USB Scales Keep Statistics, Never Judge
Grok Headline matches for USB Scales Keep Statistics, Never Judge
Internet users statistics 2003: the
latest from National Statistics
Internet users statistics 2003: the
latest from National Statistics
02/18/2004 03:47 AMPublicTechnology.net Feb 18 2004 8:02AM GMT
Adherents.com: Religion Statistics
Geography, Church Statistics
Adherents.com: Religion Statistics
Geography, Church Statistics
04/06/2005 06:45 AMAdherents.com: Religion Statistics Geography, Church
Statisticshttp://www.adherents.com/Adherents.com is a growing collection of over 41,000 adherent
statistics and religious geography citations -- references to
published membership/adherent statistics and congregation statistics
for over 4,200 religions, churches, denominations, religious bodies,
faith groups, tribes, cultures, movements, ultimate concerns, etc.
Basically, researchers can use this site to answer such questions as
"How many Methodists live in Indiana?", "What are the major religions
of India?", or "What percentage of the world is Hindu?" They present
data from both primary research sources such as government census
reports, statistical sampling surveys and organizational reporting, as
well as citations from secondary literature which mention adherent
statistics. This has been added to
Statistics Resources
Subject Tracer™ Information Blog. This has been added to
Theology Resources
Subject Tracer™ Information Blog.
"PHP Scales"
"PHP Scales"
07/05/2004 09:38 AMIBM scales up NAS gateway
IBM scales up NAS gateway
01/27/2004 09:12 AMComputer Weekly Jan 27 2004 1:09PM GMT
Overture scales down its switches
Overture scales down its switches
01/26/2004 03:02 PMCNET Jan 26 2004 6:28PM GMT
Economy of Scales: Edirol R-1
Economy of Scales: Edirol R-1
03/23/2005 05:36 PM
iPod is
great for playback, but it's not much use when it comes to recording.
Try Edirol's R-1
instead: palm-sized, integrated stereo microphone, and recording to
CompactFlash. With 1GB of CF running about $70 (the R-1 costs under
$400), removable media is the way to go. And as opposed to cheap
consumer audio gadgets, this box records absolutely clean; even the
built-in stereo mic sounds terrific (check out the audio samples).
The extras are just as impressive: there's a built-in metronome and
tuner for practicing, plus built-in digital effects for EQ, noise
reduction, and reverb, and even software simulation of different
microphone types -- you can even fake a vintage mic. When you're ready
to off-load your recordings, you can plug into your computer via USB
2.0 (or use onboard digital out or analog in/out). See CDM for more details and discussion. If
you're a video/audio pro, check out the hard drive-based 4-track R-4.
Peter Kirn, editor of createdigitalmusic,
checks in regularly with gear too cool for only musicians to be in the
know.
HP Scales Up StorageWorks for Linux
HP Scales Up StorageWorks for Linux
06/22/2004 05:31 PMThe HP StorageWorks Scalable File Share system is capable of
distributing files in parallel while sharing bandwidth from dozens to
hundreds of clustered servers.
Scales tip with tiniest mass yet
Scales tip with tiniest mass yet
03/30/2005 05:47 PMScientists weigh a cluster of xenon atoms at just a few billionths of
a trillionth of a gram, or a few zeptograms.
SAS App Significantly Scales Forecasting
SAS App Significantly Scales Forecasting
09/27/2004 06:53 AMSAS Institute Inc. is pushing the limits of forecasting up and out
with a new application that extends into the millions the number of
products.
Linux v2.6 Scales the Enterpris
Linux v2.6 Scales the Enterpris
02/13/2004 05:14 PMPlaying the Internet scales
Playing the Internet scales
03/13/2003 10:15 AM
David Rosenblum
|
Rohit Khare
|
I was in the audience at BrainShare '95 when Bob Frankenburg -- then
president and CEO of Novell -- conjured up a vision of billions of
connected devices. My refrigerator magnets still don't receive weather
reports, but when they do, we'll need something like PreCache to make
them work. At the same time, I keep recalling Rohit Khare's joke at
last year's Emerging Technology Conference. The real integration
challenge, he said, is in Layers 8 and 9 of the OSI stack: economic
and political. That scale's in a different key, and we'll have to
learn to play that one, too.
