How to build and run your first deep learning network Step-by-step instruction on training your own neural network. When I first became interested in using deep learning for computer vision I found it hard to get started. There were only a couple of open source projects available, they had little documentation, were very experimental, and relied on a lot of tricky-to-install dependencies. A lot of
Now, next, and beyond: Tracking need-to-know trends at the intersection of business and technology AI/ML Few technologies have the potential to change the nature of work and how we live as artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML). Future of the Firm Everything from new organizational structures and payment schemes to new expectations, skills, and tools will shape the future of the fi
Now, next, and beyond: Tracking need-to-know trends at the intersection of business and technology AI/ML Few technologies have the potential to change the nature of work and how we live as artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML). Future of the Firm Everything from new organizational structures and payment schemes to new expectations, skills, and tools will shape the future of the fi
The iPhone knows my location, but it doesn’t let me share it with websites via the built-in browser. For an application developer to auto-magically provide me location-aware benefits they need to write a client app. Greasepocket is a version of Greasemonkey for the iPhone. Just like Greasemonkey userscripts can be installed via the web. These scripts can access the accelerometer and location APIs
I am a Perl hacker. I have written parts of the core, created CPAN modules and written tons of perl code. In fact I am addicted to it ; or rather, CPAN. I have been wanting to play around with Google App Engine, but I haven’t had time to get up to speed in Python. Today at OSCON I met up with Brad Fitzpatrick, who told me he had permission from Google to talk about and work on a Perl on App Engine
I spend a great deal of my time encouraging “enterprise people” to think more like “web people.” Focus on adoption, use platforms to enable emergent capability, build the “generative enterprise,” and that sort of thing. So, imagine my surprise when I saw the web acting a bit like the enterprise with the launch of Gnip. As the web moves toward a network of widespread transactional API’s, each with
Tonight at their second CampFireOne Google Code is announcing App Engine, a hosted platform for web developers. The actual service will launch later tonight in a closed Beta. 10,000 developers will be granted access on a first come, first serve basis. It's about time that developers get access to Google's platform! We've been hearing about Google's server farms and development tools for years. Aft
I was lucky enough to get an invite to Google's Campfire One event where the company announced App Engine. App Engine basically allows web developers to take advantage of Google's infrastructure to scale if they're willing to build their app using Google's tools. While drinking hot apple cider, Brady wrote a great post digging into a bunch of the different aspects of App Engine. During the present
At ETech 2008 Pablos Holman hacked my iPhone voice-mail and changed my greeting during a session. During that same session (Hackers Built my Motorcycle) he demonstrated how insecure RFID-enabled credit cards can be. Xeni filmed a short segment with him afterwards. Other BoingBoing coverage: Technology and the Iraq War: Noah Shachtman at ETech - Turns out on some bases in Iraq you can't read blogs
Now, next, and beyond: Tracking need-to-know trends at the intersection of business and technology AI/ML Few technologies have the potential to change the nature of work and how we live as artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML). Future of the Firm Everything from new organizational structures and payment schemes to new expectations, skills, and tools will shape the future of the fi
Now, next, and beyond: Tracking need-to-know trends at the intersection of business and technology AI/ML Few technologies have the potential to change the nature of work and how we live as artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML). Future of the Firm Everything from new organizational structures and payment schemes to new expectations, skills, and tools will shape the future of the fi
As I wrote last year, computer book sales are a pretty good technology trend indicator. The books people buy say something about the technologies they are trying to learn about, and often tell a story that analysts using more traditional metrics might miss. (For example, I organized the open source summit in 1998 after noticing that all of my 1997 bestsellers had something in common!) At this poin
I said I'm not fond of definitions, but I woke up this morning with the start of one in my head: Web 2.0 is the network as platform, spanning all connected devices; Web 2.0 applications are those that make the most of the intrinsic advantages of that platform: delivering software as a continually-updated service that gets better the more people use it, consuming and remixing data from multiple sou
Harbor Research released a white paper discussing MAYA's Information Commons and MIT's Internet 0. Information Commons interested me when I heard about it earlier this year, and I was glad to feature it at Where 2.0. I didn't get to tease out the cool technology underneath it, though, which the white paper begins to do. The Information Commons is built on a p2p database system. It's a visualizatio
James Governor wrote in email: "Don't know if you saw Phil Waineright on google vs MS. But he has done a neat job of boiling down some issues that talk quite well to web 1.0 to web 2.0 diffs. Neatest insight, imho: Microsoft's business model depends on everyone upgrading their computing environment every two to three years. Google's depends on everyone exploring what's new in their computing envir
Now, next, and beyond: Tracking need-to-know trends at the intersection of business and technology AI/ML Few technologies have the potential to change the nature of work and how we live as artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML). Future of the Firm Everything from new organizational structures and payment schemes to new expectations, skills, and tools will shape the future of the fi
Tim Bray writes: I just wanted to say how much I’ve come to dislike this “Web 2.0” faux-meme. It’s not only vacuous marketing hype, it can’t possibly be right. In terms of qualitative changes of everyone’s experience of the Web, the first happened when Google hit its stride and suddenly search was useful for, and used by, everyone every day. The second—syndication and blogging turning the Web from
Savanna [08.09.05 01:05 PM] i *definitely* agree with that. =) all those futuristic sci-fi books about a huge interconnected data net is sorta slowly becoming reality. what i think would be *really* kewl...is since we already have xml/rss/atom stuff with trackback features on blogs and the like for communication, to see when we get that with audio/video at some point. podcasting is of course picki
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