If you already are familiar with Spiceworks, then you can skip ahead to “Brief History” – but if not, read on.
Network Inventory for the budget-crunched masses
If you are a systems administrator or IT manager who maintains a small to medium sized shop, you probably don’t have a lot of money to spend (heck, who does these days?) on proactive network monitoring and inventory tools. So, any company that puts out an inexpensive high-quality tool to help you manage your network is a welcome sight.
Of course, if it is a free high-quality tool… well, that’s even better!
Yes folks, Mr. Ballmer can finally join his buddy Bill in the “getting food trown at me” club. In the following video, you’ll see steve about to start talking at a conference at the Hungarian University of Economy in Budapest, when suddenly, an angry student gets up and start throwing eggs at him while yelling something completely unintelligible.
And as a bonus, here’s the video where someone smashes a cream pie on Mr. Gates’ face. Enjoy!
Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University have introduced a website with games designed to make peoples computers get better at doing certain tasks.
It’s one of those “for the common good” things, where you play the games and the researchers collect the results together and then use them to improve existing applications for everyone.
To give you an example, one of them is a game where you are shown a picture and you have to give words to describe that picture – you may know it better as Google Image Labeler. So these aren’t silly little league games. Some big money is involved here!
There’s only five games at the moment but I’m sure more will be added in the future. If anyone criticises you for playing the games, just tell them you’re “doing your bit to improve the internet”.
Boxers, briefs, or high-tech underwear that can monitor your health?
No joke, gentlemen: Scientists have just filed a new patent for underpants that monitor your blood pressure.
The special skivvies come equipped with waistband sensors that use conductive rubber to measure how fast your blood is pulsing through your body.
“Electrodes are so arranged as to measure the passing of pulses of the central artery, and the left and right femoralis, as well as the ECG,” the patent says.
“The system may also be arranged to monitor the temperature, the posture, and the level of activity of the subject.”
Hmm. No word what the system indicates if you happen to be in the midst of viewing Tila Tequila pictures on the internet.
These guys really do have too much time on their hands. They built a lego boulder composed of 5 million pieces of the ultimate geek toy, and then pushed it down a slope to reenact the indy-gets-chased-by-a-boulder scene from the first Indiana Jones flick. Check it out below.
There are a lot of crap websites on the net that I wouldn’t miss for an instant if they disappeared. But if Open Culture vanished, I would be really hacked off. This is one website that I monitor constantly for updates because everything they post is interesting.
I mean, look at what they have right now. A recording of what is supposedly Walt Whitman reading his poem “America” (which then makes you wonder if the recording is real or not). Then a rare early recording of the human voice (which made me comment that it isn’t really a recording of a human voice at all but more a recording of static!).
They also collect together essential jazz albums, books you should be reading, YouTube videos you should be watching, free podcasts you should be listening to, blogs you should be reading, and much more. I am still wading my way through a free Mozart symphony that I found on iTunes thanks to Open Culture pointing it out to me.
This is definately one website you should have in your RSS reader. You could easily waste an entire day going through Open Culture’s archives.
In the following video, Hacker and writer Joshua Klein talks about the fascination he has for crows and their surprising intelligence. After a long amateur study of corvid behavior, he’s come up with an elegant machine that may form a new bond between animal and human. Check it out.
All right, surveillance junkies, I’ve got a new one for you: a just-developed device that can turn your air conditioning system into a sophisticated home monitoring tool.
Shwetak Patel of the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta came up with the protocol, featured in New Scientist today. The tool monitors changes in air pressure to detect human movement. It uses five air pressure sensors inside the AC’s filter to figure out when doors open and when someone walks in or out of a room. Scientists say it functions on a real-time basis.
The implications are endless. The technology could lead to energy efficient systems that sense what rooms are occupied or empty and adjust temperatures accordingly. It could also be used for burglar alarms that detect unexpected activity in a home or area of a building, or for any number of other surveillance-related purposes.
Patel will present his invention at an international conference in Australia later this month.
This isn’t the first time regular home appliances have been used for monitoring. As New Scientist points out, a Seattle engineer also created a tool that places microphones on a home’s plumbing system to detect and monitor activity. That’s right, on the plumbing system. I don’t even want to think about the kind of data that thing has collected.