Sanjeev.NET

Sanjeev Narang notes about poetry, quotations, scrabble, trivia, vocabulary, word lists, word oddities, word play, seattle and washington lists.

Saturday, March 26, 2005

Google News sources


Google News scrapes other sources for news; this site scrapes the news stories appearing to find the soorces ...

Google News sources

Distinct sources from Google News Home Page

Here are the top 20 ... with the number of stories fed since 3/23:

215 ABC News
160 Reuters
98 New York Times
85 Guardian
84 Bloomberg
74 Xinhua
66 BBC News
63 Los Angeles Times
61 Kansas City Star
55 Washington Times
53 Washington Post
50 Voice of America
49 New Kerala
48 San Francisco Chronicle
44 CNN International
44 Scotsman
41 Newsday
41 Reuters.uk
39 International Herald Tribune
39 Times Online
38 Monterey County Herald

Monument to the Tour de France on Flickr


A beautiful sculpture to celebrate the Tour de France ... check it out.

Monument to the Tour de France on Flickr - Photo Sharing!

Tivo To Go Unleashed!


all your Tivo to Go questions answereed here ...

Tivo To Go Unleashed!

Tivo To Go Unleashed!

How do I get shows off my Tivo?
How long does it take to download a show?
I downloaded shows to my PC, now what?
How do I watch shows on my PC?
How come my shows look crappy when I view them full-screen?
Why do I have to keep entering my playback password?
How can I free the raw MPEG from this .tivo file?

Listen to Pi on a Piano ...


Listen to Pi on a Piano ...

Listen to Pi on a Piano ...

SendToAny 1.31


Add SendTo to all your right-click-menu ...

SendToAny 1.31

SendToAny extends the Windows Explorer 'Send To' context menu with all known links.

This is accomplished by synchronizing the Send To Menu with the Start Menu, Desktop and Quick Launch Menu.

This allows any file to be sent to any application, regardless of file-type association.

Microsoft Windows Media - Buying a Flash Memory MP3 Player


The article should be titled: Microsoft's 6 Reasons Why Not to Buy an iPod.

Microsoft Windows Media - Buying a Flash Memory MP3 Player

Six Tips for Buying an MP3 Player with Flash Memory
If you're the type of person who's on the go all the time and wants to jam to your favorite tunes while commuting to work, trekking across campus, or working out, then having the 'right' MP3 player is essential. Here are six tips to help you find the flash memory player that's right for you:

1. Understand the basics.
2. Make sure you're getting all the goodies.
3. You'll want a display.
4. Let a professional make your next playlist.
5. Pick the right size for you.
6. Don't get locked into one online store.

Friday, March 25, 2005

Prankster Smuggles Art Into Top Museums


Why wait till the musuems discover your art ?!! A new take on DIY (do-it-yourself)!

Yahoo! News - Prankster Smuggles Art Into Top Museums

Prankster Smuggles Art Into Top Museums

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Many a visitor to New York's Museum of Modern Art has probably thought, "I could do that."

A British graffiti artist who goes by the name "Banksy" went one step further, by smuggling in his own picture of a soup can and hanging it on a wall, where it stayed for more than three days earlier this month before anybody noticed.

The prank was part of a coordinated plan to infiltrate four of New York's top museums on a single day.

The largest piece, which he smuggled into the Brooklyn Museum, was a 2 foot by 1.5 foot (61cm by 46 cm) oil painting of a colonial-era admiral, to which the artist had added a can of spray paint in his hand and anti-war graffiti in the background.

The other two targets were the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the American Museum of Natural History, where he hung a glass-encased beetle with fighter jet wings and missiles attached to its body -- another comment on war, Banksy told Reuters on Thursday.

"It was just an outsider's view of the modern American bug, bristling with listening devices and military hardware," he said.

An art Web site called www.woostercollective.com has posted pictures of the artist -- wearing an Inspector Clouseau-style overcoat, a hat and a fake beard and nose -- hanging up his work at the four museums and describing how he did it.

Speaking by telephone from an undisclosed location in Britain, Banksy said he conducted all four operations on March 13, helped by accomplices who filmed him and provided distractions where necessary.

"They staged a gay tiff (lovers' quarrel), shouting very loudly and obnoxiously," said the artist, declining to give his real name or any personal details beyond his occupation as a professional painter and decorator.

It is not the first time he has staged such stunts. Last year he smuggled work into the Louvre in Paris and London's Tate, attracting attention in the British media.

"My sister inspired me to do it. She was throwing away loads of my pictures one day and I asked her why. She said 'It's not like they're going to be hanging in the Louvre.'"

He took that as a challenge. "I thought why wait until I'm dead," he said.

His preferred creative outlet, graffiti on trains, was growing more difficult due to greater security so he decided to branch out into infiltrating museums. "I tend to gravitate to places with less sophisticated security systems," he said.

Officials at the Natural History Museum declined to comment on security. Museum of Modern Art officials said only that the offending picture was taken down on March 17.

It was unclear what gave the game away but Banksy's version of Andy Warhol's iconic images of Campbell's Soup Cans showed a can of Tesco value tomato soup, a discounted brand sold by a British supermarket chain.

