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    <channel>
        <title>Overskrift.dk seneste indlæg for tag: data</title>
        <description>De seneste posts fra danske RSS feeds og weblogs på Overskrift.dk om tag'et data</description>
        <link>http://www.overskrift.dk</link>
        <lastBuildDate>Tue, 22 May 2012 17:01:11 +0100</lastBuildDate>
        <generator>FeedCreator 1.7.2</generator>
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            <url>http://www.overskrift.dk/images/overskrift.gif</url>
            <title>Overskrift.dk logo</title>
            <link>http://www.overskrift.dk</link>
            <description>Overskrift.dk</description>
        </image>
        <docs>http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss</docs>
        <ttl>60</ttl>
        <item>
            <title>Indbydelse til Bike for Data Day 10. juni 2012</title>
            <link>http://www.microformats.dk/2012/05/22/indbydelse-til-bike-for-data-day-10-juni-2012/</link>
            <description>(Artikelserie Dit og mit kort, 162). Søndag den 10. juni 2012 afholder Dansk Cyklist Forbund den årlige &amp;#8220;Store Cykeldag&amp;#8220;. Denne dag vil der være mulighed landet over for at deltage i forskellige typer af cykelture for hele familien. Det er ikke nogen større hemmelighed at meget research og ud og tjekke/opdage nye geografiske objekter sker via cyklen blandt OpenStreetMap frivillige. Du kommer frem alle vegne og kan hurtigt tjekke forholdsvis store områder ud med din cykel.
Så derfor den 10. juni inviteres du som OpenStreetMap frivillig til &amp;#8220;Bike for Data Day&amp;#8220;. Din mission &amp;#8211; Hop op på din cykel og tag ud i det danske landskab, og lav noget OpenStreetMap relevant. Det kan fx være registrering af manglende stier i skove eller ved strandområder med din GPS. Emnet er helt frit &amp;#8211; Du kan gøre det alene, sammen med familien eller hvad med at lokke en kammerat (eller flere) som ikke er OpenStreetMap frivillig endnu med ud på turen?
Et godt forslag (synes jeg selv) kunne være at tage ud og få registret om, der er gadebelysning eller ej ude på vejene og stierne. Det er en relativ nem opgave at gå til. Tag et kig på Rashers lyskort (Link fører til Frederikssunds området)

De gule streger hen over veje/stier er, hvor der blevet observeret, at der findes gadebelysning. Sort betyder så, at der ingen gadebelysning er. Hvor der ingenting er angivet, der mangler at blive tjekket for gadebelysning. En lille landsby med under 500 indbyggere, der tager det altså ikke mere end højst 30 minutter at tjekke alle veje og stier igennem. 
Sådan registrer du gadebelysning i OpenStreetMaps database (guiden er her til Potlatch 2 redigeringsværktøjet). Case &amp;#8211; Stenværksvej i Frederikssund. 

Her ses i billedet, at der er gadebelysning på Stenværksvej. Nu angiver man altså ikke hver eneste gadelampe. Man angiver gadebelysning eller ej for for hele vejen eller rettere for vejsegmentet. Så klik med din mus på vejen (vejsegmentet), så den bliver highlightet. (som vist i billedet nedenfor)

Ude i venstre side nederst klikker du så på &amp;#8220;Advanced&amp;#8221; og dernæst klikker du på &amp;#8220;Add&amp;#8221; &amp;#8211; Venstre side af tagging-menuen skriver du &amp;#8220;lit&amp;#8221; og i højre side skriver du &amp;#8220;yes&amp;#8221; (OBS det hele skrives med småt). Og så er det bare så klikke &amp;#8220;Save&amp;#8221; &amp;#8211; ca. 15 min. efter vil du kunne se dit arbejde på Rashers lyskort. 
Og hvis der ingen gadebelysning som vist i billedet nedenfor er, så skrives der logisk nok &amp;#8220;lit=no&amp;#8221; i taggingmenuen. Du kan læse mere om gadebelysning på OpenStreetMaps Wiki.

(skovsti i Færgelunden ved Jægerspris- ingen stibelysning)
NB &amp;#8211; Hvis der er en lang vej (vejsegment) der kører udenfor bygrænsen og gennem en landsby og ud igen af byen, og det kun er i selve byen, der er gadebelysning. Så skal du huske at klippe vejen op i flere vejstykker og så få angivet hhv. &amp;#8220;lit=yes/no&amp;#8221; for de respektive vejstykker.
Hvis du tager rundt til de mindre landsbyer ude i Danmark, så husk også at tjekke om fx købmænd, tankstationer, drikkevandshaner, kirker, grillbarer, kroer, ishuse osv. er blevet registret i OpenStreetMap, ellers kan du jo lige gøre det, nu du alligevel er ude på stedet. Så er der kun at ønske god cykeltur til jer deltagere 10. juni. Hvis du tager billeder fra dagen, så skriv gerne i kommentarfeltet, hvor vi kan se dem ude på nettet.
NB &amp;#8211; Det er helt tilladt og lovligt at tyvstarte i &amp;#8220;Bike for Data Day&amp;#8221; &amp;#8211; Så hvis du hellere vil af sted i dag i det gode vejr for en cykeltur er det helt okay.
</description>
            <author>Søren Johannessen</author>
            <source url="http://www.microformats.dk/feed/">microformats.dk</source>
            <pubDate>Tue, 22 May 2012 14:31:55 +0100</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title>Some data from Gapminder</title>
            <link>http://econstudentlog.wordpress.com/2012/05/22/some-data-from-gapminder/</link>
            <description>
</description>
            <author>US</author>
            <source url="http://econstudentlog.wordpress.com/feed/">Econstudentlog</source>
            <pubDate>Tue, 22 May 2012 12:31:29 +0100</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title>DriveScrubber 3.9.4</title>
            <link>http://www.new-software-updates.com/system-utilities/drivescrubber/</link>
            <description>								Protect your personal information when you sell, donate, or recycle your computer. DriveScrubber permanently erases hard drive data so that that your private information can never fall into the wrong hands after you part ways with your PC.
Erase the entire hard drive, or wipe just the free space on your hard drive to scrub file remnants while leaving the operating system and applications intact. DriveScrubber works within Windows, and cleans unwanted data from your primary hard drive or partition, your flash drive, your USB hard drive, and even your digital camera, mobile phone, or music player.
Deleting a file only removes the reference to that file, but not the file data itself. Until the data is overwritten, it remains on the drive, as does the evidence of the source file.
Even reformatting a hard drive is not enough to erase the data on it. Formatting removes file allocation information, and it performs other housekeeping functions for data storage. But it does NOT erase data.
DriveScrubber cleans your drives even beyond privacy standards set by the US military, shredding even the most stubborn malware that cannot be removed by other methods and ensuring that deleted files stay out of reach.
Competing products may take hours or even days to clean drives, but DriveScrubber uses the fastest, most optimized methods while maintaining its proven security strength ? bringing you peace of mind at maximum speed. What`s more, you can easily use DriveScrubber right from within Windows, so you can wipe entire drives without requiring a cumbersome boot disk.
Version: 3.9.4
License: Shareware
Download: DriveScrubber v. 3.9.4
</description>
            <author>admin</author>
            <source url="http://www.new-software-updates.com/feed/">New Software Updates</source>
            <pubDate>Mon, 21 May 2012 19:52:14 +0100</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title>Social Media Marketing: A Jungle Too Deep Or A Sea of Opportunities? [Infographic]</title>
            <link>http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/mindjumpers/~3/S9wP-JGAUnI/</link>
            <description>Tweet
We are all very familiar with Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn. But the term ?Social media? is an umbrella that covers much, much more. Multiple channels, multiple tools as well as multiple utilisation possibilities. The task is to figure out when to use what, and what purpose and outcome you have in mind.
On Friday, businessinsider.com presented the Buddy Media infographic of the social media marketing landscape as of today. Though introduced as ?insanely confusing?, we see the infographic differently. Instead of being overwhelmingly confusing, it is a quick overview of a world of opportunities and interlinking social media systems that can help you navigate and profit in social media marketing. If you know which ones to use when, that is.
And this is where people might get a bit confused, when looking at the infographic:

Keep it simple
As Jonas wrote last week, the future of successful social media engagement lies in the understanding of how to transform Big Data into business intelligence. This is exactly the reason why one should not look at the infographic with despair but with hope. Within these different categories of social media channels, platforms and tools there are interlinking paths to follow which will lead you to the holy grail of companies? social media efforts: business intelligence leading to profit.

Perfection is about Selection
Knowing how to create engagement with your target group by using the right channels/platforms, how to distribute and monitor it most time efficiently and how to analyse on the data your social media efforts produces will guide you to the goal. Sounds easy, right? Of course you need to know your target group(s) as well as the relevant social media platforms and channels before you can profit from any of your actions. But once you know when and where you can find your target groups online and with what content, you?ve come a long way already.
Sure, there are a lot of tools, platforms and management programmes to navigate through, and this can be confusing. Furthermore, in order to retrieve sufficient and relevant data extractions to analyse on both your social media performance as well as on your users interaction with your brand, you might want to be careful of combining too many platforms.
So, use the infographic as an overview of the different opportunities available today in order to pick a selection perfect for your brand and target group.
Similar Posts:

Google Analytics Unveils a Set of Social Reports
Will Social Media Initiatives Change Your Google Ranking? [Infographic]
2012 Social Marketing &amp;#038; New Media Predictions [White Paper]





</description>
            <author>Henriette Stisen</author>
            <source url="http://www.mindjumpers.com/blog/feed/">Mindjumpers</source>
            <pubDate>Mon, 21 May 2012 10:36:28 +0100</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title>Start using what is yours</title>
            <link>http://kl7.dk/blog/about/start-using-what-is-yours</link>
            <description>A couple of days ago I stumbled upon one of my older records, John Butler Trio?s Grand National, with the incredible folk tune ?Better Than?. The lyrics basically claim that the ?the grass is always greener on the other side? mentality is in the human gene pool. This may not be very new or even insightful knowledge but it provoked and reorganized some thoughts I have been having for some time.
Even though sometimes forgotten businesses and organization are fundamentally a group of human, so this mantra often goes for business too, and despite how left-wing anti-capitalistic it may seem (especially in this day of age) it might bring about a lesson to learn. From clients to just about over other business, and even in the public sector, I hear stories about the level of knowledge they wish the organization beheld. ?If we just had the competence internally&amp;#8230;? or ?If only someone in the staff was a PhD in electronic engineering our products functionality would raise by&amp;#8230;?
This might seem like a pretty obvious response, but nonetheless: ?Stop focusing on what you can?t have and start focus on what you have?, and might I add: ?but have yet to activate?.
For four decade Moore?s law stating that the number of transistors that could be placed on a microchip would double every other year, have proven to be pretty accurate and even though the IT development?s growth is predicted to slow down a little (double every 3 years by the end of 2013) it is still a pretty significant growth. A recent study from Erik Brynjolfsson &amp;amp; Adam Saunders focus on the fact that business all over the world has yet to exploid the full potential of existing technologies. Even more they conclude that ?&amp;#8230;if all technological progress ere to stop tomorrow, business could create decades? worth of IT-enabled organizational innovation using only today?s technologies.?
My question to you is whether your organization before making a wishful thinking about hiring the next Zuckerberg, has set out to exploit the existing technologies and how they may improve your business?
With the enormous amount of technologies being developed everyday, are you sure that you have seen and activated all the easy pickings already existing in the market?
A great example would is that only a handful of Danish companies have brought to life, the valuable data an organization are producing everyday and transformed them into operational strategic tools. (More on the subject here)
The data is yours and you are producing them everyday, why not start using them? Mick Jagger got it halfway right: ?You can?t always get what you want? but you can start using what you have?
</description>
            <author>Simon</author>
            <source url="http://kl7.dk/feed">/KL7</source>
            <pubDate>Sun, 20 May 2012 21:52:11 +0100</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title>A network setup 20 pc. repeater, Hub, bridge, switch router join the network. How get data passing ?</title>
            <link>http://wirelesshomesecurity-camera.com/a-network-setup-20-pc-repeater-hub-bridge-switch-router-join-the-network-how-get-data-passing.html</link>
            <description>Wirelesshomesecurity-camera.com &amp;#8211; Here i will give details of bridge network and you can discover details and suggestions trick about Kidde and other Carbon Monoxide detector, properly, nowadays i will give you info of A network setup 20 computer. repeater, Hub, bridge, switch router join the network. How get data passing ?. I have some answer [...]</description>
            <source url="http://feeds.feedburner.com/Wirelesshomesecurity-cameracom">Wireless Home Security Camera</source>
            <pubDate>Sat, 19 May 2012 09:56:54 +0100</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title>Comm Operator 4.6.0.154</title>
            <link>http://www.new-software-updates.com/uncategorized/comm-operator/</link>
            <description>								Comm Operator is a professional tool for serial port, TCP/IP, UDP and HTTP communication application?s design, development, debug and test. It makes it more efficient for the development of hardware-software application, client-server application as well as network application.
Features:
Communicate with RS232, TCP/IP and UDP
Work with Serial Port, Bluetooth, USB, Ethernet and Wifi
Send, receive and view data in Text, Hex and Decimal format
Support quick send panel and sending a file
Support terminal window and remote access
With specific send panel for NCD relay boards
Support terminal panel and RST/DTR control
Dedicated input panel for structured data
Multiple customized panel for user`s specific data
Send data repeatedly with specified interval automatically
Send single data and group data automatically according to auto send rules
Support Perl, Python and Ruby Script to send data automatically
Support third party`s Plug-in (.net dll) and user own EXE to send data automatically
Built-in Echo function for loopback test
Asynchronous sending and receiving data
Build-in checksum for Parity, Modular sum and Position-dependent checksums
Organized data in list and work with multiple send data list
Create send data list from Text, Hex and Decimal files directly
Copy and paste data between different lists
Drag and drop to open send data list directly
Detect all available COM ports automatically
Save log file automatically
Keep all settings for later use
Create COP file with current setting and data list for free tool Comm Operator Pal.
Version: 4.6.0.154
License: Shareware
Download: Comm Operator v. 4.6.0.154
</description>
            <author>admin</author>
            <source url="http://www.new-software-updates.com/feed/">New Software Updates</source>
            <pubDate>Fri, 18 May 2012 13:17:24 +0100</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title>T-Mobile launches new contract-free data-only plans</title>
            <link>http://marketingdebat.dk/t-mobile-launches-new-contract-free-data-only-plans/</link>
            <description> Not all of us want to be locked into a long term contract with a wireless carrier. Especially when it comes to data-only devices that might not get used on a regular basis. For those that want to grab a 4G dongle or a mobile hotspot and go, without the need sign their life over, T-Mobile is launching four new pre-paid data options. 
Follow this link:
T-Mobile launches new contract-free data-only plans
</description>
            <author>admin</author>
            <source url="http://www.marketingdebat.dk/?feed=rss2">Marketingdebat</source>
            <pubDate>Thu, 17 May 2012 18:23:00 +0100</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title>G DATA Internet Security 2012 Free 3 Month Serial Key</title>
            <link>http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Weblogtrick/~3/g_pTwFKPyJ4/</link>
            <description>Weblogtrick
G DATA InternetSecurity 2012 Free 3 Month Serial Key - G DATA InternetSecurity is a suite of applications that work together in order
sanjay

[[ This is a content summary only. Visit my website for full links, other content, and more! ]]

</description>
            <author>sanjay</author>
            <source url="http://feeds.feedburner.com/Weblogtrick">Weblogtrick</source>
            <pubDate>Thu, 17 May 2012 06:13:59 +0100</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title>Social Sharing Data Vampires: They Vant to Suck Your Data</title>
            <link>http://marketingdebat.dk/social-sharing-data-vampires-they-vant-to-suck-your-data/</link>
            <description> Publishers are bleeding themselves dry, giving up the very customer data that holds the promise of their continued relevance in the digital age. 
Visit link:
Social Sharing Data Vampires: They Vant to Suck Your Data
</description>
            <author>admin</author>
            <source url="http://www.marketingdebat.dk/?feed=rss2">Marketingdebat</source>
            <pubDate>Wed, 16 May 2012 15:15:13 +0100</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title>WAPCOS Limited Multiple Vacancies May 2012</title>
            <link>http://www.governmentjobs-in-india.com/jobs/wapcos-limited-multiple-vacancies-may-2012/</link>
            <description>WAPCOS Limited is a ?MINI RATNA? Public Sector Enterprise under the aegis of the Union Ministry of...

[[ This is a content summary only. Visit my website for full links, other content, and more! ]]
    
</description>
            <author>Sathish</author>
            <source url="http://feeds.feedburner.com/governmentjobs-india">Government Jobs In India</source>
            <pubDate>Wed, 16 May 2012 11:09:02 +0100</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title>Senest anvendte filer</title>
            <link>http://danmark.pbbiblogs.com/2012/05/16/senest-anvendte-filer/</link>
            <description>I MapInfo Professional findes der en liste med de senest anvendte filer nederst i menuen Filer. Den indeholder de seneste 10 filer af forskellige type, så som tabeller, arbejdsområder og MapBasic-applikationer, som er blevet åbnet i MapInfo Professional. 

Men ofte er 10 filer ikke særligt mange, i betragtning af hvor mange tabeller, man åbner i dagens løb.
Men heldigvis er der hjælp at hente. I de fleste Åbn-dialogbokse (og f.eks. i dialogboksen Kør MapBasic-program) findes der endnu en liste over de senest anvendte filer. Nedenfor er et eksempel på Åbn-dialogboksen for tabeller.

Og listen afhænger af den filtype, der er valgt, så skifter du til arbejdsområder, skifter listen også til disse filtyper.

Peter
</description>
            <author>Peter Horsbøll Møller</author>
            <source url="http://danmark.pbbiblogs.com/feed/">Den danske PB Software Blog</source>
            <pubDate>Wed, 16 May 2012 09:00:47 +0100</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title>An Overview of the Web Storage API</title>
            <link>http://www.flash-to-html5.net/blog/an-overview-of-the-web-storage-api</link>
            <description>Web developers have long yearned for a way to store data long term. Cookies are an option, but they can only store 4KB of data. Additionally, cookies are sent to the server with each HTTP request. This means that cookies, especially large ones, can consume considerable network bandwidth. There have been other attempts to implement storage techniques, but for the most part they have been hacks. Then, along came HTML5 and the Web Storage API to the rescue.
The Web Storage API defines two types of storage areas ? local storage and session storage. Local storage is persistent data which remains until it is explicitly deleted, or until the browser?s cache is cleared. According to the specification, browsers should allocate at least 5MB of local storage per domain. The second storage type, session storage, is also persistent data, however the data is tied to a ?top-level browsing context? (i.e. a browser tab or window). Session data remains until it is either deleted or the browsing context is closed. Session storage is particularly useful when a user is interacting with multiple instances of the same website. In such a situation, using local storage could result in the different instances overwriting each others data.
The two types of storage areas are accessed through global objects named ?localStorage? and ?sessionStorage?.  Both storage areas implement the exact same API.  Data is stored as key/value pairs, and all data is stored in string form.  When adding data to storage, it is implicitly converted to a string.  However, when the string data is retrieved from storage it needs to be explicitly converted to the appropriate data type using functions such as parseInt().  When dealing with objects, the JSON.parse() and JSON.stringify() methods should be used for serialization and deserialization.
Detecting Storage Support
The Web Storage API, like many other HTML5 features, is not supported by all browsers.  To check if a browser supports storage, use the function shown below.  The function checks for the existence of the global ?localStorage? object.  A similar function could be created to check for session storage, but it can be safely assumed that if one storage area exists, then so does the other.
function localStorageSupported() {
  try {
    return &quot;localStorage&quot; in window &amp;amp;&amp;amp; window[&quot;localStorage&quot;] !== null;
  } catch (e) {
    return false;
  }
}
Storing Data
Data is added to storage using the setItem() method.  setItem() takes a key and value as arguments.  If the key does not already exist in storage, then the key/value pair is added.  If the key is already present, then the value is updated.  Several example setItem() usages are shown below.  The examples show how to add data of various types to local and session storage.  Notice that the ?key? argument must always be a string, while the type of ?value? can vary.
localStorage.setItem(&quot;key&quot;, &quot;value&quot;);
sessionStorage.setItem(&quot;foo&quot;, 3.14);
localStorage.setItem(&quot;bar&quot;, true);
sessionStorage.setItem(&quot;baz&quot;, JSON.stringify(object));
Data can also be added to storage using object property assignment statements.  The previous setItem() examples have been rewritten below using assignment statements. Note that the assignment to ?key? on the first line will fail silently.  This is because the storage areas have a built in function named key() that will be covered later.  For this reason, the API methods are the preferred way to access storage.
localStorage.key = &quot;value&quot;; // this fails silently
sessionStorage.foo = 3.14;
localStorage[&quot;bar&quot;] = true;
sessionStorage[&quot;baz&quot;] = JSON.stringify(object);
If a site attempts to store too much data, eventually the browser?s storage quota will be exceeded and an exception will be thrown.  To handle this case, try-catch blocks should be used when storing data.  An example of this is shown below.
try {
  localStorage.setItem(&quot;key&quot;, &quot;value&quot;);
} catch (e) {
  alert(&quot;Exceeded Storage Quota!&quot;);
}
Reading Stored Data
To read data from storage, the getItem() method is used.  getItem() takes a lookup key as its sole argument.  If the key exists in storage, then the corresponding value is returned.  If the key does not exist, then null is returned.  The following examples use the getItem() method to retrieve the data stored in the setItem() examples.
var string = localStorage.getItem(&quot;key&quot;);
var number = sessionStorage.getItem(&quot;foo&quot;);
var boolean = localStorage.getItem(&quot;bar&quot;);
var object = JSON.parse(sessionStorage.getItem(&quot;baz&quot;));
Stored data can also be accessed by reading properties of the ?localStorage? and ?sessionStorage? objects.  The previous getItem() examples have been rewritten below using object property syntax.
var string = localStorage.key;
var number = sessionStorage.foo;
var boolean = localStorage[&quot;bar&quot;];
var object = JSON.parse(sessionStorage[&quot;baz&quot;]);
Iterating Over Stored Data
Often times, it is necessary to programmatically loop over all of the items in storage.  The loop?s upper bound is determined by the ?length? property of the particular storage area.  The stored keys can be retrieved one at a time using the key() method.  key() takes a single integer parameter that acts as an index to the storage area.  An example of looping over each key/value pair in ?localStorage? is shown below.  Of course, session storage can be processed in a similar fashion by substituting ?sessionStorage? for ?localStorage?.
for (var i = 0; i &amp;lt; localStorage.length; i++) {
  var key = localStorage.key(i);
  var value = localStorage.getItem(key);
  // do something with the key and value
}
Deleting Stored Data
When data is no longer needed, it should be explicitly removed.  This is especially true for local storage, as it will persist even after the browser is closed.  To delete individual key/value pairs from storage, the removeItem() method is used.  The removeItem() method takes the key to be deleted as its only parameter.  If the key is not present then nothing will happen.  Examples of the removeItem() method are shown below.
localStorage.removeItem(&quot;key&quot;);
sessionStorage.removeItem(&quot;foo&quot;);
localStorage.removeItem(&quot;bar&quot;);
sessionStorage.removeItem(&quot;baz&quot;);
The delete operator can also be used to remove stored data.  The previous example is rewritten below using delete instead of removeItem().
delete localStorage.key;
delete sessionStorage.foo;
delete localStorage[&quot;bar&quot;];
delete sessionStorage[&quot;baz&quot;];
While removeItem() is used to delete individual pieces of data, the clear() method is used to delete all stored data.  Usages of the clear() method are shown below.
localStorage.clear();
sessionStorage.clear();
The storage Event
A user can potentially have several instances of the same site open at any given time.  Changes made to a storage area in one instance need to be reflected in the other instances.  The Web Storage API accomplishes this synchronization using the ?storage? event.  When a storage area is changed, a ?storage? event is fired for any other tabs/windows that are sharing the storage area.  Note that a ?storage? event is not fired for the tab/window that changes the storage area.
Storage areas can be changed by calls to setItem(), removeItem(), and clear().  However, not all calls to these methods actually change the storage area.  For example, calling clear() on an empty storage area or removeItem() on a key that does not exist will not change the storage area, and therefore will not fire an event.
The ?storage? event object has several fields of interest which are described below.  Following the description of the fields is an example ?storage? event handler.

?key? ? This field is the key argument of setItem() or removeItem(), or null when clear() caused the event to be fired.
?newValue? ? The ?value? argument to setItem() is reflected in this field.  Calls to removeItem() and clear() cause this field to be null.
?oldValue? ? This field holds the key?s value prior to a call to setItem() or removeItem().  Calls to clear() cause this field to be null.
?url? ? The ?url? field stores the address of the page whose storage area was affected.
?storageArea? ? The ?storageArea? field corresponds to the local or session storage area that was changed.

window.addEventListener(&quot;storage&quot;, function(event) {
  var key = event.key;
  var newValue = event.newValue;
  var oldValue = event.oldValue;
  var url = event.url;
  var storageArea = event.storageArea;
  // handle the event
});
Example Page
The following code implements a sample page for manipulating local storage.  The page is also available online here.  The example covers the entire local storage API, including the ?storage? event.  In order to see the ?storage? event in action, the page must be open in at least two separate tabs/windows of the same browser.  The ?storage? event will also only work if the page is served over HTTP (i.e. the file:// protocol will not work).
&amp;lt;!DOCTYPE html&amp;gt;
&amp;lt;html&amp;gt;
&amp;lt;head&amp;gt;
  &amp;lt;title&amp;gt;Web Storage Example&amp;lt;/title&amp;gt;
  &amp;lt;meta charset=&quot;UTF-8&quot; /&amp;gt;
  &amp;lt;script&amp;gt;
    &quot;use strict&quot;;
    window.addEventListener(&quot;load&quot;, function(event) {
      var key = document.getElementById(&quot;key&quot;);
      var value = document.getElementById(&quot;value&quot;);
      var add = document.getElementById(&quot;add&quot;);
      var remove = document.getElementById(&quot;remove&quot;);
      var clear = document.getElementById(&quot;clear&quot;);
      var content = document.getElementById(&quot;content&quot;);
      add.addEventListener(&quot;click&quot;, function(event) {
        if (key.value !== &quot;&quot;) {
          try {
            localStorage.setItem(key.value, value.value);
          } catch (e) {
            alert(&quot;Exceeded Storage Quota!&quot;);
          }
          refreshContents();
        }
      });
      remove.addEventListener(&quot;click&quot;, function(event) {
        if (key.value !== &quot;&quot;) {
          localStorage.removeItem(key.value);
          refreshContents();
        }
      });
      clear.addEventListener(&quot;click&quot;, function(event) {
        localStorage.clear();
        refreshContents();
      });
      window.addEventListener(&quot;storage&quot;, function(event) {
        var k = event.key;
        var newValue = event.newValue;
        var oldValue = event.oldValue;
        var url = event.url;
        var storageArea = event.storageArea;
        alert(&quot;EVENT:\n&quot; + k + &quot;\n&quot; + newValue + &quot;\n&quot; + oldValue + &quot;\n&quot; + url + &quot;\n&quot; + storageArea);
        refreshContents();
      });
      function refreshContents() {
        var str = &quot;&quot;;
        for (var i = 0, len = localStorage.length; i &amp;lt; len; i++) {
          var k = localStorage.key(i);
          var v = localStorage.getItem(k);
          str += &quot;'&quot; + k + &quot;' = '&quot; + v + &quot;'&amp;lt;br /&amp;gt;&quot;;
        }
        key.value = &quot;&quot;;
        value.value = &quot;&quot;;
        content.innerHTML = str;
      }
      refreshContents();
    });
  &amp;lt;/script&amp;gt;
&amp;lt;/head&amp;gt;
&amp;lt;body&amp;gt;
  Key:  &amp;lt;input type=&quot;text&quot; id=&quot;key&quot; /&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br /&amp;gt;
  Value: &amp;lt;input type=&quot;text&quot; id=&quot;value&quot; /&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br /&amp;gt;
  &amp;lt;input type=&quot;button&quot; id=&quot;add&quot; value=&quot;Add to Storage&quot; /&amp;gt;&amp;amp;nbsp;
  &amp;lt;input type=&quot;button&quot; id=&quot;remove&quot; value=&quot;Remove from Storage&quot; /&amp;gt;&amp;amp;nbsp;
  &amp;lt;input type=&quot;button&quot; id=&quot;clear&quot; value=&quot;Clear Storage&quot; /&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br /&amp;gt;
  Contents of Local Storage:&amp;lt;br /&amp;gt;
  &amp;lt;span id=&quot;content&quot;&amp;gt;&amp;lt;/span&amp;gt;
&amp;lt;/body&amp;gt;
&amp;lt;/html&amp;gt;
Things to Remember

Local storage persists until it is explicitly deleted or the browser?s cache is cleared.
Session storage persists until it is explicitly deleted or the browsing context is closed.
Data stored by one browser is not accessible by another browser.  For example, data stored by Chrome is not seen by Firefox.
Objects should be stored as JSON strings.
For security reasons, sensitive data should not be stored, especially in local storage.
Changes to a storage area cause a ?storage? event to be fired.
As with many other HTML5 features, web storage is not yet implemented consistently.

</description>
            <author>Sophie.Y</author>
            <pubDate>Wed, 16 May 2012 07:27:40 +0100</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title>Chronic diseases, a few numbers</title>
            <link>http://econstudentlog.wordpress.com/2012/05/15/chronic-diseases-a-few-numbers/</link>
            <description>
</description>
            <author>US</author>
            <source url="http://econstudentlog.wordpress.com/feed/">Econstudentlog</source>
            <pubDate>Tue, 15 May 2012 11:20:43 +0100</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title>Social Business + Big Data = Business intelligence</title>
            <link>http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/mindjumpers/~3/ZtoYHsRthdc/</link>
            <description>Tweet 
Every day we create 2.5 quintillion bytes of data. Yes, that sounds like quite a lot ? and it is! To put it into perspective, we have produced more than 90% of all online data that exists in the world today within these past two years. Combined, this online data equals Big Data. Being exceeding interested in the talk of Big Data, I?ve recently been inspired by the research and development of Big Data related software and applications. Especially the articles of Jeremiah Owyang and Raj De Datta.
 


