Tech Weekly podcast: Personal privacy and public diplomacy Becky Hogge from the Open Rights Group joins Aleks Krotoski and Charles Arthur in a special Tech Weekly, recorded live at the Science Museum's Dana Centre.Our other guests? Austin Heap is a wunderkind hacker who used his own encryption software, Haystack, to open up the Iranian internet in the aftermath of the disputed elections in 2009. By breaking through the Iranian government's blockade, the software allowed people on the ground in Tehran to access communication tools they could use to describe unfolding events to the rest of the world.Meanwhile, personal surveillance has reached an all-time high: our web traffic is observed and recorded by governments and corporations. With every click we create personal digital identities that 'belong' to other people. Should we be worried about the private becoming public in this way, or should we reclaim ourselves using encryption software that hides who we are and where we go online? NO2ID's Christine Zaba will be on hand to lead you through the issues and the options.Don't forget to ...• Comment below• Mail us at tech@guardian.co.uk• Get our Twitter feed for programme updates• Join our Facebook group• See our pics on Flickr/Post your tech picsAleks KrotoskiCharles ArthurBecky HoggeChristina Zaba
ベッキーHoggeオープン権利グループからの特別な技の一品では、科学博物館のダナCentre.Our他のゲストでのライブ録音Aleks Krotoskiとチャールズアーサー結合?オースティンヒープは、2009年に紛争の選挙の余波を受け、イランのインターネット接続を開くために自分の暗号化ソフト、Haystackは、使用される神童ハッカーです
At Flickr, Fending Off Rumors and Facebook Flickr, while a popular site for avid photographers, is facing a stiff challenge from Facebook and its simple services for sharing snapshots. Flickrは、熱心な写真家に人気のサイトながら、共有のスナップショットはFacebookを利用して、その単純なサービスからの激しい挑戦に直面している
The Seating Arrangement at Barack Obama's Techapalooza Dinner If you were as curious as I was about who sat where when President Obama dined with Silicon Valley's elite on Thursday night, you'll be happy to discover that there's a photo of the tech giant-heavy affair on the White House Flickr page. あなたは、私がここで大統領は、木曜日の夜に、シリコンバレーのエリートと会食するとき座っていたかについてだったように好奇心ていた場合は、ホワイトハウスのFlickrのページのハイテク巨大な重い事件の写真があることを発見させていただきます
Tech Weekly podcast: digital economy bill and Opinion Space discussed Kevin Anderson, Bobbie Johnson and Aleks Krotoski tackle the murky world of politics as the general election looms.The Conservative party has outlined its technology manifesto, but is it realistic? The team cuts through the rhetoric to detail what it really says.And at the other end of the political spectrum, Labour's digital economy bill is thoroughly dissected.Finally, the team looks at the latest web toy to enrapture the White House, Opinion Space – an opinion barometer filled to the gills with new web 2.0 technology that takes the pulse of the world on US foreign policy issues, and then spits it out in a nice graphic.Find out about all these stories and more in this week's Tech Weekly podcast from the Guardian.Don't forget to ...• Comment below• Mail us at tech@guardian.co.uk• Get our Twitter feed for programme updates• Join our Facebook group• See our pics on Flickr/Post your tech picsAleks KrotoskiKevin AndersonBobbie JohnsonScott Cawley
ケビンアンダーソン、ボビージョンソンとAleks Krotoski総選挙looms.Theとして、同社の技術マニフェストを説明している、保守政党政治の不透明な世界に取り組むが、現実的ですか?本当に政治的なスペクトルのもう一方の端で何says.And細部へのレトリックを介してチームの削減、労働者のデジタル経済法案を徹底的にdissected.Finallyされると、チームは、最新のウェブのおもちゃでは、ホワイトハウス、意見宇宙とりこに見える - 世論のバロメーター新しいウェブサイトは、米国の外交政策の問題については、世界のパルス時間2.0テクノロジを使用してベロンベロンに記入して、いいgraphic.Find内のすべてのストーリーや詳細は、今週のTechウィークリーポッドキャスト内から出てそれを出してくれるGuardian.Don。。u0026#39;tを忘れる... tech@guardian.co.uk•で•メール連絡は下記•コメント•参加ごFacebookのグループ•Flickrに当社の写真を参照してプログラムの更新のためのTwitterのフィードを取得/ポストあなたのハイテクpicsAleks KrotoskiKevin AndersonBobbie JohnsonScottコーリー
Britain's royals post family pictures online The British royal family has opened an account on photo-sharing website Flickr, Buckingham Palace announced Sunday, in their latest attempt to move with the times.The free-to-access site will initially contain more than 600 photographs of Queen Elizabeth II on formal engagements, pictures from palace collections and portraits of the royals as young children. It will be continuously updated. 英国王室は写真共有サイトのFlickrのアカウントを開設し、バッキンガム宮殿は2009年の最新の試みのtimes.The無料にアクセスできるサイトで最初formalにエリザベス2世女王以上の600の写真が含まれて移動するの予告契約、宮殿からの写真コレクションや小さなお子様連れの王族の肖像画
UK aid review: which countries is DfID cutting? The UK aid review has finally reported. Has India been cut? Which countries are the biggest winners? Get the data• Get the dataUK aid to the developing world has received a huge shake-up - with complete cuts for many countries and increases for others. The report, out today from the Department for International Development (DfID) shows that a review of the £8.4bn budget means the end of aid to Russia, Serbia, China, Cambodia.Yemen, regarded by Britain as a failing state whose lack of economic development provides a fertile recruiting ground for al-Qaida, will be doubled from £46.7m this year to £90m by 2014-2015.The figures are a huge change for UK aid spending - some of the key facts are:• The biggest increase in aid is for Somalia, which sees a 208% change. This is followed by Nigeria, with a 116% change• The average change is a 25% increase, but this disguises big rises for some countries and huge cuts for others. The total budget will increase by 42%% between now and 2014/15• India, which was thought to face a complete cut, will instead see a small rise of 2.19%• Yemen sees an 80% increase over the same period - up to £305m• Pakistan will receive the most aid - £1.4bn, up 107%The full data from DfID is below. What can you do with it?Data summary Download the data• DATA: download the full spreadsheetMore dataData journalism and data visualisations from the GuardianWorld government data• Search the world's government data with our gatewayDevelopment and aid data• Search the world's global development data with our gatewayCan you do something with this data?• Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group• Contact us at data@guardian.co.uk• Get the A-Z of data• More at the Datastore directory• Follow us on Twitter• Like us on FacebookDevelopm _NULL_
