Monday, October 29, 2007

Detailed Ars Technica review of OS X Leopard

As usual, Ars Technica has a very detailed review of the new Apple OS X Leopard that came out. In (a very brief) summary:
  • Lots of potentially good backend changes
  • System speedups all around
  • Good overall UI interface changes
  • Bad Dock
  • Stacks doesn't work as well as it should
  • WTF did they do with the old icons
  • Finder still sucks in some ways
Maybe I'll put up my impressions sooner or later about Leopard.

Sunday, October 28, 2007

Sometimes Steal Music

Remember, kids: Don't steal music.*

*Unless you use it — along with video copyrighted by Apple — to make your own clever ad for the iPod touch, which the company's longtime ad agency, TBWA\Chiat\Day, spots on YouTube and remakes into a broadcast version, with you at the helm. Also, it helps if the song you steal is hip, catchy, and has a lyric that seems to reference the product.

Update: Don't worry if the song has already been used in a bizarre ad for a competitor's product.

Post of the Uncanny

Again With the Comics has scans from the Alan-Moore-penned 1963 Book Three: Tales of the Uncanny, an homage to both Marvel Comics' Tales of Suspense and Edwin A. Abbott's Flatland. [via BB]


MEANWHILE...
Todd Klein does in-depth comic book logo studies, tracing the evolutions of superheroes' insignias, like that of Batman.

BACK AT THE VILLAIN'S LAIR...
xkcd, the "webcomic of romance, sarcasm, math, and language" — known around my office for its nerdy take on sandwich-making — is the source of another oldie-but-goodie, people playing chess on roller coasters. Pick your favorite wooden monster from the Roller Coaster DataBase [sic] and recreate the comic for yourself!

WILL OUR HERO SURVIVE...
Further evidence that there is a home on the Internet for everything: Nad Shot, a blog that catalogs instances of groin-targeted attacks in comics, such as this reminder that Wolverine's healing factor applies to all of Wolverine.

ACROSS TOWN...
See Mike Draw has some funny, but disturbing, comics.


FINALLY...
Put on your Fantastic Forefathers t-shirt and check out Robot Chicken's spoof of 300, 1776.

RPS or RSP? You Decide!

Take a moment to vote in the poll on the right. The future of your country is at stake! (The future of what your country calls Bato Bato Pick, at least ...)

See also: Pop vs. Soda

Friday, October 26, 2007

Names for 10^n and 2^n

At least in the U.S.A. people in the hardware and software industries routinely use the 10^n names instead of using the 2^n names. Disk makers use the 10^n names too. See here for the difference between a Gigabyte and a GibiByte along with a table for other powers. Someone wrote a System Monitor for FC7 and they used the GiB (2^n) instead of the GB (10^n) notation.

Thursday, October 25, 2007

RPS Variants

We all know that paper covers rock, scissors cuts paper, and rock crushes scissors. But did you know that robot tramples medusa?

It's part of "RPS-101", one of the rock-paper-scissors variants invented by David C. Lovelace. Learn them well, as they make come in handy (no pun intended) when doing business in Japan.

Saturday, October 20, 2007

Nissan GT-R

Fina-freakin'-lly!! Nissan has announced the 2009 GT-R (no longer related to the Skyline sedan, our Infiniti G-35). The last model year in which the Skyline GT-R was produced was 2002. Nissan showcased a prototype of this new incarnation at the 2005 Tokyo Motor Show. Soon, I will be able to whip out my Centurion Card and actually buy the thing!


More at Edmunds.

Out of the Broom Closet

Author J.K. Rowling had a surprise for the Harry Potter fans in Carnegie Hall last Friday night:
After reading briefly from the final book, "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows," she took questions from audience members.

She was asked by one young fan whether Dumbledore finds "true love."

"Dumbledore is gay," the author responded to gasps and applause.

Friday, October 19, 2007

Thursday, October 18, 2007

ask.com-2 google-0 The Javier Bardem Story

I was having a conversation about an upcoming movie. It is called No Country For Old Men.

During conversation the actor named Javier Bardem came up. I wasn't sure who exactly he was. I went back to my desk to do a search. As touched upon very briefly in an earlier post, I'm doing a search engine bake-off between google and ask.com. For background I began using ask.com for the following reasons:

1) I saw a cool commercial for ask.com where there is no narration and the website and clicking does all the talking.

2) I'm a fan of Barry Diller (minus the Dennis Kozlowski-esque luxuries).

3) I am a (very small) share holder of IACI, so I figure I'd use one of their 238,427,530,238,492,034,234,626,234 products.

4) I definitely like to try different things as well as have the belief that certain types of competition breed better products.

I still have a knee-jerk reaction of typing in google.com when I open a web browser. This time was no exception. I figured all I'd need is an image of Javier Bardem so I did a Google image search instead of going to IMDB. Google images is billed as, "The most comprehensive image search on the web." Here is what I found:




Now I'm not saying that any software in any universe is perfect but recently as I've been performing searches with both search engines I've been getting better luck with ask.com. My bake-off is not by any means academic, but it's just my framed experiences. The thing that sucks most about the Javier Bardem search is that I did this at work. If you take a look at the first image that was returned by google, it is by no means a "SafeSearch" image. I hope that the people that monitor the web browsing at work don't think I look at questionable material. All jokes aside, lets look at what ask.com (which is not billed as the most comprehensive anything) returned:


When I first started using google a long time ago I really appreciated it's simplicity. I still do. Given that 100% of my home computers are not even "worthy of donations" as someone put it, my computer has a hard time processing a lot of busy stuff. ask.com is definitely busy compared to the likes of google. At home, something like a google is well suited to my tastes/needs. At work, one of my computers is not so old so ask.com works just fine and fast.

Although I do appreciate the simplicity of google, it is refreshing to see a website that intelligently employs useful tools such as wikipedia and news integration and also related names and other search suggestions. I don't necessarily need everything spoon fed to me, but it is cool to see that ask.com provides extra value when available and appropriate. I know that one could easily argue that an image search should have images only, but I feel like their layout has a good mix of nice-to-haves and focus on the image search. One major plus is that the images are at least suitable for work. It is funny to see that the first image that shows up on both search engines is not exactly what I was expecting. Maybe people who normally search for Javier Bardem are looking for that?

Without getting into a search engine religion argument, ask.com seems to be pulling ahead in my (poorly written) book. (Cliche high school newspaper style article ender coming up...) Now if I could just get a faster computer and stop myself from typing the G-word everytime I open a web browser...

EDIT: I just reviewed the now published post/images and realized that whether you're ask.com google.com or gramma's search engine, image searching still has a long way to go. Half the pictures returned by either search engine were way off. Unless there is a lot more to Javier's career than I'm aware of...

Street Fighter 4!?

As most sites I went to put it, "Hell has frozen over, and wishes do come true."



It's just a teaser trailer with no actual gameplay. Capcom hasn't evenannounced the style of play or which studio will be designing, but there is an actual officical website.

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

The Hero with Two Faces

A funny synopsis of Star WarsHarry Potter:



[Original Link]

Star Wars and Harry Potter are just two examples of stories based on the same archetypal structures found in mythology throughout history, famously explored by Joseph Campbell in his work The Hero with a Thousand Faces. George Lucas, in fact, has discussed the direct influence of Campbell's work on his space opera.

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Cannonball Run

Wired: "Alex Roy has a crazy dream: to beat the legendary Cannonball Run record by crossing the country in under 32 hours and 7 minutes."
As in any marathon, exhaustion and fear make quitting seem smart. You can say you tried, blame the weather, and find a hotel. But breaking a record — any record — takes something more, something personal. Right now, it will take everything. There's no room left for strategy. Roy simply has to hit it hard.

The radar is crazy with bleep! and blatt!, the spreadsheets litter the cockpit like dirty floor mats, but Roy hits it anyway. He doesn't need charts anymore. He is the chart, and Excel and Google Earth and Garmin MapSource and something more, too, a guy with something to prove.
See also: C'était un Rendez-vous and 32 Hours 7 Minutes

Update: Plenty more links and commentary on MeFi.

Monday, October 15, 2007

New Office Policy

Funny e-mail that was forwarded to me:
NEW OFFICE POLICY - EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATELY!!!

