Google I/O 2013 in pictures and more...

Google I/O 2013 in pictures: Glass, sensor motes, robot mixologists, and more


The “big reveal” at Google I/O is always the keynote. This year’s conference was unique for the low-key presentation. The three-and-one-half hour marathon presentation didn’t include any new hardware announcements (unless you count the $649 unlocked version of the Galaxy S4 running pure Android). Instead it was a tribute to Google’s rapidly growing portfolio of services. In another surprise, the last hour was Larry Page giving his perspective on just about everything, and answering an amazing number of audience question.Google IO 2013 keynote introduction
Google Maps overhaul announced at IO 2013
One of the most impressive announcements was the all-new Google Maps. Featuring a greatly simplified UI, the new Maps is designed to put more of the information you might want on your maps directly — without those annoying pushpins — while hiding information you don’t want. I/O attendees received early invites and were invited to try it out during the conference. We used it to find some local coffee shops and eateries, with mixed results. The UI itself was very cool, but either the new servers were overloaded or there were still some glitches in the preview service, as directions and other features seemed slow or in some cases didn’t seem to be connected.
Android Studio demo at Google IO 2013
While the new Maps interface might have been of most interest to consumers, the new Android Studio demo was serious eye candy for developers. Featuring real-time previews of icons, as well as layouts on various devices, the IntelliJ-based developer tool makes me want to think of an app to build just so I can use it. Google is also building in templates and other generated-code modules for connecting to its services, much like Microsoft has done over the years with Visual Studio. The result should be much more rapid adoption of new Google services by developers.
Lunch line at Google I/O 2013
Lines are a way of life at Google I/O. You might think that paying nearly $1,000 and hammering your keyboard during the three minutes tickets are on sale would make you really special. While that’s certainly true, so are the 6,000 other attendees. This line for lunch was a little daunting as we came down the escalator to the lobby, but fortunately it faded quickly. Popular sessions were filled well before they started, so advance planning was definitely a must if you had a particular agenda in mind.
Sandbox at Google IO 2013
The Sandbox level was full of product and technology exhibits and demonstrations. The space above was dominated by the Google Plus indoor blimps. Some of the cooler techon display included the Seaview SVII underwater Street View camera rig, and the Epson / Apx Labs “anti-Glass” headset. Almost all of the vendors there stayed busy throughout the conference — in contrast to last year where the Sandbox often seemed almost empty — so hopefully it was well worth their time to be part of the conference.
Google had environmental monitors everywhere in the building
Google had environmental sensors all over the building — some five hundred of them. It seemed like they didn’t have any especially amazing use for the mass of data being gathered, but were more interested in the experiment as a prototype of using Google Cloud services as a backend for massive data collection efforts. The use of open-source Arduino hardware built with the help of O’Reilly’s Data Sensing Lab made all of us wonder what has happened to the Android@Home effort that was big news at I/O two years ago.
Google Glass wearer poses for style shot at After Hours
As you would expect, Glass wearers were at the conference in abundance. Unlike in 2012 when most of the Glass units were mock-ups, this time there were hundreds of real ones being worn everywhere — including in the restrooms. I quickly decided that propping my Glass up on my forehead when entering the restroom was in the best interest of all concerned. The odd thing about wearing Glass for a few days is that you quickly forget that you have them on, so after awhile it is surprising when people look at you funny or start mumbling under their breath. Fortunately San Francisco is probably one of the easiest places to wear Glass, as everyone we met on the street or in restaurants that commented on them thought they were really cool.
Glass does not currently have a volume setting, so I found it very difficult to hear phone calls when in any type of noisy environment. Ironically I found myself needing to put my Bluetooth earpiece in my left ear while wearing Glass on my right ear in order to have a conversation in many of the conference venues.
Workers at Moscone curious about my Google Glass
Arriving early on the first morning gave me the chance to be the first Glass wearer many of the convention center workers had ever seen. These servers in the Cafe were intrigued and asked quite a few great questions about them. All of them were quite upbeat and, like nearly everyone on the street who asked about Glass, wanted to know not just what they did, but when they might be available and what I thought they’d cost. So of course I took their picture with Glass. No one visibly freaked out about having them around, but of course I have no idea what they were thinking or muttering under their breath.
20130515_191725_052
Party scenes like After Hours are ripe for Glass, although the tiny sensor makes images in low-light settings like this one I snapped with Glass a little blurry and noisy — certainly good candidates for Google Plus’s new auto-enhancement features for photos. Of course these settings are also some of the ones that raise privacy concerns about Glass. Not everyone at a bar or party wants everything they’re doing and who they are doing it with to appear on the web — with automatic facial recognition privacy concerns will only increase.
Robot drink mixers at After Hours
These robotic drink mixers were fun to watch, but I wasn’t sure if we were supposed to be impressed that they could make a drink, or dismayed that these marvels of technologywere about 50 times slower than a human bartender. As always, robots were big at After Hours. This year Maker Faire San Francisco is the day after Google I/O so there were plenty in town to put on a display.
Robotic hand demonstrates crushing fuel drums
This large robotic hand was controlled by an operator fitted with a hand-like set of controls. It was presumably designed as a demonstration of how robotic power could greatly enhance human capabilities with a semi-natural control interface. However, after watching the operator for awhile, it didn’t seem like the robot hand exactly followed his motions, more like he was using his controls the way someone might a fancy joystick, and anticipating what the result of his actions would translate into. The hand could pick up fuel drums between its “thumb” and “forefinger” which was pretty cool, and crush them of course. As you can see in this photo, it could also make silly gestures.

