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Misheel says...

 

Non-profit organization Nuru utilizes Macs to end extreme poverty

By Jim DalrympleNovember 18, 2009, 12:27 pm PT

There are quite a few non-profit organizations that help impoverished nations, but none seem to have the grassroots approach of Nuru. This one-year old non-profit is using education to help communities, help themselves and they’re using technology to do it.

NuruNuru was formed by Jake Harriman, a platoon commander in the Infantry and an elite unit of Marines called Force Recon. Harriman served two tours of duty in Iraq where he realized that the key to ending terrorism was to end extreme poverty.

Harriman’s thoughts can be seen in a video called “The End.” In his words, “terrorists rely on an endless supply of people living in extreme poverty, with no other options in life. The only chance we have to see the end of terrorism, is to end extreme poverty.”

Nuru is setting up what it calls seed projects, where the organization focuses on five areas of development: Agriculture, Water & Sanitation, Healthcare, Community Economic Development and Education.

Nuru

Douglas Scott, Nuru’s Chief Marketing Officer, explained to The Loop that they go into a community, sit down with the people and listen. He said Nuru wants to know what the people feel they need to help themselves, instead of making the assessments and moving ahead on their own.

“We want mutual respect and we want to work for the same common goals,” said Scott. “We equip people with the skills they need to lift themselves from extreme poverty.”

As an example, Scott said a lot of communities need clean water. Nuru teaches the people about water borne diseases, how they spread and how to protect themselves from them.

Nuru will then dig wells in the community, providing a clean water supply. But they don’t stop there. The people are then trained in how to maintain the well and fix it if the mechanisms breakdown.

Scott said he’s seen communities that had wells, but the pumps broke and nobody knew how to repair them. He believes Nuru’s efforts will stop that cycle.

Like any business today, Nuru uses the Internet and media to get its message out. Scott said they are well aware of what’s needed to make that happen.

“The language of this generation is media,” said Scott. “We want to be able to speak the language and speak it well.”

Nuru

For Nuru, speaking the language well means using Macs. In fact, it means using a lot of different Apple technologies.

Scott said everyone on Nuru’s media staff is a Mac user. They use Mac Pro desktops with 30-inch Cinema Displays with Snow Leopard in the offices and 17-inch MacBook Pros when they visit the communities they are helping.

As part of what they communicate to the world, Nuru produces quite a few videos and pictures. Many are uploaded via satellite directly from the communities while they are working there.

Scott said the software of choice is Final Cut Studio. As a matter of fact, they use most of the components in Final Cut like Soundtrack, Color and Compressor to produce the videos before uploading them to the Web.

Other technologies are utilized as well. Like many organizations these days, workers are spread around the world, so every morning, they login to iChat to discuss what needs to be done.

Scott said that MobileMe is used to transfer files and the daily edits for video. Of course, email is also a huge part of the business, going to the computers and iPhones.

“We are huge Apple users because they give us the opportunity to hit a level of excellence that our culture is accustomed to, at a budget we can afford,” said Scott.

Update: Clarified Doug Scott’s title and the media staff using Macs. 11/18/09 1:11 pm PT.

Awesome stuff! What Jake is doing is similar to what I will be doing in Mongolian rural communities. Also, I am a huge fan of Macs and I use Apple technology.

Filed under: Macs

For all  iPhone users seeking the Notes App of their dreams... Below is a list of brief "emoji" ratings for all the Notes apps I have tried or checked out so far. This list may save you some  time (and ) in the AppStore. 

You will need emojis on your iPhone to read this list.  (If you don't have emojis yet, see how to get them Free, here:  http://paradisemobi.posterous.com/how-to-get-free-emojis-for-iphone )

My "Big  Requirements" for a Notes App -- and the basis for the ratings -- are:
1.   Clickable URLs.
2.   Drag & Drop Manual Sorting.
3.   Email-Out your notes from within the app.

Your Top  Features may be totally different, of course. In that case, you can make your own list. 

-----------------------------------------------

Emoji Codes for below App Reviews:
 = Yes!
 = No!
 = Clickable URLs/Hyperlinks?
 = Drag/Drop Manual Sorting?
 = Email Out?
 = Font Style or Color/Good or Bad?
 = Paragraphs? Enough Room to Type??
 = Automatic Time/Date Stamping?
 = Add Photo?
 = Colors or Themes?
 = Price Paid
 = Honorable Mention

---------------------------------

Notebooks:
 = 
 = 
 = 
 =  choices!
 =  choices!
 = 
 = 
 =  Only shows when last changes were made.
 = $5.99
 = A handsome app.

