WebProNews

Tag: Videos

  • Quantum Levitation Will Blow Your Mind

    Let me preface this by dispelling any thought that you might have that I know anything about the quantum physics that makes all of this possible:

    I don’t know anything about the Quantum physics that makes this possible.

    But I do know something amazing when I see it. And this, my friends, kicks ass.

    This demonstration video, courtesy of the Tel-Aviv University and the Association of Science-Technology Centers (ASTC), has been making the viral rounds today. In saying that, I mean that I’ve seen dozens of social media shares of the video and it has been sitting on the front page of Reddit all day. Once you see it, you’ll see why.

    The demonstration is in something called Quantum Levitation, a phenomenon that results from the fact that superconductors and magnets tend to not like each other.

    They start with a crystal “wafer” and coat it with a thin layer of a ceramic material called yttrium barium copper oxide. The thing about that material is that it has no awesome properties on its own – but once you cool it to below -185 degrees Celsius, it becomes a superconductor. So they drop it in liquid nitrogen and there you have it. Here’s where I’ll let the real scientists take over:

    Superconductivity and magnetic field do not like each other. When possible, the superconductor will expel all the magnetic field from inside. This is the Meissner effect. In our case, since the superconductor is extremely thin, the magnetic field DOES penetrates. However, it does that in discrete quantities (this is quantum physics after all! ) called flux tubes.

    Inside each magnetic flux tube superconductivity is locally destroyed. The superconductor will try to keep the magnetic tubes pinned in weak areas (e.g. grain boundaries). Any spatial movement of the superconductor will cause the flux tubes to move. In order to prevent that the superconductor remains “trapped” in midair.

    The term they keep using is “locked in space.” And once you see it move and tilt, you’ll see why –

    Here’s a little more in-depth demonstration of the levitation. Look for the dual-levitation at the end for full mind-blowing effect:

    Courtesy of Geekologie, here’s a video of what looks to be the same technology, implemented into a hoverboard that can support a human being –

    Yeah science!

    They say that they are “dedicated to making the amazing physics of superconductors accessible and exciting for young adults through the unique and counter-intuitive phenomena of ‘quantum trapping’ and ‘quantum levitation.”

    Can you say holiday wishlist?

  • Watch A Creepy Dude Facebook Stalk You With “Take This Lollipop”

    Whenever you see that now-famous Facebook allow box, the one that allows applications access to all your awesome personal data in order to work properly, do you still feel a tinge of trepidation? Do you imagine the worst – that somewhere, someone now knows everything about you and is going to use that information in very bad ways?

    Take This Lollipop, a new interactive experience, works on the same kind of privacy fears – in an amazingly creepy way.

    Once you allow it to connect to your Facebook account, it populates the video with all of your personal information – photos, wall postings, friend lists, even your location. And the location data serves as the disturbing climax of the experience.

    And the video is great fun. It involves a questionable individual Facebook stalking you from the privacy of what could easily be a kidnapping dungeon or a torture room from the set of Hostel – it’s that dark and dingy. Watching this guy browse through your entire Facebook presence is unsettling, to say the least.

    Take This Lollipop is a interesting use of the Facebook API – one that plays on a lot of people’s fears about privacy when it comes to social media.

    Here’s a promo video for the experience –

    Check it out. They dare you.

    [via Reddit]

  • Steve Jobs Song Created With Only Apple Sounds, Plus More iPhone 4S Siri Fun

    Today’s video round-up is mostly Steve Jobs and Siri-related, but there are also a couple Google-related videos worth watching, and well as one from Sophos on identity theft.

    View more daily video round-ups here.

    A song created as a tribute to Steve Jobs, the creator of which claims to have only used sounds from Apple products and Steve’s voice:

    More Steve Jobs tribute in the form of post-its:

    This guy demos some various Siri tricks:

    Two Siris confuse each other:

    iPhone 4S vs. Samsung Galaxy S II drop test:

    Matt Cutts talks about Google’s approach to customer service:

    Security firm Sophos looks at “how to steal an identity”:

    Google Wallet in action:

  • iPhone 4S Camera Sample, Talking to Siri & A Broken iPad

    Today’s videos include some discussion about Amazon’s Silk browser, a discussion with Siri, a sample of the new iPhone 4S’s HD video, and plenty other goodies. Don’t miss the Pee-wee Herman PSA.