Google IO 2013 after the show
All good things must come to an end, so by late evening only a few stragglers were left taking advantage of seats at the by-now closed exhibits to relax and no doubt catch up on email. With so many of the sessions livestreamed, and so much of the technical information otherwise available online, the value of conferences like I/O is increasingly found in the person-to-person contact with other attendees — especially when there aren’t any new hardware products that need to be experienced in person.

Brasil vai simplificar visto de trabalho para estrangeiros

Brasil vai simplificar visto de trabalho para estrangeiros

FONTE: O DOCUMENTO
O governo vai implantar duas medidas para tentar atrair mão de obra estrangeira qualificada e facilitar a vida das empresas que estão procurando profissionais especializados: reduzir os documentos exigidos para visto e permitir "estágios" de estudantes de pós-graduação.

MP dos Portos: associação de terminais aponta falhas em texto

FONTE: TERRA
A redação de alguns pontos da MP dos Portos aprovados nesta quinta-feira pela Câmara dos Deputados, especialmente os relacionados aos "terminais indústria", preocupa a Associação Brasileira de Terminais Portuários (ABTP), que reúne as principais empresas do setor.

Empresas de Eike negociam blocos de petróleo entre si

FONTE: TERRA
A MPX informou nesta quinta-feira que firmou acordo com OGX para aquisição de participação de 50% em quatro blocos exploratórios na bacia do Parnaíba, adquiridos pela petrolífera de Eike Batista na 11ª rodada de áreas de licitação.

Com liminar, obras da plataforma P-58 são retomadas em Rio Grande

FONTE: REVISTA GRANDES CONSTRUÇÕES
Trabalho havia sido interrompido na quinta-feira pelo Ministério do Trabalho e Emprego
O Ministério do Trabalho e Emprego (MTE) interditou nesta quinta-feira as plataformas P-58 e P-63. As duas estão no Estaleiro da Quip, próximo ao Superporto de Rio Grande, no sul do Estado. A alegação é de irregularidades no acesso às petrolíferas.

Cinco anos sem leilões afastou as gigantes

FONTE: UDOP
A avaliação de que grandes petroleiras, como a anglo-holandesa Shell e a americana Chevron, fizeram lances perdedores no Brasil é contestada pelo engenheiro Newton Monteiro, que foi diretor da Agência Nacional do Petróleo (ANP) por oito anos. Na avaliação dele, as companhias se concentraram em outros locais nos cinco anos em que o Brasil não fez leilões.

MPX compra 50% de quatro novos blocos da OGX na Bacia do Parnaíba

FONTE: GRANDES CONTRUÇÕES
Os blocos são PN-T-168, PN-T-153, PN-T-113 e PN-T-114 e foram adquiridos pela petroleira na 11ª Rodada de Licitações, realizada na terça-feira.
Fonte: Valor

Chevron e YPF investirão US$ 1,5 bi para explorar xisto na Argentina

FONTE: GRANDES CONTRUÇÕES
A petroleira norte-americana Chevron vai investir US$ 1,5 bilhão junto com a estatal argentina YPF para o início da exploração do campo de petróleo não convencional (xisto) em Vaca Muerta, na Patagônia argentina.