-----------------------------

Notes (native iPhone app):
 = 
 = 

 = 
 =  Horrible font!
 = 
 = 
 = Free

-----------------------------

Fast Notes:

 = 
 = 
 = 
 =  but Deletes -breaks!
 =  choices! BUT...
 =  Illegible subject line font (same font as native iPhone Notes app).
 =  choices!
 =  in List View BUT...
 =  not shown in note itself.
 = Emoji key is missing from Keyboard while in this app!
 = $0.99 

-----------------------------

To Do's:
 =  
 = 
 = 
 = 
 = Free

-----------------------------

ToDo:
 = 
 = 
 = 
 = 
 = Free

 

-----------------------------

ToDo Lite:
 = 
 = 
 = 
 = Free

-----------------------------

Awesome Note:

 = 
 =  you can sort folders BUT:
 =  you canNot sort the notes inside folders.
 = 
 = $3.99

-----------------------------

NoteMaster:
 = 
 =  you can sort categories BUT: 
 =  you canNot sort notes inside the categories.
 = 
 = 
 =  
 = $3.99

-----------------------------

Google MyTask:
 = 
 = 
 = 

-----------------------------

Fliq Notes:
 = 
 =  you can sort categories BUT: 
 =  you canNot sort notes inside categories.
 = 
 = 
 = Free

-----------------------------

Taskmaster:
 = 
 = 
 = 
 = 
 = Free

-----------------------------

ThreeTags LT:
 = 
 = 
 = 
 = Free

-----------------------------

All-in-Notes:
 = 
 =  
 = 
 = 
 = 
 = 
 = $1.99
 = Wins the "Best App for Your Presentations" Award, but app is still hindered by lack of manual sorting!!  If you have an afterthought you want to include, you are skewed  as you won't be able to go back & fit it in sequence where it belongs.

-----------------------------

All-in-Notes Lite:
 = 
 =  
 = 
 = 
 = 
 = 
 = 5 Note Limit
 = Free
 = Like it's big sister Paid Version above/good; but it will frustrate you with the 5 limit.  I would buy 2-3-4-5 copies of the Paid Version if App Store would let me!! 

-----------------------------

RainbowNote:
 =  but: you have to tap Done, then tap the 2 arrows/"Expanded View" icon in top right task bar to make the link clickable.
 = 
 = 
 = 
 = 
 = 
 = $3.99
 = Wins the "ColorfulTropical App" Award. 

-----------------------------

YouNote Lite:
 = 
 = 
 = 
 = 
 = Free

-----------------------------

Nubi Do Lite:
 = 
 = 
 = 
 = Free

-----------------------------

Task Pro Lite:
 = 
 = 
 = 
 =  
 =  Limit Restriction 
 = Free
 = The ***ONLY*** app I've found so far that has my Top 3 Requirements: (1) Clickable URLs *&* (2) Drag/Drop Manual Sorting *&* (3) Email-Out.  Unfortunately, this is more of a Tasks app than a Notes app, so it has Task-type features I don't need or care about. 

-----------------------------

Memos Lite:
 = 
 = 
 = 
 = Free

-----------------------------

Omni Note Basic:
 = 
 = 
 = 
 = 
 =  Too Small, too light-grey.
 = $1.99

-----------------------------

Notespark:
 =  BUT: requires a 2nd tap to view URLs as hyperlinked.
 =  
 = 
 = 
 = $4.99

-----------------------------

Listmaker Lite:
 = 
 = 
 = 
 = Free

-----------------------------

Note Pad:
 = 
 = 
 = 
 = 
 =   
 =  Verdana good!
 =  BUT: illegible faded light grey color Bad!
 = $0.99

-----------------------------

Bunrui Memo:
 = 
 = 
 = 
 = 
 = 
 = 
 =  Requires extra tapping.
 = 
 = Can't name your own categories, only Personal & Work.
 = Free

-----------------------------

Memo Book:
 = 
 = 
 =  
 = 
 = 
 =  It does date your note but the time/date is not included IN the note; you have to tap on "Info" to see the time/date; so for that reason it gets .
 = $1.99

-----------------------------

uJournal:
 = 
 = 
 = 
 = 
 =  You can type a long entry BUT... 
 = You canNOT see  it all because the keyboard will NOT go away even after you press DONE!
 = $0.99

-----------------------------

4Notes:
 = 
 =  but is planned for future, per dev.
 = 
 = $1.99

-----------------------------

Write-a-Note:
 = 
 = 
 = 
 = $1.99

-----------------------------


Take-a-Note:
 = 
 = 
 = 
 = $4.99

-----------------------------

Not included in "ratings totals" as I have deleted these:

EverNote:
 =  clickable in "saved" view.
 =  didn't keep app long enough to find out, it erased the 2 notes I made before I could see if it had drag/drop.
 =  not that I noticed.
 = 
 = clutzy/clunky app, I didn't like it.
 = Free

-----------------------------

Quick Memo Lite:
 = Landscape mode only, so I didn't try it.
 = Free

-----------------------------

OneNote:
 = 
 = 
 = 

Filed under: macs

Paul says...

Hopefully Aperture 3 will be upon us (maybe even tomorrow! - wishful thinking) but in the mean time I was wondering whether other Aperture users fancied getting together to establish some benchmarks for Aperture to fins out what difference HDs, graphics cards, processor, RAM etc actually make. I've never found anything similar to this for Aperture, lots for Photoshop but nothing for Aperture.

What I'm proposing is this.

A set of 50 Canon 5DmkII RAW files
one aperture project with a RAW file in it with a set of adjustments to lift and stamp onto the other 50 images.
exported as full quality jpegs & tiffs and 1024 web ready jpegs.

Timings done for the following:

import time
thumbnail update time after stamping
time to click through the images any "loading" time seen
Adjusting 5 set images by a certain amount to time response and slider responsiveness
export time

We will then provide:

OS version
Aperture version
machine type
RAM installed
graphics card
OS hard drive speed
library HD speed

This way if we get a few people involved we should be able to build up a picture of what really affects Apertures performance meaning hopefully we can all then maximise our machines to get the best performance out of Aperture before version 3 comes out, and then run the tests again on 3 to give us a baseline for performance increases.

If anyone would like to get involved please do contact me and I will start to get together the necessary files. Please suggest any specific adjustments, setting or additions to the list above to give us a baseline.

www.twitter.com/mepphoto
www.mep-photography.co.uk

Filed under: macs

After reading this thread on reddit, I wanted to find out the answer. So the question is this, 
If I visited every McDonalds in the UK by foot, and ate a Big Mac at each restaurant, would I gain, or lose calories. How many Big macs would I have to eat on the trip to gain calories?

I didn't have the data for USA, but I do have some for England's.
http://freetexthost.com/yejsmr21zj
Using simulated annealing method, I cooked up this code in FORTRAN. 

Click here to download:
mac.f95 (8 KB)

 

Running it for just 100 seconds with 1022 datapoints, and untuned parameters gives the results:
 Running...
 Initial path length:   7903602.5    
 Main loop took this many times   251492.00    
 time ran in seconds=    100.00033    
 path length   1792710.3    
 The shortest path after    251492.00     iterations was    1792710.3      using l=   1.0000000    
 Number of big macs eaten=        1022
 Calories consumed=      887096
 Calories burn walking one km for average person = 166
 Calories burn on this trip =  2.97589888E+08
 Over calorie balance of -2.96702784E+08
So far it looks like I would have to eat a LOT of big macs to put on weight. BUT this is not the shortest possible path for this trip. Plotting the data we get something like this:

 

The red lines are all part of the path's trip. As you can see, it goes back and quite forth a lot, its not very optimised at all.  What we really need is for the parameters in the algorithm to be tuned so that the distance between the points are minimised. 
The algorithm is a simple:
1. Shuffle the ordering. 
2. If the new path is shorter, repeat back at 1. Else go to 3
3. if a random number is less than: exp(-difference in paths/some parameter), then it is accepted. repeat at 1 again.

So there is a chance the path of being accepted even if it is longer, this allows for more "jiggle" and a chance for a better path to be found later.
I'm going to run this for like 1000 seconds, and see where that takes us. So there we have it, my contribution to useless science for the week.

Lots of love,
Matthew

Filed under: macs

Funny how this Macs advertisement always brings a smile on my face.
Do I see myself in the geek?

 

Filed under: macs

jediwright says...

The monitor shows the contractions and the baby's activity, the others are from the 2nd Skype call w/Olivia tonight.

     
Click here to download:
More_Labor_Pics.zip (1564 KB)

Filed under: macs

jediwright says...

My office is too cold, had to move to the dining room to work last night and today.

Filed under: macs

Doing physics like me are ya? Then you'll need these don't ya:

Programming 
Textmate - Awesome text editor with syntax bundles for everything, auto completion and loads of nice little features. Brilliant for FORTRAN, ruby, perl and C and everything.
I've heard BBEdit is also quite good, but it looks too clumsy to me. textedit could work too i guess. 
Since OS X is unix underneath, its easy to google and find compilers and compile through terminal.

Graphing
I plot graphs all the time, Excel doesn't really cut it for scientific graphs. Plot is my favorite, easy and feature rich. GNUplot is also good but has a steep learning curve but you can write scripts and do batch graphs with little effort. 
Haven't figured out how to get Xmgrace to work via terminal yet. usually it works fine in X11 as a gui app anyway. Anyway here's a graph I did using plot.

(download)

 

Writings
I write my reports in latex instead of a word processor like Word. Not only do they look better but it gets easier to deal with large files a lot of references. Also, the mathematic typesetting is amazing, wikipedia uses the Latex maths typesetting system. If you only want equations then I recommend LaTeXiT
You'll need a distro of TEX install on your mac in order to do any latex work. Mactex is usually enough for anyone, comes with tons of packages.

Maths
I use mathematica when I get stuck with maths, both visually and code based equations supported. I would never attempt to find the inverse of a 10 by 10 matrix by hand. MatLab is also good, as well as maple. Shame you're suppose to pay for these apps.

Remote stuff
Macs come with all the stuff you need to remote connect to a server and start working. Read up on ssh and if your server suppose its, it can do X windows too. 
$ ssh -X username@serveraddress  : this has saved my bum lots of time when I needed to test my work on their servers. 


Non physics stuff:
Install growl
Growl notifies you of things. Not like the cunting windows tooltips, but way better.

It listens to what you're listening to so your friends can find out what you're listening to. Listen! go get a Last.fm account yeah?

Aim, Msn, google talk, skype and others for your chats yeah? Customizable and by far the best chattings client for the mac. 

Use Bittorrent yeah? This is my fav client on any platform. Need I say more? Yes i do; use with TVshows for auto downloading of TV.

Filed under: macs

Marissa says...

No Repeat Thursdays -- An Anti-Looping Workshop

Filed under: macs

Andy says...

CIO Magazine, 15 July 2008, has an interesting article called “A Tangled Paths for Macs in the Enterprise.”

The question posed: is it time to switch our enterprise from PCs to Macs?

“Apple—a synonym for awe-inspiring design and coolness—the antithesis to stodgy old corporate technology…the iPhone’s favorable reception portends something more: Some believe it could usher in the era of a more enterprise-friendly Apple.”

Macs have come a long way…

Macs have increasingly become the consumers’ brand of choice. Apple shipped 2.3 million Macs in the second quarter of 2008, which represents a 51 percent growth for the product.”

Will Weider, the CIO of the Ministry of Health Care and Affinity Health System compares “Macs to luxury cars in a PC world of Chevy Impalas.”

Aside from the design wow factor and their innovativeness, historically, Macs are safer from viruses and have lower maintenance costs. All good reasons to consider an enterprise roll-over to Macs.

From a User-centric perspective, Apple understands how people use technology and their products seem to be the choice many would like to make!

What is holding Apple back in the enterprise?

Consumer-orientation: “Business adoption of Macs and Apple software has been sluggish, perhaps, in part, because this is a low priority for Apple. While Apple, of course, deals with businesses, it remains a consumer-oriented company, by the numbers.”

Technology refresh schedule: “Apple does not provide technology roadmaps…what’s worse they make their hardware incompatible with the previous version of the operating system, and their schedule is impossible to keep up with.”

So what is an advantage to Apple in the consumer marketplace—catering to consumer needs and rapid innovation—is a boondoggle in the business environment. Ah, a double edged sword indeed.

Further, a wholesale switch-out to Apple in a Windows shop typically involves desktops, servers, operating systems, and reworking oodles of legacy systems; this is quite a costly endeavor that is not easy to justify in resource constrained organizations.

Further, one of the core principles of enterprise architecture is standardization in order to reduce complexity and achieve cost-efficiencies, so introducing new platforms or a mixed environment is frowned upon.

In the future, as more and more applications become commoditized and moved to the Internet, thereby reducing the cost of transition to Apple, perhaps Apple will have a better chance to challenge Microsoft on the business playing field.

Filed under: Macs