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Online Translation: Google Leads the Pack

April 22, 2013 Technology No Comments

languagesSearch Engine Giant Adds 66th Language

Google’s famous translation service has just added its 66th language – Khmer, the official language of Cambodia. There are around 16 million speakers of the language, but Google had great difficulty in adding Khmer since there are not a lot of web resources available, and the language doesn’t usually use spaces to separate the words.

Google Translate currently supports languages such as Afrikaans, Basque, Icelandic and Lao, which was the 65th language to be added last year in September. Whilst the translate tool can be incredibly useful, it is best to rely on professional translators for business or legal documents, in order to avoid embarrassing gaffes that sometimes occur when translations are left to algorithms and machines.

Humans versus Machines

Indeed, the offices at Google Translate do not contain native speakers of the languages that are featured. Instead, the algorithms examine language patterns already present in existing documents and books. Thus, the more literature available for a particular language, the more accurate the online translation is likely to be.

A Clash of Clouds

price wars cloud computingPrice Wars Heat Up

The intense competition between major cloud services providers is reaching new heights, or, in this instance, new lows. Last Thursday, Google dropped the prices for its Compute Engine virtual machines by 4%. Less than 12 hours later, Amazon announced a 26% reduction in price for its Windows virtual machines.

Amazon Web Services appear to the leader in the cloud computing industry. However, hot on their heels are other major cloud technology providers such as Rackspace, Microsoft Azure and the aforementioned Google Compute Engine. In the past 14 months alone, there have been 29 price reductions in total between the big 4.

Implications for the Future

A principle analyst at a research firm stated that “Companies like Amazon and Google will have the advantage due to economies of scale. If history is any indication, Amazon will go to any level to undercut the competitor pricing. Service providers who don’t have the economies of scale will try to add additional value on top of infrastructure to avoid going down this slippery slope”.

The Smart Home of the Future Is Here

Source: Pellesten

For most people the concept of a smart home implies a house with a number of cool features like a lighting system that can be activated by clapping one’s hands. Ion Cuervas-Mons thought bigger and, together with colleagues from the Think Big Factory (which he leads) has created a working, almost fantastical smart home called Openarch.

It’s a kind of magic

Openarch truly is the smart home of the future, offering a number of av services; a flick of the wrist can display internet pages or a cityscape (with sound effects) on the living room walls, a digital alarm clock on the bedroom wall can be switched off with a wave and the day’s schedule appears.

The smart home system works from a central console in the living room but lights, music and the internet can be activated or shut down by a movement within two meters from any wall.

Which Cloud Storage Service Is the Fastest of Them All?

March 27, 2013 News, Technology No Comments

These days the chances are that if you work online at all, you are using a cloud storage service like Dropbox, Google Drive or Mega. Why not; they offer masses of storage space and the service is free to boot. Laptop Magazine and Tech2 have compiled useful guides, on which website offers the fastest cloud storage service.

 

A summary of  cloud storage services

Cloud computing service providers are getting a nice boost with a variety of excellent cloud storage services. Dropbox is a very user friendly storage website that allows file uploading, sharing and synchronization. According to Tech2, Dropbox is available on Windows, Mac and Linux desktops as well as on iPhone and Android phones. Users start off with 2GB of free storage upon signing up.

Google Drive offers the same services as Dropbox with the added benefit of more storage space (5GB) and the ability for users to work collaboratively on documents.

Concrete Jewelry Wins Red Dot Award

March 25, 2013 Events, News, Technology No Comments

Source: Quapan

Austrian jeweler extraordinaire, Thomas Hauser, has won an international Red Dot Award for his concrete and palladium jewelry.

“Concrete has incredibly beautiful aesthetics. As a material it can do a lot more than you would think”, Hauser told The Register. Thomas certainly knows what he’s talking about; where most jewelers fashion diamond rings or use metal inlays to adorn their rings, he’s using strips of concrete in black, grey and white.

It requires a special process

Working from Atelier Allure in Vienna, Hauser is able to fashion his contemporary designer rings because of a new process developed at the Technische Universität Wien (Vienna University of Technology), which allows the concrete to be applied as a coating.

How it works

For those who prefer more traditional jewelry Thomas also creates ruby rings and the like, but his current passion is clearly for concrete. Thomas fashions his ring out of palladium (a rare silvery-white metal) after which he literally sprays on a number of coatings of concrete, creating the ‘focal’ point of the design.

It’s a Brand New World with Google Glass

March 20, 2013 News, Technology No Comments

Source: Max Braun

Google Glass is set to change the way we use technology for ever. Since the company announced the creation of its smart glasses a year ago the sci-fi fans, concerned citizens and techno geeks have been excitedly anticipating the first proto type (albeit for different reasons). Google finally demonstrated its Google Glass recently at the South by Southwest technology convention in Texas.

 

What is Google Glass?

Essentially Google Glass is a pair of spectacles with a built in camera, microphone and a minute screen that displays information, video etc in the corner of your eye. Whilst not the most stylish eye wear the glasses do promise users to see like the “Terminator” and being able to do almost as much.

What can it do?

If the final version of Google Glass lives up to the pair recently demonstrated by Google Co-Founder, Sergrey Brin, it will be able to do everything a smart phone can do now.

Cloud Computing Around The World

February 18, 2013 Technology No Comments

cloud computingCloud technology is a relatively new phenomenon that has exploded in popularity in the last year. Cloud computing service providers enable companies and individuals to store data remotely and access it from anywhere in the world.

Canada

Although Canada is extremely technologically-advanced, its laws are less so. Canada’s data privacy laws are very strict, and companies are wary of adopting cloud-based computing for fear of privacy lawsuits. The situation is likely to remain unresolved until the federal and provincial laws are updated in accordance with the new technology. The current laws dictate that the company is responsible for the security and maintenance of all personal data that passes through its servers, which means that they are then automatically entered into a contract with the individual whose data they possess.

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