Recém-eleito, conselheiro da HRT renuncia ao cargo

FONTE: ABDIB
Menos de uma semana após Marcio Mello renunciar à presidência executiva da HRT, a petroleira informou ontem, depois do fechamento do mercado, a renúncia de Stefan Alexander do conselho de administração.

Navio da Marinha brasileira é aberto a visitas pela primeira vez em Itajaí

FONTE: JORNAL DE SANTA CATARINA
Embarcação apresenta diversas curiosidades, como poder navegar 35 dias sem reabastecimento
O Navio-Patrulha Oceânico (NPaO) estará aberto para visitação pela primeira vez neste final de semana, em Itajaí. O navio foi construído pela empresa BAE Systems Maritime - Naval Ships, no Reino Unido. Finalizado em julho de 2010, o navio foi incorporado à Marinha do Brasil em novembro do ano passado, em Portsmouth, Reino Unido.

Ex-braço-direito de Eike entra na briga do petróleo

FONTE: R7
Os três blocos arrematados pela estreante Ouro Preto na 11ª rodada de licitações da ANP deram o pontapé inicial na companhia. Mas não serão os únicos da petroleira, criada pelo engenheiro Rodolfo Landim, seis meses depois de o executivo deixar a EBX, em meio a uma batalha judicial com Eike Batista.

Saul Leblon – PSDB, petróleo e interesse nacional:um antagonismo inconciliável

FONTE: CORREANETO.COM.BR
No seminário dos dez anos de governo do PT, realizado nesta 3ª feira, em Porto Alegre, o ex-presidente Lula fez uma ponderação interessante:
‘Quando você ficar em dúvida, feche os olhos, imagine o que seria o Brasil de hoje sem os dez anos de governo do PT’.

Demanda menor faz OSX rever planejamento

FONTE: PORTAL NAVAL
O balanço da OSX, divulgado na quarta-feira (15), deixou claro os novos rumos que a companhia está tomando em função da condição da sua principal cliente, a OGX, petroleira também controlada pelo grupo EBX, do empresário Eike Batista.

Transpetro vai retomar compra de navios do EAS

A Transpetro anuncia, na segunda-feira, na presença da presidente Dilma Rousseff, a retomada dos contratos de 12 navios que estavam suspensos com o Estaleiro Atlântico Sul (EAS). A decisão encerra pendência contratual entre a Transpetro, subsidiária da Petrobras, e o EAS que se arrasta há um ano.

"A Ouro Preto é uma empresa de longo prazo"

FONTE: IG
"Ninguém chegou aqui para montar alguma coisa, empacotar e tentar vender. É uma empresa de longo prazo", afirma Landim
Criada há dois anos e meio, a petroleira fez sua estreia em leilões de petróleo esta semana e busca novos ativos no Brasil e no exterior.

As notícias que a grande mídia ignora

Não é raro que diversas notícias importantes não ganhem destaque na grande imprensa. Muitas vezes, isso acontece porque elas contrariam o que prega essa mesma mídia. É o caso de algumas informações que aparece hoje no Valor Econômico. São informações importantes, mas que não chamaram a atenção dos jornalões.

Projeto da Rio Tinto para explorar Bauxita na Austrália é aprovado

FONTE: REVISTA GRANDES CONSTRUÇÕES
Após o estabelecimento de várias condições ambientais, que atrasaram o empreendimento por mais de um ano, o governo de Queensland, na Austrália, aprovou o projeto de US$ 1 bilhão da Rio Tinto de investir em uma mina de bauxita no local.

Portos privados acreditam que medida vai gerar investimentos

FONTE: REVISTA GRANDES CONTRUÇÕES
O presidente do Porto de Itapoá, Patrício Júnior, é favorável a MP por acreditar que o documento vai gerar mais investimentos no setor
Fonte: Jornal de Santa Catarina

Estivadores suspendem greve no Porto de Santos

FONTE: CORREIO DO POVO
A paralisação de estivadores no Porto de Santos, o maior do país, terminou ontem (15) à noite, após decisão em assembleia. Segundo a Companhia Docas do Estado de São Paulo (Codesp), que administra o terminal, os operários voltaram hoje (16) ao trabalho e a carga e descarga dos navios é feita normalmente.

