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November 30
I know you're all probably missing that old mini-mainframe you used to program on as a kid, right? Ok, maybe that's just me... But darn it, I can do it again using
this PDP-8/E simulator for the Mac. You can even write your own simulated DEC I/O devices like paper tape readers via a plug-in API. And for the techno-frankenstein in me, it'll run using
SheepShaver on my BeBox too.
posted by grant at 7:45 PM PST - 0 comments - Post a Comment
November 29
So Nike has this custom shoe thing
online and the whole thing seems ridiculous to me. Luckily, I'm not alone, because someone way more witty than I came up with
some great custom shoes of their own. I wonder if Nike would actually produce those if you ordered them? I bet the 'Air 3rdworld' shoes could win Nike a truth in advertising award somewhere.
posted by mathowie at 10:21 PM PST - 3 comments
Blink.com
is yet another server-side bookmark site. If I remember correctly, the first one I saw was over two years ago. Recently, with the big push towards application service providers, anyone with a script that can be used by multiple users is calling themselves a distributed application company. Hey,
MetaFilter can be used by everyone, it's not a weblog, it's an application! Get ready for the IPO!
posted by mathowie at 6:23 PM PST - 0 comments - Post a Comment
November 28
Thanks to the scarcity of good domain names, we're stuck with stupid ideas like
piiq.com. Here's their deal: you put the letter 'p' and 'q' around anything you want, and their site will come up, like
pbookq.com,
ptoysq.com, and
pfoodq.com. Stupid, stupid, stupid.
posted by mathowie at 8:58 PM PST - 1 comments
A century of scams
shows us that government agencies don't have the monopoly on con jobs and consumer conspiracies. Read through a few of these tales of technological jiggery-pokery, and then see who's been zoomin' whom. Remember, the next time your browser freezes, it was designed to do that.
posted by grant at 6:53 PM PST - 0 comments - Post a Comment
Should Apple change its name?
After all, they changed the way we use computers. They changed the way we design. They recently changed their logo. That would certainly be thinking different now, wouldn't it? Personally, I'd like them to change their minds and release a six-slot G4 chassis...
posted by grant at 6:44 PM PST - 0 comments - Post a Comment
November 25
Y2K Spoof Flick Goes Awry
"This FBI agent called," said Zieper. "He said, 'There are a lot of people planning to vacation in New York this year, a lot of them are coming to your site and they're getting scared. I want to talk to you about how we can stop people from coming to this site.'" ... see the flick
here. The FBI is full of a bunch of weirdos.
posted by greyscale at 2:12 PM PST - 0 comments - Post a Comment
November 24
The Attorney General's Office just released the results of it's
sixth annual holiday scanner accuracy survey (betcha didn't know you already missed five of these puppies, eh?) The survey unearthed an overall scanner error rate of 16.8 per cent, of which 85 per cent of the errors were overcharges. I always thought those cashiers at Sears looked shifty.
posted by grant at 9:35 PM PST - 0 comments - Post a Comment
Ted Nelson rocks!
This article from Interactive Week is a month old or so, but it was so enjoyable, I re-read it recently and had to post it. The HyperTextual Man writes and rants about breaking free from the conceptual shackles of interfaces and metaphors. Let the web do its own thing. Let anyone program. Of, course he's talking in terms of his
Xanadu project, but nevertheless, some provoking commentary.
posted by grant at 12:02 PM PST - 1 comments
November 23
Hmm...this is weird. Recently, RealNetworks split their site into two distinct sites.
Real.com caters to the general internet user and focuses mainly on the new RealPlayer 7 (which I didn't even know came out this month), and they've moved all their content creation stuff to
RealNetworks.com. What I find odd about this is I'm used to their old unified site, so when I stumbled upon an article about the new player at Realnetworks.com, I couldn't find any place to download the new player. They don't even mention it on their
products page!
posted by mathowie at 12:40 PM PST - 0 comments - Post a Comment
November 22
A browser emulator.
