a gentleman in the audience, did not seem to generate enough enthusiasm. First off, Navteq is a $4-5 bln company, and even if money was not an issue, the company’s current value is based on the fact that it sells the data to both Yahoo! and Google as well as numerous other companies. Buying the company for that amount just to ruin its revenue stream and generate exodus of existing clients to the competition might not be a wise business decision.
Every company in the discussion placed a lot of value on existing APIs. The obvious trap for third-party developers, of course, is having the company commit to the API. Ask.com Maps did not have any APIs to speak of, but both Google and Yahoo! pledged their support for "freezing" released APIs and versioning always present in their Web services releases. A9’s BlockView feature and Windows Live’s bird-eye view was agreed to generate a lot of "wow" factor, which faded quickly, for being barely usable. Neither company is too concerned with the foreign governments’ cries for disclosing the sensitive data - if Ghana or whoever has concerns about their national security objects exposed on satellite maps, they can dial NavTeq number and deal with them, while Google and Yahoo! got indemnity from their satellite imagery providers specifically for such cases.
World finals for 2006 ACM programming contests took place in San Antonio, TX this year, and the results are in. Russia’s Saratov State University solved 5 contest problems in record time, followed closely by Altai State Technical University (Russia) with 5 problems solved as well. University of Twente (Netherlands), Shanghai Jiao Tong University (China), Warsaw University (Poland), St. Petersburg State University (Russia), Massachusetts Institute of Technology (USA), Moscow State University (Russia), University of Waterloo (Canada) and Jagiellonian University - Krakow (Poland) all completed 4 problems. Associated Press reports from the event.
Be it weding reception or romantic dinner, Falafel Drive-in fits perfectly… Aaah, who am I kidding? The place is a little hole in a wall, and not a drive-in to begin with, as it’s quite hard to drive in with only 4 parking spots available and limited street parking. Nevertheless, the lines are always there during lunch time for the $6.50 large falafel and banana shake special. The falafels are tasty and plentisome, they’re kinda messy to eat on the spot or in the car, but make a perfect lunch at home or at work.
There are a few picnic tables with tents over them to cover people in case of rain. The food preparation process is quite fast, and generally one doesn’t have to wait a whole lot to get their food. Each to-go serving comes with extra red sauce. Definitely a must-try if you happen to drive near Stevens Creek Blvd.