Ful
l story at InfoWorld.com]
...Tellabs scales back AFC buy
Tellabs scales back AFC buy
09/07/2004 07:41 PMThe communications equipment maker scales back the size of its
purchase of Advanced Fibre Communications.
Britain scales back
Britain scales back
09/20/2004 10:42 AMIts main combat force in Iraq is to be reduced by about a third during
a routine troop rotation in October.
IBM Scales the Vertical Industry
IBM Scales the Vertical Industry
09/13/2004 09:19 AMThe IBM Software Group executes an aggressive middleware program for
vertical industries.
Economy of Scales: TC Electronic's
G-System
Economy of Scales: TC Electronic's
G-System
04/06/2005 11:31 AM
If
you play guitar, get ready to drool over the slickest electronics
you'll ever handle with your shoes. Guitar effects boxes are nothing
new, but the sound is usually decidedly low-fi. Not so with TC
Electronic's G-System, which packs TC's high-end
effects, analog looping, amp switching, floor control, and other
extras into a gorgeous case. One major innovation is the slick metal
"switch-encoders" for editing: think knobs for your toes. If you can't
afford the G-System's EUR 1395 price tag, TC also has a real-analog
drive pedal for getting a vintage, gutsy sound, at EUR 275.
createdigitalmusic's
Peter Kirn reports this week on hot new gear from Germany's Musikmesse
conference; Europe's major music technology show.
Overture Networks scales down its
switches
Overture Networks scales down its
switches
01/26/2004 01:50 PMThe start-up now offers two versions of its product that service
providers can use to upgrade their metropolitan networks to Ethernet.
DataPipe Scales Gas Buddy Web Hosting
DataPipe Scales Gas Buddy Web Hosting
09/10/2004 02:43 PMtheWHIR Sep 10 2004 7:12PM GMT
Linux Scales New Test Platform
Linux Scales New Test Platform
08/19/2004 02:35 PMNot sure that Linux can handle a particular load? New version of STP
continues to provide
stable testing ground.
Aussie bank scales up against 'phishing'
Aussie bank scales up against 'phishing'
04/27/2004 02:36 PMA major Australian financial group increases its efforts to combat
online fraud and drops its large-scale use of Microsoft Windows for
ATM and point-of-sale transactions.
Economy of Scales: Tune Plug
Economy of Scales: Tune Plug
03/17/2005 03:51 AM
While
record labels and publishers are locked in lawsuits and legal
hair-pulling, independent artists are using Creative Commons (CC)
licenses as a new publicity tool: keep your copyright, but let
consumers copy or even sample your song. Your next Flash Drive might
even have albums on it (or is that the other way around?): indie
online label Magnatune and
manufacturer Hana Micro have loaded up the TunePlug
USB drive with ten albums under a CC license. The first 'volume'
starts at $19.99; the $69.99 512MB model has all ten albums on it
pre-loaded. More details on CDM.
Peter Kirn, editor of createdigitalmusic,
checks in regularly with gear too cool for only musicians to be in the
know.
Economy of Scales: Groove with Your
Fingers and USB
Economy of Scales: Groove with Your
Fingers and USB
03/17/2005 03:51 AM
Hip-hop,
rap, and electronic music changed forever in 1988. That was the year
Akai introduced its legendary MPC-60
sampler/groovebox. Computers have looked enviously at music
hardware ever since -- and no, clicking a 4x4 grid of drum pads on a
screen with your mouse is not the same as doing it physically. But
computers are about to strike back: M-Audio's upcoming USB-powered
Trigger Finger (see CDM for details) costs just US$199,
works with Mac and PC, and doesn't even need drivers. (via GearJunkie) If your
fingers are itching to groove, this could be for you. Just start
thinking about what your new DJ / hip-hop moniker will be. I'm opting
for DJ Procrastinate, so that's taken.
Peter Kirn, editor of createdigitalmusic,
checks in regularly with gear too cool for only musicians to be in the
know.
