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Project Biped. AutoRap by Smule. WordFoto. ShowMe - The Online Learning Community. Storify · Find the best of social media. 'The Harvard of DeVrys' Strikes Back at Stephen Colbert. Stuart Schmill’s video response to Stephen Colbert’s comments about M.I.T. Sometimes, an admissions officer’s job is more than sifting through enormous stacks of applications. Sometimes, an admissions officer has to take a stand. Stuart Schmill, dean of admissions at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and an ardent fan of “The Colbert Report,” Stephen Colbert’s satirical show on Comedy Central, saw something in an episode that raised his hackles. During an interview with the higher education consultant Richard Hersh, Mr. Colbert referred to M.I.T. as “a tech school,” then called it “the Harvard of DeVrys” (referring to DeVry University, a for-profit school with many campuses).

Mr. Schmill, incensed, responded the only way he could: by parodying Mr. Mr. Mr. Cloud computing. Cloud computing metaphor: For a user, the network elements representing the provider-rendered services are invisible, as if obscured by a cloud. Cloud computing is a computing term or metaphor that evolved in the late 1990s, based on utility and consumption of computer resources. Cloud computing involves application systems which are executed within the cloud and operated through internet enabled devices. Purely cloud computing does not rely on the use of cloud storage as it will be removed upon users download action. Clouds can be classified as public, private and hybrid.[1][2] Overview[edit] Cloud computing[3] relies on sharing of resources to achieve coherence and economies of scale, similar to a utility (like the electricity grid) over a network.[2] At the foundation of cloud computing is the broader concept of converged infrastructure and shared services.

Cloud computing, or in simpler shorthand just "the cloud", also focuses on maximizing the effectiveness of the shared resources. Judgment Calls - Harvard Business Review. Microsoft creates a multitouch projector you can wear – New Tech Gadgets & Electronic Devices. Microsoft Research is on a bit of a roll lately with their future-tech demonstrations. At the end of last month they showed off a Holoflector augmented reality mirror, a physical object sharing projector called Illumishare, and an interactive transparent 3D desktop using Samsung’s transparent OLED.

This week Microsoft has revealed another device for the future, one which looks to be an extension of Carnegie Mellon’s HCI Institute Omnitouch project. What Microsoft have done is to clip a Kinect motion controller and pico projector together, and mount them on your shoulder. The combination of devices produces a projection on any given surface that the user can interact with just like a touchscreen.

Obviously the parts needs to be miniaturized, but this wearable multitouch projector could one day replace the need to actually carry a phone or tablet. Instead, you’d just clip a small device to a shirt pocket or jacket, and project your screen when you need it. Read more at Next at Microsoft. Educreations. The Next Web - International technology news, business & culture.