Recently in Computer Category

Dooced


Little Brother


Little Brother

This is a book that is about right now. It plays out the tension and intersection of privacy versus safety in the after math of a terrorist incident in the SF Bay Area. The book will probably seem dated pretty quick since the technology and lingo are so current, but the story is still great. This book marks a turning point in Cory Doctorows writing. This book is a real turning point for the author, Cory Doctorow. Previous works like "Eastern Standard Tribe" or "Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom", or even a novella I truly loved "When Sysadmins Ruled the Earth" were good reads but it wasn't something I would try and get friends who weren't sci-fi/cyberpunk fans to check out and read. This book changes all that - I know I'll probably mail my copy off to my nephew to read. If you are too cheap to get the book, the txt download will be posted soon I'm sure.

Search Commands



Search Commands, originally uploaded by timbu.

I've recently switched to the newest version of office. I don't hate it other than the fact that once again everything seems slower. One thing that I can't stand is the fact that there are a few commands I can't find with the new sorry excuse for a toolbar. Hope this thing from office labs helps. I'll let you know.

Blue Monsters


I am totally amazed at the way Hugh MacLeod has created a movement at Microsoft around a doodle. He simultaneously captures the best and worst things that there are about Microsoft in a way that is thought provoking. It's funny how many companies spend millions of dollars to create a brand or an internal vision only to have something that is far less meaningful than what Hugh created on the back of a business card. I am not that fond of Microsoft but I want this on my business card.

One Billion Dollars


I was stunned to read that Sun bought MySQL AB for One Billion dollars.

Sun is one of my favorite technology companies. If faced with having to choose a commercial UNIX system I would choose Sun hands down. I love the tool set especially some of their latest hits like DTrace, Open Office and their T2 processors.

MySQL is hands down my favorite database to develop code with. It's fast, it's easy and it scales. I've worked with the software on both a free and commercial basis and I have been very happy with the product and the support offered by the company.

Why was the marriage so shocking? I simply can't believe the price tag. How will Sun recoup a billion dollars from this investment. It will take a lot of consulting and support contracts to return that much money to it's stock holders. I admit I'm happier than if a competitor had scooped them up and buried the product deep underground.

Who benefits most? I'm willing to bet Tim O'Reilly makes more money from this acquisition than Sun ever will. Hopefully, I'm wrong.

Beautiful Code


Beautiful Code: Leading Programmers Explain How They Think (Theory in Practice (O'Reilly))

I'm half way through this O'Reilly book and it is inspiring. I can tell you from experience that looking at well designed code is a real pleasure. This book is a collection of essays about computer code. Most of the essays do a great job at taking a particular piece of code and explaining something about that code that makes it stand out as beautiful for one reason or another. If you care about the craft of creating computer programs you will probably enjoy this book. This book had me hooked immediately when it's first essay was by none other than Brian Kernighan.

Delete me


Bruce Schneier, in his latest newsletter was talking about how to protect data on a laptop. He suggest whole disk encryption combined with encrypted archives for sets of older documents. He then added this gem.

"The best defense against data loss is to not have the data in the first place." -- Bruce Schneier

This is both brilliant and obvious. I am a digital pack-rat and am professionally employed to think about creating more copies of data, so it goes against my natural tendencies, but it probably wouldn't hurt me to start chucking more data. That would make an excellent holiday project!

Speaking of security, the same newsletter pointed to a link indicating Britian never installed PALs on their nukes until quite recently. The had bike locks on their nukes. Given how easy it is to pick a bike lock, I can't believe the world is still here.

Copyright


I've followed Larry Lessig's writing on the topic of copyright for sometime. I share his concern about the RO (read-only) aspects of culture forced on us by the extension of copyright laws beyond their original intentions. If you would like more info, I suggest you check out a speech he recently made at TED.

Even if esoteric points of copyright law are not interesting to you, consider watching the video as a great example of how to do a presentation. It's so spare and zen like, yet the words on the screen serve to completely enforce all the points that Larry makes. I would love to take my game up to that level some day.

Proverbs


Here is a great list of "Software Engineering Proverbs" My favorites were these two.

Q: How many QA testers does it take to change a lightbulb?
A: QA testers don't change anything. They just report that it's dark.

 -- Kerry Zallar

Q: How many software engineers does it take to change a lightbulb?
A: Just one. But the house falls down.

 -- Andrew Siwko

Funny for today


I have to have a t-shirt.

Ephemera

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This page is a archive of recent entries in the Computer category.

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