    View other daily video round-ups here.

    The magazine – an iPad that doesn’t work.

    Is Amazon’s Silk awesome or scary?

    Business Insider interviews Siri:

    Mitt Romney talks about how he tried to hire Steve Ballmer:

    A video sample from the new iPhone 4s’s HD camera (via MacRumors):

    Google Wallet in San Francisco and New York:

    An old Pee-Wee Herman PSA:

    Google Gets its Ice Cream Sandwich statue:

  • Tips for Diagnosing A Drop In Google Rankings, From Matt Cutts

    Google has posted a new Webmaster Help video. As usual, Head of Web Spam Matt Cutts has answered a user-submitted question. The question is:

    “When you notice a drastic drop in your rankings and traffic from Google, what process would you take for diagnosing the issue?”

    “One thing I would do very early on, is I would do ‘site:mydomain.com’ and figure out are you completely not showing up in Google or do parts of your site show up in Google?” he begins. “That’s also a really good way to find out whether you are partially indexed. Or if you don’t see a snippet, then maybe you had a robots.txt that blocked us from crawling. So we might see a reference to that page, and we might return something that we were able to see when we saw a link to that page, but we weren’t able to see the page itself or weren’t able to fetch it.”

    “You might also notice in the search results if we think that you’re hacked or have malware, then we might have a warning there,” he adds. “And that could, of course, lead to a drop in traffic if people see that and decide not to go to the hacked site or the site that has malware.”

    Then it’s on to Webmaster Tools.

    “The next place I’d look is the webmaster console,” says Cutts. “Google.com/webmasters prove that you control or own the site in a variety of ways. And we’re doing even more messages than we used to do. Not just things like hidden text, park domains, doorway pages. Actively quite a few different types of messages that we’re publishing now, and when we think there’s been a violation of our quality guidelines. If you don’t see any particular issue or message listed there, then you might consider going to the Webmaster Forum.”

    “As part of that, you might end up asking yourself, is this affecting just my site or a lot of other people? If it’s just your site, then it might be that we thought that your site violated our guidelines, or of course, it could be a server-related issue or an issue on your site, of course, on your side,” he says. “But it could also be an algorithmic change. And so if a bunch of people are all seeing a particular change, then it might be more likely to be something due to an algorithm.”

    We’ve certainly seen plenty of that lately, and will likely see more tweaks to Panda for the time being, based on this recent tweet from Cutts:

    Weather report: expect some Panda-related flux in the next few weeks, but will have less impact than previous updates (~2%). 7 days ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    “You can also check other search engines, because if other search engines aren’t listing you, that’s a pretty good way to say, well, maybe the problem is on my side. So maybe I’ve deployed some test server, and maybe it had a robots.txt or a noindex so that people wouldn’t see the test server, and then you pushed it live and forgot to remove the noindex,” Cutts continues in the video. “You can also do Fetch as Googlebot. That’s another method. That’s also in our Google Webmaster console. And what that lets you do is send out Googlebot and actually retrieve a page and show you what it fetched. And sometimes you’ll be surprised. It could be hacked or things along those lines, or people could have added a noindex tag, or a rel=canonical that pointed to a hacker’s page.”

    “We’ve also seen a few people who, for whatever reason, were cloaking, and did it wrong, and shot themselves in the foot,” he notes. “And so they were trying to cloak, and instead they returned normal content to users and completely empty content to Googlebot.”

    “Certainly if you’ve changed your site, your hosting, if you’ve revamped your design, a lot of that can also cause things,” he says. “So you want to look at if there’s any major thing you’ve changed on your side, whether it be a DNS, host name, anything along those lines around the same time. That can definitely account for things. If you deployed something that’s really sophisticated AJAX, maybe the search engines are[n’t] quite able to crawl that and figure things out.

