person:paul allen

  • 2018, on n’est pas encore partis
    http://www.radiopanik.org/emissions/on-est-des-pigeons/2018-on-n-est-pas-encore-partis

    On va un peu revoir l’année 2018.

    Ingvar Kamprad, Paul Allen et Donald Panoz sont morts.

    Apple a gagné de l’argent, Facebook en a perdu. Mais cet argent n’existe même pas.

    La Mauritanie a changé de monnaie.

    Truck Technic (Liège) a changé de propriétaire et de statut.

    Et 10% des belges possèdent 44% du patrimoine (source CGSLB).

    Ouais, y’a encore des petits choses à dire en 2018.

    http://www.radiopanik.org/media/sounds/on-est-des-pigeons/2018-on-n-est-pas-encore-partis_06035__1.mp3

  • Paul Allen : son parcours en 10 dates clés - Tech - Numerama
    https://www.numerama.com/tech/431741-paul-allen-son-parcours-en-10-dates-cles.html

    Paul Allen est décédé le lundi 15 octobre 2018. Cofondateur de Microsoft avec Bill Gates, l’Américain a au fil des ans diversifié ses activités, de la philanthropie aux activités spatiales, en passant par la science et le sport. Retour sur sa vie en dix dates-clés.

    Paul Allen s’est donc éteint le lundi 15 octobre 2018, à l’âge de 65 ans. Bien que moins célèbre que son compère Bill Gates, avec qui il a co-fondé Microsoft dans les années 70, une société devenue aujourd’hui l’une des plus grosses entreprises informatiques du monde, l’Américain a laissé derrière lui de multiples projets reflétant ses centres d’intérêt. C’est la maladie qui l’a terrassé.

    Y-en a des qui l’ont googlé sans nous le dire...

    Sans rire, je n’ai pas vu passer l’information jusqu’à par hasard hier soir...

  • ANALYSIS-Data-bait: using tech to hook globe’s multi-billion-dollar fishing cheats
    https://af.reuters.com/article/africaTech/idAFL8N1Q94J5

    In 2016, a Thai-flagged fishing vessel was detained in Seychelles on suspicion that it had been fishing illegally in the Indian Ocean, one of the world’s richest fishing grounds.

    The Jin Shyang Yih 668 was caught with help from technology deployed by FISH-i Africa, a grouping of eight east African countries including Tanzania, Mozambique and Kenya.

    But as the vessel headed to Thailand, which pledged to investigate and prosecute the case, it turned off its tracking equipment and disappeared. Its whereabouts remain unknown.

    Such activity is rampant in the global fishing industry, experts say, where illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing is estimated to cost $23.5 billion a year.

    However, a range of non-profit and for-profit organisations that are developing technology solutions to tackle IUU say it is a matter of time before vessels can no longer vanish.

    The industry is developing very fast ... basically the oceans will be fully traceable. There is no place to hide,” said Roberto Mielgo Bregazzi, the co-founder of Madrid-based FishSpektrum, one of the few for-profit platforms.

    With backing from Google, Microsoft’s Paul Allen and Leonardo DiCaprio, among others, such platforms also track fishing on the high seas and in marine reserves, aided by radio and satellite data that send vessels’ locations and movements.

    They use satellite imagery, drones, algorithms and the ability to process vast amounts of data, as well as old-fashioned sleuthing and analysis, to help countries control their waters.

    Algorithms could identify illegal behaviour, Mielgo Bregazzi told the Thomson Reuters Foundation, including predicting when a fishing vessel was about to meet its quota, triggering an alarm.

    Bradley Soule, the chief fisheries analyst at OceanMind, a non-profit, said technology can help even rich countries, which might otherwise struggle to process the volume of data broadcast by hundreds of thousands of vessels.

    Organisations such as his crunch that data and help to differentiate between normal and suspicious activity.

    The bulk of the threat is non-compliance by mainly legal operators who skirt the rules when they think no one’s looking,” said Soule, who helps Costa Rica monitor its waters.
    […]
    Dirk Zeller, who heads the Sea Around Us - Indian Ocean project at the University of Western Australia, said as the ocean’s bounty is a public resource, the world should know who is taking what.