How fair is Britain? Get the key data Britishness and being fair are supposed to go together. See how the key data shows that is not always the case• Get the dataIs Britain fair? A new report by the Equality and Human Rights Commission provides a complete breakdown of how fair Britain has become.How Fair is Britain, shows exactly how the UK has changed - and what has stayed the same in terms of race, gender and disability.Says Trevor Phillips, chair of the commission there are still Gateways to opportunity that appear permanently closed, no matter how hard they try; while others seem to have been issued with an 'access all areas' pass at birthKey findings from the report include:• the poorest can expect to live seven years less than the richest• boys are falling far behind in education with girls outperforming them at ages 5, 16 and degree level. Students of Indian and Chinese origin are streaking ahead at school.• Gypsy and traveller communities appear to be targeted by the criminal justice system – and women prisoners have become a prominent feature of Britain's jails• The ageing society means that women have a 50% chance of becoming a carer before they reach 59• A quarter of men of Pakistani descent drive for a living – mostly in a taxi cabWe've extracted the key data from the report for you - and you can download it too. What can you do with it?Download the data• DATA: download the full spreadsheetWorld government data• Search the world's government with our gatewayDevelopment and aid data• Search the world's global development data with our gatewayCan you do something with this data?Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group• Get the A-Z of data• More at the Datastore directory• Follow us on TwitterEqualityEquality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC)PayRace & religionRace in 英国人気質は、公正一緒に行くことになっているさ
Tunisia: how does it compare to other countries in the region? Is the uprising in Tunisia likely to happen in other similar countries? Get the dataThe protests over unemployment, food inflation and corruption in Tunisia have effectively ousted the President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali after 23 years of rule. Most remarkably the political pressure has brought with it a more democratic system, albeit with trouble along the way. We ask: how similar are Tunisia's neighbouring countries? This is an important question as it gives a clue about whether actions in Tunisia will inspire other countries, in a similar situations, to do the same.We look at key statistics that show how Egypt, Algeria, Libya, Morocco and Syria compare to Tunisia on population, labour force, unemployment and GDP per capita. With this very brief analysis you can see that Libya is the only country with a higher unemployment rate than Tunisia, and a similar population size. However the GDP per capita is lower than Tunisia in every country compared except Libya, where GDP per capita is running at a relatively healthy $14,000. Other clues about uprisings come from the Transparency International corruption index, which ranks Tunisia as the 59th most corrupt country in the world, while Morocco is ranked 85, Egypt 98, Syria 127, Algeria 105 and Libya 146. Here is the data, how would you expand on it to compare these countries more accurately?Download the dataDATA: download the full spreadsheetMore dataData journalism and data visualisations from the GuardianWorld government data• Search the world's government data with our gatewayDevelopment and aid data• Search the world's global development data with our gatewayCan you do something with this data?• Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group• Contact us at data@guardian.co.uk• Get the A-Z of data チュニジアでの暴動は、他の同様の国で発生する可能性が高いですか?チュニジアの失業、食品インフレと腐敗の上dataThe抗議をGetは効果的にルールの23年を経て、学長Zineのアルアビディンベンアリを追放した
Tech Weekly: Google Street View row rolls on, Robert Llewellyn on Carpool On this week's Tech Weekly, the comedian and presenter Robert Llewellyn joins Aleks Krotoski to talk about Carpool, his hugely popular web chatshow with celebrities, scientists and the general public, set in his car. Tech Crunch's Mike Butcher jumps on board too, giving his insights into the top news stories this week.The trio talk about Google Street View's latest privacy fumbles, as the UK's information commissioner re-opens its case against the mapping service. Allegations around the world suggest that the company collected email addresses, email content and passwords in addition to the photos that make up the 3D representations of cities, inspiring privacy campaigners to call foul.Robert is vocal in his concerns about the source of the £530m earmarked by the coalition government in last week's comprehensive spending review for broadband rollout; the BBC isn't a source for such infrastructure, he says. Mike concurs. And all three are curious about the future of software distribution via Lion OS for Mac, but what will the walled garden mean for consumers?Don't forget – Tech Weekly is coming to the Bradford animation festival at the National Media Museum on 9 November. Our guests will include Charles Cecil, Kieron Gillen and Dan Pinchbeck, and it'll all be presented by Keith Stuart. There's details on how to come join us here – tickets are FREE.And later in November Tech Weekly is coming to Dublin for a meetup – Jemima has more details here – come and visit us!Don't forget to ...• Comment below• Mail us at tech@guardian.co.uk• Get our Twitter feed for programme updates or follow our Twitter list• Join our Facebook group• See our pics on Flickr/Post your tech picsAleks KrotoskiRobert LlewellynScott Cawley
今週のTechウィークリー、コメディアン、司会者のロバートLlewellynさんて、Aleks Krotoskiは相乗り、彼の車に設定され芸能人、科学者と一般市民との彼の非常に人気のあるWeb chatshowについて話を結合します
Tech Weekly podcast in Dublin Tech Weekly visits Dublin to check out the thriving local startup scene. The tech community has benefited from assistance through development agencies such as Enterprise Ireland that help to foster and fund new tech businesses. Ireland has also benefited from the presence of tech giants such as Google, Apple, Facebook, Microsoft, HP, Dell and others in the country.But will all this success be put into jeopardy? Ireland has just accepted a €85bn bailout from the International Monetary Fund – will talented developers emigrate as their financial situations worsen? Will the tech giants that were attracted by favourable corporation tax rates leave the country if the government has to raise the rate? It would appear not however, and most entrepreneurs in the programme were upbeat about future prospects. Charles Arthur and Jemima Kiss tour the city, meeting up with Enterprise Ireland to hear how it helps fund and foster the country's new digital businesses. We also meet Joe Drumgoole of Cloudsplit, who tells us how punishing the cost of failure is in Ireland, and how startups shouldn't be worried – just learn from the mistakes.Dylan Collins of Jolt discusses Ireland's success as a hub for online gaming, and his role as a mentor for other startups, and Rob Martin of Infacta explains how Ireland's infrastructure such as broadband has been challenging for his business.Plus we get some interesting projects to pitch us their ideas at a listener meetup.You can find links to the startups and projects mentioned on the Guardian Technology in Ireland page.Don't forget to ...• Mail us at tech@guardian.co.uk• Get our Twitter feed for programme updates or follow our Twitter list• Like our Facebook page• See our pics on Flickr/Post your tech pics
ハイテクウィークリーダブリンの繁栄ローカル起動シーンをチェックアウトして訪問