    Cutts, of course advises filling out a reconsideration request, once you think you’ve figured the issue.

  • iPhone 4S Siri Demo, Wolfram, Schmidt & A Scary Phone Ad

    People are still waiting to get their hands on the new iPhone, but you can still see some hands-on demos. Also, check out the ad that’s apparently scaring children in the UK, and may get banned for violating ad standards. Pretty lame if you ask me.

    For more daily video round-ups, go here.

    MacRumors points to a pair of iPhone 4S hands on (and Siri) demos from YouTube:

    The ad for this phone is apparently in danger of being banned in the UK for being too scary:

    Eric Schmidt speaks at the Kenexa World Conference:

    Stephen Wolfram talks about the background and vision of Mathematica:

    John Carpenter’s The Thing: The Musical:

    Sneak peek of Photoshop image debarring from Adobe MAX:

  • Facebook Provides a Look at Facebook Bootcamp

    Facebook has released an interesting video about Facebook Bootcamp. This is what all Facebook engineers go through when they start at the company. It lasts for six weeks.

    “At Facebook, engineers don’t waste time before getting their hands dirty. Every new engineer spends his or her first six weeks in Bootcamp, the intensive onboarding program designed to immerse new engineers into our code base, learn the ins-and-outs of company culture and give them greater flexibility in choosing a project,” the company explains. “Between onboarding classes, coding tasks and mentoring sessions, everyone from software engineers right out of college to engineering directors with PhDs start the program right after orientation to begin building their foundation at Facebook.”

    Facebook’s Pedram Keyani notes in a status update that the Bootcamp was the brainchild of FB Director of Engineering Andrew Bosworth.

  • Steve Jobs Remembered in Videos

    Steve Jobs Remembered in Videos

    We’ve been doing the daily video round-up for a few weeks now, and it seems only appropriate that we just look at some memorable Steve Jobs moments caught on video over the years.

    See other daily video round-ups here.

    For more coverage of Steve Jobs go here. You can see what 100 well-known people have said about Jobs here.

  • Google, Playstation, Elmo & Celebrities Saying the F Word

    A video round-up is hardly complete without one of Google’s webmaster help videos featuring Matt Cutts dropping some knowledge on site owners, but beyond that, there’s quite a mix here in today’s. I’ll just let you look at them.

    View other daily video round-ups here.

    Google’s Matt Cutts talks about how Google treats the .co TLD:

    Google celebrates 1 billion downloads for Google Earth:

    Pretty cool Playstation ad:

    The “Being Elmo” trailer:

    Occupy Wall Street gets a rap with a Radiohead riff:

    The “strange power of the placebo effect” – this has been around a while, but it’s getting shared around a lot today:

    Celebrities talking about famine:

    Google shares a multi-platform advertising case-study for Animal Planet:

    Autolib’s car sharing initiative is getting some attention:

    Google talks feature update for Google+:

    IAB CEO Randall Rothenberg talks to Microsoft:

    Wolfram/Mathematica talks generating random numbers:

  • David Lynch, A Web-based Talent Show and Bad Lip Reading

    Who knew filmmaker David Lynch was a solo artist capable of making some pretty crazy sounding music? I suppose his style of film should provide a clue at what kind of music Lynch would make if he were to do so, and I have no doubt what you imagine will be a lot like “Crazy Clown Time,” if, somehow, the title of the song didn’t clue you in.

    Lynch’s awesome song is just one of today’s top videos, which also includes information about the YouNow talent show, another incredible offering from the folks at Bad Lip Reading, this time, their focus is on Michelle Bachman. In the words of Korn, are you ready? I’m not quite sure you are. If so, then take my hand and I’ll get us started off with this crazy offering from David Lynch.

    Enjoy the trip:


    Yes, as a matter of fact, that is David Lynch singing. In fact, according to the YouTube page, Lynch performed and produced the tracks on his upcoming album. Sounds like the perfect soundtrack to drop acid to, if that’s your thing. Hat-tip to Boing Boing for pointing Lynch’s work out.

    Speaking of talent, the next offering is an interview by WebProNews’ own Abby Johnson. In her latest piece, Abby interviews Adi Sideman, the CEO and founder of YouNow.com. YouNow is essentially an online talent show in the same vein as American Idol and X-Factor, expect, it’s much more interactive. Take a look at what Sideman had to share with Abby:


    This next piece is a labor of love, courtesy of Desrumaux Celine. The video, which is titled “Countdown,” is an awesome piece of animation. The subject manner is the launch of rocket, and the final product is pretty close to masterpiece status; at least to this writer:

    Countdown – HD from Desrumaux Celine on Vimeo.


    Here’s a link to Celine’s blogspot in case you’re interested in knowing more about this skilled artist.

    Next up is the awesome folks at Bad Lip Reading. Their latest target is Michelle Bachman, and much like the Obama and Rick Perry pieces, it pretty much nails everything:


    See more of their work at the Bad Lip Reading Tumblr site.

    Finally, from the self-serving pile, here’s EA’s latest attempt to market its highly anticipated Battlefield 3 video game, which comes out on the 25th of October. This latest piece is apparently meant a Facebook-only video, and, in fact, it’s unlisted on YouTube, but instead of making you jump through any Facebook hoops — you can do so at Battlefield’s Facebook page if you’d like — here’s the embed, and it features some NFL players you’re probably familiar with:


    Until next time, enjoy the videos. If you see any that should be featured in this segment, feel free to drop us a line.

  • Google Panda Update, Trust & Monty Python LEGOs

    We’ve been talking about the Google Panda update a lot here at WebProNews since the company rolled out another version of it last week. Aaron Wall at SEOBook has put together a video dedicated to the occasion, and of course Google has been talking about plenty of other things with video clips. In addition to all of that, there is some other fun stuff below for you to check out in today’s edition of top videos.

    View other daily video round-ups here.

    Here’s a Google Panda-related cartoon uploaded by SEOBook:

    Google announced the Trusted Stores pilot program:

    Monty Python LEGO display from Brickcon:

    WebProNews interviews Rand Fishkin:

    A typewriter that makes drinks:

    A “Google Apps Adventure”:

    If other planets were as close as the Moon (CollegeHumor):

    Becoming a noun to live forever (from NPR):

    Wanna Live Forever? Become A Noun from NPR on Vimeo.

    Twilio’s “brogramming” primer:

    YouTube’s “Tales from the Tube”:

    A plane hits a ferris wheel in Australia and nobody is injured:

  • iPhone 5 Prototype, Google Beer & Rambo

    Today’s video round-up has some a touch of the inspirational, a touch of the artsy, and plenty of the just plain cool. I’ll let you decide which is which. Of course there is also some humor and in depth discussion tossed into the mix as well.

    View other daily video round-ups here.

    BENM.at created an iPhone 5 prototype based on various hints and rumors that have come out:

    Possibly the coolest street art ever:

    Hommage à Rambo par Robert Hibourassa from Robert Hibourassa on Vimeo.

    Google teamed up with Dogfish Head on beer brewing (more here):

    A 29 year old gets to hear herself for the first time. She was born deaf, and recently received a hearing implant. It’s being shared a lot around the tech industry:

    WebProNews interviewed digital historian and archivist Jason Scott about the cloud:

    A couple of closer looks at Amazon’s Kindle Fire tablet from SlashGear:

    A new Pink Floyd TV ad has been released in the UK. It’s kind of cool:

    Next Media Animation provides its weekly wrap:

    The Rick Mercer Report has some fun with Blackberry:

    8,000 photos cover 80 days (via Google’s Amir Fish on Google+):

  • Ads, Search, Analytics & Star Wars Music

    The video round-up is strictly business today. Well, almost. There is some pretty sweet Floppy drive music and some business-based comedy from an Onion guy. But plenty of marketing material too.

    View other daily video round-ups here.

