Monday, December 31, 2012

Google Search ‘Mad Men’-Style Using Punch Cards

Google Search is a thoroughly modern tool, having launched in 1997, but a new website is taking Internet users back in time for a vintage twist on the search engine.

Called "Google60," the site enables visitors to search "Mad Men-style." It features a 1960s aesthetic, complete with old-school punch cards.

After users type in a search term on the virtual typewriter, they are prompted to select one of three "modes" -- text search, image search or "get the latest news" -- which are respectively ordered from one to three. Users must then select a number on the "control input" keypad. Clicking "1" prompts the machine to slowly list its search results (the same ones you'd get in a regular Google Search); "2" recreates image results using asterisks and dashes (my personal favorite); and "3" provides news stories.

While Google60 won't produce instant search results, it will supply a welcome dose of nostalgia in today's tech-obsessed culture. What do you think of the site? Tell us in the comments below.

Image courtesy of Flickr, Marcin Wichary

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4 Things to Leave Off Your Resume

Brie Weiler Reynolds is the content and social-media manager at FlexJobs, the award-winning site for telecommuting and flexible job listings, and a former career advisor. At FlexJobs, Reynolds offers job seekers career and work-life balance advice through the FlexJobs blog and social media.

One area of job searching that confounds plenty of job seekers is what to include on a resume. Include too much information, and you’ll lose recruiters in unimportant details. But, with too little information, recruiters won’t be sure you’re qualified for the next step in the process.

Since most job seekers have excessive information on their resume and don’t know what to eliminate, let’s start with four things you can always leave off of it. These tips will help you better organize your information, and present it in a format that is easy-to-read and quickly understandable for recruiters.

1. An "objective.” This is the statement at the top of a resume that tells an employer what you're looking for -- but it’s got to go. They already know you're interested in their job, so it's unnecessary. Instead, use a "summary of qualifications" to introduce employers to your most relevant skills and experience, and to show them exactly how your experience can fit their needs.

2. Unrelated awards, hobbies and interests. Our CEO once had a job seeker who claimed to be a "pig-wrestling champion" on his resume, which is a great accomplishment, I'm sure. But it had nothing to do with the job he applied for, and it distracted from the rest of his qualifications. Unless it directly adds to your qualifications for the job or helps the employer see how you fit with their company culture (for example, if you’re applying to an outdoor apparel company and you are an avid hiker, that’s a hobby that matches their culture), leave it off your resume.

3. Too much formatting. Keep your resume simple, so recruiters can read it quickly and easily. Don't use bold, italics and underlines all at once. Don't use more than one font, and be consistent in the way you present information. Bulleted lists are much easier to read than paragraphs. Keep your resume single-spaced, and shrink your margins to a half inch. You’ll be surprised at how much space poor formatting can take up on your resume, pushing it far longer than it needs to be.

4. Lists of tasks for each job. Instead of telling recruiters what you did at your past jobs, tell them what you accomplished -- what were the overarching results of your day-to-day tasks? Rather than rewriting your job description, tell recruiters how you did what you did and why it made a difference to your employer and customers.

What you leave off of your resume can be just as important as what you include, so make sure that precious real estate is taken up with relevant, well-stated, interesting information. Recruiters should be able to check off their list of qualifications easily by reading your resume, and come away with a sense of who you are and the value you can bring to their company.

The Mashable Job Board connects job-seekers across the U.S. with unique career opportunities in the digital space. While we publish a wide range of job listings, we have selected a few job opportunities from the past two weeks to help get you started. Happy hunting!

Image courtesy of Flickr, Elliot P.

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Sunday, December 30, 2012

A Spotify Subscription Makes a Stellar Last-Minute Gift

Mashable's Gift of the Day series highlights cool, interesting and fun products for that special someone on your holiday list.

Gift of the Day

That sound you hear is your stomach churning because you have only a few days left to buy your friends or relatives a gift. Don't worry, we've got your potential saving grace: a subscription to music-streaming service Spotify.