Audio: Tech Weekly podcast: Apple's results - more iPads than Macs, Ray Ozzie leaves Microsoft This week, Jemima Kiss is joined by Charles Arthur to analyse how Apple are edging towards being the biggest company in the world. They also discuss Ray Ozzie's departure from Microsoft, AOL's interest in Yahoo and whether cyber warfare will be the defining characteristic of a new era of global terrorism.We're also joined by games designer Kevin Slavin, founder of the New York-based games company Area/Code. He has a vision of the future of TV ... lying outside the traditional television industry.Heads up! Tech Weekly is coming to the Bradford Animation Festival at the National Media Museum on 9 November. Our guests will include Charles Cecil, Kieron Gillen and Dan Pinchbeck, and it'll all be presented by Keith Stuart. There's details on how to come join us here - tickets are FREE.And later in November we'll be bringing Tech Weekly to Dublin - more details next week.Don't forget to ...• Comment below• Mail us at tech@guardian.co.uk• Get our Twitter feed for programme updates or follow our Twitter list• Join our Facebook group• See our pics on Flickr/Post your tech picsJemima KissCharles ArthurScott Cawley
今週は、ジェミマ、Appleは世界最大の企業であることに向かって縁取りする方法を分析し、チャールズアーサー参加しているキス
Mortality statistics: every cause of death in England and Wales. Full data and visualisation How do we die? Are you more likely to get knocked down by a car, bitten by a dog or fall down the stairs? Find out with the latest mortality statistics• Get the dataThe annual mortality statistics published by the Office for National Statistics provide vital clues for health experts looking at causes of death - and those who specialise in the prevention of accidents.It gives us a real picture of risk. We may worry about swine flu, for instance - but the big killers of heart disease and cancer are much more significant in terms of public health. What is also striking is how constant many of these numbers of deaths are - why do around 12,000 people die each year in accidents, for instance? Why do around 200 people accidentally drown every year?Besides the graphic above (which you can download as a PDF), we've summarised two of the datasets below: major causes of death and deaths from external causes - ie, accidents or assaults. If you want to find out how many people died after being bitten by bees or falling down stiars, this is the place to look.The NHS has visualised previous years' data already with its atlas of risk. And this data, although published last October, gathered virtually no coverage. Can you do something better?Data summary Download the data• DATA: download the full spreadsheetMore dataData journalism and data visualisations from the GuardianWorld government data• Search the world's government data with our gatewayDevelopment and aid data• Search the world's global development data with our gatewayCan you do something with this data?• Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group• Contact us at data@guardian.co.uk• Get the A-Z of data• More at the Datastore directory• Follow us on Twitter• Like us on FacebookHealthOffice for Nati どのように我々が死ぬのですか?より多くの犬に噛まれた、車にはねられるのを取得したり、階段から落ちる可能性が高いですか?死の原因を探している健康専門家のための重要な手がかりを提供する最新の死亡統計と長者は•国家統計局が発行したdataThe年間死亡統計情報を取得する - 、誰accidents.Itの予防に特化し、これらは私たちに実像を与えるリスク
North Korea v South Korea: mapping every incident from 1958 to 2010 North and South Korea are in a state of heightened tensions following attacks on Yeonpyeong island. How many of these incidents have there been - and where were they?• Get the dataTwo South Korean marines have died after North Korea fired shells at the South Korean island of Yeonpyeong. South Korea's Joint Chief of Staff said 16 others were injured during the bombardment of the island, which is located near the countries' disputed western border.This is obviously not the first time this has happened - there have been over 150 incidents since the Korean War in 1950, that we know about. The reason we do know about these is because of an exhaustive report by the Congressional Research Service, published in 2007. It covers every incident, from diplomatic hostilities, through to the more serious events where people have died.Some of these events have occured around the world.We wanted to map those events, using Google Fusion tables - and that's what you can see above. There are some hefty caveats here. Where we didn't know the precise location, we have made an educated guess, based on reports and the location details we do have. The other thing worth noting is that this was compiled in the US - a report compiled in Pyongyang would look very very different.This is just a starting point. What can you add to the data?Download the data• DATA: download the full spreadsheetWorld government data• Search the world's government with our gatewayDevelopment and aid data• Search the world's global development data with our gatewayCan you do something with this data?• Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group• Contact us at data@guardian.co.uk• Get the A-Z of data• More at the Datastore directory• Follow us on TwitterNorth KoreaSouth KoreaSimon Rogersguardia 北朝鮮と韓国は島を延坪への攻撃、次の高まる緊張の状態になっています
Tech Weekly podacst: WikiLeaks, Anonymous and cyber war This week we turn the whole programme over to the extraordinary events that have taken place on the web over the past fortnight.Since the Guardian and four other newspapers around the world printed the details of US diplomatic cables that were leaked to whistleblowing website WikiLeaks, major internet companies and services have been taken offline in a battle between hackers and governments – all over the principle of the freedom of the internet.In this programme we'll discuss whether this could be the first global cyber war, as well as looking at what has happened so far and how the attacks took place.We'll hear how Tom Cruise's video on the virtues of Scientology helped spawn online activists Anonymous, and an expert on electronic transactions gives his view of the success of the Operation Payback attacks.The programme is presented by Jemima Kiss, who is joined by the Guardian's technology editor Charles Arthur, Professor William H Dutton of the Oxford Internet Institute and Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant at security experts Sophos.You may also want to listen to our recent Guardian Focus podcast which looks at the future of US diplomacy and the Politics Weekly podcast which discusses whether governments can - and should - keep secrets from their voters.Don't forget to ...• Mail us at tech@guardian.co.uk• Get our Twitter feed for programme updates or follow our Twitter list• Like our Facebook page• See our pics on Flickr/Post your tech picsJemima KissCharles ArthurScott Cawley