Xiotech Scales Its Storage Clusters
Xiotech Scales Its Storage Clusters
07/19/2004 06:08 PMXiotech adds controller nodes to its midrange storage
cluster subsystem.
Economy of Scales: Turntable Furniture
Economy of Scales: Turntable Furniture
04/19/2005 11:03 AM
createdigitalmusic's
Peter Kirn has been out musical cool-hunting again. Here's his latest
report: Who says you can't fill your home with lots of music gear
and look good doing it? If you've got two turntables and a very large
wad of dough, you can dock your decks in style with one of two
space-age turntable tables. DUAL
Furniture's floating coffins are suspended to avoid rumble, though
you're more likely to put them in your home because they look cool.
You should be able to mount it properly for stability, but if you want
your decks more grounded, the alien-pod DJ Kreemy Table (street
just under $3000) was good enough for a Queer Eye episode. Both of these are designed for
vinyl turntables, of course—leave the iPods at home
[Or at least on a different table! -Ed.]. Thanks to Max and
Wally for the tips.
A picture of the super-slick DJ Kreemy table after the jump.
Economy of Scales: iControl for
GarageBand
Economy of Scales: iControl for
GarageBand
04/08/2005 10:39 AM
M-Audio's new iControl (info in German at M-
Audio; English analysis at createdigitalmusic) is hardware for
controlling Apple's GarageBand music software.
It's designed just for GarageBand, down to the fake wood-paneled sides
of Apple's interface. Buttons let you set up playback and recording, a
big jog wheel and transport controls lets you move around your song
with ease, and physical knobs control track volume. Best of all, you
can adjust individual track parameters like effects via custom
buttons. It's all plug-and-play: connect via USB and GarageBand
recognizes the device, no drivers required (thanks to USB
class-compliance). Control surfaces have been tightly integrated with
applications like this before, but usually on high-end boxes: M-Audio
scores a first for an entry-level music interface. Expect a US price
under $200.
What does this mean for the leaked Asteroid information that
launched legal action by Apple? Not much: the Asteroid was an audio
interface, whereas this box is just for control, not audio. That said,
check the uncanny similarity to a user-created mockup of a GarageBand
control surface posted here on Gizmodo during the flurry of Asteroid
activity in November.
Economy of Scales: A Tale of Two DJ
Mixers
Economy of Scales: A Tale of Two DJ
Mixers
04/14/2005 01:25 PM
Is the future
of digital DJing iPods or vinyl?
Yes, says Numark. Aside from
apparently working on a concept for a DJ mixer that would integrate
iPods, allowing you to scratch right from your portable player (as reported earlier today), Numark
continues to beef up its options for hard-core vinyl DJs. Witness the
analog-digital hybrid Numark 5000FX (also via
scratchworx): this monster can connect three turntables, 6-9 line
inputs from devices like laptops, 2 microphones, and output to
headphones and multiple line outs. (Beck might have to update the
lyrics of the song.) With
the $895 5000FX, you can mix, flip, reverse, chop, sample, scratch,
beat-match, [rub it down, onoes! -ed.] and add rhythmic echo
and other effects. That's not to say that iPod DJing has to be any
less musical—real DJ features for the iPod could challenge DJs
to get their chops up.
createdigitalmusic's
Peter Kirn regularly reports on digital music trends for
Gizmodo.
Samsung Scales Up GDDR-3 Speeds
Samsung Scales Up GDDR-3 Speeds
06/22/2005 01:47 AMSamsung Electronics said Tuesday that it had begun production of its
1.6 Gbit/s GDDR-3 memory chip, also announcing that it has reached a
speed of 2.0-Gbits in the lab.
FoTW: Turbots don't have scales, you
idiots!
FoTW: Turbots don't have scales, you
idiots!
06/04/2004 10:23 AMFoTW Honourary award
Economy of Scales: Electronic Music, 50
Years Ago
Economy of Scales: Electronic Music, 50
Years Ago
04/12/2005 11:31 AM
createdigitalmusic's
Peter Kirn goes retro to celebrate the 50th anniversary of either the
first music synthesizer or the first failed automatic lounge music
generator.