    Baratunde Thurston of The Onion talks IAB MIXX Awards:

    Floppy music DUO plays the Imperial March from Star Wars:

    WebProNews interviewed Steven Wyer of ReputationAdvocate.com about rebuilding your online reputation:

    YouTube presentation looks at YouTube API and the news:

    Google shares some lessons from Animal Planet and Volvo on how display builds brands:

    Google has a new surfing-based “Search Story”:

    Google announced Google Analytics Premium:

    Adobe put up Digital Enterprise platform in 10 Minutes:

  • Popular iPhone App Improvements, Geocities & Justin Bieber Meets Slipknot

    This is the second time I’ve mentioned Justin Bieber today in an article, as he came up in an infographic round-up as well, but that’s actually pretty fitting considering that I woke up this morning to find that a fake Justin Bieber on Google+ added me to one of his circles.

    Anyway, the Bieber/Slipknot video is pretty awesome, but if that’t not your cup of tea, there are plenty of other social media and tech-related videos below. Enjoy.

    View other daily video round-ups here.

    Internet superstar Justin Bieber meets dudes in masks from Iowa Slipknot:

    Deleted Geocities archived visualized as city:

    The Deleted City from deletedcity on Vimeo.

    European Commission President Barroso takes questions on YouTube:

    Neville Hobson talks digital, social media PR, etc.:

    Google gave $1,000 scholarships to the filmmakers responsible for the following three videos:

    Skype for iPhone and iPad gets improvements:

    Delicious re-launched with a new “Stacks” concept:

    This video game trailer has been out for quite some time now, but today, news came out that they’re making a movie based on the trailer:

    An interview with the guy from GooglePleaseHire.Me:

    Is there a more popular celebrity among the tech crowd than William Shatner? Watch him sing about robots with his rendition of Black Sabbath’s Iron Man:

  • Catwoman Pics, Google, Dead Sea Scrolls, LEGOs & Dr. Seuss

    Today’s video round-up features a project Google is involved with in putting the Dead Sea Scrolls online, a full-sized Ford Explorer made out of legos, some other Google-related endeavors and a picture collection from the set of the highly anticipated The Dark Knight Rises.

    View other daily video round-ups here.

    Google celebrates the launch of The Dead Sea Scrolls Online project:

    More Catwoman photos from the set of the Dark Knight rises have emerged:

    Google is now letting Google+ users share their Circles:

    Google also launched the Google Earth Outreach program in Canada. The company points to this video as “a great example of a Canadian organization using Google Earth to communicate their cause to a larger global audience”:

    WebProNews interviewed Michael Brito, SVP of Social Business at Edelman:

    The Daily looks at a dentist who is obsessed with Dr. Seuss:

    Ford social media guy Scott Monty shows how the Ford Explorer was recreated in actual size with LEGO bricks:

  • Steve Jobs on iCloud in ’97, HK Apple Store & Social Good

    Today’s video round-up features a vintage Steve Jobs clip, some location-based marketing advice from social media guy Chris Brogan, some thought-provoking discussions from Mashable’s Social Good Summit and a few other goodies.

    View other daily video round-ups here.

    Steve Jobs describes iCloud in ’97?

    Apple Store opens in Hong Kong:

    Chris Brogan shares location based marketing for dummies:

    A man attempts to do 24 different accents in the English language (via Jeremiah Owyang on Google+):

    TV watching record to be broken?

     

    Mashable shares some interesting videos from the Social Good Summit:

  • Facebook Changes, Mark Zuckerberg Get A Post-f8 Ribbing

    Yesterday, at Facebook’s f8 developer conference, Mark Zuckerberg announced some huge changes to the social network we all know and love (sometimes). Among those changes is the upcoming Timeline feature that will virtually replace the Facebook profile and looks to become the “story of your life.” Zuck also talked about the Open Graph, which will allow users to interacts with apps in a wider variety of ways.

    Just a few days before f8, the Facebook News Feed got a facelift. A new feed launched, merging top stories with recent stories – and a ticker was added to the UI that shows all the activity going on in your Facebook realm at any given moment. These changes have been met with a little bit of resistance.

