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Team room   22 Dec 04
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William Pietri put some nice pics and text online.

Working Effectively With Legacy Code   20 Dec 04
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Interesting article by Michael Feathers. Michael also wrote a book about the same subject.

GNU/Linux Desktop Survival Guide   18 Dec 04
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Good free book.

Webcam to watch penguins :-)   18 Dec 04
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Enjoy!

Ubuntu - nice Linux distro based on debian   18 Dec 04
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Their solgan: "Ubuntu" is an ancient African word, meaning "humanity to others". Ubuntu also means "I am what I am because of who we all are". The Ubuntu Linux distribution brings the spirit of Ubuntu to the software world.

Logo:

It comes with Gnome 2.8 and a 2.6 Kernel. The overall install was amazingly simple. Download it.

DE: Bildblog: Notizen ueber eine grosse deutsche Boulevardzeitung   11 Dec 04
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Bildblog ist ein Watchblog.

Was heute in der "Bild"-Zeitung steht, steht morgen ueberall. Vielleicht sollte man sich also mal genauer anschauen, was sie schreibt. Die kleinen Merkwuerdigkeiten und das grosse Schlimme.

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DE: LaTeX vs XSL-FO   07 Dec 04
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Wir haben eine kurze Zusammenfassung geschrieben.

Linux Clustering with Ruby Queue: Small Is Beautiful   07 Dec 04
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Nice article in the Linuxjournal

Using Ruby and SQLite to create Linux clusters that take advantage of idle nodes and bypass expensive software solutions.

My friend Dave Clements always is game for a brainstorming session, especially if I’m buying the coffee. Recently, we met at the usual place and I explained my problem to him over the first cup. My office had a bunch of Linux nodes sitting idle and a stack of work lined up for them, but we had no way to distribute the work to them. Plus, the deadline for project completion loomed over us.

Over the second cup of coffee, I related how I had evaluated several packages, such as openMosix and Sun’s Grid Engine, but ultimately had decided against them. It all came down to this: I wanted something leaner than everything I’d seen, something fast and easy, not a giant software system that would require weeks of work to install and configure.

After the third cup of coffee, we had it: Why not simply create an NFS-mounted priority queue and let nodes pull jobs from it as fast as they could? No scheduler, no process migration, no central controller, no kernel mods—simply a collection of compute nodes working as fast as possible to complete a list of tasks. But there was one big question: was accessing an NFS-mounted queue concurrently from many nodes possible to do safely? Armed with my favorite development tools—a brilliant IDE named Vim and the Ruby programming language—I aimed to find out. link

Cryptic signature   05 Dec 04
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Who says we can’t produce hard to understand code in Ruby? :-) Brian Mitchell posted this signature in a ruby-ML mailing, which Florian Gross shortened even further. Any clue .. what it does? :-)
 32.times{|y|print" "*(31-y),(0..y).map{|x|~y&x>0?" .":" A"},$/}

10x10: 100 Words and Pictures that Define the Time   04 Dec 04
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A big thx to Sven C. Koehler for the link.

Every hour, 10x10 scans the RSS feeds of several leading international news sources, and performs an elaborate process of weighted linguistic analysis on the text contained in their top news stories. After this process, conclusions are automatically drawn about the hour’s most important words. The top 100 words are chosen, along with 100 corresponding images, culled from the source news stories. At the end of each day, month, and year, 10x10 looks back through its archives to conclude the top 100 words for the given time period. In this way, a constantly evolving record of our world is formed, based on prominent world events, without any human input.

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408 to 417 of 694 articles Syndicate: full/short