"Obviously they've got their eye a lot more on things leaving than things going in which works in my favor," Banksy said. "I imagine they'll be doing stricter bag checks now."

He said the painting in the Metropolitan Museum, a small portrait of a woman wearing a gas mask, had been discovered after one day, while the others stayed up for several days. The paintings were fixed to the wall with extra-strong glue.

Asked how he managed to escape notice while putting them up on a busy Sunday at the museums, he said: "They do get pretty full, but not if you put the pictures in the boring bits.

Armstrong to make Belgian return


BBC SPORT | Other Sport | Cycling | Armstrong to make Belgian return

Armstrong to make Belgian return

Lance Armstrong returns to action on Sunday in a bid to get his Tour de France preparations back on course.

The six-time winner will race in the Fleche Brabanconne event in Belgium with his Discovery Channel team.

Two days later the American will ride in the 208km Paris-Camembert one-day race, which takes place in Normandy.

Armstrong, 33, dropped out of the first event of the new ProTour season, the Paris-Nice, earlier this month with a sore throat and fever.

His team manager Johan Bruyneel said: "He's been feeling really good while out training and he's motivated to race again."

Armstrong is scheduled to compete in the Tour of Flanders on 3 April before returning to the United States.

File Swappers Find New Ways to Trade Tunes


As more and more iPods and hard disk devices are sold, people will trade with those - just like people used to lend/borrow CDs and make mix tapes for others. This should not come as a surprise.

PCWorld.com - File Swappers Find New Ways to Trade Tunes

File Swappers Find New Ways to Trade Tunes

E-mail, IM, and even IPods are becoming popular alternatives to peer-to-peer networks.

Paul Roberts, IDG News Service
Friday, March 25, 2005

Recording industry lawsuits against file swappers and P-to-P (peer-to-peer) software companies may be forcing Internet users onto informal networks to exchange songs and videos, according to a new study by the Pew Internet & American Life Project.

A Pew survey of 1421 U.S. adult Internet users found that informal file-sharing networks are used by 19 percent of music and video downloaders, with MP3 players, e-mail, and instant messaging products popular mediums for transferring files between friends and family. The results of the survey suggest that legal action by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) and others is shifting file swapping to other online avenues, even as file-sharing activity recovers from recent declines, Pew says.

Around 27 percent of Internet users surveyed by Pew said they downloaded either music or video files over the Internet, and 48 percent of all those who downloaded said they use sources other than P-to-P networks or premium online services, such as Apple Computer's ITunes, to get music or video files. Pew estimates that about 18 million Americans are swapping files using nontraditional means based on the survey results.

Surprising Findings

Approximately 19 percent of the adult Internet users in the survey admitted to downloading files using an MP3 player, such as an Apple IPod. That translates into about 7 million adults, and is surprising, because products like the IPod are not designed to support file sharing between devices, says Mary Madden, a research specialist at Pew who wrote the report ....

Wednesday, March 23, 2005

Yahoo bolsters e-mail storage to 1GB


Who says competition doesn't work ... Google makes Yahoo up it's storage ... MSN will surely follow.

[print version] Yahoo bolsters e-mail storage to 1GB | CNET News.com

Yahoo bolsters e-mail storage to 1GB

Yahoo on Tuesday said it plans to once again boost its free e-mail storage limit--this time to 1GB, the same amount offered by archrival Google.

Beginning in late April, Yahoo will upgrade free users to the new storage limit of 1GB, up from its current 250MB. The company said it will take about two weeks for all Yahoo Mail users to see the boost.

Yahoo's storage upgrade comes one week after Google started offering Gmail accounts to random visitors of its home page. This has led to heightened speculation in news articles and blogs that Google plans to open Gmail's doors to the public on April 1, a year after it launched in its current test form.

Tuesday, March 22, 2005

Mind Mapping


Try your hand at mind mapping with this free software; or check out Amazon for Tony Buzan.

FreeMind - free mind mapping software

FreeMind - free mind mapping software

FreeMind is a premier free mind-mapping software written in Java. The recent development has hopefully turned it into high productivity tool. We are proud that the operation and navigation of FreeMind is faster than that of MindManager because of one-click 'fold / unfold' and 'follow link' operations.

Monday, March 21, 2005

A Directory Of Programs Designed For USB Drives


A neat directory of USB drive-able programs.

Jeremy Wagstaff's LOOSE wire: A Directory Of Programs Designed For USB Drives

"A Directory Of Programs Designed For USB Drives"

Here’s a directory of applications designed to run on USB drives

* Chat/instant messaging: ICQ (not yet available), Miranda, Trillian Anywhere
* Browsers: Portable Firefox
* Operating Systems: Linux, Windows CE, VPM (Linux)
* PIMs/organisers: EssentialPIM, Sunbird
* Email: JBMail, Portable Thunderbird, EmailVoyager, PocoMail PE
* Encryption: CryptoAnywhere
* Office: AbiWord, OpenOffice (instructions in a PDF here)
* Music: Zoom Player, XMPlay
* Web Authoring: NVU