Hey, What’s That? A Map Hack
Google engEDU
51 min – May 8, 2007
Google Tech Talks
May 8, 2007
Designed to answer the question "What am I looking at?" when standing on a hilltop or pulled over at a scenic overlook, HeyWhatsThat.com has garnered reviews like "Just when I thought I was in danger of becoming a jaded customer of the mass mapping space, here’s a site that effortlessly returns me to a state of slack-jawed wonder" (OgleEarth). In addition to peak detection and identification, it offers viewshed computations, elevation contours, elevation profiles, and integration with Google Maps and Google Earth. This talk — given by Michael Kosowsky, designer and proprieter of HeyWhatsThat.com — will focus on what it is and how it got to be that way.
http://www.heywhatsthat.com/
http://www.heywhatsthat.com/faq.html
Speaker: Michael Kosowsky
Michael Kosowsky has more than 25 years of experience in software development, on platforms ranging from embedded microprocessors to supercomputers. Currently sole proprietor of the HeyWhatsThat.com web site, previous roles include founder and CTO of Great Point Design, where he developed its desktop photo application and web service; founder and CTO of Momentum, Inc., where he led the development and patenting of a portable client-server communications technology; and software engineer for The Jackson Laboratory and DNA Sciences, where he implemented systems for visualizing and sharing genomic data. Read the rest of this entry »
Sphere: Related ContentPhoto Tech EDU Day 1: Photo Technology Overview
Google EngEDU
1 hr – Jan 18, 2007
Google Tech Talk
January 17, 2007
The goal of PhotoTechEDU is to have a Photographic Technology short course for engineers. The course will teach:
- useful properties of light and image formation
- theory and techniques of photographic optics and image capture
- theory of colorimetry and techniques of color reproduction
- and lots more… Read the rest of this entry »
A Googly MySQL Cluster Talk
Google engEDU
55 min – Apr 28, 2006
Google TechTalks
April 28, 2006
Stewart Smith
Stewart Smith works for MySQL AB as a software engineer working on MySQL Cluster. He is an active member of the free and open source software community, especially in Australia.
ABSTRACT
Part 1 – Introduction to MySQL Cluster The NDB storage engine (MySQL Cluster) is a high-availability storage engine for MySQL. It provides synchronous replication between storage nodes and many mysql servers having a consistent view of the database. In 4.1 and 5.0 it’s a main memory database, but in 5.1 non-indexed attributes can be stored on disk. NDB also provides a lot of determinism in system resource usage. I’ll talk a bit about that.
Part 2 – New features in 5.1 including cluster to cluster replication, disk based data and a bunch of other things. anybody that is attending the mysql users conference may find this eerily familiar. Read the rest of this entry »
Sphere: Related ContentAutoTest: Push-button testing using contracts
Google engEDU
59 min – Sep 7, 2006
Google London Test Automation Conference (LTAC)
Google Tech Talks
September 7th, 2006
Presenter: Andreas Leitner Read the rest of this entry »
Sphere: Related ContentHow can we better understand customers?
Google engEDU
50 min – Jul 18, 2006
Google TechTalks
July 18, 2006
Ely Dahan
At MIT’s Sloan School of Business, Ely Dahan taught high tech marketing and new product development. He now develops new models and methods for developing products at UCLA’s Anderson School of Business. Dahan has developed internet-based market research methods, mathematical models of parallel and sequential prototyping, the economics of cost reduction, and strategies for mass customization. Prior to entering academia, he was national product manager for W.R. Grace and NEC until 1984, when he founded a computer networking company in Maryland, serving as CEO until the firm was acquired in 1993. He is the recipient, along with his coauthors, of the INFORMS John D.C. Little Award, the American Marketing Association EXPLOR Award, the INFORMS Frank M. Bass Outstanding Dissertation Award (based on Olivier Toubia’s PhD thesis), and the Journal of Product Innovation Managment Hustad Award. Dahan earned his PhD in the Operations & IT program at Stanford Business School, where he was a Department of Energy Fellow, an AACSB Doctoral Fellow, and a recipient of the Jaedicke Prize for scholarly achievement. He attended Princeton University, then received a Bachelor’s degree in Civil Engineering from MIT in 1978 and an MBA from Harvard in 1980. Read the rest of this entry »
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