    Part of the problem, he said, is overcapacity in the global fishing fleet.

    But he also points to difficulties in calculating IUU’s scale: the FAO’s estimates of fish stocks, for instance, are based on official government data, which are open to under- and over-reporting.

    His research shows global catches from 1950 to 2010 were 50 percent higher than countries had said.
    […]
    The FAO’s senior fishery officer, Matthew Camilleri, agrees technology is no silver bullet.

    “What use is it if you’re able to detect IUU fishing and find the vessel with illegal fish on board, but you do not have the process in place to enforce, to prosecute?” he said.

    Progress is underway towards that in the form of the FAO’s 2009 Port State Measures Agreement, which is aimed at curbing IUU fishing. Close to half of the 194 U.N. member states have signed it, including four of the top five fishing nations - Indonesia, the United States, Russia and Japan.

    China, though, has not. It is the world’s largest fishing nation, whose 2014 catch of 14.8 million tons, the FAO’s 2016 State of the World’s Fisheries report showed, was as much as the next three nations combined.

    When asked whether it was likely to sign, China’s mission to the FAO in Rome told the Thomson Reuters Foundation it was not authorized to comment.

    Tony Long from GFW - which runs a free-to-access platform that uses Automatic Identification System (AIS) data to track the global movement of vessels - said combining technology with cooperation between countries could close the loopholes.

  • USS Lexington: aircraft carrier scuttled in 1942 is finally found | World news | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/mar/06/uss-lexington-aircraft-carrier-scuttled-in-1942-is-finally-found
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-K-V_ah6IIs

    Wreckage from the USS Lexington, an aircraft carrier that sank during the second world war, has been found in the Coral Sea by a search team led by the Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen.

    The wreckage was found on Sunday by the team’s research vessel, the R/V Petrel, about 3,000m (two miles) below the surface and more than 500 miles (800km) off the eastern coast of Australia.

    The team released pictures and video of the wreckage of the Lexington – one of the first ever US aircraft carriers – and some of the planes that went down with it.

    Remarkably preserved aircraft could be seen on the seabed bearing the five-pointed star insignia of the US navy on their wings and fuselage.

    On one aircraft an emblem of the cartoon character Felix the Cat can be seen along with four miniature Japanese flags presumably depicting “kills”.

    The search team also released pictures and video of parts of the ship, including a nameplate and anti-aircraft guns covered in decades of slime.

  • Build Your Own Altair 8800 Personal Computer - IEEE Spectrum
    https://spectrum.ieee.org/geek-life/hands-on/build-your-own-altair-8800-personal-computer

    The MITS Altair 8800 was the first commercially successful personal computer. Created by Ed Roberts in 1974, it was purchased by the thousands via mail order, proving there was a huge demand for computers outside universities and large corporations. Its influence was immense: For example, after seeing the Altair featured on the cover of the January 1975 issue of Popular Electronics, Bill Gates and Paul Allen founded Microsoft (then Micro-Soft) in order to write a Basic interpreter for the new machine.

    The Altair sold for US $439 in kit form. Original machines are now collectors’ items that trade for thousands of dollars. Fortunately, there are some cheaper alternatives for people who want to get a direct understanding of the Altair computing experience. Modern kits that replicate the Altair hardware as faithfully as possible are available, as are purely virtual online simulators. Falling somewhere between a replica and a simulation is the $149 Altairduino kit from Chris Davis. The Altairduino duplicates the front panel of the Altair in all its LED- and switch-festooned glory while emulating the internal hardware (including some once fantastically expensive peripherals), using an Arduino Due.

    #Altair #Histoire_numérique

  • How #Amazon Took Seattle’s Soul - The New York Times
    https://www.nytimes.com/2017/10/20/opinion/how-amazon-took-seattles-soul.html

    I live in the city that hit the Amazon jackpot, now the biggest company town in America. Long before the mad dash to land the second headquarters for the world’s largest online retailer, Amazon found us. Since then, we’ve been overwhelmed by a future we never had any say over.