Before the likes of Bob Moog
made electronic music accessible even to non-geeky rock-and-rollers,
there was the RCA synthesizer. RCA's Mark I was a three-ton behemoth
the record honchos at RCA Victor hoped would automatically churn out
lounge music. It didn't, so Columbia and Princeton grabbed a successor
and profs like Milton Babbit used it for electronic serial music. (No
big record hits; sorry, RCA.) Significantly, it also fired up Otto
Luening, one of Moog's first customers.
Wall Street scales 32-month peak
Wall Street scales 32-month peak
02/19/2004 04:42 PMSolid profits and healthy economic data underpin a surge on the New
York Stock Exchange, while European shares also soar.
HP Scales Up StorageWorks for Linux
(Ziff Davis)
HP Scales Up StorageWorks for Linux
(Ziff Davis)
06/22/2004 07:13 PMZiff Davis - The HP StorageWorks Scalable File Share system is capable
of distributing files in parallel while sharing bandwidth from dozens
to hundreds of clustered servers.
Friendster scales the network with open
source
Friendster scales the network with open
source
04/07/2005 09:32 PMTechWorld Apr 8 2005 1:34AM GMT
'Batman' Protester Scales Royal
Residence (AP)
'Batman' Protester Scales Royal
Residence (AP)
09/13/2004 11:07 AMAP - A protester dressed as Batman scaled up the front wall of
Buckingham Palace on Monday afternoon, reaching a ledge near the
balcony where the royal family appears on ceremonial occasions,
campaigners and witnesses said.
Economy of Scales: Ecler NUO4 DJ Mixer
Economy of Scales: Ecler NUO4 DJ Mixer
06/24/2005 04:02 PM
Forget
turntables, CDs, or even iPods: many DJs and laptop musicians now hook
into computers for more power over beat mangling. That's why we've
eagerly awaited the Ecler NUO4 DJ Mixer, announced
today. Using included software, you can assign the knobs, cross-fader,
or anything else to control your computer software, via MIDI or USB
connections. Ecler even includes magnetic labels so you can remember
what controls what. Now you'll just have to work on your computer
chops to keep everybody dancing [or flailing while the try to keep
the intern off of married women -Ed].
Peter Kirn
regularly checks in with the latest in tech for music.

AmberPoint scales its Web services
management system
AmberPoint scales its Web services
management system
06/21/2004 07:35 AMAmberPoint on Monday is announcing an upgraded version of its Web
services management software that can manage of thousands of active
service-level agreements.
Economy of Scales: Hip, Affordable
Analog-style Instruments
Economy of Scales: Hip, Affordable
Analog-style Instruments
04/05/2005 02:11 PM
Music has
gone vintage-chic. Fat, bleep-y 60s- and 70s-era synthesis sounds are
hot, and it's no fad—classic electronic sounds are here to stay.
Audio electronics inventor Bob Moog is now a virtual God, with a movie and soundtrack out. But
maybe you can't afford shelling out a few grand for the original, or
$2000+ for a new Moog synth.
And you don't want to have to boot your computer just to make music
with a software instrument. Take heart: new hardware rivals software
for sound quality and even price.
Economy of Scales: Dave Smith's Xmas
Surprise
Economy of Scales: Dave Smith's Xmas
Surprise
01/03/2005 10:33 AM
Once a week, createdigitalmusic's
Peter Kirn checks in with favorite music equipment picks. This week
brings a new keyboard from pioneer Dave Smith; it's not even out yet,
but blinking blue lights, lots of knobs, and the combination of two
generations of synthesis technology with both analog and digital
circuitry might make even a non-musician salivate.
Microsoft scales back Longhorn for 2006
launch
Microsoft scales back Longhorn for 2006
launch
04/12/2004 04:53 AMZDNet UK Apr 12 2004 9:37AM GMT
Whatsoever hath no fins nor scales in
the waters, that shall be an abomination
unto you.
Whatsoever hath no fins nor scales in
the waters, that shall be an abomination
unto you.
03/22/2005 04:37 PM
Have you
given
up on the Atkins Diet? Tired of
miracle diet pills that don't work?
Maybe you,
like
many other Americans,
can find dietary salvation
in the Bible. Try the
Hallelujah
Diet®. It's a primarily vegan diet that's "Biblically
Based. Scientifically Validated. Personally Evidenced." Unless
of course, it's actually
dangerous
quackery,
or worse,
heresy. Maybe you're better off with
the Maker's Diet, "based on
Biblical precepts and scientific resources".
Uh
oh.
"airplane wings that change shape like a
bird and have scales like a fish"
"airplane wings that change shape like a
bird and have scales like a fish"
04/27/2004 08:57 AMGrok Description matches for USB Scales Keep Statistics, Never Judge
GrokA matches for USB Scales Keep Statistics, Never Judge
Running headlong into an impedance
mismatch
Running headlong into an impedance
mismatch
10/28/2003 11:08 PMSo, I've been thumping away at parrot's forth implementation, and it's
been going pretty well. Bunch of control structures are in (do/loop,
do/+loop, begin/again, begin/until, if/then), some horribly insecure
stuff has been added (' and compile,), and since Forth can live in its
own little world I added in cell space for "address" base storage. In
this case "address" and "offset into the cell array" are identical,
but that's OK -- the data space, at least according to the standard,
doesn't have to correspond to anything else, just be accessible. Which
it is. Unfortunately once the cell space comes in,...
Vishay Siliconix Half-Bridge N-Channel
MOSFET Drivers Feature 1-A Drive
Capability for up to 50-V Systems and
Impedance Under 1 Ohm
Vishay Siliconix Half-Bridge N-Channel
MOSFET Drivers Feature 1-A Drive
Capability for up to 50-V Systems and
Impedance Under 1 Ohm
02/05/2005 09:28 PMThe new SiP41103, SiP41104, and SiP41105 dual MOSFET drivers, which
drive both the lower and upper MOSFETs in a half-bridge configuration,
work in systems with supply voltages from 4.5 V up to 50 V. [PRWEB Feb
2, 2005]
Spreadsheet::WriteExcel 2.04
Spreadsheet::WriteExcel 2.04
08/19/2004 03:55 AMA cross-platform Perl module for creating Excel binary files.
Spreadsheet-Perl-0.02
Spreadsheet-Perl-0.02
01/11/2004 07:09 PMSpreadsheet-Perl-0.04
Spreadsheet-Perl-0.04
01/18/2004 06:01 PMSpreadsheet-WriteExcelXML-0.06
Spreadsheet-WriteExcelXML-0.06
08/20/2004 12:32 AMSpreadsheet-BasicRead-1.02
Spreadsheet-BasicRead-1.02
08/20/2004 11:37 PMSpreadsheet-Perl-0.05
Spreadsheet-Perl-0.05
01/24/2004 10:36 PMSpreadsheet-WriteExcel-1.01
Spreadsheet-WriteExcel-1.01
05/24/2004 05:26 PMSpreadsheet-WriteExcel-2.10
Spreadsheet-WriteExcel-2.10
09/24/2004 12:02 AMSpreadsheet-ConvertAA-0.02
Spreadsheet-ConvertAA-0.02
01/24/2004 06:11 PMSpreadsheet::WriteExcel 2.10
Spreadsheet::WriteExcel 2.10
09/24/2004 03:58 AMA cross-platform Perl module for creating Excel binary files.
Spreadsheet-WriteExcel-2.04
Spreadsheet-WriteExcel-2.04
08/19/2004 12:25 AMSpreadsheet-Perl-0.01
Spreadsheet-Perl-0.01
01/10/2004 01:33 AMSpreadsheet-WriteExcelXML-0.05
Spreadsheet-WriteExcelXML-0.05
07/01/2004 11:40 PMSpreadsheet-WriteExcelXML-0.04
Spreadsheet-WriteExcelXML-0.04
07/01/2004 12:11 AMSpreadsheet::WriteExcel 0.43
Spreadsheet::WriteExcel 0.43
04/28/2004 09:46 PMA cross-platform Perl module for creating Excel binary files.
USB Scales Keep Statistics, Never Judge