background preloader

Public Data Sets on Amazon Web Services (AWS)

Public Data Sets on Amazon Web Services (AWS)
Click here for the detailed list of available data sets. Here are some examples of popular Public Data Sets: NASA NEX: A collection of Earth science data sets maintained by NASA, including climate change projections and satellite images of the Earth's surfaceCommon Crawl Corpus: A corpus of web crawl data composed of over 5 billion web pages1000 Genomes Project: A detailed map of human genetic variation Google Books Ngrams: A data set containing Google Books n-gram corpusesUS Census Data: US demographic data from 1980, 1990, and 2000 US CensusesFreebase Data Dump: A data dump of all the current facts and assertions in the Freebase system, an open database covering millions of topics The data sets are hosted in two possible formats: Amazon Elastic Block Store (Amazon EBS) snapshots and/or Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon S3) buckets. If you have any questions or want to participate in our Public Data Sets community, please visit our Public Data Sets forum .

Amazon Architecture This is a wonderfully informative Amazon update based on Joachim Rohde's discovery of an interview with Amazon's CTO. You'll learn about how Amazon organizes their teams around services, the CAP theorem of building scalable systems, how they deploy software, and a lot more. Many new additions from the ACM Queue article have also been included. Amazon grew from a tiny online bookstore to one of the largest stores on earth. They did it while pioneering new and interesting ways to rate, review, and recommend products. Site: Information Sources

Unboxing the First Quad-Core Android Tablet The Asus Eee Pad Transformer Prime, the first quad-core Android tablet has arrived. Before you read the full review, check out the unboxing photos. It's a tablet! The Transformer Prime goes on sale in about two weeks for $499 (32GB) and $599 (64GB). Besides being built around a powerful quad-core 1.4GHz processor, tablet has an 8-megapixel rear camera, a 10-inch, 1280-by-800 super bright "super-IPS" LCD screen, Wi-Fi, and Bluetooth. The Transformer Prime and keyboard each arrive in a simple black box without many extra components; you do get a charger with the tablet, slim manuals and a blue cleaning cloth, but that's about it. Thus far, the Transformer Prime is the most powerful Android tablet you can get, thanks to the Tegra 3 chipset, but it's missing a key element for 2012: Ice Cream Sandwich, the latest version of Android. To learn more about the Transformer Prime, check out our story from the tablet's announcement.

Gapminder: Unveiling the beauty of statistics for a fact based w (39) Data: Where can I get large datasets open to the public BOINC E La Carte Raises $4M From Groupon Co-Founders To Bring Tablets To Restaurant Tables E la Carte, a company that develops a tableside tablet for the restaurant and related hospitality industries, has raised $4 million in funding from Lightbank, the venture fund created by Groupon co-founders Eric Lefkofsky and Brad Keywell. The Y Combinator-backed startup previously raised more than $1 million from angel investors including SV Angel, Dave McClure, Joshua Schachter, Roy Rodenstein, and Skip Sack, a former board member and SVP at Applebee’s chain of restaurants. As we’ve written in the past, E la Carte launched ‘Presto,’ earlier this year to bring user-friendly tablets to restaurants to bring efficiency to the tableside and ordering experience. Presto tablets have a full-day battery life, a credit card reader and sit comfortably and on restaurant tables. Similar to shopping for items in an online store, the Menu feature of Presto lets eaters pick which items they’d like to order and uses a shopping cart system so you can order multiple things at once.

Databib | Research Data Repositories Supercomputer Predicts Civil Unrest In Isaac Asimov's "Foundation" series, the future of masses of people can be predicted with "psychohistory," a method of predicting future political and social trends, using a device called the "Prime Radiant." In the 1950s, there wasn't the math or the computational power available to make such a thing reality. Now there might be. Supercomputers, such as the Nautilus at the University of Tennessee's Center for Remote Data Analysis and Visualization, may have brought the world closer to Asimov's vision, though it is still early days. The key is seeking patterns in massive amounts of data and being able to visualize them. Kalev Leetaru, assistant director for text and digital media analytics at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, did just that. SCIENCE CHANNEL: Hacker Quiz: Can you distinguish a "phish" from a "pharm"? Leetaru used a database of 100 million news articles spanning the period from 1979 to early 2011. BLOG: Bin Laden Conspiracies Rely on Complex Scenarios

A Glut of Food-Tech Startups Competing for a Piece of the Pie Rajat Suri was excelling at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology when he dropped out and became a waiter — not the typical direct path to fame and fortune in the technology industry. But then Suri took his restaurant and technology expertise to Palo Alto, raised three rounds of venture capital, including $4 million from the founders of Groupon, and took a seat at the increasingly crowded table of entrepreneurs mixing technology with food. Suri used his time as a waiter to study restaurant inefficiencies and to devise technological solutions. The result: his company, E la Carte , and an iPad-like tablet called Presto that allows diners to order and pay at their tables without server interaction and play games while they wait. E la Carte is one of several similar startups in Silicon Valley. With so many food-tech startups in the area, some observers, including the entrepreneurs themselves, wonder how the companies can stand out and earn money. Marc St. HeardAbout?

Civil War Battles & Civil War Casualties Interactive Map Prof Promises Supercomputer on Every Desktop | Wired Enterprise Virginia Tech researcher Wu Feng hopes his work on the HokieSpeed supercomputer will help make supercomputing more accessible (Photo:Virginia Tech) When Wu Feng looks at an iPad, he sees something more than a great way to play Fruit Ninja. To him, Apple’s sleek device looks more like a compute node on a supercomputer of the future: 1.5 gigaflops of computer power just waiting to be harnessed. Feng — an associate professor of computer science at Virginia Tech — hopes to one day bring the supercomputer to an entirely new audience. Today, supercomputers are used by research laboratories, oil companies, and big financial firms, but Feng wants to put them in small businesses and doctor’s offices. And he plans to do it using existing consumer hardware. He’s known for building very small supercomputers. By today’s standards, HokieSpeed is not exactly an elite supercomputer. “A lot of the capability, right now, of personal computers is just latent,” Feng says.

How to Use Your Tablet Computer as a Small Business Tool | SBA.gov Community Think your new tablet is strictly for entertainment purposes? Think again. Small businesses are rapidly finding innovative ways to use tablet computers (iPad, Kindle Fire, Playbook, etc.) to connect with clients, market while on the go, and enhance customer experiences. With the deluge of apps available in the marketplace geared toward tablet devices like the iPad, we small business owners can have the latest technology at a fraction of the cost of more traditional setups. Here are a few ways a tablet can help your business. 1. It seems odd to think that a tablet could replace your workers, but that’s what the iPad is doing for many restaurants nationwide. Point-of-sale systems for restaurants like ISISPOS also make it easy to seat tables, update menus and accept payments, all from a tablet. 2. If your business is too small to really benefit from merchant services and credit card processing, but would like to accept credit cards, the tablet can help you do that. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.

Related: