YouTube Now Offering 2160p 4K Video Resolution

Around this time last year I published a post describing YouTube’s then-new 3D video player option.

This year, they’ve stepped up their game in a big way.

Earlier this week (on Monday, April 7, 2014), while holding a regular tech chat/meeting in my office with my UC Berkeley colleague Lars Føleide (who is also my company‘s Philanthropy Chair) we noticed something new.

YouTube is now offering 2160p 4K resolution (along with 1440p HD) video resolution:

4K mainstream, here we come…

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Bill Nye to USA: We Need More Engineers

A good friend of mine, Dil, caught me off guard the other day by asking me, “are you watching the debate?” I thought immediately to myself, “the debate?.. it must be something epic.” It was something epic.

Bill Nye (on behalf of science) faces off with Ken Ham (on behalf of genesis, i.e., religious beliefs about human origins) – the entire debate is a back-n-forth over these two viewpoints on ‘where we come from’ –  in an ultimate two and a half hour debate.

Bill Nye & Ken Ham

In this excellent debate broadcasted live earlier this week (broadcast date: February 4th, 2014), my favorite spoken thought came from Bill Nye, at the 1:49:26 mark, where he says:

“…we need scientists and especially engineers for the future. Engineers use science to solve problems and make things. We need these people so that the united states can continue to innovate and continue to be a world leader. We need innovation and that needs science education.”

Bill Nye: We Need More Engineers

Check out the video yourself on YouTube and it will likely also remain embedded on the debatelive.org homepage for some time.

Emoticons Deceiving Mobile Users

I only bring it up because when you look closely you can notice some major differences between what I think I am sending and what is actually sent (who knows what it looks like on the other end…), defeating the intrinsic meaning of the emoticon and thus they message being conveyed itself…

Emoticons Falsity 1Emoticons Falsity 2

MRI Neural Brain Map Overlay on Human Brain Label Diagram

Studying a little neuroscience tonight. Neural networks of various types play the most crucial role in classifying information, used in my company’s trading software. Normally, I just get to look at the algorithms and other scientists’ work/attempts to quantify the way our brain processing information into various programmable languages, like C++, C#, and Python. Tonight, I chose to read a textbook on the subject and it is beyond fascinating to learn about the complexity behind the systems in the human body (especially the brain). Apparently, the human brain weighs three pounds and has over 100 billion neurons.

I decided to open my laptop and find a good diagram labeling the various parts of the brain – to have visible in the background (as I continued reading). Found one quickly, then, I got experimental and created an overlay of one of Van Weeden, et al.’s MRI images. It is transparent and with very little rotation fits nearly perfect on the diagram.

It cannot be helped to love looking at the human brain in its full complexity (in this case, adding some dimension an old useful diagram)!

Human Brain Labels Overlay with Weeden MRI

Quant Desktop

I’ve had little time to post lately, a screenshot of my desktop may explain why…

Literally, the story of my life:

Quant Screenshot

Quant Screenshot

Analyzing Code in Movies – Tron Legacy Does Great

If you are a programmer like me then you probably stop to analyze/assess the quality of any film when computer code appears (by pressing stop, pause, rewind, and play [and sometimes screenshot shortcut keys thereafter]). If it weren’t for the independent toolbars at the top of each window open (see screenshots below), then I would score Tron Legacy’s accuracy of what code really looks like a 10/10; but since they do, I award them a solid 9/10.

Disclaimer: I am not the holder of any credentials in the field of movie critiquing. Please do not make any life-changing decisions based on my 9/10 rating.

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