Archive for September, 2006

Self updating software

Saturday, September 30th, 2006

I’m currently looking at a project based on self replicating content. Closest thing out there is Jeremy Rushton’s awesome TiddlyWiki, however it seems that PHP can self-write with no problems.

[PHP] Self-overwriting Scripts - GameDev.Net Discussion Forums

quantum computer breakthrough

Saturday, September 30th, 2006

Make the electrodes in an ion trap cold and you can stop qubit decoherence.

science, engineering & technology news

String theory all tied up in knots

Saturday, September 30th, 2006

New Yorker article on Lee Smolin’s visceral attack on string theory.

‘The paradoxical situation of string theory

Linking to specific points in a web page.

Friday, September 29th, 2006

This thing written by Brian Donovan a couple of years ago, is very interesting.

Its basically like tinyurl, except that the links are to any point in a web page, regardless of whether there are any (named anchor) links created by the author.

I remember talking about this with Evan a while back.

Brian Donovan’s Ahoy

Cribcandy version 2 launches

Thursday, September 28th, 2006

Based on the new version of Wists, in progress - Cribcandy version 2 launches. Enjoy!

Cribcandy 2 point oh!

Cycling helmets increase risk of accidents.

Monday, September 11th, 2006

Study finds that wearing a cycling helmet increases your chance of being hit by a car.

Wearing a long flowing wig provides the greatest protection.

BBC NEWS | UK | England | Somerset | Wearing helmets ‘more dangerous’

Is the iPod era over?

Saturday, September 9th, 2006

Is the iPod past it?

Apple’s iPod was a form factor success - learning from the mistakes of the disastrous Newton they went for the cigarette packet standard rather than try and invent something new.

Lately, however, I’ve noticed that the Sidekick/PS2/Blackberry are onto something with a genuinely new form factor that will possibly blow away Apple if they stick to the iPod format.

The problem is that Apple can’t stick to its own format anyway - the thumbwheel doesn’t leave enough room for a large enough video screen - and if it gets replaced by on screen navigation with the device being landscape rather than portrait, it begs the question as to whether that is the same design at all.

In fact any viable full screen video iPod would be half way towards the two-thumb typing Sidekick style format that is now ubiquitous on Japanese and European phones which will hit the US in earnest in a year or so.

So for all the hoo ha about having separate music players from phones and IM, that was just because the interface on phones used to suck when they tried to cram in extra features without a sizeable screen or useable keyboard - it no longer does.

What does suck is the design - Sidekick, Blackberry, Windows driven phones with slide out keyboards - they all leverage the fact that typing with two thumbs on a small keyboard is good enough, but they are all terribly designed at the detail and features level.

Now if Apple did a Sidekick style handheld then the combination of the right style device and elegant design would be perfect - but my guess is that they are probably too complacent because of the iPod’s success.

The Observer | UK News | Why the iPod is losing its cool

Geodesic dome

Friday, September 8th, 2006

Friends, Alex, Helen, James and Nancy built a geodesic dome for burning man.

By built, I mean completely from scratch i.e. they fabricated the tube connectors. Now admittedly James is a NASA engineer, but if this had been me the dome would still consist of a bunch of steel rods and a few empty wine bottles.

Flickr: Photos from alexnigg

My most traumatic day

Wednesday, September 6th, 2006

Google news archive has just launched.

I searched for the most life changing experience I ever had. It was there, and emotional to read. In February 1983, a group of us fell 800 ft while climbing in Wales.

RIP David Solomons and Richard Palmer. I won’t forget you.

- Google News Archive Search

SETI and global warming

Tuesday, September 5th, 2006

Would climate change be a good measure for SETI searches for intelligent life.

It seems that long after the pyramids of Giza have crumbled and the last remnants of our civilizations are swallowed up by the galcial movements of plate tectonics, our single legacy will be our affect on the climate.

If another intelligent species evolves over time - then traces of this would be the most obvious clue that they had intelligent ancestors.

The time difference between us and animals that we evolved from which had similar intelligence to many long extinct species is 2 million years. This is out of a time period of higher life forms several hundred times longer.

We can see our impact on the climate on a scale of about a million years. Can we measure the climate on a scale of hundreds of millions of years? If so, would a sudden spike be as exciting evidence of non-human intelligent life as a radio signal from space, or are we really so special as to necessarily be the pinnacle of all of our forebears?

BBC NEWS | Science/Nature | Deep ice tells long climate story