今週、私たちは『ガーディアン』と、世界中の他の4つの新聞が告発サイトWikileaksはに流出していた米国の外交ケーブルの詳細を印。過去fortnight.Since、主要な上にウェブ上で起きている特別なイベントに上の全体計画を向けるインターネット企業やサービスは、ハッカーや政府間の戦いでオフラインになっている - でinternet.Inの自由の原則世界中の私たちは、これが初のグローバルサイバー戦争できるかどうか議論があります、このプログラムとしてだけでなく、looking何と攻撃がplace.We。。u0026#39;llはサイエントロジーの美徳のトムクルーズのビデオは、オンライン活動家は、匿名生成支援方法を電子商取引の専門家は、操作回収attacks.Theプログラムの成功の彼のビューを提供聞くかかったこれまでのところ起こっている人Sophos.Youまた、我々の最近のガーディアンフォーカスPodcastを聴くする可能性のあるセキュリティの専門家でガーディアンの技術エディタチャールズアーサー、オックスフォードインターネット研究所を務めるグレアムクルーリー氏、上級技術コンサルタントの教授ウィリアムHダットンで参加している、キスジェミマから提示されたと必要があります - - 米外交の未来と政府ができるかどうかについて説明します政治ウィークリーポッドキャストを見て、そこから秘密を守るために自分voters.Don。。u0026#39;tは取得tech@guardian.co.ukの•でする...•メールお忘れ我々のプログラムの更新のためのTwitterのフィードはやFlickr /投稿あなたの科学技術のpicsJemima KissCharles ArthurScottコーリーの上の私たちの写真を参照してください我々はFacebookのページ•同様に我々のTwitterのリスト•に従ってください
Flocks of starlings make for spectacular photographs | Grahame Madge It's the time of year when these birds come together to produce one of nature's most impressive sights. Grahame Madge has some tips for capturing it on camera • Share your photos of starlings in flight on our Flickr groupEven as an ardent birdwatcher, I'll confess that a single starling is a rather drab sight. But you can capture stunning images of starlings if you see them in a new light. In summer, the drabness of their dark plumage melts away to reveal an iridescent show of greens and purples. In winter, the birds develop a completely different look as the plumage becomes spangled with white spots.In my opinion, the best way to see starlings is just before dusk when flocks – known as murmurations – gather in autumn and winter skies for one of our most celebrated wildlife spectacles. Sometimes up to 1 million birds - from a radius of 20 miles - join vast flocks that twist and turn against the fading light, creating a pageant of ephemeral, ever-changing patterns - like smoke on a breeze.Many of the birds will have travelled to the UK from Scandinavia, or even Russia, to join starlings that have nested in the UK. Starlings gather in huge flocks to spend the night in safety in reedbeds, or on buildings, such as Brighton pier. It's always been a slight mystery to me why these birds put on such a prominent display before roosting for the night. The primary aim of creating a large flock is to confuse predators, such as peregrine falcons or sparrowhawks: so, why do starlings advertise their presence so obviously?The ecologist in me says they are probably encouraging others into the roost site, creating an ecological advantage for the starling's survival. However, my fun-loving side yearns to believe that starlings put on a Red Arrows show just because they can.These spe これらの鳥は、自然の最も印象的な名所の一つを生成するために一緒に来るときは一年の時です
Tech Weekly podcast: Email overload On this week's programme we discuss the waning influence of email, as users turn to different tools to communicate more effectively with one another. Are priority inboxes the answer? Or is a whole new method of communication in order? We speak with Jeff Bonfiorte from Xobni (it's inbox, spelt backwards) who explains why email isn't dead, just misunderstood. He offers his insight on how to reach the fabled Inbox Zero.Charles follows the collapse of Haystack, the US State Department's-sponsored anti-censorship software, celebrated for its role in opening up the Iranian web during the violence in the aftermath of Iran's 2009 elections. It has been found to make its users vulnerable to the authoritarian government, rather than anonymous; the team dissects the hype.We look at the latest hacker actions taken against the RIAA and the MPAA, causing their services to go down. Charles argues that there's nothing to be done to stop attacks like this in the future; it's simply part of the weather of the Internet, and we should just bring our umbrellas.And Jemima weighs in on the open-source social network Diaspora, which has released it's first code. The project promotes personal data ownership, a criticism levied against Mark Zuckerberg's Facebook.Plus - we want your questions for the next in our installment of the Startup Surgery. Next week corporate finance specialist Simon Carmichael of Torch Partners will be answering your questions on refining your proposition to take your business to the next level. Questions to him on the PDA blog.Don't forget to ...• Comment below• Mail us at tech@guardian.co.uk• Get our Twitter feed for programme updates or follow our Twitter list• Join our Facebook group• See our pics on Flickr/Post your tech picsAleks KrotoskiCharles ArthurJemima KissS ユーザーが別のツールをより効果的に相互に通信に向けると、今週のプログラムで私たちは、電子メールの衰退の影響を議論する
Drop in racist incidents reported across England and Wales Reported racist incidents have dropped according to the Home Office. Which area records the most incidents?• Get the dataEngland and Wales have seen a 1.4% drop in the number of reported racist incidents the newest statistics from the Home Office show.Police forces across England and Wales recorded 55,056 reported incidents connected with racisim, a drop from the 55,862 figure for 2008/09. A racist incident defined as 'any incident, including any crime, which is perceived to be racist by the victim or any other person' have been recorded by police forces across England and show a decrease amongst 25 of the 43 police areas.Over 10,000 incidents were recorded by Metropolitan Police during the 2009/10 period, with Greater Manchester police recording the second highest rate with over 4,000.The highest percentage change was reported in Nottinghamshire with a 43.7% change since the previous year. Durham recorded 107 more incidents and saw their percentage change rise to 28.9%.City of London police, Dyfed- Powys and North Yorkshire reported the least racial incidents with City of London seeing numbers drop by nearly half. Although this does not include all incidents, as only those reported show in the figures, it does give an idea of the rates of racist incidents dealt with by the each police force in each area.We have provided the figures in a table below along with the percentage change. What can you do with this data?Download the data• DATA: download the full spreadsheetWorld government data• Search the world's government with our gatewayDevelopment and aid data• Search the world's global development data with our gatewayCan you do something with this data?• Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group• Contact us at data@guardian.co.uk• Get the 報告人種差別的な事件は内務省によると減少した