A $4.99 per month subscription provides unlimited, ad-free listening on desktops and laptops.

The $9.99 per month premium subscription grants commercial-free access to Spotify's robust collection on mobile devices (iPhone, Android, Symbian and Windows Phone), laptops and desktops. Premium mode lets users download songs and playlists for offline listening, too.

Price: $4.99 - $9.99 per month

Image via Spotify press kit

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See MTV’s Video Tribute to Amazing Spider-Man

MTV Geek has put together this video tribute to Amazing Spider-Man #700, featuring several people involved in the comic (including writer Dan Slott), Stan Lee (of course), Norman Reedus and several of the cast members of Jersey Shore. Well… they are on an MTV show, so that makes sense.

Fair warning: Do not watch this if you have not already read Amazing Spider-Man #700. There are going to be spoilers in the comments, too. Basically, if you A) haven’t read it or B) don’t already know what happens, click away from this story right now lest ye be spoiled.

Screenshot via MTV Geek

This article originally published at The Mary Sue here

The Mary Sue is a Mashable publishing partner that hopes to be a place for two things: highlighting women in the geek world and providing a prominent place for the voices of geek women. This article is reprinted with the publisher's permission.

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Michigan Passes Law to Protect Social Media Accounts

Michigan passed a bill on Friday that prohibits employers and schools from asking employees and students for login information to their personal social media accounts.

House Bill 5523, signed by Governor Rick Snyder and introduced by state Rep. Aric Nesbitt, "prohibit[s] employers and educational institutions from requiring certain individuals to grant access to, allow observation of, or disclose information that allows access to or observation of personal internet accounts."

This means an employer or institution cannot require that you provide them with your username or passwords for sites like Facebook and Twitter. The bill is known as the "internet privacy protection act."

“Potential employees and students should be judged on their skills and abilities, not private online activity,

“Potential employees and students should be judged on their skills and abilities, not private online activity,” Snyder said in a press release.

Michigan isn't alone in adapting laws to the changing Internet social sphere.

Earlier this year, Delaware banned public and private schools from requiring students' social media account information. The bill passed through the House in a unanimous vote. Months earlier, Maryland introduced a similar bill that would particularly benefit student athletes.

In September, California passed a law that barred companies from asking its workers to surrender their social media account passwords.

Will bills and acts similar to these become more commonplace in our local and national legislature? Let us know your thoughts in the comments.

Photo via iStockphoto, DNY59

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NASA Sets Record with Ion Thrusters Test

NASA has completed a 43,000 hour stress test -- a record for ion thrusters -- on a new rocket propulsion system that could extend future space travel to farther reaches of the solar system.

Developed by NASA's Evolutionary Xenon Thruster Project, the 7-kilowatt ion thruster can burn 10-12 times longer than the conventional chemical thrusters used today. Though not practical for manned-spaceflight, the system could power exploratory rockets that reach outer planets and their moons.

To find out more, watch the video above and let us know your thoughts in the comments.

Photo courtesy of NASA

BONUS: 15 Twitter Accounts Every Space Lover Should Follow

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Saturday, December 29, 2012

Enloop Will Write Your Business Plan For You

The Launchpad is a series that introduces Mashable readers to compelling startups. If you would like to have your startup considered for inclusion, please see the details here.

Name: Enloop

One-Liner Pitch: Enloop helps entrepreneurs figure out whether their idea would really make for a good business.

Why It's Taking Off: The online service makes it easier for small and medium-sized companies to write business plans and vet their ideas.

Coming up with a good idea is just the first test for aspiring entrepreneurs; the next big test is figuring out whether that idea is actually a viable business. That's where Enloop comes in.

Enloop, an online service that launched in 2011, helps small and medium-sized companies craft and vet their business plans. The website prompts users to enter in basic information about their business ranging from product details to payroll information, and uses a set of common underwriting metrics to vet and predict the financial the performance of the company.

