[Geek] Good Java Mailing List
I've subscribed to this list from OCI ("Object Computing Inc.") for a while now. They always have interesting readable articles on one thing or another related to Java. If you are interested in Java, I recommend it! Technorati Tags: java
Bill Gates Foundation supports Intelligent Design?
The New York Times is running a series on the Evolution/Intelligent Design 'debate'. Quite interesting. I was startled to see this in the article, though: Referring to the Discovery Institute, one of the main think tanks pushing the ID agenda, the New York Times says:
"A closer look shows a multidimensional organization, financed by missionary and mainstream groups - the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation provides $1 million a year, including $50,000 of Mr. Chapman's $141,000 annual salary - and asserting itself on questions on issues as varied as local transportation and foreign affairs." (from "Politicized Scholars Put Evolution on the Defensive", New York Times)
The New York Times series is just beginning (2 articles so far) and seems to be a good survey of the issue.
[GEEK] More tips for the 40 year old virgin
Here's something funny I came across: "Sex Tips for Geeks: How to be Sexy" where we learn such gems as:
"While human beings often have sex for pleasure, the instincts that drive human mating behavior have been shaped by a deadly serious game of evolutionary selection. Sexually attractive people are those whose characteristics suggest they are well equipped to help you propagate your genetic line successfully. Good looks are sexy because they correlate with health and a robust immune system; wealth and status are sexy because they signal ability to sink high levels of investment into offspring, increasing their chances of surviving to reproduce" (from "Sex Tips For Geeks")
Compelling: interview of Cindy Sheehan with Chris Mathews of ‘Hardball’
"But I am compelled to do this. And other than that, that's as far as I'm going to talk about my family's -- another personal tragedy due to this war." Technorati Tags: iraq
The unfolding of language: Looks like a very interesting book
http://rcm.amazon.com/e/cm?t=blogbridge-20&o=1&p=8&l=as1&asins=0805079076&fc1=000000&lc1=0000ff&bc1=000000<1=_top&nou=1&IS2=1&f=ifr&bg1=ffffff&f=ifr I came across this review in "World Wide Words", an email newsletter (remember those?) about … well, words. Here's an excerpt from the review:
"He takes readers through introductory topics such as syntax, case endings, grammatical gender, and the curiosities of Semitic nouns, in which a set of three consonants creates a template within which detailed meaning is carried by the interspersed vowels (so shalom, salaam, Solomon, Islam, and Muslim are variants on the root s-l-m). He quotes examples in English of what seem to be abrupt changes in sense--resent three hundred years ago mean to appreciate or feel grateful for, practically the opposite of its modern sense." (from World Wide Words, "The Unfolding of Language")
Sorry, but I love stuff like that. Technorati Tags: book
Who has a life?
As you might have seen over at our BlogBridge blog , we are experimenting with a new visualization of blog postings, right inside BlogBridge. I've taken to calling this the Kleppner Widget as it was invented by Paul and Andrew Kleppner who have been contributing some cool stuff of late. This is a snippet from a pre-release build of BlogBridge: What you are looking at is a display of 4 Feeds (Dan Gillmor, Joho the Blog, Emergence Marketiong and Pito's Blog) All the way over to the right you can see the visualization. Here's how you read it: From left to right, each column is 1 day, starting today, yesterday, and back to 1 week ago. The number of dots in the column corresponds to the number of new articles or posts on that day. Hey look at that: David and Dan are posting like crazy, Francois pretty good, and I am the laggard. We aren't sure yet whether this new visualization is the cats pajamas or too gimicky but we are quite fond of it. It will probably make it in the very first weekly release after BlogBridge 2.0 ships early next week. What do you think? Too much information, or a nice compact summary of how active a blog is? And by the way, should the days run left to right (as they do today) or right to left? Technorati Tags: blogbridge, visualization, UI
Check out Findory
I was talking about search engines the other day. I guess Findory includes a search engine, but in my mind it's a lot more. Here's how they describe it:
"Our patent-pending technology personalizes the homepage for each reader, recommending content based on what they've read and what new content is being published. We crawl through thousands of news and blogs articles so you don't have to." (from About Findory)
You have to play with it to get the idea. For me it's especially handy to uncover other information that is somehow related to what I am writing about in my own blog. For example, here's the page on Findory that has the most recent posts in my own blog. But the really interesting stuff to me is "below the fold" where I can see other information around the internet that relates to what I have written. Very very cool. Recommended! Technorati Tags: blog, recommended, searchengines
Color laser printers consume lots of consumables
Color laser printers are wonderful. The one I use is a Konica Minolta QMS 2200. We've had it for years and it works like a champ. Only thing is, the toner is really pricey. So pricey that I started suspecting that something was awry, so I kept a log of when I replaced what consumable and how much I paid. It's a lot! Yes, "consumable ", because in addition to the toner there are a bunch of other things that 'wear' out and that you have to replace. The printer very helpfully says, "Replace Oil Roller" and stops working. What the heck is an oil roller? I don't know but it costs $40 or so. It is actually quite cool how they have designed the inside of the thing to make each part easily replaceable with nice color coded numbered levers and knobs. But anyway, this does seem to be the ultimate expression of the razor-blade/razor business. The printers are surprisingly reasonable to buy and then, expensive to operate. For several years now I've been printing "two pages per sheet" on my color laser printer, hoping to save a few bucks. No not on paper, but on the 'consumables.' Paper is cheap. Does anyone out there know whether two pages per sheet reduces the consumption of consumables? Intuitively , it seems like it must, but I've never actually been able to prove or verify this. Technorati Tags: printer
iTunes and Podcasts
This is just a quickie: did you know that you can just drag and drop the URL of a Podcast RSS feed (a.k.a. an RSS Feed with enclosures) onto the Podcasts list in iTunes? In other words, you don't need to surf the Apple iTunes catalog looking for your favorite show if you have the URL. This is especially handy if the Podcast you want to listen to has not made it to their catalog. Technorati Tags: podcast
A bit of personal PR (at least I labeled it so you can skip it)
Hey, I just came across this:
"The Invention of the Pivot Table: The concept that led to today's pivot table came from the halls of the Lotus Development Corporation with a revolutionary spreadsheet program called Lotus Improv. Improv was envisioned in 1986 by Pito Salas of the Advanced Technology Group at Lotus. Realizing that spreadsheets often have patterns of data, Pito concluded that if one could build a tool that could recognize these patterns, then one could build enhanced data models. Lotus ran with the concept and started developing the next-generation spreadsheet." (from Pivot Table Crunching)
Yes, that's pretty accurate, and it's in an actual book! Neat.
Technorati Tags: improv, PitoSalas, pivottables