Now we're all set. We've got a program to emulate software which was designed to simulate and display multiple, linked text documents dirived from printed matter that runs in a virtual data-driven environment made up of digitally created window-like containers that are part of an interface based on the desktop metaphor. I think I'll go buy a book.
posted by grant at 9:22 PM PST - 1 comments
SGI is going to dump Cray
at a Wal-mart price, after a tormented merger and an unfocused relationship. A source within Cray said it was like 'if your sister married your worst enemy...' SGI is looking at selling Seymore's baby to
Gores Technology Group which touts itself as 'a technology acquisition and management company'. Translated: We don't build anything, but we can wave around lots of money.
posted by grant at 7:05 PM PST - 0 comments - Post a Comment
Palm Buddy
lets you view and install files on your Palm using a slick Finder-like window. It also does file conversion, but doesn't sync. Nice. Here's
a screen shot.
posted by grant at 6:46 PM PST - 1 comments
November 21
Today on a web list I subscribe to, some members were complaining about spam and the need for sites to have privacy policies that promise not to sell your address. I have a hotmail address that I use whenever a site requires an email address and doesn't post a privacy policy. I hadn't checked my account in a month, but
I did today and look what was in it. 74 useless messages in 30 days. Thanks spammers.
posted by mathowie at 4:58 PM PST - 0 comments - Post a Comment
November 20
This site
should get an award for being so long overdue. I'm surprised there isn't more pokemon backlash on the web. I don't know anyone over the age of 12 that doesn't hate them.
posted by mathowie at 11:56 AM PST - 0 comments - Post a Comment
November 19
Tonight, I found a bevy of Bill Hicks mp3s. God, he was hilarious. He was more a truth-teller than a comedian. Luckily, there's still people out there that dig him too, including the great site at
BillHicks.com. Among the many cool things at that site is a
huge archive of audio clips of his standup and interviews.
posted by mathowie at 10:50 PM PST - 0 comments - Post a Comment
November 18
Uncle Bill's other hobby
is collecting the digital rights to millions of images that basically make up a large chunk of the visual history of humanity. Gates, via
Corbis,
Adobe and others are charging themselves with bringing digital imaging to the people. The best snippet: 'In addition to the delectable link sausages served at breakfast, Mr. Gate's keynote speech spiced up an otherwise bland show.'
posted by grant at 9:42 PM PST - 2 comments
Ugh! Jakob Nielsen is at it again,
this time quantifying design conventions for the web.
This quote of his stands out to me in a bad, bad way: "Therefore, I recommend following the conventions even in those cases where a different design would be better if seen in isolation." Instead of pointing out the recipie for making a boring, slightly functional site, I wish he'd stress alternatives to the emerging trends in corporate web site design.
posted by mathowie at 11:54 AM PST - 2 comments
November 17
Is it just me, or has there been a trend towards creating logos that look like whirlpools? I have compiled
a small collection of company logos that seem to have been separated at birth. Additional sightings are welcome.
posted by grant at 9:49 PM PST - 2 comments
November 16
I'm a gadget freak and I've got lights in my house
controlled by my computer. But the folks at
misterhouse.net have taken it 10 steps further. There's a web interface to all sorts of things, inlcluding the lighting system, the vcr, and reminders of new mail. That's some pretty nifty geek stuff they have going on there.
posted by mathowie at 1:18 PM PST - 0 comments - Post a Comment
November 15
I found this site's list of 90's remakes
at
hack the planet. Having grown up in the eighties, I knew about half these songs were remakes from my childhood, but since I was a wee boy for much of the 70's, I didn't know some of today's songs were redone oldies. The coolest thing about this list is I could find any interesting songs as mp3 using
napster. Every search resulted in a successful download. Even the Cure's 'Love Song' done by Tori Amos on the radio was on my hard drive a minute after I read about it on that page.
posted by mathowie at 10:19 PM PST - 0 comments - Post a Comment
Dumb name, clever site.
Yodlee wants to provide an online service that consolidates all of the email, ecommerce, banking, and travel accounts that you probably have scattered across a half-dozen, disparate sites and then link them right into your Palm. And they support
sites out the wazoo already. Now you have only one login and password to forget.
posted by grant at 11:11 AM PST - 1 comments
November 14
November 13
'Is the glass half empty of half full? That all depends upon who is looking at it. The case is similar with the Bible. For thousands of years man has been putting his own spin on Religion and the Scriptures and now so can you. Simply select the beliefs that are most advantageous to you and
The Cult Construction Set will generate actual Bible scriptures to support these beliefs. Now you too can start your own Cult in the comfort of your home!'
posted by tdecius at 7:27 PM PST - 1 comments
November 12
November 11
I want my QTV.
According to the current scuttlebutt surrounding the next rev of QuickTime, you'll be able to launch a plethora of happin', high-gloss streaming media channels directly from the control strip in the Mac OS. And with the addition of seamless ad insertion and tracking into the mix, they've now got the mouse potatos by the proverbial short hairs.
posted by grant at 8:15 PM PST - 0 comments - Post a Comment
Wow, check
Amazon's new holiday look. They've added even more new product lines (home improvement, software, and video games). How many folder tabs can they stuff into that navigation bar?
posted by mathowie at 7:45 PM PST - 1 comments
I'm quickly realizing that
everything I buy comes with a URL. Tonight I ordered a pizza, which came in a box emblazoned with
www.DominosLA.com, and I noticed that now I can even
order my pizzas from dominos online. Even with all this new tech, Domino's still needs to add one thing: an extra field in their customer database for tip rating. I tip heavily and would love to get better service as a result.
posted by mathowie at 7:16 PM PST - 0 comments - Post a Comment
Someone sent this to me,
apparently it was mentioned somewhere on slashdot, but I can't find the reference. It's a final exam from a special college course on the future of computing. Question 11 is especially intriguing.
posted by mathowie at 3:58 PM PST - 1 comments
From Today's Suck.com,
comes the story of
plagiaraism.org, a service that checks papers against a huge database of online essays and automatically highlights stolen passages from internet essays, then quantifies the plagiaism by giving every paper an 'originality index.' This looks like a cool application of technology if it really works.
posted by mathowie at 7:07 AM PST - 0 comments - Post a Comment
November 10
There's something truly bizarre about the Zappos.com
Measure Your Foot page. You download a
PDF which contains the image of a traditional foot measuring device, print it out, and step on it to get your shoe size. I'm all for combining the best technologies, but...
posted by grant at 8:08 PM PST - 0 comments - Post a Comment
Check out the new Netscape home page.
They're showing three different designs right now, upon reloading either www.netscape.com or home.netscape.com, I'm seeing these designs:
old one,
new one #1, and
new one #2. I like the new one #1 the most. There's probably more stuff on the page than there was before, but it's organized better. It's nice to see someone doing something different than the snap/metacrawler/go/altavista portal madness, I like the new ones a lot better than the old one.
posted by mathowie at 3:09 PM PST - 5 comments
(via /.)
comes the much-rumored new
4.8 Gb personal mp3 player. I heard about this a long time ago, but it seemed like a fantasy. 4.8 gigs! That's hours and hours of mp3's! My entire collection at home and work is less than 4 gigs. They claim it's going to be released next week. If they can sell if for under $300, I bet they won't be able to produce enough for the demand. The revolution has begun.
posted by mathowie at 11:10 AM PST - 0 comments - Post a Comment
November 9
What comes After Dark?
Apparently ten years is long enough for
Berkeley Systems to keep developing the modular screen saver that we all know and love. With the release of Mac OS 9, those strangely captivating Flying Toasters will no longer flutter by on our dimmed screens. Say, whatever happened to Confetti Factory anyway?
posted by grant at 9:30 PM PST - 0 comments - Post a Comment
Oh my god.
With this new site, Microsoft just crossed an invisible line of decency. Who are they kidding? Would you believe any pro-Microsoft commentary on the site came from a site visitor and not an internal MS employee? They've just lost what little credibility they had left.
posted by mathowie at 1:06 PM PST - 1 comments
November 8
The nukes are alright...
"since most American nuclear plants were built in the 1960s and '70s, they operate on analog systems, and are unlikely to be affected by digital errors." I feel so much safer now...
posted by grant at 7:33 PM PST - 4 comments
November 7
November 6
Is PDF the Java of digital content?