Dress Code:
You are advised to come to work dressed according to your salary.

If we see you wearing Prada shoes and carrying a Gucci bag, we will assume you are doing well financially and therefore do not need a raise. If you dress poorly, you need to learn to manage you money better, so that you may buy nicer clothes, and therefore you do not need a raise.


Sick Days:
We will no longer accept doctor's statement as proof of sickness. If you are able to go to the doctor, you are able to come to work.


Personal Days:
Each employee will receive 104 personal days a year. They are called Saturdays & Sundays.


Bereavement Leave:
This is no excuse for missing work. There is nothing you can do for dead friends, relatives or coworkers. Every effort should be made to have non employees attend the funeral arrangements. In rare cases where employee involvement is necessary; the funeral should be scheduled in the late afternoon. We will be glad to allow you to work through your lunch hour and subsequently leave one hour early.


Bathroom Breaks:
Entirely too much time is being spent in the toilet. There is now a strict three minute time limit in the stalls. At the end of three minutes, an alarm will sound, the toilet paper roll will retract, the stall door will open, and a picture will be taken.

After your second offense, your picture will be posted on the company bulletin board under the "Chronic Offenders" category. Anyone caught smiling in the picture will be sectioned under the company's mental health policy.


Lunch Break:
Skinny people get 30 min for lunch, as they need to eat more, so that they can look healthy.

Normal size people get 15 minutes for lunch to get a balanced meal to maintain their average figure.

Chubby people get 5 minutes for lunch, because that's all the time needed to drink a Slim-Fast.



Thank you for your loyalty to our company. We are here to provide a positive employment experience. Therefore, all questions, comments, concerns, complaints, frustrations, irritations, aggravations, insinuations, allegations, accusations, contemplations, consternation and input should be directed elsewhere.

Watterson on Schulz

Bill Watterson reviews David Michaelis' controversial new book, Schulz and Peanuts: A Biography [excerpt] in the Wall Street Journal. Yes, that Bill Waterson.

My brain just exploded.
The wonder of "Peanuts" is that it worked on so many levels simultaneously. Children could enjoy the silly drawings and the delightful fantasy of Snoopy, while adults could see the bleak undercurrent of cruelty, loneliness and failure, or the perpetual theme of unrequited love, or the strip's stark visual beauty.

Sunday, October 14, 2007

The Zettabyte of Data Cometh

Source Linux Journal November 2007 Issue 163. Back issues excluding the current month are available for view online at www.linuxjournal.com. The journal each month for a long time has a regular column titled "LJ Index". It's typically a stream of about 20 statistics somehow connected...maybe.

The sources listed at the bottom include a whitepaper which is actually cited from an emc website along with a web ticker estimating total data created and replicated to date this year. See Expanding the Digital Universe. Guess I'll go read that white paper sometime.

1. Average measured speed in Mbps of a broadband connection with "up to 8 Mbps download speed: 2.7

2. Lowest measured speed in KBps of a broadband connection with "up to 8Mbps" download speed: 90

3. Number of consumers out of five who get the broadband they signed up for: 1

4. Percent of surveyed consumers out of five who have felt mislead byh providers' advertising: 30

5. Billions of Internet users in 2006: 1.1

6. Additional millions of Internet users expected by 2010: 500

7. Millions of video streams per day served by YouTube: 100

8. Number of surveillance cameras in London: 200

9. Trillions of bits sent by London surveillance cameras to their data center: 64

10. Terabytes accumulated per day by Chevron: 2

11. Total exabytes of data in 2006: 161

12. Multiple in millions of 2006 data total to all information in all books ever written: 3

13: Percentage of the digital universe that will be created by inidividuals by 2010: 70

14: Percentage of the current digital universe that is subject to compliance rules and standards: 20

15. Percentage of the current digital universe that is potentially subject to security applications: 30

16. Exabytes of "user-generated content" expected by 2010: 692

17. Total exabytes of data expected by 2010: 988

18. Percentage of the 2010 digital universe for which organizations will be responsible for security, privacy, reliability and compliance: 85