The goal, according to founder and CEO Cynthia McCahon, is to improve the success rate for small and medium-sized businesses. "So many entrepreneurs just assume success. They can't imagine their idea is anything other than good," McCahon told Mashable. "Enloop lets you set that aside and look at the data, the facts, so you can make a more informed decision to decide whether to go forward."

McCahon, a former business consultant, worked with several underwriters and financial institutions to pick out a set of key metrics for predicting a business's potential for financial success, which the average entrepreneur might not think about. All in all, Enloop uses 16 different financial metrics -- including ratios for expense-to-sales and debt-to-work as well as percent profit before taxes -- to evaluate business plans and give companies an overall performance score for their strategy.

Business owners can then compare this score to the average performance of businesses in their industry to see how their financials stack up. "You should be in the ballpark or at least have a reason for not being," McCahon said.

The service doesn't just vet one's business plan, however, it also helps business owners write it. Enloop recently added an auto-write feature that generates text for each section of a business plan based on the data the user has offered. As McCahon notes, it won't exactly be creative writing, but the tool will fill in your business plan with the kind of language that financial underwriters expect to see.

In addition to the auto-write feature, Enloop also recently added a text-sync option lets business owners insert live data from their financial reports into the text of the business plan so that the overall forecast stays up to date over time.

Enloop is bootstrapped at the moment, but its own business plan is to rely on a freemium model. Enloop lets each user create one business plan for free with a financial forecast that extends out three years, along with the predictive score and some additional analysis. Those business owners looking for more than that can sign up for one of three premium plans ranging from $9.95 to $39.95 a month, which provide more detailed financial forecasts.

Images courtesy of Flickr, plantoo47 and Enloop.

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Dear Today Show, Here’s Why You Need to Know Social Media

Mashable OP-ED

It’s not OK to know nothing about social media or the Internet anymore. It’s especially not OK if you are an anchor for a major network TV news program.

This happened after a segment about Randi Zuckerberg’s private family photo being shared publicly. Today's Willie Geist, Savannah Guthrie and Natalie Morales -- three TV journalists at the top of their profession -- laughed about their lack of knowledge about Facebook, Twitter and privacy on social media.

"What's the takeaway here?" Guthrie asked after several minutes of banter about technological ignorance. "We don't know either."

(For the full clip, see below.)

It was meant to be cute, but it came off as plain dumb. Such banter is not only an embarrassment to journalists everywhere, but a slap in the face for the Today audience. (Really, is it that hard to explain that a subscriber to Randi Zuckerberg's Facebook feed saw her photo then posted it to Twitter?)

Here’s a wake-up call, morning crew; your audience is not that dumb. They watch TV news to keep up with what’s happening in the world. It is your job to inform them. Reading the news and then proclaiming you don’t understand any part of it is the epitome of failure.

Social media and digital technology is no longer news; it’s part of the way we live our lives, how we communicate, how business is conducted. Kids use technology to learn in school, to get their entertainment, to compete in the world. They don’t call it technology; they call it life. Saying "I don’t get it, so I will just skip this part of a global revolution" is like saying "I don’t know how to drive a car so I'll keep riding my horse and buggy to work." Technology is not something we can choose to ignore.

Savannah Guthrie was a White House correspondent for four years. If she were still there, would she turn to her audience and say “show of hands if you understand how the fiscal cliff actually works?” No, she would need to understand it and explain it to her viewers. That’s what being a journalist is all about.

In a recent interview with USA Today, Guthrie talked about why her favorite alarm clock is her iPhone, and why she has a distinctive ringtone. Clearly she understands some of the ways technology has entered her life.

Before I came to Mashable, I was a network newswriter and producer for ABC News for more than 20 years. During that time, I covered everything from the politics to the economy to technology. While I may never have a full understanding of how gas prices rise, for example, I always made sure I was prepared to interview an expert in the field and ask knowledgeable questions in order to better understand it. It was my job to explain it in a clear and concise way. If I don't get it, neither will the audience.