Not that Java comes even vaguely close to fulfilling it's 'Write Once, Run Everywhere' promise - but
Adobe's PDF has a chance to become the universal, interchangeable, cross-media delivery boy it should be. This article by Robert Morgan explores Adobe's options around a PDF future.
posted by grant at 1:38 PM PST - 2 comments
The Beginner's Guide to Effective Email
is such a great resource that it should be required reading for
everyone before they ever send a single email message. I first read this in 1996, and thought the author sounded like an old crank. That was back when 10 emails a day was a lot for me. Now in 1999, I'm getting 150-200 a day and every word in this Guide is gospel. I especially hate it when people don't reformat their quoted messages when replying. Why do email clients allow for typing above the original message? Why not default a reply message to new entries below the original?
posted by mathowie at 12:04 PM PST - 0 comments - Post a Comment
November 5
I buy a lot of stuff online:
books,
music,
stereo stuff,
clothes,
camping equipment,
watches, and
computers, but I can never find shoes online. Yeah, I know it's pretty hard to try on shoes over the web, but I have big feet (size 13 or 14 depending on shoe manufacturer) and finding shoes in a store is usually a problem. So I found
some skate shoes at
Fogdog the night before last, and
I noticed the package is going to be here tomorrow. They only charged me $2.99 for shipping, but they sent it 2nd day air. Does Amazon share their records with anyone? Does Fogdog have access to my VISA records? I'm happy to get my stuff quicker and cheaper than I thought, but it seems a bit weird. I keep thinking I'm flagged somewhere in a database as the gullible impluse buying type...
posted by mathowie at 11:01 PM PST - 0 comments - Post a Comment
November 4
November 3
Boo.com finally launched today.
There's been a lot of hype around this site and now that it's finally out, I wonder if shoppers will put up with the small popup window. I looked at some shoes, and they were only showing about 15 records at a time, which made for numerous hits of the 'Next page' link. The product detail pages were interesting, I liked the 3-D spinning shoe applet. The 'shopper agent' AI thing that runs in another window didn't work at all for me. It spit out the same 3 phrases over and over. It's nice to see someone doing something different though. This industry is still too young to have rules and guidelines.
posted by mathowie at 3:41 PM PST - 0 comments - Post a Comment
So the DVD copy protection was cracked,
and it's interesting to hear the comments from the industry. The DVD Forum's release makes the hackers sound awful. The DVD folks feel like they've been ripped off. Can't these motion picture and DVD industry folks see this as a good thing? A couple hackers decrypted what was supposed to be a secure format and they're horrified? They should be horrified at the idiots that created the weak 'protection' in the first place. These hackers just did the industry a great service. They found a gaping security hole before good recordable DVDs ever came out! I'm surprised hackers are vilified instead of being offered lucrative positions as security experts.
posted by mathowie at 10:15 AM PST - 0 comments - Post a Comment
November 2
The ICQ Protocol Site is a neat resource about the ICQ protocol. Yeah, that's right. I bet you didn't see that coming.
Anyways, the protocol is kinda elegant.
posted by tdecius at 6:25 PM PST - 1 comments
Barry Weaver from the University of Oklahoma has a neat Web site on the islands
Saint Helena, Ascension, and Tristan da Cunha. These islands belong to Britain and are in the South Atlantic, a few thousand miles from Africa. Weaver's pages may not be the prettiest, but the content is interesting, especially the photo-tour of each island.
posted by tdecius at 12:10 PM PST - 0 comments - Post a Comment
November 1
A few political links today.
Arthur, Tyler, and Polk were interesting men, but mediocre Presidents. Learn about them by spending a few minutes in the smallish
Hall of Forgotten Presidents.
William F. Maton's
Solon Law Archive Mirror is a neat resource, especially for those interesting in the Canadian constitution. Every major and minor constitutional act is up there.
The
ZDNet UK Random Political Manifesto Generator is a funny little script. 'Friends, Britain stands poised on the threshold of a new era. The future holds great promise but who will reap the benefits? Make sure you're not left out by voting for us.'
posted by tdecius at 1:28 PM PST - 0 comments - Post a Comment