Via Dave Winer, the Google Calculator rocks. Of course it handles all the weird an imaginary numbers quite well:
…And much fun was had by all.
Via Dave Winer, the Google Calculator rocks. Of course it handles all the weird an imaginary numbers quite well:
…And much fun was had by all.
Bakery-cafe chain Panera Bread Co. is one of the newest food chains to announce that they’re deploying Wi-Fi access. Unlike many of the other companies that have announced plans for wireless networking access, however, Panera’s doing it for free.
Wow, that is great news. The list of wi-fi enabled stores doesn’t include the one closest to me, but honestly, I wouldn’t mind driving a little out of my way to eat food and surf for free.
Now that is a logo. Did I mention that I love the color orange? The Register has details, and of course, all we need now are the actually Athlon64’s.
Cinerella 1.1.7 is out. It is movie editing on crack for the Linux platform. Here’s what’s new:
Improved playback through firewire. Importing of dvgrab and lavtools AVI files. Changing parameters for PCM works more often. A virtual file system for renderfarms. Time stretch based on overlapping windows instead of FFT. Integrated mpeg2enc, toolame, and LAME encoding as libraries. The default configuration should run on a stock Red Hat 9.0 system.
It requires some beefy hardware, but from the screenshots it looks like it’s all worth it. The integrated clustering also looks awesome.
RSS Owl is a Java three paned RSS aggregator written using SWT. The latest version is 0.51b. I saw this come across the WAP aggregator the other day, but I had no way of blogging it.
It looks like I missed the release of GCC 3.3.1 the other day.
Yes, my plane was supposed to be on the ground around 11pm. Yes it’s about 3:30 and I’m just settling in at home.
I’m hopelessly playing catchup, but there’s some interesting mono/python news from a few days ago:
Brian Lloyd has announced the availability of his Python binding to .NET. This works with .NET and Mono. For more information about it, see Brian’s site at http://zope.org/Members/Brian/PythonNet/
Today was MGM Studios and will be after hours night at the Magic Kingdom. Right now I’m off to the top of The Contemporary Resort for dinner. Later.
It rained a good bit of today in orlando. I caught up on some feeds today, but was mostly offline. Check out my moblog for a few pictures. Back to some vacation…
I’m getting on a plane in a few hours, but I’ve got to clear out some news first:
Of course the exciting stuff happens while I’m going to have limited connectivity. It looks like I’ll have quite a bit of catch up to do when I get back.
I’ll be moblogging at my textamerica moblog, and might even set up a webserver while I’m at the airport.
You know youre slacking when your Dad gives you shit about not posting to your blog in a week.
I’m going to be away from my weblog for the next few days. I’ll be following some news on my WAP Aggregator, but will do my best to mostly unplug. I’ll be back late Sunday and I plan to start catching up Monday morning.
Mark has released an Atom 0.2 Snapshot. It includes some changes from the 0.1 snapshot, and also omits some things that are still in flux on the wiki.
I was able to produce a valid Pie/Echo/Atom feed in just a few minutes using MovableType. All I did was grab Mark’s template, two plugins: UTCDate and LastModified, and rebuilt my indexes.
It should also be trivial for TypePad to deploy Atom 0.2 feeds system wide. I would assume a blosxom (or similar) template wouldn’t be hard to put together either.
It just gets better from here.
The National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) plans to use more than 1,450 Dell Inc. servers in a powerful Linux supercomputer that will be used for everything from predicting the demise of the universe to discovering new drugs to keep you alive until that happens.
With all of the recent supercomputer news, it looks like the Top 500 list might have to be shuffled around a bit.
An open letter from Greg Stein as posted in The Inquirer:
The project (tentatively named “Apache Geronimo”) builds upon the many Java projects at the Apache Software Foundation. In addition, the project is bringing together leading members of the Castor, JBoss, MX4J and OpenEJB communities. We would like to extend an open invitation to everyone involved in the J2EE space, both commercial entities and talented individuals, to join the community and build a world-class J2EE implementation.
This struck my by suprise, but I haven’t been paying too close attention to J2EE rumblings as of late. It’s an excellent project to undertake, and I wish the Geronimo developers good luck.
There’s a bit of Mono news today:
Gonzalo rearchitected our Apache module for hosting Mono and ASP.NET. The previous incarnation hosted a Mono runtime on each Apache process, which lead to a slow setup for webforms. The new setup uses a shared mono process for all the incoming requests. Daniel later improved up the new architecture and added dual support, so now in addition to Apache 2.x, we support Apache 1.3 with the same codebase.
The new code is available via CVS. A new module, mod_mono is also available. Rock on, guys.
Via freshmeat, Syndigator is another RSS feed reader in typical three-pane style under Linux.
I do like the ability to easily validate a feed:
Three new options were added to feed drop-down menu, including the very useful “Validate RSS”.
MySQL AB is going to rename SAP DB MaxDB:
MySQL AB, developer of the world’s most popular open source database, today announced that it is re-branding the SAP DB database “MaxDB, which it will offer as a MySQL AB product beginning in Q4 2003. Through a technology and cross licensing partnership with SAP AG (NYSE: SAP) announced on May 27, 2003, MySQL AB has acquired full commercial rights to develop and market future releases of SAP DB, SAPs enterprise-level open source database. MaxDB by MySQL is targeted at large SAP R/3 environments and other applications that require maximum enterprise-level database functionality.
After rebranding issues are ironed out, there will be a MaxDB release with increased MySQL interop, which is “A Good Thing.”
Loudmouth is a lightweight and easy-to-use C library for programming with the Jabber protocol. It’s designed to be easy to get started with and yet extensible to let you do anything the Jabber protocol allows.
Last year, Powell directed his staff to take the steps needed to make the FCC one of the first federal agencies to provide public WiFi access. Visitors bringing their own hardware and software can use the service on the Twelfth Street, Courtyard, and Eighth Floor levels of the headquarters located at 445 12th Street, SW in Washington, D.C. The system uses the 802.11a and 802.11b protocols, commonly referred to as WiFi.
Hmm, I’ll have to head downtown and blog from the FCC. It will probably have to wait until I get back from Florida.
Imaging Resource has some information and a logo for the new Minolta/Konica company:
The color of the oval has been changed to a different shade of blue which has been dubbed “Innovation Blue”, with the five horizontal lines that “represent light and express the wide range of technical capabilities in the field of imaging” retained as-is. Minolta’s logo is sometimes shown with four lines currently, but only in smaller versions where we presume the fifth line makes it look too busy – the larger versions currently use five lines. Meanwhile, a new typeface with a clean, modern look underneath lists the name of the new company – Konica Minolta.
I honestly think that Konica got the shaft on the logo, as they had the cooler non-AT&T looking logo. It had color. The font doesn’t really thrill me either, but they obviously didn’t check with real people after designing the logo.
I just hope that a little bit of Konica shows through the merger, they were by far the more helpful and more understanding company to dealers. Their digital cameras have also been top notch and inexpensive.
Konica stopped making point and shoot film cameras this year. I really hope that this merger isn’t the end for Konica completely.