The world's top 100 universities, 2010 Cambridge is now the world's top university, according to a new report, which knocks Harvard from the top spot. See how it compares with the world's top 100 universities here• Get the dataHarvard today forfeits first place to the University of Cambridge in a league table of the world's top institutions, the first time in the list's seven year history that the Ivy League university has been knocked off the number one spot.The QS table is based on measures of research quality, graduate employability, teaching and how international the faculties and student bodies are. Harvard was still most popular among the 5,000 employers polled worldwide, but Cambridge was voted best for research quality in a survey of 15,000 academics and took overall first place. The rankings also use citation counts from a database of academic publishing.The Times Higher Education magazine, which is publishing its own global university rankings next week, is no longer collaborating with QS. The magazine is concerned that these rankings rely too heavily on subjective surveys of scholars and employers and not enough on hard indicators of excellence. The THE's new rankings are expected to contain disappointing news for some prestigious British institutions.Some of the key UK losers this year are:• University of Oxford down to 6 from 5 last year• University of Edinburgh, down two places to 22• University of Lancaster, down from 161 to 182However, some are doing better, notably University of Durham, up to 92 from 103 last year.Thanks to QS, we've got the top 100 for you to play with - you can download it below. What can you do with the data?Download the data• DATA: download the full spreadsheetWorld government data• Search the world's government with our gatewayCan you do something with this data?Flickr ケンブリッジは世界のトップ大学、トップの座からハーバード大学をノック新しいレポートによると、です
World Statistics Day: UK in a spreadsheet In celebration of World Statistics Day the ONS has created the UK in a spreadsheet: Get the full list here• Get the dataAs part of World Statistics Day the Office of National Statistics has provided us with data showing the UK in a spreadsheet.London, the East and Northern Ireland have all seen high increases to the regional population whereas the North West shows the lowest increase at only 1.2% as the population in Chester and Merseyside have had a decrease in numbers.It gives us an interesting snap shot of the UK. West Somerset has the highest percentage of pensioners with 34.2% of the population being pension age or over and the South West as a whole has a percentage of 22.8% Unemployment figures focus on London with Tower Hamlets, Hackney and Newham having the highest unemployment rates in the UK although Leicester and Birmingham follow closely with 9.9% and 9.8% respectively. But it isn't all bad news for London, they also have the highest median earnings with those living in Kensington and Chelsea bringing home an average of £933 per week and London as a whole, an average of £598. The UK has had a 3.3% population increase between 2004 – 2009 with the City of London having a 38.8% increase alone and these statistics from the ONS show some fascinating comparisons between the regions for unemployment rates, population increases, mortality rates and pension population.Have a look at your area and see where it stands in the snapshot of the UK. What do these figures tell you about your region? What stands out to you? Download the data• DATA: download the full spreadsheetWorld government data• Search the world's government with our gatewayDevelopment and aid data• Search the world's global development data with our gatewayCan you do something with this data?Flickr Pleas 世界統計の日を記念してのONSは、スプレッドシートに英国を作成しています:•世界の統計日国家統計局のdataAs部分を取得ここで完全なリストを取得するspreadsheet.London英国を示すデータをご提供していますノースウェストはnumbers.Itの減少があったチェスター、マージーサイドの人口のわずか1.2%で最低の伸び率を示しています一方、私たちに、英国の興味深いスナップショットを与えるイースト、北アイルランドは、すべての地域の人口の高い増加を見てきました
Corruption index 2010 from Transparency International: find out how each country compares Which country is most corrupt? Why has the US score gone down? See how the annual corruption index has changed• Get the dataThe Corruption Index is always controversial. And it's out today.Transparency International's 2009 Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) is the world's most credible measure of of domestic, public sector corruption. The CPI scores countries on a scale of zero to 10, with zero indicating high levels of corruption and 10, low levels. And the most corrupt places in the world are not the most surprising. Unstable governments, often with a legacy of conflict, continue to dominate the bottom rungs of the CPI. Afghanistan and Myanmar share second to last place with a score of 1.4, with Somalia coming in last with a score of 1.1.The world's most peaceful countries score the best. In the 2010 CPI, Denmark, New Zealand and Singapore tie for first place with scores of 9.3. The ranking is based on data from country experts and business leaders at 10 independent institutions, including the World Bank, Economist Intelligence Unit and World Economic Forum. Transparency International says that it has seen improvements in scoresfrom 2009 to 2010 for Bhutan, Chile, Ecuador, FYR Macedonia, Gambia, Haiti, Jamaica, Kuwait, and Qatar. The scores of the Czech Republic, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Madagascar, Niger and the United States have all gone down.The full data is below - and download the complete version for background scores and all the indicators. What can you do with it?Country summaryDownload the data• DATA: download the full list as a spreadsheetCan you do something with this data?Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group or mail us at datastore@guardian.co.ukWorld government data• Search the world's government datasets• More environm どの国で最も腐敗ですか?なぜダウンして、米国のスコアは?年間腐敗指数は•破損インデックスは、常に議論の余地があるdataTheを取得変更されている方法を参照してください
Tech Weekly podcast: The Social Network - our verdict on the Facebook film Join Aleks Krotoski, Jemima Kiss, Gia Milinovich and Charles Arthur for the latest technology news. This week, they dissect The Social Network, often referred to as The Facebook Movie, because it documents the rise and rise and rise of the most popular social networking site in the world. 500 million users can't be wrong, right? Charles, Jemima and Gia report back from this week's special preview screening.Also this week, the virtual and the real worlds are under threat from hackers. An Iranian nuclear power plant has been infiltrated by a computer worm that attacks the integral systems of the plant's workings. Charles suggests it's a government job, and Gia gets excited about nuclear espionage.Alexander Hanff from Privacy International gives us the implications of the 750 MB file accidentally revealed on the ACS:Law website after it was taken down by members of the 4Chan social network - and what legal recourse the 10,000 email and ISP address owners have against the firm, who have the details as part of investigations into illegal peer-to-peer filesharing.Next week, as previously billed for this programme, the team are joined by Simon Carmichael from Torch Partners who will be answering your pressing start-up questions in the latest in our Start-Up Surgery series.Don't forget to ...• Comment below• Mail us at tech@guardian.co.uk• Get our Twitter feed for programme updates or follow our Twitter list• Join our Facebook group• See our pics on Flickr/Post your tech picsAleks KrotoskiCharles ArthurJemima KissScott Cawley
最新技術のニュースをして、Aleks Krotoski、ジェミマキスジアMilinovichとチャールズアーサーに参加します
BP oil spill: the official Deepwater Horizon disaster timeline. As a spreadsheet and visualised BP's report into the Deepwater Horizon oil well disaster contains a detailed timeline of events. Find out how the data shows what happened when• Get the dataBP's report into the Deepwater Horizon oil rig explosion has exposed deep failings in the company's operation, categorising eight key failings.BP admitted today its managers on the Deepwater Horizon missed key warning signs in the hours before the explosion aboard the oil rig, but an internal investigation put much of the blame on other companies involved in the well.A 234-page report described eight main causes for the blast, which killed 11 men and created an environmental disaster. But BP was accused of attempting to pass on the blame for its conclusion that Transocean, the rig owner, and Halliburton, which carried out cement work, shared much of the responsibility.But the full report also contained - within the detailed analysis of the operation - a comprehensive, minute-by-minute timeline of every event, as it happened. BP have also produced a graphic video animation. The report contains a lot of data, including:• Dates• Times• Pressure readings• Events It's a fascinating insight into the events on the rig - you can find the key moments before the explosion - in which 11 crew members died - at around 21:49 on April 20. We've visualised this in today's Guardian already - and there's an interactive version too. What can you do with the information?Download the data• DATA: download the full spreadsheetWorld government data• Search the world's government with our gatewayCan you do something with this data?Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group or mail us at datastore@guardian.co.uk• Get the A-Z of data• More at the Datastore directory• Follow us on TwitterBP oil spillBPOilOilUnited ディープウォーターホライゾンオイルにBP社のレポートも災害イベントの詳細なタイムラインが含まれます
Pakistan flood aid pledged, country by country. Visualised data Pakistan will need millions in aid following the floods. Find out which countries have donated what so far Get the dataFloods have decimated Pakistan: the number of people suffering could exceed 13 million - more than the combined total of the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, the 2005 Kashmir earthquake and the 2010 Haiti earthquake, the United Nations says.The death toll in each of those three disasters was much higher than the 1,500 people killed so far in the floods that first hit Pakistan two weeks ago. But final figures are still to come. The total number of people affected in the three other disasters is about 11 million - 5 million in the tsunami and 3 million in each of the earthquakes.We wanted to know how much aid has been raised so far - and which countries have donated hard cash. The figures, from the UN, show that at the moment, the major donor is the UK - with over $7m. Although in funds per head of their populations, many other countries are ahead.The figures are split between committed funding - which is cash the UN has in the bank, and pledges - where the money has not been transferred. We tried this exercise during the Haiti disaster - and we will update this as time goes on.In some instances, the cash may never be transferred, if previous disasters are anything to go by.We've also included details on where the aid money has been spent so far.The data is below - what can you do with it?Download the data• DATA: download the full spreadsheetWorld government data• Search the world's government with our gatewayCan you do something with this data?Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group or mail us at datastore@guardian.co.uk• Get the A-Z of data• More at the Datastore directory• Follow us on TwitterData summaryPakistanAsif Ali Zard パキスタンは援助の洪水、次の何百万人が必要になります
Tech Weekly podcast at Activate: Eric Schmidt, Martha Lane-Fox, Beth Noveck, Nigel Shadbolt This week's programme comes from the Guardian's Activate summit – a conference dedicated to the future of the web, and how we get there.The editor-in-chief of the Guardian, Alan Rusbridger, spoke to Google CEO Eric Schmidt about the search giant's current problems in China, the future of newspapers in a digital world, and Google's ongoing issues with personal information and privacy.Aleks Krotoski sits down with Martha Lane-Fox, the UK government's digital champion. She's tasked with connecting 100% of the population to broadband, and engaging them with a digital Britain. They're joined by Martha's US counterpart Beth Noveck to discuss their respective approaches to empowering citizens through the internet.Finally, Nigel Shadbolt from Southampton University tells Charles Arthur about the next phase of his drive to open up government data. After success earlier this year with national government, now comes the tricky task of securing the release of local government information.Don't forget to ...• Comment below• Mail us at tech@guardian.co.uk• Get our Twitter feed for programme updates• Join our Facebook group• See our pics on Flickr/Post your tech picsAleks KrotoskiAlan RusbridgerCharles ArthurScott Cawley
今週のプログラムはガーディアンのActivateサミットから来ている - 会議ウェブの将来に捧げ、どのように我々がそこにエディタインガーディアン、アランRusbridger、長取得グーグルCEOエリックシュミットに話を聞いた検索大手の現在の中国の問題、個人情報privacy.Aleksとデジタル世界の新聞の未来は、Googleの継続的なissues Krotoskiはマーサレーンフォックス、英国政府のデジタルチャンピオンで座っている
A year in open data: how the Open Platform has changed what we do We're out of Beta. Today the Open Platform is finally released to the world. Now we've realised how far we still have to go.As we pushed the Open Platform out of beta this week we started looking back at what has happened over the year. In March 2009 we launched a beta service for re-using Guardian content that took the form of an open database and a new way to publish the raw data that informs our journalism. We named the initiative the Open Platform.A year later it's easy to see that we did a lot of things right but that we actually have a lot further to go.When Simon Rogers first shared what data he could offer at our first internal Hack Day, we knew this was something that had to be opened up right away. We recognised early on that the Open Platform needed to move to a more data-focused view of journalism over time, and Simon was well on his way to defining what that world looked like. So, we created the Data Store, an umbrella brand for the data products we offer which included Simon's now world famous Datablog.There has been some truly innovative datajournalism: • The BNP vote across the UK from our spreadsheets• Aid to Haiti compared by country• Full swine flu data• UK election results as a spreadsheet - the only place you can get this• The best election datasetsThe innovation of publishing raw data using Google Docs was exactly what we needed and it came with some nice surprises, such as the ability to see when other people are also looking at a spreadsheet using Google's sharing features. This live shared reading experience is amazing to witness.Then we setup a group on Flickr where people share their data visualisations, and we add some of the things people make with Guardian data in our own Applications Gallery. We have a thriving Twitter feed too.There 私たちはベータ版のだ
