Month: May 2019

Foursquare Personas

An example on the site illustrates just how much Foursquare can know about the habits of an individual user. For a man aged 45-49, in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, Foursquare can use data about which shops, bars, and other buildings the man visits regularly to assign “personas,” which then can be used by advertisers to target the user more effectively. Because Foursquare can tell the man visited AT&T Stadium between 19:00 and 22:30, and he stopped by Harry’s Sports Bar last week, Foursquare has him pegged as a “Sports Lover.” Similarly, the man’s visit to Pepper’s Grill between 17:00 and 18:30—his second trip to the establishment this week, it notes—confirms the “Casual Diner” persona.

Sarashina Horii

Centuries-old Japanese buckwheat noodle restaurant Sarashina Horii — helmed by 9th-generation soba maker and owner Yoshinori Horii — will open at 45 East 20th St., near Park Avenue South in Flatiron this July. The menu will include more than 12 noodle dishes, both hot and cold, as well as appetizers and other entrees.

Low energy classification

The goal is to produce a low-energy hardware classifier for embedded applications doing local processing of sensor data. To get there, the authors question a whole bunch of received wisdom, beginning with this: do we really need to convert the analog sensor data into a digital signal?! Here’s another fun one: what if instead of being something you worked hard to avoid, you had to build your whole application based on the outcomes of data races??!

Barrow’s Tasting Room

I love ginger. I love fresh ginger, pickled ginger, ginger candy chews, ginger ale, and ginger tea. So it stands to reason that I will love something called Intense Ginger Liqueur. This intimate bar has over 150 spirits, where you can taste your way through flights, craft cocktails, or sweets made in collaboration with Blue Marble Ice Cream and Li-Lac Chocolates. I’m looking forward to trying ginger-spiked cocktails.

Dawn of the Iron Dragon

the crew of the Andrea Luhman stranded on Earth in the middle ages faced a seemingly impossible challenge. They, and their Viking allies, could save humanity from extinction in a war in the distant future only by building a space program capable of launching a craft into Earth orbit starting with an infrastructure based upon wooden ships and edged weapons. Further, given what these accidental time travelers, the first in history, had learned about the nature of travel to the past in their adventures to date, all of this must be done in the deepest secrecy and without altering the history to be written in the future. Recorded history, they discovered, cannot be changed, and hence any attempt to do something which would leave evidence of a medieval space program or intervention of advanced technology in the affairs of the time, would be doomed to failure. These constraints placed almost impossible demands upon what was already a formidable challenge.