Diminui fila de navios para embarque de açúcar no Brasil

FONTE: R7
SÃO PAULO, 16 Mai (Reuters) - O número de navios chegando aos portos brasileiros e à espera para embarcar açúcar da temporada 2013/14 diminuiu para 32 embarcações, ante 37 da semana anterior, informou a agência Williams Serviços Marítimos.

Empresários europeus conhecem potencial do Pará

FONTE: DIÁRIO DO PARÁ
Os cerca de sete mil quilômetros de vias navegáveis existentes no Pará foram apenas um dos aspectos apresentados ao grupo de empresários  finlandeses que veio, em sua maioria, pela primeira vez a Belém para conhecer melhor o potencial naval do Estado. Reunidos com o empresariado local, a comitiva apontou para o interesse despertado para investimentos futuros.

Com MP dos Portos, diversidade estimulará ações

FONTE: REVISTA ISTO É
Por Renée Pereira e Lu Aiko Otta
A aprovação da MP 595 trouxe algumas incertezas para os terminais em operação no País, avalia o presidente executivo da Associação Brasileira dos Terminais de Contêineres (Abratec), Sérgio Salomão. Segundo ele, as reivindicações feitas pelas empresas da área foram atendidas, mas de forma pouco clara.


Google and NASA buy a quantum computer

Google and NASA buy a quantum computer, to research more intelligent AI

D-Wave qubit chip, underneath some complex cooling hardware

Share This Article

The new Quantum Artificial Intelligence Lab (QAIL), housed at NASA’s Ames Research Center in Silicon Valley and staffed by Google and NASA scientists, has become the second lab in the world to own a quantum computer. As the name suggests, the Google and NASA scientists will use the quantum computer to advance machine learning — a field of AI that deals with computers that autonomously optimize their behavior as they garner more experience.
The new lab will be outfitted with a D-Wave Two — a 512-qubit machine that costs in the region of $15 million. Prior to QAIL taking delivery of the cryogenically cooled quantum computer, Lockheed Martin was the first and only owner of a D-Wave One in 2011, and then recently it upgraded to a D-Wave Two. There is still some debate over whether D-Wave’s machines are actually quantum computers, but at least for a small set of specialized functions, most critics have acquiesced. Before stumping up the cash for the D-Wave Two, NASA, Google, and the USRA (Universities Space Research Association) ran some benchmarks to confirm that the quantum computer actually offers a speed boost over conventional supercomputers — and it passed.
D-Wave's new 512-qubit Vesuvius chip
D-Wave’s new 512-qubit Vesuvius chip
The new lab, which will be situated at NASA’s Advanced Supercomputing Facility at the Ames Research Center in Silicon Valley, will be operated by NASA, Google, and the USRA. NASA and Google will each get 40% of the system’s computing time, with the remaining 20% being divvied up by the USRA to researchers based at American universities. NASA and Google will primarily use the quantum computer to advance a branch of artificial intelligence called machine learning, which is tasked with developing algorithms that optimize themselves with experience. For example, a robotic vacuum cleaner such as the Roomba might use machine learning to learn the layout of your room, and then optimize its route to clean the room as quickly as possible, while using as little power as possible and avoiding any obstacles. Optimization happens is one of few areas that D-Wave’s quantum annealing (adiabatic) qubits excel at.
As for what specific machine learning tasks NASA and Google actually have in mind, we can only guess. NASA might be interested in optimizing flight paths to other planets, or devising a safer/better/faster landing procedure for the next Mars rover. The core of many of Google’s products is optimization: From search, to advertising, to displaying relevant updates in your Google+ feed, to self-driving cars — there are complex, AI algorithms underpinning them all. Of all the companies and institutions in the world that could’ve acquired a quantum computer, NASA and Google are probably the most exciting. We now have some of the brightest minds in the world working with a quantum computer, to forward the field of artificial intelligence. This is a very exciting development indeed.