Debt crisis: how Fitch, Moody's and S&P rate each country's credit rating. Visualised - with a spreadsheet Fallout from Greece's financial crisis has shone a light on the work of credit ratings agencies. See how different country scores compare• Get the dataAs the fate of Greece's bailout is being thrashed out, the role of the credit ratings agencies is being examined afresh. There are fears over Spain now: the Spanish public deficit was one of the highest in the euro area last year, at 11.4% of GDP. The government has pledged to reduce the deficit to 3% by 2013 and is due to announce a fresh round of cost savings later today.So, who are the ratings agencies? The big three agencies are Fitch, Moody's and Standard & Poors. What they do is assess how likely a borrower is to be able to repay its debts and help those trading debt contracts in the secondary market. That means for those trading debt contracts such as treasury gilts after they've been issued, ratings agencies help assess a fair price to charge. Ratings agencies have been criticised for having too much clout in jittery markets during the financial crisis. They were widely attacked for failing to warn of the risks posed by certain securities, in particular mortgage-backed securities.Losing your rating or being downgraded can have a fatal effect on your country's ability to borrow money on the markets.Thanks to the three big agencies, we can bring you the ratings of countries around the world as of today. Because each agency's approach is slightly different, we've colour-coded them in three broad categories too.Can you do something with the data?Download the data• DATA: download the full datasheetWorld government data• Search the world's government data with our gatewayCan you do something with this data?Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group or mail us at datastore@guardian.co.uk• Get フォールアウトはギリシャの金融危機から信用格付け機関の仕事に光を輝いている
Google: Privacy.com | Editorial There are important questions to be resolved about safeguarding privacy but the answer cannot lie in censoring everything before it is allowed to be readIn a Milan court this week both prosecution and defence agreed on one fundamental thing: some videos of an autistic schoolboy being bullied by his classmates posted online were disgusting. That is why, when alerted to their presence on its video-sharing site, Google removed them within 24 hours. So far, so simple – except that that action was not good enough for the Italian court. On Wednesday it convicted three Google executives of violating privacy and gave them six-month suspended sentences. This is an analogue verdict in a digital age. If allowed to stand, it poses a serious threat to the development of the internet and to freedom of speech.If the development of the internet has had a single theme over the past decade, it is surely the means it has given people to express themselves with unprecedented freedom: often silly, sometimes nasty – but occasionally and increasingly to good and important ends. Hundreds of thousands of comments are posted to news sites everyday, vastly expanding the range of political discussion. There are more than 133m blogs, according to the blog search site Technorati. Facebook boasts 400m users, letting each other know about everything from what they had for breakfast to the latest outrage perpetrated by some politician or other. Photo-sharing site Flickr hosts more than 4bn images. Twenty hours of video are uploaded to YouTube every minute.These social media companies do not create content as much as offer everyone a means of distributing it. And herein lies the regulatory rub. If someone used a telephone to blackmail or abuse someone else, they would be the ones guilty of crime, rather しかし、プライバシー保護の答えすべてを前に、readInミラノ裁判所が許可されて検閲にうそをつかないことについては解決することが重要な問題は、この1週間は、検察との防衛1基本的なことで合意:自閉症の男子学生の中のいくつかの動画ではいじめに彼のクラスメートを投。嫌だった
Volcanic ash: how do you spot the next volcano to disrupt flights? Every one listed The world's airlines fly over active volcanoes every day. Now a comprehensive list from the Smithsonian gives us a guide to each one• Get the dataThe decision not to fly any aircraft across Europe since last Thursday is based on the latest guidance from the International Civil Aviation Organisation. In turn, the UK's traffic control organisation, Nats, and the Civil Aviation Authority follow the guidance to the letter.The flight which sparked this system was BA 009 - a 747 from Kuala Lumpur to Perth where all four engines stopped at 37,000 feet in 1982. An international agreement followed - and the bottom line now is that volcanic ash means no flights.The agreement set up a number of volcanic ash warning centres around the world. VAAC London (actually based at the Met Office in Exeter) covers Iceland - which is why the UK has taken the lead on this volcano.Behind the agreement sits a mountain of data - in particular a complete list of the world's volcanos from the Smithsonian Institution. ICAO used this to categorise each volcano by its type and its eruption history.The Eyjafjöll volcano in Iceland (row 1449 on the spreadsheet) is categorised here as S0 - which typically means tall plumes of ash. It's based on historic records - the last time Eyjafjöll erupted was in the 19th century.This is the full dataset - which includes geographic coordinates and the categorisations. As the map above shows - they straddle the world's main flight routes.Can you do anything with the data?Download the data• DATA: download the full datasheetWorld government data• Search the world's government data with our gatewayCan you do something with this data?Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group or mail us at datastore@guardian.co.uk• Get the A-Z of data• More a 世界の航空会社は活火山で、毎日飛ぶ
Simon Singh's libel victory: how many libel cases are there? As science writer Simon Singh wins his libel case, we look at how the numbers of proceedings have changed• Get the dataSimon Singh has won his libel case - over a piece he wrote in the Guardian. The British Chiropractic Association dropped its libel action against the science writer today, filing a notice of discontinuation in the high court.The case had become a cause celebre, with scientists, celebrities and freedom of speech campaigners lining up to condemn the British libel laws and argue that Singh had a right to express his opinion in print.The sudden end to the case (read the full judgment here) will strengthen the campaign for reform of the libel laws, which Jack Straw, the justice secretary, is considering. It is also a specific pledge in the Liberal Democrats' manifesto.According to statistics from the Ministry of Justice, libel cases have seen a huge jump recently - and big cases are now the largest percentage of the total they have ever been. The Libel Reform Campaign now has 50,000 signatures in its' petition to reform the laws - in addition to commitments from Conservatives, Labour and the Liberal Democrats.And defending yourself in a libel case is an expensive buisness: Singh tells the Datablog he lost 46 solid weeks of work in defending his article and it cost him £200,000.We've pulled together the data from several years below. What can you do with it?Download the data• DATA: download the full datasheetWorld government data• Search the world's government data with our gatewayCan you do something with this data?Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group or mail us at datastore@guardian.co.uk• Get the A-Z of data• More at the Datastore directory• Follow us on TwitterData summary LawLabourConservativesMedia lawJack StrawPress f 科学ライターのサイモンシンは彼の名誉毀損の勝訴として、我々は手続の番号が変更されてどのように•dataSimonシンは彼の名誉棄損訴訟を獲得して入手してください - 彼はガーディアンに書いた作品で見てください
The battle of the land: Jane Perrone visits the Imperial War Museum's new exhibition What strikes me about this Dig for Victory film is how we've come full circle. During the Second World War, people were being asked to grow their own food as a way of helping to win the conflict against Germany: today, we're being urged to grow food to win the war on climate change. Digging may have gone out of fashion in the 21st century, replaced by the no-dig method and raised beds, but the message is still the same - GYO is simple: anyone can do it, on any old patch of spare land. Which is true, but what both the wartime propaganda and many of the current rash of GYO books and articles tend to glaze over is the sheer hard work involved in that seemingly effortlessly lush and productive veg patch. The Imperial War Museum's new Ministry of Food exhibition, which looks at feeding Britain in wartime, doesn't pull any punches on the job of work that is bringing abandoned land into food production: there's a cartoon of a man bent double after a weekend of planting seed potatoes on his allotment, a photograph (above) of boys grappling with forks and spades turning a bombsite in London into a veg patch, and chicken coops made from recycled packing cases. You can get a flavour of what's on display from the museum's Flickr stream of images. My favourite thing was a little cartoon on the wall which helped gardeners remember the all-important difference between gardener-friendly centipedes and pesky millipedes - the slow-moving millipede marked with a Nazi flag, the speedy centipede with an allied flag.As I looked around, I realised that the life-size greenhouse on display probably isn't dissimilar to the glasshouse my grandad built from scratch. That's right - he built them from scratch - as well as growing everything from asparagus to raspberries on his five allotments in the これは何を掘る勝。映画について私が思うにどのように完全に戻ってしまいましたです
Teenagers receiving drug and alcohol treatment where you live New figures from the NHS National Treatment Agency show the number of teenagers in England being treated for drug dependency, by regionNew figures from the National Treatment Agency for Substance Misuse (NTA) show the number of young people in England receiving support for drug dependency, by region. A few weeks ago we published the NHS National Treatment Agency for Substance Misuse's (NTA) latest statistics on the number of under-18s in England who are in treatment for drug and alcohol misuse.Today the NTA has released the 2009 figures by region, showing the number of young people receiving support for substance misuse in each area, the primary drugs and the outcome of support and treatment. The release coincides with the launch of a new Guardian microsite, in conjunction with the NTA, aimed at promoting recovery and reintegration for former drug users. According to the data, the north west had the highest number of children being treated for drug dependency over the past year - 4,916 - half of whom were over 16 and most of whom were male. The primary drug there, as in all the English regions, was cannabis, followed by alcohol. The vast majority of patients in all regions completed their treatment for drug misuse, with only a small minority dropping out or going to prison.Check out the tables below or download the spreadsheet for the full data.What do you think? Can you do anything with the data?Download the data • DATA: Substance misuse among young people by region 2009Can you do something with this data? Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group or mail us at datastore@guardian.co.uk• Get the A-Z of data• More at the Datastore directory• Follow us on TwitterSummary tables HealthDrugsAlcoholNHSChildrenDrugs policyGovernment dataDrugs tra NHSの内国民待。庁から新しい数字に薬物依存のため、内国民待遇機構物質悪用(国税庁)からregionNew数字がイングランドの若者の薬物依存のための支援を受ける数を表示する治療を受けて、英国の10代の若者の数を表示地域
All the major award nominees and winners for the 2009 film season The film industry is building up to the Academy Awards, with the Golden Globes kicking off the awards season in a few weeks. Track all the key nominees and winners hereThe 2009 film awards season, which culminates with the Oscars in March, is well underway, with the Golden Globe nominations announced a few weeks ago and several awards already handed out.Here at the Datablog we're tracking nominations and winners in all the main categories, including best actor and actress, director, film and screenplay. Those categories that have been left out, like cinematographer, short film and editing, have been ignored because they aren't presented in sufficient award ceremonies to warrant a comparison.So far, Kathryn Bigelow's The Hurt Locker, about bomb disposal experts in Iraq, is leading the directing and film categories, though Michael Haneke's film The White Ribbon, set in pre-world war Germany, took the honours at the European Film Awards last month.Jeff Bridges (Crazy Heart), George Clooney (Up in the Air), Colin Firth (A Single Man) and Morgan Freeman (Invictus) lead the acting nominations, while Sandra Bullock, recently named the biggest box office draw of 2009, has received rare critical acclaim for drama The Blind Side. Meryl Streep (Julie & Julia), Carey Mulligan (An Education) and newcomer Gabourey Sidibe (Precious) are also doing it for the girls.Who will make it to the Oscars and who will fall by the wayside? Check the tables below to make your predictions in some of the top categories, download the spreadsheet for the full list of nominees and winners, and keep checking back for updates.What do you think? Can you do anything with the data?Download the data • DATA: All the major 2009 film award winners and nomineesCan you do something with this data? Flickr Please p 映画業界のアカデミー賞授賞式には、ゴールデングローブ賞では数週間で賞シーズンのキックオフを構築しています