19. Exabyte capacity of media ready to store newly created and replicated data in the 2010 digital universe: 601

20. Year in which the amount of information created will surpass available storage capacity for the first time: 2007

Sources: 1,2: which.co.uk, 3,4: moneysupermarket.com, 5-20: Expanding the Digital Universe by John F. Gantz et al, a March 2007 IDC whitepaper.

oo

Friday, October 12, 2007

The Days and Knights of Tom Murphy

Washington Post Magazine tells the story of a chess player in D.C.'s Dupont Circle, which is basically a movie waiting to happen:
Murphy is himself one of the least encumbered people you are likely to meet. He has no telephone, no bank account, and, at the time I caught up with him, he was spending most nights on a bench in the park and passing his days at his chosen employment: offering lessons at $15 to $20 per and hustling speed chess for $2 to $5 a game. Yet as a player, Murphy's fame extends far beyond the park. In past years, he'd racked up major tournament wins, routing some of the best chess players in the country and cementing a widespread reputation as a player who might have risen to international prominence had his life taken a different turn.
Update: Another choice quote:
The proudest teaching I ever had was I taught a pimp in New York. His name was Comfort, as in 'comfortable.' I was going down the street to my friend's house. I had my board with me. He said, 'You know anything about that game?' I said, 'Yeah.' He said, 'You have time to show me?' I said, 'Yeah.' He said, 'Step into my office,' which was a pink, long Cadillac. I got in. It had a bar in the car and everything. I started thinking, 'Now how in the world am I gonna show this pimp how to play the game of chess?' So he asked me, 'What do the queen do?' I said, 'The queen do all the work.' He said, 'Ohhhh, now what do the king do?' I said, 'The king don't do nothing.' His eyes lit up when he heard that. He said, 'Man, I like this game already.'

Thursday, October 11, 2007

someecards

someecards "may or may not be the greatest thing since ecards"

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Deep Blue for President

We may need the computerized chess master in the Oval Data Center if Garry Kasparov succeeds in his bid to become the next President of Russia, a feat that may not be so easy to accomplish ...
As the summer wore on, however, it became clear even to Kasparov that the Other Russia could only put forward a “parallel” candidate, a symbolic one. At first, Kasparov was reluctant to be that candidate, but when he proceeded to win many of the Other Russia’s regional primaries in August and September he began to change his mind. “It seems I have no choice,” he said.

The Traveling Companion

October 5th marked the 50th anniversary of the launch of Sputnik, which TIME describes thusly:
The Soviet Union launched Sputnik, the world's first satellite, and the U.S. reacted the way any mature, technologically savvy nation would — which is to say we lost our marbles.
This quote comes from its photo-essay commemorating the anniversary, which lists the "highs and lows of space exploration", from the moon landing to the deaths of the Apollo 1 astronauts and more. As for the moon landing:
So, here was the proposal: The nation that had launched precisely one astronaut into space on one mission that had lasted 15 minutes was going to put a man on the moon in less than nine years, bring him home alive, and do it all before the Russians — who, let's face it, had a surer hand with this kind of thing than we did — could. Oh, and this bright idea came from the man who had signed off on the Bay of Pigs.
No mention of "the Russians used a pencil", but there are more harrowing moments that sometimes get lost in histories of the "space race".
Here's a syllogism every astronaut knows: Space pilots are test pilots; test pilots die; therefore, space pilots will die. The key is not to be one of them.
Legendary author and futurist Arthur C. Clarke was asked for his thoughts on Sputnik by IEEE Spectrum. Obviously, he provides a perspective that few others could:
Launching Sputnik and landing humans on the Moon were all political decisions, not scientific ones, although scientists and engineers played a lead role in implementing those decisions. (I have only recently learned, from his long-time secretary Carol Rosin, that Wernher von Braun used my 1952 book, The Exploration of Space, to convince President Kennedy that it was possible to go to the Moon.) As William Sims Bainbridge pointed out in his 1976 book, The Spaceflight Revolution: A Sociological Study, space travel is a technological mutation that should not really have arrived until the 21st century. But thanks to the ambition and genius of von Braun and Sergei Korolev, and their influence upon individuals as disparate as Kennedy and Khrushchev, the Moon—like the South Pole—was reached half a century ahead of time.
One tangential thing that struck me while reading the TIME photo-essay and during my consequent (and inevitable) jaunt through Wikipedia is what it must be like to be any astronaut not named Neil Armstrong or Buzz Aldrin (the list may also include John Glenn, Alan Shepard, and Jim Lovell). Take, for example, John Young. He flew two Gemini missions (smuggling the first corn beef sandwich in space onto Gemini 3), two Apollo missions (testing the lunar module on Apollo 10, and setting the moon speed record with the lunar rover on Apollo 16), and two shuttle missions (the first, STS-1, as well as the first to use Spacelab, STS-9) — the only man to command missions in all three programs. Quite a career, if you ask me, but spent in relative obscurity.

Tuesday, October 9, 2007

S&P info

I was searching for information about the average p/e ratio for the S&P 500 and had some trouble doing so. The reason why I have been searching for this information is because a book I have been reading refers to getting the average P/E of indices such as the S&P 500. The book I have been reading (at a glacial pace) David Dreman's [old but genius interview] Contrarian Investment Strategies in the Next Generation .

Hopefully I'll finish reading this book before his next update to the book is published.

So I went searching ...

Side note: I've been trying to kick the google habit and found more success with ask.com tonight. Score one for ask.com! Unfortunately, I still have this habit of opening a web browser and typing "www.google.com" which is proving difficult to break.

I'm not saying that google couldn't find it but I am saying that I didn't have to re-word my search with ask.com or paw through any extra links. In any case here is the article that shows you where to go.

Just in case the information in this article vanishes one day, here is the pertinent information:
Go to www.sandp.com, select United States, then click on the "products & services" pull-down bar, then the "indices" option. Next, choose the "learn more" option listed under the Standard & Poor's 500 entry. Next, click the "data" tab, select "earnings' and then scroll down a bit to "S&P 500 Historical Average Price to Earnings Ratio." That will open a spreadsheet showing the S&P 500's P-E ratio every quarter going back to the index' inception in 1936.
Here is the link to the data page that I am sure will change once the S&P dudes redo their site.

Monday, October 8, 2007

The intangible wealth of nations

Source:

Intangible Wealth

Excerpts:

A Mexican migrant to the U.S. is five times more productive than one who stays home. Why is that?

The answer is not the obvious one: This country has more machinery or tools or natural resources. Instead, according to some remarkable but largely ignored research—by the World Bank, of all places—it is because the average American has access to over $418,000 in intangible wealth, while the stay-at-home Mexican's intangible wealth is just $34,000.

The rule of law explains 57 percent of countries' intangible capital. Education accounts for 36 percent.

Switzerland scores 99.5 out of 100 on the rule-of-law index and the U.S. hits 91.8. By contrast, Nigeria's score is a pitiful 5.8...

In his brilliant 1972 book Dissent on Development, Bauer wrote: ... "If all conditions for development other than capital are present, capital will soon be generated locally or will be available . . . from abroad. . . . If, however, the conditions for development are not present, then aid . . . will be necessarily unproductive and therefore ineffective."

The World Bank's pathbreaking "Where is the Wealth of Nations?" convincingly demonstrates that the "mainsprings of development" are the rule of law and a good school system. The big question that its researchers don't answer is: How can the people of the developing world rid themselves of the kleptocrats who loot their countries and keep them poor?

I have 1/2GB of video RAM I don't know what do with?

Bizarre but true...you use it for fast swap.

Water at a micro scale

Snow pictures made by a microscope.

Water at a macro scale

There are some pretty interesting views of clouds at the The Cloud Appreciation Society

Sunday, October 7, 2007

Supersize Me TV Shows, Laddy

I've been following along with the U.K. sitcom The IT Crowd. I think it's funny, though not "DRM-bustingly" so, as Cory Doctorow might say. And definitely on the traditional side — more Are You Being Served? than The Office. The show recently finished its second series of ... 6 episodes? Counting the episodes from the first series, that makes a grand total of ... 12 episodes!

