| What is your favourite "programming musiuc" (non-technical question)
|
|
27 Sep 06 |
|
[print
link
all
] |
|
I came across this insane Dilbert-like posting
in the comp.lang.java.programmer group.
> Hi all,
> When you are programming, what kind of music or which song you love to
> hear? Is it classic music, piano, or pop music? Is it by male singer or
> by female singer?
I don't listen to music as such; I listen to an 8-second mp3-loop of my
manager screeching, puce-faced, at the top voice, "WTF is taking you so
long?!?! RELEASE THE CODE!!!! RELEASE THE CODE!!!! WTF AM I PAYING YOUR
SALARY FOR?!?! RELEASE THE F%#KING CODE, YOUR WORTHLESS, DISGUSTING,
INTOLERABLE PIECE OF S@&T!!!"
> I think sometime hearing music would be helpful in
> our productivity, right?
I find that this mp3-loop truly helps <TWITCH> my productivity. I love
<TWITCH> my manager, and dream of him <TWITCH><TWITCH><releases safety>
often ...
> Regards,
> Sam Huang
.ed
|
| Tyger - a great short film
|
|
23 Sep 06 |
|
[print
link
all
] |
A great short film about William Blake’s poem "The Tyger".
www.guilherme.tv/tyger
|
| Ericsson has a Ruby community
|
|
15 Sep 06 |
|
[print
link
all
] |
|
Hey, from the company that did "buy" Erlang .. another nice news:
They have a ruby community.
|
| Small Teams Make Better Software
|
|
30 Aug 06 |
|
[print
link
all
] |
|
I saw that a small team of good people seemed to outperform the most
disciplined process, toolset, or philosophy. A bad team usually failed to
produce a good result, regardless of what magic process was applied. Article
|
| European Ruby Conference, Euruko 06
|
|
27 Aug 06 |
|
[print
link
all
] |
wiki
Euruko06, the European Ruby Conference,
will be in Munich, November 4 and 5, 2006.
******************************************
* Conference wiki: http://www.euruko.com *
******************************************
This year, we'll meet in a hotel in Munich,
locations are being searched for. If you know
of a good place, let us know, too.
The conference will begin at 10 AM on Saturday and
end sometime on Sunday.
******************************************
* matz has offered to give us a *
* Skype video message. *
******************************************
Audience: Everybody interested in Ruby is most welcome!
Fee: minimal fee of 20 EUR, T-Shirts will be extra
(cash in small unmarked bills)
Registration: wiki at http://www.euruko.com, follow the link
to the Visitors' Page.
Talks: If you want to give a talk, please put down
topic (an short description) on the wiki, too.
******************************************
* Design the conference T-Shirt *
* or I'll do it again ... *
******************************************
If you have questions drop us a note at
euruk...@euruko.com
See you in Munich,
|
| Approximity GmbH offers commercial ruby and R support
|
|
21 Aug 06 |
|
[print
link
all
] |
|
When applying for projects from time to time big Fortune 500 companies turn
down interesting solutions as no company out there offers commercial
support. Therfore, if anybody is out there trying todo great stuff in R or
ruby and the client requires commercial ruby, rails or R support, we are
happy to help.
We have been using R and ruby since 1998.
Please send requests to armin (at) approximity.com.
|
| Ruby Weekly News: 7th-13th August 2006
|
|
20 Aug 06 |
|
[print
link
all
] |
|
As always a great summary by Tim Sutherland about what is going on in the
ruby universe. www.rubyweeklynews.org/20060813.html
|
| Semi-automatic test generator and code annotator
|
|
24 Jul 06 |
|
[print
link
all
] |
|
xmpfilter.rb is basically a source code filter than can generate assertions
for your tests, and annotate the code to show intermediate results.
Make sure you read the entire article
|
| Smalltalk: 15 lines, XAML-C#L: 1000 lines
|
|
24 Jul 06 |
|
[print
link
all
] |
|
A nice example, and probably more typical than one thinks: Using the right
tool for the right job greatly reduces development time.
Read the full story.
|
| Parallel coordinates
|
|
22 Jul 06 |
|
[print
link
all
] |
|
Parallel coordinates: visualization & data mining for high dimensional
datasets by Al Inselberg www.stanford.edu/group/mmds/slides/inselberg-mmds.pdf
Make sure you check out Inselberg’s homepage.
Very fascinating slides. Absolutely worth reading.
|
| Ruby Hacking Guide
|
|
15 Jul 06 |
|
[print
link
all
] |
|
This is the home page of the
project to translate into English the Ruby Hacking Guide. The RHG is a book
that explains how the ruby interpreter (the official C implementation of
the Ruby language) works internally.
To fully understand it, you need a good knowledge of C and Ruby. The
original book includes a Ruby tutorial (chapter 1), but it has not been
translated yet, and we think there are more important chapters to translate
first. So if you have not done it yet, you should read a book like the
Pickaxe first.
Please note that this book was based on the source code of ruby 1.7.3 so
there are a few small differences to the current version of ruby. However,
these differences may make the source code simpler to understand and the
Ruby Hacking Guide is a good starting point before looking into the ruby
source code. The version of the source code used can be downloaded here: i.loveruby.net/ja/rhg/ar/ruby-rhg.tar.gz.
Many thanks to RubyForge for hosting us and to Minero AOKI for letting us
translate his work.
rhg.rubyforge.org/
|
| R Graph Gallery
|
|
20 Jun 06 |
|
[print
link
all
] |
|
I came across this useful posting by Gregor Gorjanc in the r-help ML.
- R graphical manuals (this is awesome page as there are all help pages of
all packages on CRAN and probably even more and all graphics examples are
displayed! - more than 8000 images!)
bg9.imslab.co.jp/Rhelp/
This is a very nice addition to already existing R graph and movies
galleries
addictedtor.free.fr/graphiques/
addictedtor.free.fr/movies/
|
| Refactoring Demo Screencast
|
|
21 May 06 |
|
[print
link
all
] |
|
Four different ways of performing the refactoring "Extract
Method".
xp123.com/xplor/xp0605/index.shtml
|
| Multitouch Interaction Research
|
|
13 May 06 |
|
[print
link
all
] |
|
Bi-manual, multi-point, and multi-user interactions on a graphical
interaction surface.
Amazing video. I want
one!
|
| Google Tech Talks
|
|
11 May 06 |
|
[print
link
all
] |
|
Google has tons of interestings videos worth
watch about a range of different topics.
This morning I watched
Kevin Kelly’s "The next 50 years of science".
The scientific method which provides us with so many … all
technological goodies does not resemble the science of 1600. Ever since
Bacon, science has undergone a slow evolution.
Landmarks in the history of the scientific method are the invention of
libraries, indexes, citations, controlled experiments, peer review,
placebos, double blind experiments, randomization, and search among others.
At the core of the scientific method is the structuring of information.
In the next 50 years, as the technologies of information and knowledge
accelerate, the nature of the scientific process will change even more than
it has in the last 400 years. We can’t predict what specific
inventions will arise in the next 50 years, but based on long-term trends
in epistemic tools, I believe we can speculate on how the scientific method
itself — that is, how we know — will change in the next five
decades
|
| Sven's idea scratchpad
|
|
27 Apr 06 |
|
[print
link
all
] |
|
Sven C. Koehler has finally put up his own blog "Symbol
Thinking".
|
| A bad citizen in Javaland
|
|
27 Apr 06 |
|
[print
link
all
] |
|
Excellent blog entry
by Darren Hobbs.
|
| On myth and religion in the incredibly ugly network
|
|
26 Apr 06 |
|
[print
link
all
] |
Comop.lang.smalltalk excerpt between Joachim Tuchel and Andre Schnoor.
Joachim Tuchel wrote:
> >> ... Why on earth does it seem everybody believes that JBOSS or any EJB
> >> environment will scale with no limits? After all, it's a bunch of Java
> >> classes running in a JVM, just like seaside is a bunch of SMalltalk
> >> classes runnung in a Smalltalk-VM....
Andre Schnoor answered
Marketing. The right buzz words and false promises within a perfect
> opportunity window in history - and there you are. If something is new (I
> mean so new that nobody can actually grasp it), hype and buzz sometimes
> work like religion: You believe what you want to believe. You find
> yourself spreading the word before you actually had a look at it. Suddenly
> there are 5 million people chiming in, while only a mere 0,05% of them
> really know what they are talking about. The big bang of myths.
>
> I ran rather large sites with 8 million+ monthly visitors and 7-8
> Terrabytes of bandwith on a single 4 CPU Sun. Others required 16 Suns for
> less traffic. It mostly depends on your database model and how frequently
> users interact with content that is compiled "live" (not cached). The
> basic application scripting doesn't account much to it.
>
> From the perspective of a classic software engineer (and with an extra
> bias towards German "Gruendlichkeit"), web technology in general is a huge
> pile of complicated, heterogenous, incredibly expensive and annoying crap.
> All that in-band signalling, all those stone age protocols and character
> sets, quick & dirty hacks, spaghetti scripting,
> what-happens-next-machines ... think about how incredibly *ugly* this
> network actually is ;-)
>
> Seaside looks like a very beautiful and innovative thing. You should give
> it a try.
>
>
..
Largo Argentino ..
|
| Top ten lines of entrepreneurs
|
|
26 Apr 06 |
|
[print
link
all
] |
|
Guy Kawasaki has a nice blog posting.
.. and here are the top ten lies of
venture capitalists.
|
|
|