BDAs ? what exactly is it again?
 The massive amounts of data make the value of good social media management and engagement even greater ? and easier to sustain. Parts of Big Data are produced via Big Data Applications (BDA) such as LinkedIn or Facebook. Applications that produce detailed user data to the rapidly expanding masses of online data.
Breaking down BDAs? structure to us, Raj De Datta?s article explains: ?Every user that joins LinkedIn adds a signal to the LinkedIn BDA stack, enabling the recruiter to harness all their millions of profiles, not just their individual silos. As a result, smaller, specialized recruiters are competing with the biggest executive search agencies with comparable reach.?
The point of Big Data and thereby BDAs is neither marketing nor PR. The point is that understanding how to interact with Big Data can transform how we live, how we interact ? and how we do business. Insights and analyses we are gradually exploring at Mindjumpers. From a business perspective, it all comes down to business intelligence: if we can manage to filter and funnel this data somehow, we can start mining on the data and realise details about our business as well as our fans or followers that we never would have expected or realised otherwise. In addition, if we can manage the BDA?s data, we can essentially analyse how our followers? friends and connections engage with us.


Social Performance Software: helping us to retrieve business intelligence
 Enter Social Performance Software. Needless to say, the Big Data hype has also caught the attention of software developers around the world, and a new species of social media tool software is emerging: Social Performance Software (SPS).
The aim of this new breed of software is to, as Jeremiha Owyan puts it: ?analyze the conversations of your followers, then suggest which content and media to publish, then determine when to publish, on which channel, and to whom. As a result, content will reach the intended audiences and result in higher resonation, or higher call to action rates.? 
So, SPS enables us to perform data mining in the relevant BDA data. On top of that, the SPS will analyse when, where and to whom we should engage to strengthen our brand.
I have introduced the white paper on Actionable Social Analytics by Awareness before, but I would like to show a relevant illustration to underline the purpose of SPS in handling Big Data from BDAs:



 
 























Let the data revolution begin!
 Social business is all about business intelligence. In November and in April I touched upon Big Data and the magnificent opportunities it entails. Continuously fascinated by the unlimited opportunities Big Data unleashes, I still think that the revolutionary thing about Big Data is the mind-blowing amounts of online data on social media users? behaviour. Data that is sitting there waiting to be analysed, transformed and utilised. Data that reaches much further than to a simple status update or ?like?: it can tell you where the segments hang out, what/who they like, who they are friends with, what they pay attention to right now, which brands they like, where they work, how they are connected within certain segments, how they influence their connections and last but certainly not least, it gives you access to the data of your followers? friends and connections &amp;#8211; in real time.

In the end, it?s all about Business Intelligence
 At Mindjumpers, we believe that this space for social performance software development will only expand in the coming years and that the number of management and monitoring tools will explode. The tools that are already being used to monitor social media channels will most likely be upgraded to accommodate these increasingly detailed insight analyses and planning functions. To be able to filter and analyse these astounding amounts of Big Data from BDAs in real time, will mean an extraordinary value to all companies involved in social media activities. Not only will the actual outcome and ROI of the social media investment become easier to calculate, it will provide detailed insights about your business and your fans? and followers? network.
I?m following the development with increasing excitement and am sure that organised utilisation of BDAs&amp;#8217; data shortly will become paramount to all businesses.
 





















































 

Similar Posts:
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</description>
            <author>Jonas Klit Nielsen</author>
            <source url="http://www.mindjumpers.com/blog/feed/">Mindjumpers</source>
            <pubDate>Tue, 15 May 2012 10:00:18 +0100</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title>In class: engaging a community</title>
            <link>http://danegeld.dk/2012/05/15/in-class-engaging-a-community/</link>
            <description>@RichMillington, author of the FeverBee blog and a community management expert, offered a free one week masterclass on community engagement from 7-10 May. The class was run in Lore (formerly Coursekit), a free online course platform/learning management system (LMS) geared at social learning, with daily webinars held in GoTo Webinar. Nearly 350 people signed up.
This is my reflective diary on participating in the course as a time shifted anti-social participant.
Monday

reading (24 page PDF file) available on Lore
webinar on converting newcomers to regulars &amp;#8211; recording here

As the webinars are being held at 6pm CPH time (not ideal) I didn&amp;#8217;t catch up with this one until Tuesday morning, when I largely listened while getting on with other things. The sole components were slides and a tiny question box, no talking head. The slides are not being made available, which is OK as I suspect most of them are in the PDF file.
First impressions are that the target group is those already running largish communities. I still need a definition of community in this context &amp;#8211; versus a network say, but also versus a community of practice. It&amp;#8217;s probably all on the FeverBee blog somewhere&amp;#8230;found it! And, like buses, another one popped up handily this week to help clarify the issues.
Much stress was put on the use of data (buzzword of the year?) to back up community development. Which is great if you&amp;#8217;ve got a community producing data, but can seem like making a lot out of a little sometimes. The softer stuff around interventions etc seemed pretty self evident.
So in the end a bit of a strange mix. But I did pick up on the notion of a community designed for lurkers  &amp;#8211; ie where members aim to fulfill their information rather than social needs.
Use of the Twitter hashtag #cmgr was recommended rather than the question facility in GoToWebinar,  but as this is a general tag after several hours it&amp;#8217;s not easy to pinpoint relevant tweets.
Tuesday 

open clinic, &amp;#8220;an hour talking about online communities and answering any questions you might have&amp;#8221;

The session was uploaded to Lore as an mp4 file, but an mp3 would have been fine as there were no visuals, not even a talking head &amp;#8211; is that the norm with GoToWebinar? I sat down to listen/watch, but with one speaker and no visuals it&amp;#8217;s not very engaging. Really really needed a transcript &amp;#8211; there may well be some pearls in the mixed bag of questions, but as it is this knowledge is pretty much lost.
Three ways of participating available &amp;#8211; via #cmgr, via the question box on GoToWebinar, and outside class via chat on Lore. The first two would have benefited from curation, while the third is apparently buggy.
Wednesday

reading (35 page PDF file) available on Lore
webinar on moderation - recording here

Sat in on around 30 minutes of the moderation webinar. Usual issues &amp;#8211; felt faintly ridiculous waiting for the start, then slow to get going, difficult to twin screen on a netbook, teeny tiny window for questions (one way &amp;#8211; couldn&amp;#8217;t see what other people were contributing), couldn&amp;#8217;t see who was logged in, chat over on Twitter.
Some polls were used this time to engage &amp;#8211; good idea, especially with closed questions. My brain closed down when requested to define engagement in 30 seconds, but apparently 25 people gave it a go, either via Twitter or in the questions box (couldn&amp;#8217;t see those ones).
One hour has to be the maximum in terms of concentration IMO. This session was stuffed with information and over-ran by 40 minutes, which must have been completely exhausting for all concerned!
I left Tweetchat running throughout the session and favourited the content heavy tweets. On Thursday morning I hurled these into Storify for a closer look &amp;#8211; see Everything in moderation.
Thursday

webinar by guest speaker Elisabeth Joyce (recording not available due to technical problems)
two articles (PDF files) by Elisabeth available on Lore

I was not able to attend the webinar, so no notes today!
The Lore platform 
The people behind Lore chose the name as it means &amp;#8220;knowledge shared between people&amp;#8221;, and according to an article in Poynter its innovation is the stream, making it like &amp;#8220;Facebook for academia&amp;#8221;.

My reactions:

the stream _is_ useful and it&amp;#8217;s easy to post something, with a range of options including notes, questions or blogs
individual items, for example in the calendar and stream, open in a separate window on the right, easy to miss
don&amp;#8217;t really get the browse options &amp;#8211; probably need more content to be meaningful
the various parts of the page are weird &amp;#8211; some scroll and some don&amp;#8217;t, and it&amp;#8217;s not obvious which
the resources section grew throughout the week and includes files, links and books in a long list &amp;#8211; needs another look to be usable

It always takes a wee while to work out how a new platform fits together and it&amp;#8217;s the first time I&amp;#8217;ve used an LMS, but Lore certainly has potential.
Conclusions
What was striking throughout the week was how much information management is needed to ensure a class hangs together. The same issues come up as with event amplification, for example the need for curation to ensure the useful stuff is most visible, how to cater for people who aren&amp;#8217;t able to attend an event live, or don&amp;#8217;t have equal access to tools.
The class was offered as a taster for the full Pillar Summit and also as an opportunity to try out Lore (the course is currently offered using BuddyPress). As a free class there was a lot of content on offer, and there were a couple of indications that it was too dense &amp;#8211; maybe not suited to the webinar format? Webinars and social learning are In, but you still need to put in the  individual effort, for example to do justice to the reading files. Perhaps a flipped classroom model would be more successful in terms of generating interaction between the participants.
Webinars can be presented as a lecture, a seminar or in a flipped classroom scenario, with the last of these equating most to the aims of social learning. It is perhaps instructive to compare the GoToWebinar experience with a recording of a recent webinar held in Collaborate on digital literacy in the EU. A range of formats are offered so the time shifted participant can shape their own experience &amp;#8211; on this occasion I fired up Collaborate to recreate the live experience as closely as possible, and the selection of material on offer, including synchronised chat, made for a more complete experience:

No doubt Rich is taking his own medicine &amp;#8211; Feverbee posts during the week included How to optimise an online community platform, lots of tips there, and Identifying and articulating the benefit of the community, highlighting the dangers of content driven strategies. I&amp;#8217;d like to thank him and his team for sharing their knowledge and also giving me the opportunity to try out the Lore platform.
</description>
            <author>annindk</author>
            <source url="http://danegeld.dk/feed/">Danegeld</source>
            <pubDate>Tue, 15 May 2012 08:54:13 +0100</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title>The data revolution ? in links</title>
            <link>http://kl7.dk/blog/behavioral-engineering/the-data-revolution-in-links</link>
            <description>I&amp;#8217;ve been sharing so many links about the current data-revolution on mail and now I thought you might as well benefit from the link collection:

The data turn in general

Google Quarterly about data. A great read with very interesting articles. The data guru Hans Rosling&amp;#8217;s (pictured above) statement is kind of a /KL7 credo:
&amp;nbsp;

&amp;#8220;The problem isn&amp;#8217;t that specialized companies lack the data they need, it&amp;#8217;s that they don&amp;#8217;t go and look for it, they don&amp;#8217;t know how to handle it.&amp;#8221;

&amp;nbsp;
Big data
The term Big data is all over the place. Big data refers to the immense possibilities and challenges in increasing volume, variety, and velocity of data.
&amp;nbsp;


New York Times introduction to Big data
The Economist another introduction
O&amp;#8217;reilly Radar yet another
McKinsey report about Big data
World Economic Forum chose Big Data as focus in 2012
And an interesting scientific paper on the productivity gains in DDD (Data-driven decision making) from Erik Brynjolfsson (MIT Sloan School of Management) et al.




Big data as developmental aid and philantropy 


A testimonial to the the potential of data is the way large organization and authorities are now turning to data for social improvements:




UN Global Pulse
Google&amp;#8217;s philanthropic use of data
Add to that authorities in NYC, Washington and Kenya and now Århus in Denmark opening up for data to improve welfare, service and so on through increased transparency and bottom up innovation




Big data hype critique
Fast Company: Why Big Data Won?t Make You Smart, Rich, Or Pretty
&amp;nbsp;
Small data &amp;#8211; self-tracking

We announced the first Danish Quantified Self event at Danish Design Center some days ago. You could call the tendency for athletes, professionals and patients to measure and monitor little experiments with how they train, work, feel, think as &amp;#8216;small data&amp;#8217; since data is mostly personal. However, we will undoubtedly see big data and small data merge as big data starts including personal informatics (such as medico starts buying data from self-trackers for research):


Wired&amp;#8217;s original article on Quantified Self from 2009
The Quantified Self community
The Eatery from Massive Health &amp;#8211; a very good diet app and consumer example of the trend
A recent commercial take on QS &amp;#8211; from Nike: Turning running miles into capital


Data and design
&amp;nbsp;
&amp;#8220;It is this ability to turn data into information into action that presents the most challenges.&amp;#8221;
&amp;nbsp;
The quote is not ours but Wall Street Journal&amp;#8217;s although the link from data to meaning/motivation to behavior is /KL7 to the core. Without human understanding (cognition, visualization, meaning, social processes) data will never make a change. A commonly remarked constraint on Big Data. Hence a lot of the largest companies are spending vast amounts on visualization of Data (Google and GE have created special departmenst for this). And then there are sites like Visualizing.org and CreativeApplications.net with a lot of great work.
&amp;nbsp;
Data, complexity, and cognition
I started many years ago with philosophy and a PhD in biomimetic design (it resulted in a blog about survaillance and data since all the rage was on &amp;#8216;Bigbrother&amp;#8217; &amp;#8211; hence I made a blog called Bigmother about &amp;#8216;care ware&amp;#8217;). Since a lot of thing have happened to what we are to do with increased dynamics and complexity. A couple of recent things (that I&amp;#8217;ve blogged about at Bigmother):


 McKinsey affiliate Eric Beinhocker?s The Origin of Wealth. Evolution, Complexity and the radical Remaking of Economics. A hardcore evolutionary argument on how creating value in general depends on complex thinking, dynamics and adaptivity rather than traditional static dynamic models.
Yahoo?s chief scientist, former Columbia professor in sociology and PhD i network theory Duncan Watts? latest book Everything is Obvious: Once you Know the Answer claims that long-term strategic thinking have to be replaced by an iterative data-driven approach. Common sense is not just sometimes off but ALWAYS wrong when it come to fairly complex matters and several steps of causality.

The economist Tim Harford have just made a similar argument although more explicitly darwinistic in Adapt: Why succes always starts with failure. We need to be ?always in beta?, to conduct ?disciplined pluralism? (variation + selection) and delegate power to the frontline.
Gary Hamel, perhaps the most influential managerial theorist right now, claims in What Matters now ? rather radically ? that management is broke and we are better of with informed decision making in the front line. Why? Well, because of the dynamics and complexity of the modern world.
Then we have the whole Nudge-trend. Thaler and Sunstein argues that we need to compensate for our insufficient cognitive capacities by designing the decisional context to ?nudge? us in the ?rational? direction without undermining liberty (or changing the incentives ? too much).
Like Watts, Thaler and Sunstein is building on psychologist Daniel Kahneman&amp;#8217;s thinking that gave him the nobel prize in economy in 2002 and created the field behavioral economy. The basic argument is that our cognitive system was developed for and most constructive when dealing with well known and ?simple? decisions. We simply deploy our fast, spontaneous, associative faculties much more than we think ? even when dealing with quite complex and important decisions. Kahneman?s latest book Thinking fast and Slow is a must read for everybody who new that Freud, Nietzsche and later embodied cognitive science was right about the hierarchy between rationality and emotional thinking.
Something that even McKinsey is now warning top management and boards about by arguing for ?behavioral strategy?. Their version of depotenzising management is even mentioning future ?automated? (read AI) decision processes to compensate for our lack of cognitive ability when faced with complexity. Quite extraordinary.
And practitioners such as designers have simply just started to deploy evolutionary thinking. Tim Brown of IDEO is now also proposing some sort of ?Darwinism? as a design approach.
Browns counterpart in Frog Design, Rob Girling is arguing that ?designing for preferable outcomes? (what we call behavioral engineering i /KL7) is the prime concern of 21?st design. Again the reason being our new knowledge on how challenged we are cognitively in a complex world stemming from cognitive science and behavioral economy.