Now, we Yanks may be known for our outsized motor vehicles, Coke cups, and waistlines, but this is one area in which I feel that excess is warranted. It really says something about the talent and productivity of the industry when a good U.S. sitcom can run for over a decade, with three to four times as many episodes per season as it would get in the U.K., and be consistently funny over that span. This probably has to do with budgets and the sizes of writing staffs, but I wants me my Arrested Development and 30 Rock, you know what I mean?

Am I just flag-waving here, or do the numbers back up my sentiments? Here's a table to look at:
U.S. ShowNo. SeasonsTot. EpisodesU.K. ShowNo. SeriesTot. Episodes
Cheers11273Absolutely Fabulous536
Curb Your Enthusiasm658Are You Being Served?1069
The Cosby Show8201Blackadder424
Everybody Loves Raymond9210Dad's Army980
Frasier11265Father Ted325
Friends10236Fawlty Towers212
The Larry Sanders Show689The Office214
M*A*S*H11251Porridge320
Roseanne9222Spaced214
Seinfeld9180Yes Minister/Yes, Prime Minister538
Source: Wikipedia

Note: all shows chosen arbitrarily, by me, though I did look at these Wikipedia articles: 1, 2, 3, 4.

Clearly, the U.S. wins in terms of quantity (episodes per season, number of seasons), though the HBO shows bring down the average a bit. As for quality, I leave that to the reader to decide. It's not like Fawlty Towers or The Office weren't considered hilarious or influential on this side of the pond. And as for creativity, the U.K. did also provide America with the premises for The Office, Sanford and Son (Steptoe and Son), Three's Company (Man About The House), and All in the Family (Till Death Us Do Part). But I'm going to give the award to the Americans here, because it takes a lot of work to even come up with non-shark-jumping plotlines after 100 episodes, much less the classics that Seinfeld did.

Postverbindungen: October 7, 2007

The Batman TV series of the 1960s was known for its campiness and deus ex utility belt, but how soon we forget the wisdom of the caped crusader:
Batman: "Cattail Lane and Nine Lives Alley. The Grimalkin Novelty Company is on that corner."
Robin: "Grimalkin? What kind of a name is that?"
Batman: "An obscure but nevertheless acceptable synonym for cat, Robin."
If I had a glass of milk, a webcam, and some Legos, I'd drink the milk, re-enact the Chocolate Rain video, and construct a wall. Friedrich Kirschner's 3-D Scanner shows that he is clearly smarter and more resourceful than I am.

Set your phasers on stun: Raytheon's Silent Guardian, a.k.a. the pain-ray gun.

Finally, what kid wouldn't love to have these plush toys as friends?

Friday, October 5, 2007

Forget the elevators take the slides

They get EVERYTHING in Hopkington. ;-)

http://hitslot.com/?p=86

Intel version of an iPhone like device

http://www.myitthings.com/nathan18/Post/tech/It_Device/Intel_shows_off_iPhone_competitor%21/86920200722357490.htm

Anyone who owns Apple stock Sell! Sell!! Sell!!!

Magnetic Confinement Fission as Rocket Propulsion

A reduced size version of the original Orion project -- capable of reaching 10% of the speed of light:
http://www.tfot.info/news/1006/mini-mag-orion-will-reach-for-the-stars.html

Bungie Splits from Microsoft

Apparently, it has been announced that Bungie will be splitting from Microsoft. Quite a move after releasing one of the most anticipated games of the year.

Requisite Memory Knowledge for Programmers

I stumbled upon this article some time, but never got the chance read more of it. It pretty much is an overview of the entire memory architecture that is commonly found on commodity computers. It also explains how memory works on a high level. The article itself isn't Linux specific, but the website has a whole host of information about Linux.

Wednesday, October 3, 2007

Crazy-ass plasma kill in Halo 3

Talk about lucky. From Joystiq and Kotaku.

Introducing the Vii

Those folks in the east can pretty much knock off anything, including the Nintendo Wii. Introducing the Vii, the greatest thing ever since...uh...ever.

Tuesday, October 2, 2007

Golf Tips

Two ends of the same game.

Swing from Sir Charles:



"Easy" tips to make golf fun:

Monday, October 1, 2007

Inhuman Brutality

Buzzfeed posts a collection of links that I think my co-bloggers would like: Animals Fighting!

Here's a preview: