Category: Sci/Tech

  • How does he use the ants in order to forecast the earthquake

    How does he use the ants in order to forecast the earthquake

    Kadir Sütcü has coherence nearly ninety_nine percent in his estimation explained his story. The activities about forecasting the date and hour of probable İstanbul Earthquake are keeping on.

    While  walking around in my garden on november 11, 1999, I saw the ants went up the trees that I grew up and it doesn’t have rotten as the bees that escape from honeycomb go up the trees.

    On account of the fact that I graduated Agriculture Faculty, I appraısed this situatıon unusual. After that day on November 12, 1999 Düzce Earthquake happened and İstanbul shaked too. I decided to watch the ants which reacted the earthquake.

    Can the earthquake be forecasted before? This question is always asked. I look for the answer with this Project on which I studied. Today (21.11.2008) included, I made 6500 experiments with this ants in my garden and house.

    I publish the reports related with this experiments in my website: www.dkos.org and www.kadirs.com

    I try to estimate the date and hour of probable İstanbul Earthquke in resulting of unusual reaction of (1).ants colonies which live in my house plum tree and another alives (2).dogs, (3).snakes, (4).mice, (5).lizards,
    (6).earthwormes, (7).spiders, (8).gulls, (9).crows, (10).sparrows (11).plants and (12).sky.

    I established that these alives don’t show unusual reaction in some earthqukes happened below 5 magnitude in the Marmara Sea and cities in this  region because of the long distance.

    The each of ants show unusual reaction before November 12,1999 Düzce Earthquake have thousands neural cells  and  live together harmonously and perception organs are in their feet and also walk by following chemical segretion so that control eachother. These are main features of ants By following the colonies in the plum tree and 24 colonies in the nest made specially  with four hours interval daily and in resulting of 4000 experiments, I started to declare in my website the max. Earthquake which can be occured between 39,5-41,5 latitude and 26-29,5 longitude valid through24 hours by appraising the unusual reaction after the date of July 01,2007.

    The people visited my website can decide whether it is scientific or not by following      about the magnitude of the earthquake occured the last 24 hours in the and
    http://sismo deprem.gov.tr/DEPREM/SONDEPREMLER/sondepremler.php sites and the magnitude of earthquake that we forecasted in our website Please click the site for listening to the story of Düzce Earthquake.

    Going on watching my website. 

    Note:contact with Kadir Sütçü: [email protected]

    05056823779

    www.dkos.org/usgs.html  Dünya Tahminleri için tıklayınız

  • Amazon Mechanical Turk

    Amazon Mechanical Turk

    The Amazon Mechanical Turk (MTurk) is one of the suite of Amazon Web Services, a crowdsourcing marketplace that enables computer programs to co-ordinate the use of human intelligence to perform tasks which computers are unable to do. Requesters, the human beings that write these programs, are able to pose tasks known as HITs (Human Intelligence Tasks), such as choosing the best among several photographs of a storefront, writing product descriptions, or identifying performers on music CDs. Workers (called Providers in Mechanical Turk’s Terms of Service) can then browse among existing tasks and complete them for a monetary payment set by the Requester. To place HITs, the requesting programs use an open Application Programming Interface, or the somewhat limited Mturk Requester site.

    Requesters can ask that Workers fulfill Qualifications before engaging a task, and they can set up a test in order to verify the Qualification. They can also accept or reject the result sent by the Worker, which reflects on the Worker’s reputation. Currently, a Requester has to have a U.S. address, but Workers can be anywhere in the world. Payments for completing tasks can be redeemed on Amazon.com via gift certificate or be later transferred to a Worker’s U.S. bank account. Requesters, which are typically corporations, pay 10 percent of the price of successfully competed HITs (or more for extremely cheap HITs) to Amazon.[1]

    About the name

    The name Mechanical Turk comes from “The Turk”, a chess-playing automaton of the 18th century, which was made by Wolfgang von Kempelen. It toured Europe beating the likes of Napoleon Bonaparte and Benjamin Franklin. It was later revealed that this ‘machine’ was not an automaton at all but was in fact a chess master hidden in a special compartment controlling its operations. Likewise, the Mechanical Turk web service allows humans to help the machines of today to perform tasks they aren’t yet suited for.

    History of the service

    The service was initially invented for Amazon’s in-house use, to find duplicates among its web pages describing products.[1]

    The service was launched publicly on November 2, 2005, and is currently in beta. Following its launch, Mechanical Turk user base grew quickly, in part the result of the Slashdot effect. At that time there were a huge number of “Human Intelligence Tasks” (HITs) in the system. In early to mid November, 2005, there were tens of thousands of HITs, all of them uploaded to the system by Amazon itself for some of its internal tasks that required human intelligence. Web traffic grew to a massive amount near the beginning of December 2005. Since then, the number of HITs in the system has decreased, and by December 20, 2005 there were less than 100 groups of HITs on the average page load. By January, new types of HITs were set up, such as selecting the three best restaurants in a city, and third party HITs began to appear as well. As of April 2006, there were only the occasional batch of 25 HIT groups being offered, and the service had slowed to a crawl. As of January 2007 there were new HITS being offered of podcast transcribing and rating and image tagging (which is becoming very popular). In March 2007 there were reportedly more than 100,000 workers in over 100 countries.[1]

    In 2007, the service began to be used to search for prominent missing individuals. It was first suggested during the search for James Kim, but his body was found before any technical progress was made. That summer, computer scientist Jim Gray disappeared on his yacht and Amazon’s Werner Vogels, a personal friend, made arrangements for DigitalGlobe, which provides satellite data for Google Maps and Google Earth, to put recent photography of the Farallon Islands on the Mechanical Turk. A Slashdot effect sparked by Digg led to 12,000 searchers signing up, who were supplemented with imaging professionals working separately with the same data. The search was unsuccessful.[2] In September 2007 a similar arrangement was repeated in the search for aviator Steve Fossett. Satellite data was divided into 85 meter square sections, and Mechanical Turk users were asked to flag images with “foreign objects” that might be a crash site or other evidence that should be examined more closely.[1]

    Third party programming

    Programmers have developed various browser extensions and scripts designed to simplify the process of completing HITs. According to the Amazon Web Services Blog, however, Amazon appears to disapprove of the ones that automate the process 100% and take out the human element. Accounts using so-called automated bots have been banned.

    Related systems

    Main article: Crowdsourcing

    MTurk is comparable in some respects to the now discontinued Google Answers service. However, the mechanical Turk is a more general marketplace that can potentially help distribute any kind of work tasks all over the world. The Collaborative Human Interpreter by Philipp Lenssen also suggested using distributed human intelligence to help computer programs perform tasks that computers cannot do well. MTurk could be used as the execution engine for the CHI.

    Criticism

    Because HITs are typically simple, repetitive tasks and users are paid often only a few cents to complete them, some have criticized Mechanical Turk as a “virtual sweatshop.” Workers have no recourse if companies refuse to pay them for good work. Requesters do not have to file tax forms, and avoid minimum wage, overtime, and workers compensation laws. Workers, though, must report their income as highly-taxed self-employment income. However, at least some workers on Mechanical Turk are people who are middle class and do the work to end boredom or for fun.[3]

    References

    ^ Steve Silberman. “Inside the High-Tech Search for a Silicon Valley Legend”, Wired magazine, July 24 2007. Retrieved on 2007-09-16.

    ^ I make $1.45 a week and I love it Salon.com. July 24, 2006.

    External links

    Official website

    Wired Magazine story about ‘Crowdsourcing’ June, 2006

    Business Week Article on Mechanical Turk

    New York Times Article on Mechanical Turk

  • FELLOWSHIP- 2009 Junior Faculty Development Program (JFDP)

    FELLOWSHIP- 2009 Junior Faculty Development Program (JFDP)

    Posted by: Junior Faculty Development Program <[email protected]>

    The Government of the United States of America is pleased to announce the open competition for the Junior Faculty Development Program (JFDP) for the 2009 spring semester. The JFDP is a program of the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs of the United States Department of State (ECA). American Councils for International Education:

    ACTR/ACCELS, an American non-profit, non-governmental organization, receives a grant from ECA to administer the JFDP, and oversee each participant’s successful completion of the program. The United States Congress annually appropriates funds to finance the JFDP, and authorizes the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs to oversee these funds.

    If you are a citizen of Albania, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Kosovo, Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia, Tajikistan, or Turkmenistan, and are teaching full-time in an institution of higher education in your home country, have at least two years of university-level teaching experience, and are highly proficient in English, American Councils invites you to learn more about the program and apply.

    JFDP applications may now be downloaded as a print version or submitted online at the JFDP website. Additional information, including the 2008-2009 calendar, academic field descriptions, a list of frequently asked questions, and information about past program participants and host institutions can be found at the JFDP website:

    http:\\www.jfdp.org&Horde=4fcb6119853632a5cd4a4348e0f9d664 .

    Applications are due for applicants from Eurasia on August 29, 2008.

    Applications are due for applicants from Southeast Europe on September 5, 2008.

    Thank you very much for your help in promoting this program.

    Sincerely,

    JFDP Organizers