and band name
Monday, March 31, 2008
Including SLIP, PPP and a TCP/IP stack
Today is happy birthday #10 for the Mozilla Foundation. In honor of this, Mosaic's site has been put back online for Auld Lang Syne. Some of their pages are a nostalgic trip down memory HTTP request.
Go geeks.
Thursday, March 27, 2008
Videro Gamez
Just sitting here in the intermission of Video Games Live - a concert put on by the Utah Symphony (although it looks like it's a production that tours nationally, playing with local orchestras).
It's pretty much the awesome. They picked a guy from the audience, had him put on a t-shirt that had a picture of the ship from Space Invaders on the back of it, gave him a tethered fire button, and had the orchestra play the game music as he played a level of the game by firing with the button and moving across the stage (they tracked him) to move the ship on the big screen left and right. So, yes - the awesome.
There's lasers and fog. And they had the guy that did the viral video of himself playing Mario Bros. music on his piano blindfolded play 10 themes from the Final Fantasy series for one of the numbers. That guy has the maddd keyboard skilsz.
Tuesday, March 25, 2008
Wednesday, March 19, 2008
Friday, March 14, 2008
Thursday, March 13, 2008
Let's see it in 3D
Once in a while an application comes along that breaks the model for similar applications and poses the question of why it was done. Consider for a second, if you will, your common everyday Web browser. Flat, one-tab interface, BORING!
Now try this on for size. You might need a pretty peppy CPU (as in 2.4GHz Pentium 4 or better), but I tried it on my old Pentium III 1GHz and it was functional, but not great.
Of course, there's always the standby classic of the Project Looking Glass which challenges the idea of what a computer desktop is capable of. Try it for yourself and see what I mean. Now, after taking a look at that, can anyone really say that Java is slow? The whole thing is written in Java.
Okay, I've had my geeky moment.
Chao!
Tuesday, March 11, 2008
found poetry
1108 do not include
the penguin and the duck
thus logically we must conclude
that Wagner gets us stuck
Monday, March 10, 2008
Cool Video
Jon, that was definitely a cool video. I loved the animation. I guess if I knew more about cellular biology, I might better appreciate the "micro machines" featured therein.
However, all is not well. At the end of the film, there is a BMW commercial for the Hydrogen 7 (the first hydrogen fuel cell performance luxury car.) People are under the impression that consuming hydrogen in their cars is responsible and good for the environment. Uh, you'd be wrong there. While burning the hydrogen in the engine doesn't produce any emissions (other than water), producing the hydrogen fuel for the car requires a lot of energy which hydrogen can't produce. Therefore, to obtain the hydrogen for the car, the "factory" must burn petroleum or coal to extract it. Hydrogen cars simply shift the focus rather than actually doing something for our environment. Where the real clean energy is to be found is in diesel derivatives. Now, burning petroleum-based diesel (kerosene) is bad, but burning biodiesel is fine. It doesn't pollute any more than burning paper. In fact, why can't we make our cars run on paper?
Anyhow, I digress. The video was fantastic. It's one of the best science-y films I've seen recently.
Thanks for sharing.
Wednesday, March 05, 2008
Normally
I would post this only on my video blog, but it was cool enough I'm including it here as well. I've only ever taken one biology class in my life, but I remember that it was fascinating stuff if you can get past the learning curve for the stuff you need to understand to be able to appreciate the intricacy of microbiology. But David explains it much better than I do and makes some excellent points about the nature of education. The images are great, but the video is mind-blowing.