Plenty of people older than the Today crew can wrap their brains around new things. Last night I spent two hours with my mother, an eightysomething-year old (I can't say the exact number, or she'll disown me) who is addicted to her iPad. She emails, shares pictures, watches YouTube videos and Skypes with her relatives in Canada. She's not letting the pleasures of technology pass her by.

Today's Willie Geist, who's apparently "still trying to figure out (his) fax machine," has two young children. I'm sure he plans on teaching them many things as they grow up. Among those should be digital safety and social media etiquette. If he doesn't get it, he can't explain it.

Today may not have a takeaway from Randi Zuckerberg's privacy debacle, but I do. The need to understand our privacy settings illustrate why we can't stop learning. We can't say it's too hard. We don't let our kids get away with that. As adults, we shouldn't either.

Photo via istockphoto, emyerson.

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Friday, December 28, 2012

LG Display to Showcase Ultra HD TVs, Full HD Smartphone Screens at CES

LG Display's presence at CES 2013 will be measured in PPI (pixels per inch), as the company plans to show several Ultra HD (4K) TV screens, as well as high-resolution screens for smartphones, tablets and laptops, at the technology trade show.

The pixel-per-inch limits will be pushed in almost every category. First, there are the 55-, 66- and 84-inch UHD panels with a 3840 x 2160 pixel resolution, meaning each of these will have 8 million pixels.

Next up is a 30-inch 4K2K monitor with a whopping 4096 x 2160 pixel resolution, which LG Display claims is the highest-resolution computer monitor to date. Although the monitor is probably aimed at professionals, it's a dream machine for every computer enthusiast who's been aching for 30-inchers with a horizontal resolution higher than 2560 pixels.

LG will also show off a 5.5-inch, 1080p smartphone screen, a 7-inch, 1920 x 1200 pixel tablet screen and a 12.9-inch, 2560 x 1700 pixel screen for laptops. The latter is comparable to Apple's retina screen on the 13-inch MacBook Pro, which has a 2560 × 1600 pixel resolution.

Not content with merely stuffing more pixels into screens, LG is also narrowing the bezels of its monitor screens. At CES, it will show a 23.8-inch monitor panel with an "ultra narrow" bezel, a 13.3-inch laptop panel with a "narrower than 2 millimeter" bezel and a 4.7-inch mobile display with a 1 millimeter bezel.

Finally, the LG's OLED screens will be losing weight. The company plans to show an "impossibly thin" (meaning 4 millimeter) OLED display that weighs only 3.5 kilograms.

Image courtesy of LG

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Gift-Giving Bot Picks Presents For You, on Amazon

From the toy store grab-bags you opened with delight as a child to receiving a "free gift" with purchase at the department store, the excitement of unwrapping a present never gets old.

That's why Darius Kazemi, a game developer from Massachusetts, devised a program -- a "bot" if you will -- called "Random Shopper," that selects a gift for him every month on Amazon.com based on keywords he pre-selected pertaining to his interests.

The "gifts" cost Kazemi $50, so it's more like a surprise grab-bag he's sending himself. So far he's received a CD by Ákos Rózmann, The Oxford History of World Cinema, and Noam Chomsky’s Cartesian Linguistics.

Kazemi told Boing Boing that he created the program because he enjoys the surprise of receiving an item in the mail weeks after he purchased it on backorder.

He documents his experience with the bot on his Tumblr account and recently faced some criticism that he's wasting money.

Kazemi, however, views the experiment as art.

"I am operating from a position of privilege where I can afford to spend money to make art," he writes. "But I would ask you to look at this as a hobby or a side project, rather than a waste of money, as though I’m burning $100 bills."

It seems people are never too old for surprises. Paid subscription services that mail subscribers a box filled with unknown goodies have become all the rage in the past year. There are curated boxes for men, women, foodies, dieters -- all varieties of tastes.

Would you let a bot buy a surprise gift for you every month? How else might this technology be used? Tell us in the comments.