Lastly, the implicit theoretical foundation of A/B testing that e.g. Wired Magazine just covered is evolutionary to its bone. Google, Yahoo, eBay, Amazon and even the Obama campaign does nothing without systematically testing variations and selecting the best performing variants, whether it is the color, wording, placement, size or shape of the button.



</description>
            <author>admin</author>
            <source url="http://kl7.dk/feed">/KL7</source>
            <pubDate>Mon, 14 May 2012 20:43:20 +0100</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title>Lige straks ? incl. smartphone!</title>
            <link>http://deborah.dk/2012/05/14/lige-straks-incl-smartphone/</link>
            <description>Hm, fornuften sejrede alligevel. Synes det var mange penge, at give bare for &amp;#8220;looks&amp;#8221;, hvis jeg ville have den her Rhyme model. For helt seriøst, jeg ved ikke engang, om jeg kan vænne mig til skidtet. 
Den billige model, jeg havde udset mig HTC Wildfire, havde jeg jo også kig på, fordi min veninde har den. Og jeg havde faktisk kigget på Sensation også, som ligger midt i Rhyme og Wildfire prismæssigt. Men nu snerper det jo sammen tidsmæssigt, og den der Helligdag torsdag drillede mig lige også, for den havde jeg ikke lige lagt ind i min tidspklan. 
Så var jeg inde og kigge på Elgigantens side, og der var svaret så kastet for mine fødder. En  HTC Explorer til 799,- kr. Den har mere kapacitet end Wildfire på nogen punkter, og på andre ikke, men nu har jeg &amp;#8220;taget hovedspring&amp;#8221;. Og bliver jeg ikke glad for den, er skaden altså ikke katastrofal. 
Til gengæld lader det til,at jeg i Berlin skal forlade mig på et gammeldags kort og ikke GPS på telefonen, for det er dyrt,  forklarede den meget meget søde hjælper hos Telmore mig. Så det gør jeg så. Til gengæld er det ikke ret dyrt at ringe og sms&amp;#8217;e og at modtage, koster slet ikke &amp;#8211; så skriv af hjertens lyst, mens jeg er væk   Det bliver da lidt spændende, at bevæge sig udi noget nyt på flere planer samtidig. Telefonen bliver sendt, og skulle gerne være her onsdag.
Ingen relaterede poster.</description>
            <author>Deborah</author>
            <pubDate>Mon, 14 May 2012 15:18:08 +0100</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title>Institute Of Bioresources And Sustainable Development  Multiple Positions May 2012</title>
            <link>http://www.governmentjobs-in-india.com/jobs/institute-of-bioresources-and-sustainable-development-multiple-positions-may-2012/</link>
            <description>Institute of Bioresources and Sustainable Development, Imphal, a research institute under...

[[ This is a content summary only. Visit my website for full links, other content, and more! ]]
    
</description>
            <author>Sathish</author>
            <source url="http://feeds.feedburner.com/governmentjobs-india">Government Jobs In India</source>
            <pubDate>Mon, 14 May 2012 12:25:22 +0100</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title>Ugen der gik: Facebooks akilleshæl, Twitters ejendomsret og store data</title>
            <link>http://techtjek.blogs.business.dk/2012/05/12/ugen-der-gik-facebooks-akilleshael-twitters-ejendomsret-og-store-data/</link>
            <description>Her er fem historier fra den forgangne uges tech-univers. 
Bing fortsætter det lange seje træk
?Den vigtigste ændring i Bings treårige historie,? siger analysefirmaet Moor Insights &amp;amp; Strategy om den nye sociale dimension, Microsoft har tilføjet søgemaskinen. Søgeresultaterne vil nu inkludere meninger, links og andet fra sociale netværk, først og fremmest Facebook og Twitter.
Google har forsøgt noget lignende, men ikke med den store succes. Bings søgeresultater forventes at være mere præcise, fordi Microsoft har et bedre forhold til både Facebook og Twitter end Google, der jo er i gang med sit eget sociale netværk, Google+, og derfor en konkurrent.
Den nye Bing vælter ikke Google af pinden, men bliver endnu et skridt på den lange rejse mod at blive en seriøs udfordrer. På det amerikanske marked har Bing nu 15 procent af markedet og Google 65 af slagsen. 
Men jeg tror, Bing er kommet for at blive, og vil fortsat vokse. Microsoft har investeret for meget prestige i det projekt til at give op. Og det tager tid at vinde markedsandele, også selv om man på nogle punkter performer bedre.
Facebook mangler det mobile
Kort tid før den med spænding imødesete børsnotering kaster Facebook lidt grus i maskineriet. Det sociale netværk erkender, at man ikke har levet op til forventningerne på den mobile platform. 
Dels hører appen ikke til de bedste, hverken teknisk eller mht. brugervenlighed, dels, og nok så vigtigt, tjener Facebook ikke særligt mange reklamepenge på det mobile. Det er et problem, da stadig flere brugere tyr til smartphones, når der skal facebookes. 
Det er essentielt for Facebooks troværdighed som investering, at man er i stand til at følge brugerne og dermed reklameindtægterne. De er trods alt Facebooks primære, måske eneste, indtjeningskilde.

Twitter frasiger sig tweets
Hvem ejer dine tweets? Det gør du, siger Twitter i en juridisk tvist med en delstatsdomstol i New York. Anklagemyndigheden er ude efter tweets tilhørende Malcom Harris, der havde deltaget i en demonstration for Occupy Wall Street. Harris&amp;#8217; tweets skulle bevise, at han var klar over politiets opfordringer til gå tilbage, hvorfor hans handlinger var i ond tro.
Domstolen argumenterede, at tweets tilhører Twitter, der således ville være juridisk forpligtet til at udlevere indholdet. Men Twitter bestrider afgørelsen og siger, at tweets tilhører brugeren og dennes privatsfære, hvilket vil betyde, at de ikke skal udleveres. 
Twitters holdning er principiel i en juridisk og forfatningsmæssig forstand, men den ændrer ikke meget ved råderetten over vores data. Bare fordi du ejer en tweet, har Twitter stadig adgang til de data. Det sørger servicebetingelserne for.
Har nogen brug for en mini-iPad?
Ingen uge uden Apple-rygter, denne gang to af slagsen. Først var der historien om en ny, mindre og billigere iPad på vej. Den nuværende model måler 9,7 tommer, nu skulle der også komme en på 7 tommer, der ville placere sig cirka midt imellem iPhone og den eksisterende iPad. Der bliver ganske vist eksperimenteret en del med skærmstørrelser for tiden, ikke mindst af Samsung, men jeg har svært ved at se, hvad en mini-iPad kan tilføre af afgørende nyt. Kompakthed til en lavere pris, men hvor stort er det marked?
Så er der mere hold i den anden historie, som kommer fra Kina. Foxconn, verdens største elektronikfabrik, gør sig angiveligt klar til at fremstille iTV, Apples debut på tv-markedet. Timingen henstår lidt i det uvisse, men det er langt fra den første historie om iTV, og det er den generelle forventning, at Apple kommer med et tv-apparat inden for et år eller to.
Bliv klog på Big Data
Det er et af tidens buzzwords, Big Data, de enorme mængder information, vi genererer hvert øjeblik i den digitale virkelighed. Disse data kan med de rette analyseværktøjer fortælle uendelig meget om alt fra markedsanalyser til klimaovervågning. Jeg faldt over dette glimrende skriv om Big Data fra Smithsonian, hvor man forklarer fænomets perspektiver, kommer med eksempler, men også stiller kritiske spørgsmål.
Der er for eksempel risikoen for, at vi bliver for fascineret af disciplinen og stoler for meget på de mange data, i stedet for at bruge mere kvalitative input, tilsat lidt sund fornuft. Det var, hvad skete under finanskrisen, hvor computerne og deres algoritmer uden menneskelig indblanding håndterede langt størstedelen af verdens finanstransaktioner. Baseret på data. 
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</description>
            <author>Sten Løck</author>
            <source url="http://techtjek.blogs.business.dk/feed/">Tech tjek - teknologi til folket</source>
            <pubDate>Sat, 12 May 2012 17:35:17 +0100</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title>Genvej: Lav lagkager, søjler, kurver osv. med FF Chartwell</title>
            <link>http://birkvig.mediajungle.dk/2012/05/11/genvej-lav-lagkager-sojler-kurver-osv-med-ff-chartwell/</link>
            <description>FF Chartwell er en font, der udnytter mulighederne i OpenType-formatet til at genere forskellige former for infografiske fremstillinger af taldata. Du indtaster dine tal og typograferer tekstlinjen med FF Chartwell og ? Vupti! ? har du en graf. Dele af grafen kan fx farvelægges med character-paletten.
Se og køb her:
http://www.fontshop.com/fonts/downloads/fontfont/ff_chartwell/
</description>
            <author>Henrik Birkvig</author>
            <source url="http://birkvig.mediajungle.dk/feed/">eVinkelhagen</source>
            <pubDate>Fri, 11 May 2012 09:23:19 +0100</pubDate>
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        <item>
            <title>Kval-net; fra etnografisk data til viden og resultater</title>
            <link>http://mediacominsight.wordpress.com/2012/05/10/kval-net-fra-etnografisk-data-til-viden-og-resultater/</link>
            <description>Onsdag d.9.04.12 var MediaCom Insight endnu engang inviteret til Kvalitativ Netværksmøde af Huset Markedsføring, som er Danmarks største netværk af marketingprofessionelle. Denne gang blev netværksmødet afholdt i DSBs lokaler og under overskriften; fra etnografisk data til viden og resultater. Det var en spændende formiddag, hvor Karen Waltorp &amp;#8211; antropolog og underviser på masterprogrammet &amp;#8216;Anthropology &amp;#38; People-Centred Business?, startede mødet med [...]</description>
            <author>SigneHedemannMikkelsen</author>
            <source url="http://mediacominsight.wordpress.com/feed/">MediaCom Insight</source>
            <pubDate>Thu, 10 May 2012 14:40:25 +0100</pubDate>
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            <title>8 skøre ting IBM forskere har lært af Twitter</title>
            <link>http://lotusdk.wordpress.com/2012/05/09/8-skore-ting-ibm-forskere-har-laert-af-twitter/</link>
            <description>Et hold af IBM forskere har i lang tid prøvet at analysere tweets på Twitter. Ved at lave analyser af live streams på Twitter, er  det lykkedes forskerne at udvikle computere, som er &amp;#8220;klogere&amp;#8221; end en almindelig computer. Ved at bruge disse tweets, har de udviklet en teknologi, som lader en maskine forstå at visse [...]</description>
            <author>Lotusdk</author>
            <source url="http://lotusdk.wordpress.com/feed/">IBM Collaboration Solutions</source>
            <pubDate>Wed, 09 May 2012 13:29:29 +0100</pubDate>
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        <item>
            <title>Ministry Of Finance Department Of Revenue Financial Intelligence Unit, India Group ?B? And ...</title>
            <link>http://www.governmentjobs-in-india.com/government-jobs/ministry-of-finance-department-of-revenue-financial-intelligence-unit-india-group-b-and-group-c-posts-may-2012/</link>
            <description>Financial Intelligence Unit ? India (FIU-IND) was set by the Government of India vide O.M. dated...

[[ This is a content summary only. Visit my website for full links, other content, and more! ]]
    
</description>
            <author>Sathish</author>
            <source url="http://feeds.feedburner.com/governmentjobs-india">Government Jobs In India</source>
            <pubDate>Wed, 09 May 2012 09:23:26 +0100</pubDate>
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        <item>
            <title>Har vi brug for piratpartier?</title>
            <link>http://techtjek.blogs.business.dk/2012/05/09/har-vi-brug-for-piratpartier/</link>
            <description>Piratpartiet fik over 8 procent af stemmerne i søndagens delstatsvalg i Slesvig-Holsten, som dermed er den tredje tyske delstat til at have det tyske Piratparti repræsenteret i det lokale parlament.
Piratpartier findes i næsten samtlige europæiske lande, men har størst parlamentarisk succes i Tyskland og Sverige.

De enkelte partiprogrammer varierer, men udgangspunktet har været internettet og ønsket om fri information, der præger væsentlige dele af internetfolket, som nogle vil kalde hackere eller det, der er værre.
Diskussionen har sit eget liv i cyberspace, men nu har driftige mennesker i en række lande altså flyttet debatten til også at omfatte politiske partier og græsrodsaktiviteter som modstanden mod ACTA.
Men har vi brug for et piratparti? Er det en gimmick eller en seriøs demokratisk spiller? Jeg har kigget nærmere på partiet i Slesvig-Holsten.

På en højre-venste akse ligger partiet til venstre, men med nogle væsentlige afvigere til den anden side, når det gælder individets rettigheder og statslig indblanding.
Der er ikke et partiprogram i egentlig forstand. Dertil er der for mange huller med hensyn til eksempelvis udenrigspolitik, forsvar og økonomi. På en række andre områder som uddannelse, socialpolitik og miljø har man sympatiske, men vage holdninger.
Men partier bringer også noget nyt og nødvendigt med sig. Med udgangspunkt i den digitale virkelighed vil man sætte ind på områder, hvor udviklingen enten har bragt udfordringer eller muligheder.
Beskyttelse af privatsfæren. Vi skal selv kunne bestemme over data om os. Der skal være strikte grænser for statens indblanding i borgernes private gøren og laden. Grænser der i dag er overskredet.
Transparens. Statsmagten og virksomheder skal være mere åbne og vise, hvad de ligger inde med af informationer om den enkelte. I det hele taget skal demokratiet styrkes med mere gennemsigtighed i politik og forvaltning.
Ned med siloerne. Information er nøglen til magten og den bør ligge hos folket. Informationssiloer i det offentlige skal brydes ned for at give borgerne mulighed for at deltage på (næsten) lige fod med magthaverne.
Spredning af viden og kultur. Teknologien giver uudnyttede muligheder for at sprede informationer til gavn for samfundsudviklingen. Det gælder blandt andet inden for uddannelse og kultur.
Jeg hæfter mig især ved de to første punkter, som også synes at være centrale for Piratpartiet i Slesvig-Holsten. 
Det er altid vigtigt at have partier, der slås for individets rettigheder og personlig frihed, men det er specielt nødvendigt i en tid, hvor mulighederne for dataindsamling og overvågning er skræmmende, og lige så de slappe lovgivninger 
Jeg tror, diskussionen om privatsfære og transparens først lige er begyndt. Fordi den teknologiske udvikling også først er i sin vorden. Vi får meget mere at gøre med disse spørgsmål i fremtiden, hvorfor det også på sin plads, de bliver del af et partiprogram.
Vi har brug for engagerede politikere, som forstår den digitale virkelighed.



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</description>
            <author>Sten Løck</author>
            <source url="http://techtjek.blogs.business.dk/feed/">Tech tjek - teknologi til folket</source>
            <pubDate>Wed, 09 May 2012 05:35:37 +0100</pubDate>
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