Windows 8 may drive me to Linux - Part 2

Windows 8 may drive me to Linux


Windows 8 vs. Linux (Tux)

Share This Article

Microsoft is not entirely alone in this outlook, of course. Apple pioneered it with its iPhone, spread it with its iPad, and is trying to propagate it still further with each new release of itsconverging OS lines. But Apple has one advantage Microsoft doesn’t: It controls the hardware, too. This lets Apple ensure that its devices, of any size or complexity, work with the software exactly the way they’re supposed to. One of the main reasons I’ve stuck with Microsoft so long is that its openness across a broad range of products and platforms encourages usingtechnology the way I like to: while maintaining foundational control over the hardware and the software alike.
That doesn’t work in the Metro-ized Windows 8 — either way. Interacting with apps is clunky and nonintuitive with the mouse. Programs take longer than they should to start because each is accompanied by animation that plays before it opens. Switching between open tasks (which you’ll do all the time, as they’re so difficult to close) is cumbersome and confusing if you use either of the new “corner” methods rather than the stalwart (and, thankfully, still-working) Alt-Tab. Signing in is a chore because you have to “sweep away” a splash screen and log in via a Microsoft account, and finding the setting to change this is like a scavenger hunt in a junkyard. And what if you don’t care about your e-mail, your calendar, the weather, or the Microsoft Store — why should you have to remove all those links instead of add them as you want them? Previous versions of Windows stashed them in the Start menu or on the taskbar, but here they’re front and center. Again: taking choices away by default.
The good news is that if you hate Metro you can still use the desktop. Sort of. Unfortunately, it’s treated as another app, and not something you can see automatically when you turn on your computer. And, once you get in, the functionality is basically identical to that of Windows 7, minus the convenience of the traditional Start button and menu. In other words, if you buy Windows 8 and don’t groove on it, you’re not even granted an updated alternative to the OS you gave up. This is, in every way, a raw deal for everyone except devoted tablet users. A colleague crowed about using Windows 8 and not seeing Metro for hours — would Microsoft really consider that a plus?
Unity LauncherCompare this behavior with that of another operating system: Ubuntu. Canonical, the company behind the popular Linux distribution,took a lot of heat last year when it moved Ubuntu full-time to its own Unity interface, which was developed with the goal of helping Ubuntu better cater to the emerging tablet market. Yes, it added a new (side-mounted) program launcher filled with big icons and a dash for searching through your programs and files. But the underlying functionality remained the same, and you still had (and have) the option of using it the old-fashioned way, and you don’t have to change your workflow to do it. In other words, it expanded into a new market without shutting out the previous one — exactly what Microsoft hasn’t done.
Of course, the Redmond-based company is in a much different position, with a dazzlingly large market share, and thus has good reasons for thinking it can get away with this and telling everyone how they’ll use their computers at home and work. Microsoft may be right, but my time with Windows 8 has made it seem so simplistic that I can’t envision why any company would want it on any non-tablet computers (and I’ve never worked at, or even seen, a business that operated entirely off of tablets). And I see even advanced home users rebelling against using one program per screen, something PC owners haven’t had to endure since DOS went the way of the dodo.
If Microsoft has demonstrated a more hubristic attitude when releasing a product, I can’t recall it. And I’m not sure such cockiness is safe this time around. Windows 8 is poised to alienate millions of people who have been devoted Microsoft users, or even (in my case) fans, for as long as the company has been around — all in a play to wrest a nascent product market from the Cupertino-based firm that now dominates it. It’s a gutsy move, and I appreciate that — but the company’s willingness to junk nearly 30 years of work, and the customer trust it’s generated during that time, does not thrill me.
Steve Palpatine vs. Start menuThere’s still time for Microsoft to change its mind. Not everything about Windows 8 is bad. I like, uh, the reduced boot times — my hard drive–based test computer dropped to 48 seconds from 55 after upgrading. And one little option to let me specify whether I want to boot into Metro or the desktop, preferably located near the top of the byzantine Settings menu, would instantly inspire me to give the whole thing a long second look. I’d love to see more truly useful features, but I’ll keep my demands light for the moment. Once the biggest “fixes” are undone, we can discuss the rest.
One warning, Microsoft: If you don’t, you’ll permanently lose this defender. You’re halfway there already. I’m too die-hard a DIYer to ever love Macs, but the folks at Canonical have shown that, even while favoring Unity, they want longtime desktop users to feel at home with their product. I have to say, I’ve been getting might cozy with it — whether on desktops or tablets. And it’s free. If you don’t prove with Windows 8, as you have with so many of your previous products, that this one is worth paying for, I’ll drop you faster than you dropped the desktop.
I’m giving you the chance you refuse to give me. Please don’t blow it.


Demônios

"Os únicos demônios neste mundo são os que perambulam em nossos corações, e é aí que as nossas batalhas devem ser travadas." Maha...