    As we’ve come to expect around here at WebProNews, Next Media Animations has just come out with one of their animations that gives their take on Facebook’s big week. In NMA style, the end provides an awesome surprise involving a Matrix reference and what can only be described at a Google+ death pit. Enjoy –

    Check out our recent interview with NMA’s Emily Wu.

    This video from Funny or Die takes on the recent Facebook changes in a little more NSFW format. The premise: Facebook’s terms and conditions allows Mark Zuckerberg to do anything he wants now. If this sounds a little bit like a recent South Park episode involving the iTunes terms and conditions, that’s because it’s mighty similar. But it’s still pretty funny –

    And if you missed it, here’s SNL’s Andy Samberg at yesterday’s f8 conference doing his best Zuckerberg –

  • Andy Samberg, Facebook, Spotify & A Lunatic

    We’ve been in Facebook land all afternoon, so naturally there are some videos related to Facebook’s big news today. If you’re excited about all of that, watch those. If not, scroll down further and find some other interesting items. Spoiler alert: One is a guy climbing a big building without safety equipement. Spoiler alert: He doesn’t die.

    View other daily video round-ups here.

    Facebook unveiled its new Timeline feature today at the f8 conference. More on this here.

    Andy Samberg made an appearance as Mark Zuckerberg:

    Yahoo News takes advantage of the new Facebook:

    So does Spotify:

    Google posted this video about Box.com’s mobile ads success:

    Google shares success stories from small & medium sized business owners in Italy, Spain and Russia:

    And this has nothing to do with anything, but it’s worth watching. A guy climbing a skyscraper without safety equipment (via Laughing Squid):

    Business Insider points to the amazing Chinese typewriter, which is capable of writing over 2,500 symbols:

  • YouTube Rolls Out 3D Conversion, Long Form Videos

    Whether you’ll use it or not is another matter, apparently, but that hasn’t stopped YouTube from introducing the ability to convert videos into the 3D format. While the feature is in the beta stage, it’s still an option available to anyone who uploads a video to YouTube’s index.

    It’s true that 3D has been taking a beating lately, although, the re-release of The Lion King in 3D, and the resulting success, may hold off pushing the 3D format back onto the gimmick pile. Digression about the format itself aside, YouTube uploaders can now convert their videos in a post-production format with the click of a mouse.

    From YouTube’s blog entry:

    Today we’re launching 2D to 3D conversion. Once you’ve uploaded your 2D videos to YouTube, you can convert them to 3D with the click of a button. Converted videos will be viewable by everyone in 3D. You’ll still get best results with a 3D camera, but it’s a great new way to let people enjoy your finest moments. You’ll find this feature by selecting “Edit Info”, then “3D Video” on a video you’ve uploaded. (Note, you’ll still need glasses to watch on most devices.)

    It will be interesting to see just how many jump on the “YouTube videos in 3D” bandwagon. With that in mind, do you still consider 3D to be a gimmick or is it a feature that couldn’t get here soon enough?

    Other features introduced by YouTube includes the video time limit removal for verified accounts. Until today, the time limit, even for YouTube power users, was 15 minutes. If you meet YouTube’s criteria as a verified user, you can now upload full-length videos. To facilitate these longer uploads, YouTube has also introduced a “resumable uploads” feature, something that does pretty much what it says. If your connection fails during an extended upload, you can resume it once the connection issues are resolved.

    In the link YouTube provided, it’s also revealed that the size limit for these larger uploads is 20GB. From their explanation:

    Chrome and Firefox 4+ users can not only upload files of a size up to 20GB, but it is also possible to resume uploads if your connection drops, and recover uploads even if you leave the page. When you return to the upload page and attempt the same file again, the progress bar will jump to where it was before.

