Apple offers free Mavericks os

Apple offers free Mavericks os
Apple offers free Mavericks OS X update for Mac users (via The Inquirer)

APPLE HAS RELEASED the latest version of its Mavericks Mac OS X desktop operating system, and has made the surprise announcement that it will be available to download for free. Apple claims that new improvements to the software mean a 13in Macbook running…

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What we can learn from gifted Minds.

 

  • Posted: 10/18/2013 8:00 AM
  • Updated: 10/18/2013

Read the blog post below for a music teacher’s account of the contradictions of autism, and watch the video above for an incredible performance by a blind student with autism.

‘Why’s he doing that?’ Freddie’s father sounded more than usually puzzled by the antics of his son.

After months of displacement activity, Freddie, 11 years old and on the autism spectrum, was finally sitting next to me at the piano, and looked as though this time he really were about to play. A final fidget and then his right hand moved towards the keys. With infinite care, he placed his thumb on middle C as he had watched me do before — but without pressing it down. Silently, he moved to the next note (D), which he feathered in a similar way, using his index finger, then with the same precision he touched E, F and G, before coming back down the soundless scale to an inaudible C.

I couldn’t help smiling.

‘Fred, we need to hear the notes!’

My comment was rewarded with a deep stare, right into my eyes. Through them almost. It was always hard to know what Freddie was thinking, but on this occasion he did seem to understand and was willing to respond to my request, since his thumb went back to C. Again, it remained unpressed, but this time he sang the note (perfectly in tune), and then the next one, and the next, until the five-finger exercise was complete.

In most children (assuming that they had the necessary musical skills), such behavior would probably be regarded as an idiosyncratic attempt at humor or even mild naughtiness. But Freddie was being absolutely serious and was pleased, I think, to achieve what he’d been asked to do, for he had indeed enabled me to hear the notes!

He stared at me again, evidently expecting something more, and without thinking I leant forward.

‘Now on this one, Fred’, I said, touching C sharp (the black note next to C).

Freddie gave the tiniest blink and a twitch of his head, and I imagined him, in a fraction of a second, making the necessary kinesthetic calculations. Without hesitation or error, he produced the five-finger exercise again, this time using a mixture of black and white notes. Each pressed silently. All sung flawlessly.

And then, spontaneously, he was off up the keyboard, beginning the same pentatonic pattern on each of the twelve available keys. At my prompting, Freddie re-ran the sequence with his left hand — his unbroken voice hoarsely whispering the low notes.

2013-10-17-DerekPavacini_2013X_photo.jpg
Image by Chris Perry, 2013
So logical. Why bother to play the notes if you know what they sound like already?

So apparently simple a task, and yet … such a difficult feat to accomplish: the whole contradiction of autism crystallized in a few moments of music making.

As I later said to Freddie’s father, if I had to teach a ‘neurotypical’ child to do what his son had so effortlessly achieved, it would take years of effort and hundreds of hours of practice to get to grips with the asymmetries of the Western tonal system and their relationship to the quirky layout of piano keyboard. Yet Freddie had done it unthinkingly, just by observing me play, hearing the streams of notes flowing by, extracting the underlying rules of Western musical syntax, and using these to create patterns of sounds afresh. I had never played the full sequence of scales that Freddie produced. He had worked out the necessary deep structures intuitively, merely through exposure to the language of music. Viva Chomsky!

So how did this child — by all accounts with a severe learning disability — do it?

The phenomenon is explored in the TEDTalk “In the Key of Genius” that I gave with Derek Paravicini, with whom I have been working for the last 30 years. Derek, now 34, like Freddie, has severe autism and has learning difficulties. Unlike Freddie, though, he is also blind — so his perceptual and cognitive capabilities, that permit him to make sense of the world, are even more constrained. In fact, Derek’s capacity to reason and to use language is in the bottom 0.05 percent of the population. Yet his capacity to process musical sound is in the top 99.99 percent: actually, the best I’ve ever encountered, even among advanced performers. He enjoys an international reputation as a pianist — a unique creative talent bolstered by a formidable technique, acquired through many thousands of hours of practice.

How can this be?

In the TEDTalk, I argue that the two things are related. It was Derek’s inability to process language in his early years, coupled with his inability to ascribe functional meaning to everyday sounds, that, I contend, led to his heightened ability to process all sounds in a musical way. One traded off the other. In fact, without the former, it is almost certain that the latter would never have developed. Derek’s disabilities and abilities, like Freddie’s are, I believe, different sides of the same coin.

For information on Derek, please see:
http://www.sonustech.com/paravicini/index.html
and
https://www.facebook.com/derekparavicini

The new Edgertronic super slow motion camera.

I recently was looking into camera products for our documentary and product testing.
I found the Edgertronic slow motion camera and am quite intrigued…

edgertronic1

It has interesting capabilities–>

An amazing video of a hummung bird at slow motion–>

Female Anna’s Hummingbird – 500 Frames/sec from edgertronic on Vimeo.

We would love to test and review it and use it for our testing of products as well.

Here is a nice review I found on Petapixel–link

And this is a link to Edgertronics website as well–>Edgertronic

How does the edgertronic work According to their Kickstarter page–>

The edgertronic contains a specialized CMOS image sensor, ultra high-speed electronics, memory, and image processing electronics in a compact form factor.

The camera runs a web server and connects to a computer/laptop or to a LAN over Ethernet. The user directs a standard web browser to the camera’s IP address and controls the camera via a user interface (UI) appearing on the web browser. The camera’s UI allows the user to set exposure, frame rate, preview composition, adjust focus, and finally trigger the camera to take a high-speed video.

While running, the edgertronic is constantly capturing frames of high-speed video into an internal buffer. Depending on frame size and frame rate, this buffer contains, at a minimum, the last 8 seconds of video. When a trigger occurs, video before and/or after the trigger is captured and compressed into H.264 video and saved to a removable SD card.

Continuous capture into a this large buffer allows the user to trigger the edgertronic even after an event has occurred. Unpredictable events, like a lightning bolt, are captured with ease.

Once the video is saved, it can be downloaded to the computer, or replayed in the web browser. Alternately, you can remove the SD card and download the videos to their computer or laptop.

User Interface:

High-speed videography has unique challenges in how frame rate, shutter speed, aperture, and resolution settings interact. We completely rethought the control interface to reduce complexity while allowing full creative override. You can specify as many or as few of the settings as you want, and the camera will fill in the remaining ones. This allows you to optimally concentrate on your creative process.

Top 5 Slo-mo Cameras

Top 5 Slo-mo Cameras
Top 5 Slow Motion Cameras (via http://tekedia.com)

Slow motion is the technique of playing a video at slower than the recorded speed, so that every action can be focused upon. This technique has been in use in motion pictures and the television industry for long now. Slow motion gives a more detailed…

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iOgrapher® Filmmaking Support Case

iOgrapher® Filmmaking Support Case
iOgrapher® Filmmaking Support Case for the Apple iPad Mini Reaches Kickstarter Funding Goal; Now Shipping to Customers (via MarketWired)

SOURCE: iOgrapher LLC October 08, 2013 09:00 ET iOgrapher Turns iPad Mini Into a Handheld Rig or Tripod Mounted Studio for Pro and Consumer Filmmakers SAN MARINO, CA–(Marketwired – Oct 8, 2013) –  The creators of the patent-pending iOgrapher® mobile…

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From postman to profit

From postman to profit
From postman to profit: A one-man startup goes the alternative route (via Pando Daily)

By Erin Griffith On October 8, 2013Like any industry, the tech world has a way of reinforcing its own tunnel-vision view of How Things Are Done. If you want to start an Internet company, you must study the bibles of Paul Graham, Mark Suster, and Fred…

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If you thought this was common sense, think again

If you thought this was common sense, think again
If you thought this was common sense, think again (via www.lostandtired.com)

It always amazes me how much misinformation is floating around about Autism. In my opinion, Autism is by far one of the most misunderstood disorders. I’m absolutely floored by some of the things that people think/assume about kids with Autism. The…

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Do you consider #Autism a disability?

Do you consider #Autism a disability?
Do you consider #Autism a disability? (via www.lostandtired.com)

First of all this is probably the type of loaded question that I would hate to answer myself.  Having said that, I think it’s an interesting and relavent question because I would suspect that answers will very based on personal experience. Do you…

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The Inner Voice of a Thirteen-Year-Old Boy with Autism

The Reason I Jump: The Inner Voice of a Thirteen-Year-Old Boy with Autism (via http://www.readingfunzone.com)

NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLERYou’ve never read a book like The Reason I Jump. Written by Naoki Higashida, a very smart, very self-aware, and very charming thirteen-year-old boy with autism, it is a one-of-a-kind memoir that demonstrates how an autistic…

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