    With the passing of Thursday’s deadline for final bids, it’s been strange to watch nearly every city in the United States pimp itself out for the right to become HQ2 — and us. Tax breaks. Free land. Champagne in the drinking fountains. Anything!

    In this pageant for prosperity, the desperation is understandable. Amazon’s offer to create 50,000 high-paying jobs and invest $5 billion in your town is a once-in-a-century, destiny-shaping event.

    Amazon is not mining coal or cooking chemicals or offering minimum wage to hapless “associates.” The new jobs will pay $100,000 or more in salary and benefits. In #Seattle, Amazon employees are the kind of young, educated, mass-transit-taking, innovative types that municipal planners dream of.

    So, if you’re lucky enough to land HQ2 — congrats! But be careful, all you urban suitors longing for a hip, creative class. You think you can shape Amazon? Not a chance. It will shape you. Well before Amazon disrupted books, music, television, furniture — everything — it disrupted Seattle.

    At first, it was quirky in the Seattle way: Jeff Bezos, an oversize mailbox and his little online start-up. His thing was books, remember? How quaint. How retro. Almost any book, delivered to your doorstep, cheap. But soon, publishers came to see Amazon as the evil empire, bringing chaos to an industry that hadn’t changed much since Herman Melville’s day.

    The prosperity bomb, as it’s called around here, came when Amazon took over what had been a clutter of parking lots and car dealers near downtown, and decided to build a very urban campus. This neighborhood had been proposed as a grand central city park, our own Champs-Élysées, with land gifted by Paul Allen, a Microsoft co-founder. But voters rejected it. I still remember an architect friend telling me that cities should grow “organically,” not by design.

    Cities used to be tied to geography: a river, a port, the lee side of a mountain range. Boeing grew up here, in part, because of its proximity to spruce timber used to make early airplanes. And then, water turned the industrial engines that helped to win World War II.

    The new era dawned with Microsoft, after the local boy Bill Gates returned with a fledgling company. From then on, the mark of a successful city was one that could cluster well-educated people in a cool place. “The Smartest Americans Are Heading West” was the headline in the recent listing of the Bloomberg Brain Concentration Index. This pattern is likely to continue, as my colleagues at the Upshot calculated in picking Denver to win the Amazon sweepstakes.

    At the bottom of the brain index was Muskegon, Mich., a place I recently visited. I found the city lovely, with its lakeside setting, fine old houses and world-class museum. When I told a handful of Muskegonites about the problems in Seattle from the metastatic growth of Amazon, they were not sympathetic.

    What comes with the title of being the fastest growing big city in the country, with having the nation’s hottest real estate market, is that the city no longer works for some people. For many others, the pace of change, not to mention the traffic, has been disorienting. The character of Seattle, a rain-loving communal shrug, has changed. Now we’re a city on amphetamines.

    Amazon is secretive. And they haven’t been the best civic neighbor, late to the charity table. Yes, the company has poured $38 billion into the city’s economy. They have 40,000 employees here, who in turn attracted 50,000 other new jobs. They own or lease a fifth of all the class A office space.

    But median home prices have doubled in five years, to $700,000. This is not a good thing in a place where teachers and cops used to be able to afford a house with a water view.

    Our shiny new megalopolis has spawned the inevitable political backlash. If you think there’s nothing more annoying than a Marxist with a bullhorn extolling a failed 19th-century economic theory, put that person on your City Council. So Seattle’s council now includes a socialist, Kshama Sawant, who wants “the public” to take over Amazon ownership. Other council members have proposed a tax on jobs. Try that proposal in Detroit.

    As a Seattle native, I miss the old city, the lack of pretense, and dinner parties that didn’t turn into discussions of real estate porn. But I’m happy that wages have risen faster here than anywhere else in the country. I like the fresh energy. To the next Amazon lottery winner I would say, enjoy the boom — but be careful what you wish for.