    Another feature YouTube uploaders will be able to enjoy is the ability to edit and add effects. While on-the-fly editing has been launched already in YouTube, their blog entry actually introduces two new editing services uploaders will now have access to in YouTube’s Create area:

    We’re adding two additional video creation platforms for you to make your videos even better: Vlix and Magisto. Vlix lets you spice up your videos by adding cool effects and text to the video intro and closing. Magisto takes your unedited video and automatically edits it into short, fun clips.

    There’s a video of both services in action, as well:


    While YouTube was never in danger of falling back to the pack, at least at this juncture in our lives, such capabilities will only make the service stand out even further, especially once you add the 3D conversion to your video.

  • Robot iPad Testing, Face Swapping, Pandora & New Mastodon

    There are some pretty interesting clips in today’s round-up. I think the face-swapping program takes the cake though. Imagine how good this technology could be in another year. Get ready for impostors to infiltrate your video chats and “hangouts”.

    View other daily video round-ups here.

    Arturo Castro created a very cool face-swapping app. It works in real time and it’s developed using the open source framework for creative coding openFrameworks.

    Faces from arturo castro on Vimeo.

    WebProNews interviewed Tom Conrad, CTO and Head of Product at Pandora about the new Pandora and who the company can continue to maintain its competitive edge in the online music world:

    Stress testing an iPad app with a LEGO robot (via Kevin Tofel):

    The Robot (English version) from Pheromone Lab on Vimeo.

    9to5Mac points to a “See What You Print” concept from Artefact, which it calls “If Apple did make printers”:

    SWYP: See What You Print from Artefact on Vimeo.

    Google uploaded this multi-platform advertising case study for Adidas:

    Indie rock band Clap Your Hands Say Yeah played live at Google, and Google shared this as the latest in its Google Music promotional video:

    On the Google and music note, the YouTube blog points to the full album premiere of the new Mastodon album:

    Adobe’s John Nack shared this video of reverse graffiti:

    This isn’t new, but it was passed on to me today, and seems worth sharing anyway. It’s Friends stars Matthew Perry Jennifer Aniston in a Windows 95 guide:

    New Podio iPhone app for building your own apps:

    Foursquare passed a billion check-ins:

    A Week of Check-ins on the Path to One Billion from foursquare on Vimeo.

    The LinkedIn Engineering blog shared three tech talks for mining billion-node graphs, recommender systems and the art and science of matching items to users, and processing data streams:

  • Netflix, Qwikster, Xbox Live on Windows 8 and Hot Wheels

    Netflix, Qwikster, Xbox Live on Windows 8 and Hot Wheels

    Today’s edition of the daily top videos article has mostly tech-related stuff, but it also has Netflix apologizing for the way it’s handled its recent pricing and plan restructuring. Of course the apology was accompanied by yet another controversial move.

    There is also plenty of media industry drama, for those of you who have been following the AOL/TechCrunch plot. Let’s get to the videos.

    Xbox Live running on Windows 8:

    Pretty cool video of what it would “feel like to fly over planet Earth” has been making its way around the tech blogs and social networks:

    A Hot Wheels publicity stunt that performed well on YouTube:

    And an explanation of the campaign from BlogWell (via Business Insider):

    Mattel: Hot Wheels’ Record Breaking Stunt, presented by Betsy Burkett and Gretchen de Castellane from GasPedal and SocialMedia.org on Vimeo.

    One of the most talked about things on the web today is Netflix’s decision to split its DVD and streaming businesses into two. Here’s a video of CEO Reed Hastings talking about the decision and apologizing for how things have been going lately:

    Google Wallet has also been a hot topic of conversation between the George Costanza teaser and a leaked document indicating it would be launching today. Here’s the video Google put out when it announced Google Wallet, in case you need a reminder of what it’s all about:

    Here’s what Redmond Pie calls “the Best iPad Knock-Off We’ve Ever Seen”. It runs Android 2.3.3 Gingerbread.

    Kara Swisher points to a pair of CNN interviews in which now former TechCrunch writer Paul Carr and herself talk about the drama that has recently unfolded at AOL and TechCrunch:

    Interesting video from HakTip at Revision3 on how to make any application portable:

    Gizmodo points to this video of a boat motor-powered blender: