Thursday, February 26, 2009

Shocking!!!!!

Nokia considering entering laptop industry


By Tarmo Virki

HELSINKI - The world's top mobile phone maker Nokia is eyeing entering the laptop business, its Chief Executive Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo said in an interview to Finnish national broadcaster YLE on Wednesday.

Read more here: Yahoo News.

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Attention!

Something caught my attention today. I hope I have the luxury of time to read and comprehend this paper.

Digital Ecosystems: Self-Organised Complexity of Evolving Agent Populations


This kind of paper will really attract my attention, evolution, computer science and sociology in one. He he he he he. :D

Friday, February 20, 2009

Arxiv Laundry List III

Again, I am still busy to read some papers. I have to remind myself that I need to read these papers, so I am posting them here.

Much of the papers in Arxiv.org have not been refereed yet but you got to see the view of what keep the scientists and mathematicians busy.

How Does the Brain Organize Information?

Authors: Helmut Kroger
Abstract: Cognitive processes in the brain, like learning, formation of memory, recovery of memorized images, classification of objects have two features: First, there is no supervisor in the brain who controls these processes. Second there is a hugh number of neurons (10^{6} to 10^{10}) involved in those cognitive tasks. For this reason, the search of understanding cognitive processes uses models built from a large number of neurons, but very much simplified neurons. The so-called neural networks have been quite successful in describing certain aspects of brain functions, like the mechanism of associative memory or recently the prediction of epileptic seizures. At hand of the Kohonen network we discuss the treatment of information in the brain, in particular how the brain organizes such information without supervisor. Recently, networks of small-world and scale-free architecture came into focus. There is evidence indicating that the brain (cat cortex, macaque cortex, human brain) uses such connectivity architecture. Tasks like treatment of information, learning and classification take advantage of such scale-free and small-world connectivity and thus play a potentially important role in self-organization of the brain.
Subjects: Neurons and Cognition (q-bio.NC)
Journal reference: Mechanisms of Spontaneous Active States in the Neocortex, ed. I. Timofeev, Research Signpost, (2007), p.169-193
Cite as: arXiv:0902.3418v1 [q-bio.NC]


A distributed editing environment for XML documents

Authors: Claude Pasquier (INRIA Sophia Antipolis), Laurent Théry (INRIA Sophia Antipolis)
Abstract: XML is based on two essential aspects: the modelization of data in a tree like structure and the separation between the information itself and the way it is displayed. XML structures are easily serializable. The separation between an abstract representation and one or several views on it allows the elaboration of specialized interfaces to visualize or modify data. A lot of developments were made to interact with XML data but the use of these applications over the Internet is just starting. This paper presents a prototype of a distributed editing environment over the Internet. The key point of our system is the way user interactions are handled. Selections and modifications made by a user are not directly reflected on the concrete view, they are serialized in XML and transmitted to a server which applies them to the document and broadcasts updates to the views. This organization has several advantages. XML documents coding selection and modification operations are usually smaller than the edited document and can be directly processed with a transformation engine which can adapt them to different representations. In addition, several selections or modifications can be combined into an unique XML document. This allows one to update multiple views with different frequencies and fits the requirement of an asynchronous communication mode like HTTP.
Subjects: Software Engineering (cs.SE)
Journal reference: 1st ECOOP Workshop on XML and Object Technology, Sophia Antipolis : France (2000)
Cite as: arXiv:0902.3136v1 [cs.SE]

What are the best routes for us to use for driving home tonight in rush hour traffic?

Abstract: We show that the capacity of a complex network that models a city street grid to support congested traffic can be optimized by using routes that collectively minimize the maximum ratio of betweenness to capacity in any link. Networks with a heterogeneous distribution of link capacities and with a heterogeneous transport load are considered. We find that overall traffic congestion and average travel times can be significantly reduced by a judicious use of slower, smaller capacity links.
Comments: 6 pages, 4 figures
Subjects: Physics and Society (physics.soc-ph); Disordered Systems and Neural Networks (cond-mat.dis-nn); Networking and Internet Architecture (cs.NI); Computational Physics (physics.comp-ph)
Cite as: arXiv:0902.2415v1 [physics.soc-ph]

What's in a Message?

Abstract: In this paper we present the first step in a larger series of experiments for the induction of predicate/argument structures. The structures that we are inducing are very similar to the conceptual structures that are used in Frame Semantics (such as FrameNet). Those structures are called messages and they were previously used in the context of a multi-document summarization system of evolving events. The series of experiments that we are proposing are essentially composed from two stages. In the first stage we are trying to extract a representative vocabulary of words. This vocabulary is later used in the second stage, during which we apply to it various clustering approaches in order to identify the clusters of predicates and arguments--or frames and semantic roles, to use the jargon of Frame Semantics. This paper presents in detail and evaluates the first stage.
Subjects: Computation and Language (cs.CL)
Journal reference: 12th Conference of the European Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics (EACL 2009), workshop on Cognitive Aspects of Computational Language Acquisition. Athens, Greece
Cite as: arXiv:0902.2345v1 [cs.CL]


Collective dynamics of social annotation

Abstract: The enormous increase of popularity and use of the WWW has led in the recent years to important changes in the ways people communicate. An interesting example of this fact is provided by the now very popular social annotation systems, through which users annotate resources (such as web pages or digital photographs) with text keywords dubbed tags. Understanding the rich emerging structures resulting from the uncoordinated actions of users calls for an interdisciplinary effort. In particular concepts borrowed from statistical physics, such as random walks, and the complex networks framework, can effectively contribute to the mathematical modeling of social annotation systems. Here we show that the process of social annotation can be seen as a collective but uncoordinated exploration of an underlying semantic space, pictured as a graph, through a series of random walks. This modeling framework reproduces several aspects, so far unexplained, of social annotation, among which the peculiar growth of the size of the vocabulary used by the community and its complex network structure that represents an externalization of semantic structures grounded in cognition and typically hard to access.
Subjects: Computers and Society (cs.CY); Statistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech); Physics and Society (physics.soc-ph)
Cite as: arXiv:0902.2866v1 [cs.CY]

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Arxiv Laundry List II

This is what I can do best in my blog for now. I am sooooooo very very busy.

Ageing as a price of cooperation and complexity: Self-organization of complex systems causes the ageing of constituent networks

Abstract: The network concept is increasingly used for the description of complex systems. Here we summarize key aspects of the evolvability and robustness of the hierarchical network-set of macromolecules, cells, organisms, and ecosystems. Listing the costs and benefits of cooperation as a necessary behaviour to build this network hierarchy, we outline the major hypothesis of the paper: the emergence of hierarchical complexity needs cooperation leading to the ageing (i.e. gradual deterioration) of the constituent networks. A stable environment develops cooperation leading to over-optimization, and forming an "always-old" network, which accumulates damage, and dies in an apoptosis-like process. A rapidly changing environment develops competition forming a "forever-young" network, which may suffer an occasional over-perturbation exhausting system-resources, and causing death in a necrosis-like process. Giving a number of examples we demonstrate how cooperation evokes the gradual accumulation of damage typical to ageing. Finally, we show how various forms of cooperation and consequent ageing emerge as key elements in all major steps of evolution from the formation of protocells to the establishment of the globalized, modern human society.
Link: http://arxiv.org/abs/0812.0325

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Arxiv Laundry List

Arxiv Laundry List

Papers to read when I get free-time:

Emergence of Power Law in a Market with Mixed Models

M. Ali Saif, Prashant M. Gade

We investigate the problem of wealth distribution from the viewpoint of asset exchange. Robust nature of Pareto's law across economies, ideologies and nations suggests that this could be an outcome of trading strategies. However, the simple asset exchange models fail to reproduce this feature. A yardsale(YS) model in which amount put on the bet is a fraction of minimum of the two players leads to condensation of wealth in hands of some agent while theft and fraud(TF) model in which the amount to be exchanged is a fraction of loser's wealth leads to an exponential distribution of wealth. We show that if we allow few agents to follow a different model than others, {\it i.e.} there are some agents following TF model while rest follow YS model, it leads to distribution with power law tails. Similar effect is observed when one carries out transactions for a fraction of one's wealth using TF model and for the rest YS model is used. We also observe a power law tail in wealth distribution if we allow the agents to follow either of the models with some probability.


Effects of introduction of new resources and fragmentation of existing resources on limiting wealth distribution in asset exchange models

M. Ali Saif, Prashant M. Gade

Pareto law, which states that wealth distribution in societies have a power-law tail, has been a subject of intensive investigations in statistical physics community. Several models have been employed to explain this behavior. However, most of the agent based models assume the conservation of number of agents and wealth. Both these assumptions are unrealistic. In this paper, we study the limiting wealth distribution when one or both of these assumptions are not valid. Given the universality of the law, we have tried to study the wealth distribution from the asset exchange models point of view. We consider models in which a) new agents enter the market at constant rate b) richer agents fragment with higher probability introducing newer agents in the system c) both fragmentation and entry of new agents is taking place. While models a) and c) do not conserve total wealth or number of agents, model b) conserves total wealth. All these models lead to a power-law tail in the wealth distribution pointing to the possibility that more generalized asset exchange models could help us to explain emergence of power-law tail in wealth distribution.

Virtual Desktop

Thin Computing

Cloud Computing

Grid Computing

Cloud Computing for the Rest of us. Symmetry Breaking.



I want to learn more.

Other Earths

Copying Nexxx.

http://www.universetoday.com/2009/02/16/the-milky-way-could-have-billions-of-earths/

:D

Anyway, let me deviate a little by having this link. Milky Way Could Have Billions of Earths.

I wish to see these earths someday.


Thursday, February 12, 2009

Joke Time

Funny!



And some funny comments:

Christine

Is it not an i missing in the second term?

Then it is just a case of taking what is real or imaginary in your physics feelings.

Best,
Christine


Hi dberenstein,

Yes, of course, but I think you have missed my point! :) [Only in an imaginary world you'd have too much time and little to do! At least for a physicist!]

Best,
Christine


Todd

For me, f(t) is less than epsilon where epsilon is less than 10^-12.



Christine

Yet my joke does not work in Hilbert spaces… :(



Lionel

The reason f(t) stays close to zero is due to the quantum Zeno effect. I recommend not making any rapid repetitive measurements on “physics” when you have too many other things to do =)


For more details check Shores of Dirac.

Happy Birthday Darwin!

Happy Birthday Charles Darwin! May all the organisms of this planet and beyond celebrate your bday today (technically yesterday - if you are in PH time).


Sunday, February 8, 2009

Progress Bar

So many things are happening right now in life. Personal projects, work projects and some other side tasks are populating my calendar and I cannot keep track of them anymore. To be on track, I believe it is time for me to launch the “Progress Bar” of my life to see my progress in all of my major projects, both personal and work. This morning, after kicking myself out of bed (while sipping a good cup of coffee), I tabulated all the tasks I finished in 6 major projects I am determined to complete. And here are the results:

Project BTX – 2.25% out of 222 tasks

Project MM3 – 0.89% out of 112 tasks

Project BIG – 0.00% out of 132 tasks

Project CELESTIA – 0.53% out of 190 tasks

Project Prometheus – 1.98% out of 186 tasks

Project HOME – 3.64% out of 165 tasks

All of these are long term projects. Some will run for a year others will run for 2-3 years.

Maybe, it is time for me to check my progress on these 6 areas every month. This is the only way to make sure than I will complete them.

Today is the kick off of my Progress Bar.