    Lire aussi dans le @mdiplo du mois de novembre, « Les “créatifs” se déchaînent à Seattle. Grandes villes et bons sentiments », par Benoît Bréville https://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2017/11/BREVILLE/58080

    De Paris à Londres, de Sydney à Montréal, d’Amsterdam à New York, toutes les métropoles se veulent dynamiques, inclusives, innovantes, durables, créatives, connectées… Ainsi espèrent-elles attirer des « talents », ces jeunes diplômés à fort pouvoir d’achat qui, comme à Seattle, font le bonheur des entreprises et des promoteurs immobiliers.

    En anglais en accès libre https://mondediplo.com/2017/11/05seattle

    Voir aussi le dernier blog de Morozov sur l’urbanisme Google https://blog.mondediplo.net/2017-11-03-Google-a-la-conquete-des-villes

  • [l] (https://blog.fefe.de/?ts=a7863802) Google steigt jetzt auch in...
    https://diasp.eu/p/5796884

    [l] Google steigt jetzt auch in das Wettrennen um Energie aus Kernfusion ein.

    Google and a leading nuclear fusion company have developed a new computer algorithm which has significantly speeded up experiments on plasmas, the ultra-hot balls of gas at the heart of the energy technology.

    Die andere Firma heißt Tri Alpha Energy und wurde u.a. von Microsoft-Gründer Paul Allen finanziert.

    #google #microsoft

    • Le projet prévoit de livrer 21 centres médicaux reculés et de réaliser jusqu’à 150 livraisons par jour. Pesant une dizaine de kilos, les 15 drones sont capables d’embarquer chacun 1,3 kilo de médicaments. Sans pilote, ils sont guidés par GPS et le réseau cellulaire du pays. Volant à plus de 100 km/h, ces véhicules électriques ont une autonomie de 120 kilomètres et pourront desservir les hôpitaux en moins de trente minutes après qu’un médecin ou un infirmier a commandé son matériel par… sms.

      Le concept, imaginé en Suisse, à l’EPFL, a été repris par Zipline, une firme américaine de la Silicon Valley. Derrière cette petite start-up se cachent de grands noms comme Google ventures, Paul Allen, cofondateur de Microsoft, Jerry Yang, cofondateur de Yahoo, ou encore le géant de la livraison UPS.

      (...) Sous couvert d’anonymat, journalistes et militants d’associations s’inquiètent de possibles dérives sécuritaires, notamment en matière de surveillance.

      « Nous connaissons tous le désir de contrôle de notre président, Paul Kagamé. Une caméra est vite installée sur un drone. Pour faire plaisir aux compagnies qui financent le projet, nous avons littéralement renoncé à toute forme de législation sur ces engins. Cela pose des questions de libertés fondamentales »

      #merci #surveillance

      voir aussi https://seenthis.net/messages/529324

  • Paul Allen agrandit considérablement son empreinte écologique
    Jacht von Microsoft-Gründer beschädigt Korallenriff | www.heute.at
    http://www.heute.at/digital/multimedia/Jacht-von-Microsoft-Gruender-beschaedigt-Korallenriff;art73472,1254428


    Il n’est pas facie d’être très riche et de garder bonne conscience quand même. Une solution pour les Paul Allen du monde serait de suivre l’exemple de Ghandi et des érémites religieux - mais à quoi sert d’être riche si on ne peut pas le montrer ? L’avenir s’annonce mal pour les récifs coralliens.

    Seine 92 Meter lange Luxusjacht „Tatoosh“ riss mit seiner Ankerkette laut Behörden der Cayman Islands 80 Prozent des 1.300 Quadratmeter großen, geschützten Korallenriffs von West Bay ein.


    #nantis #wtf #écologie

  • Paul Allen to build private shuttle replacement | TG Daily
    http://www.tgdaily.com/space-features/60196-paul-allen-to-build-private-shuttle-replacement

    Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen has announced plans to build the workld’s largest plane in an effort to create a replacement for the retired US space shuttles.

    Through his new company, Stratolaunch Systems, he’s teamed up with Burt Rutan, one of the creators of Virgin Galactic’s SpaceShipOne, the first privately-funded, manned rocket ship to fly beyond earth’s atmosphere.

    #espace

    http://blogs.nature.com/news/2011/12/stratolaunch_embarks_on_hybrid.html
    http://blogs.nature.com/news/Stratolaunch1.jpg