Archive for the 'technology' Category Page 2 of 14



Google Earth Engine launched to aid global environmental monitoring and measurement.

Google has launched Google Earth Engine at the United Nations Climate Change Conference, currently underway in Cancun, Mexico. The new platform enables global monitoring and measurement of changes in Earth’s environment.

Google Earth Engine will allow scientists to use Google’s huge infrastructure to analyse imagery (running analyses across thousands of computers), in order to study data related to such things as the state of deforestation, disease mitigation, disaster response and water resources.

Google says it’s particularly excited about the use of Google Earth Engine to support development of systems to monitor, report and verify efforts to stop global deforestation. Deforestation is responsible for a substantial amount of carbon being released into the atmosphere, and loss of biodiversity.

It’s a timely launch, as a United Nations proposed framework  for Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation in Developing Countries (REDD) is a key agenda item at the Cancun conference.

Because of the huge amount of satellite imagery, and the substantial computer resources needed to analyze the images, many images have never before been seen or analyzed. Google says that scientists will now be able to build applications to mine the significant amount of data they have built up.

Google is also donating 10 million CPU-hours a year for 2 years on Google Earth Engine, to help developing nations track the state of forests. The aim is to provide transparency and certainty to efforts to stop deforestation; both important and significant issues.

It’s good to see Google using its resources in a project such as this, which I notice is also supported by several partners, including key strategic and funding partner the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation.

Wikileaks is rocking our institutions to the core.

You’d have to have been living under a rock not to notice the massive and continuing fallout from the latest Wikileaks release of diplomatic ‘cables’, on top of the Iraq war logs released not long ago.

Add to this the probability that Wikileaks will release documents that will significantly impact some major banks (and other companies?) in the near future, and you have a full blown scramble to try and shut down Wikileaks as soon as possible.

Wikileaks, It's time to open the archives

Just in the last couple of days since the beginning of the latest release, among other developments, many governments seem to be in damage control; Wikileaks has been under DDOS attack on multiple occasions; Interpol has issued a ‘Wanted’ notice for Wikileaks founder Julian Assange; Amazon has cut off hosting to Wikileaks on its servers; and a senior advisor and strategist to the Canadian Prime Minister has even called for Assange’s assassination! What next?

Whether you think what Wikileaks is doing is right or wrong, there’s little doubt that they are so far succeeding in rocking many of our major institutions to the core, including ‘the media’, governments, and soon various large corporations. It also leaves little doubt about just how much impact the Internet is continuing to have on the world. Wow.

Is Foursquare about to offer image uploads at last?

Do these tweets just now from Foursquare co-founder Dennis Crowley mean Foursquare is about to offer image uploads as part of an app update, at last?

I certainly hope so. I think it really needs it to keep people’s interest up over the longer term. I know he’s said before they have been planning to add the feature. Perhaps now is the time.

Dennis Crowley tweetDennis Crowley tweet

Mobile internet use set to soar [stats].

Here are 2 slides I think are interesting in relation to growing mobile internet use around the world.

The slides are from a recent presentation by former Morgan Stanley (now moving to Kleiner Perkins) tech analyst Mary Meeker. The full presentation can be downloaded from here. Click on the images below to see them in a larger size, in a new window.

In short, 3G subscription growth is climbing at very high rates in some countries with very large populations, such as Brazil, China, Indonesia and Russia, and is still around 25-35 percent year on year in many other countries around the world.

mobile internet growth

Additionally, it’s astonishing how steep the curve is when the Apple iPhone, iTouch and iPad are shown together, in comparison to the first 20 quarters from the launch of some other products and services. It seems clear that mobile still has a big future ahead.

Apple iPhone + iTouch + iPad useage

The whole presentation is embedded over at Business Insider.

Can we move as one using social media? Twitter’s Biz Stone thinks so.

Here’s an interesting recent video interview with Twitter co-founder Biz Stone.

One point grabbed me as I was listening to the interview. He says:

One particular event opened our eyes to what we had on our hands. That was in March of 2007 at a festival called South by South West….We had about 75,000 users at that point and many of the people at the festival were using Twitter, and this was the first time we were able to see Twitter in the wild, so to speak. And there were a couple of things that happened at that festival that made us realize that people were using our service to come together and move as one…We rushed right back to San Francisco and formed Twitter Incorporated.

I find this interesting in the light of my recent thoughts on what a global civilization, aided by an increasingly social web, might start to look like. Is it possible that sometimes (only sometimes) we may be able to use the social web to come together and act as one, on a larger scale than anything previously achieved? Twitter has certainly become a lot bigger since then.