Photo courtesy of iStockphoto, 26ISO

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Thursday, December 27, 2012

Free Calling for Gmail Users Extended through 2013

Gmail users in the U.S. and Canada will get free calling for another year, Google announced Wednesday.

"You'll continue to be able to make free domestic calls through 2013," Mayur Kamat, a product manager at the company, said in a blog post.

Users with Internet connection and a microphone can make calls to any phone from within the email client. An option to "Call phone," indicated by a phone-receiver icon, is part of Google Chat's menu; when clicked, a pop-up with a dial pad appears.

Google debuted voice calls in August 2010, and extended free calling at the end of every year-- through 2011 and 2012 -- since then.

While international calls are not free, users can dial to another country from Gmail "at insanely low rates," Kamat wrote. Rates for the calls start at $0.02 per minute, according to Google.

In the first 24 hours after its launch, Google Voice saw 1 million class placed. At the time, commentators said the service could be a Skype-killer.

Will you be taking advantage of Google Voice's free domestic calls? Do you use the service in Gmail? Tell us in the comments below.

Image courtesy of Flickr, timparkinson

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Hollywood Studios Caught Pirating Movies via BitTorrent

The thought that motion picture studios, including members of the Motion Picture Association of America, or MPAA, have been pirating content through the use of BitTorrent is one of those things that's long been suspected, and TorrentFreak reports that they now have proof.

Specifically, they worked with BitTorrent monitors Scaneye to track down what IP addresses associated with the member studios of the MPAA have been illegally accessing, and the results were pretty much what you'd expect.

TorrentFreak and Scaneye found that IP addresses associated with Paramount Pictures, Warner Bros., 20th Century Fox, and Walt Disney were using BitTorrent to access a variety of illegal content. Someone at Paramount, for example, was caught grabbing The Hunger Games, while another person over at Warner Bros. apparently just wanted a little porn. One of the pirates at Disney, however, showed a little class by downloading an episode of Downton Abbey.

Once again, none of this is terribly surprising. If nothing else, opponents to controversial copyright infringement legislation that's been pushed by the MPAA should feel vindicated. The worst part of all this? It's likely going to be shrugged off by the entertainment industry's lobbyists. Introspection is not exactly their strong suit.

The final tidbit from TorrentFreak notes that BitTorrent was also caught sharing a bunch of stuff, but the files were all being shared with permission.

Via TorrentFreak

Image courtesy of Flickr, SDPD

This article originally published at Geekosystem here

Geekosystem is a Mashable publishing partner that aims to unite all the tribes of geekdom under one common banner. This article is reprinted with the publisher's permission.

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Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Ouch, Charlie! YouTube Sensation Kids Talk Christmas Toys

The infamous "Charlie Bit My Finger" video has surpassed half a billion views on YouTube -- not bad for a 56-second clip of a one-year-old kid biting his older brother's finger.

Charlie and Harry, now six and eight, returned to the web earlier this year with a new series through Viral Studios. The mini-episodes focus on the boys and their younger brother, Jasper, as they talk about toys, viral videos and -- of course -- biting things.

Mashable sat down for a Skype interview with the three boys last week. Unfortunately, the Internet connection wasn't the greatest -- Harry twice referred to me as a "man made out of boxes" because of the spotty video quality -- but they were still able to talk about what toys they were most excited about this holiday season. Check 'em out below:

Charlie's Pick: Playmobil Large Pirate Ship

Price: $95.50

Image courtesy of Playmobil

Harry's Pick: Thomas & Friends Take-n-Play The Great Quarry Climb

Price: $19.99

Image courtesy of Fisher-Price

Jasper's Pick: Turbo Snake Remote Control

Price: £38.45 (only available in the U.K.)

Image courtesy of Amazon

You can catch all the episodes on the "Charlie Bit Me!" series on their YouTube page. Which toys or gadgets did you score this year? Tell us below.

BONUS: 10 Gifts for People You Hate


Image courtesy of Viral Studios

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