World: r3wp
[Tech News] Interesting technology
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btiffin 16-Apr-2008 [2884] | Ch v6.0 is out. Slower than 5.5 on my Win98 machine, but they fixed a few bugs, probably added others. I still get freaked out by Ch. Mixing shell, C and C++ at a console feels weird C:/ch/> char *s = `date` C:/ch/> s Wed Apr 16 03:33:37 Eastern Daylight Time 2008 C:/ch/> free(s) |
Tomc 19-Apr-2008 [2885] | http://www.channelregister.co.uk/2008/04/18/commodore_lawsuits/ |
Henrik 23-Apr-2008 [2886] | I read a Danish newsarticle today that said that a technology group that works for the Danish government suggested that all PCs would have to undergo periodical physical examinations in order to be usable on the internet, quite like we have to put our cars through examinations every X kilometres to make sure they are safe to ride. It's hard to grasp how incredibly stupid that suggestion is. Since we now have a broken patient journal system thanks to government policies on how such software should be built, as predicted by 12 year olds, I wouldn't put it out of the question that they would actually try to do this. |
Kaj 23-Apr-2008 [2887x2] | We'll know what happened when we don't hear from you any more :-) |
I know what you mean. I worked in the Dutch government organisation that was supposed to push our electronic patient files | |
Reichart 24-Apr-2008 [2889] | I'm confused, what would be an example of what would "fail" the computer? All I can say is, if my car has an OS, and it was Windows, well....you all know that should not be allowed on the streets... |
Pekr 24-Apr-2008 [2890] | Interesting - Apple buys PA-Semi, producer of low voltage PPC chips - http://www.osnews.com/story/19672/Apple_Buys_Chip_Designer |
Henrik 24-Apr-2008 [2891x2] | Reichart, the problem is of course that you can't possibly tell that. Would my Macbook not be OK'ed, because it does not run Norton Antivirus? We could write a few thousand more examples like that. Perhaps a couple of million. |
Looks like the OLPC road is getting more bumpy. I don't get however how this will help the Sugar UI by running WinXP underneath: http://www.thestate.com/technology-wire/story/383365.html | |
Graham 24-Apr-2008 [2893] | If they had made the OLPC from edible components, it would have been more useful. |
yeksoon 24-Apr-2008 [2894] | maybe the weakening USD make it so much tougher to achieve the goal. |
Kaj 25-Apr-2008 [2895x2] | It's another trainwreck |
The weakening USD would only make it more affordable, though | |
yeksoon 25-Apr-2008 [2897] | My assumptions are as follows: 1. the same USD can now buy less stuffs 2. weak USD has cause oil price to go up and in turn this translate to higher manufacturing production cost for the components. 3. The weak USD can now import less components from the manufacturing countries like Korea, China etc. It is with the above logic that I said it will be tougher to achieve the OLPC @ US$100 goal. I may be wrong though. |
btiffin 25-Apr-2008 [2898] | 4. Weaker USD may also mean less "nice people" funding OLPC out of goodness of heart. |
Robert 26-Apr-2008 [2899] | A weaker USD is the best way to get rid of national debt fast. |
Pekr 28-Apr-2008 [2900] | MS Mesh concept (kind of IOS NG), ironically presented by guy called Ori Amiga - http://channel9.msdn.com/Showpost.aspx?postid=399964 (looked at the low res video) |
[unknown: 5] 28-Apr-2008 [2901] | A weaker US dollar makes US products a more attractive offer. |
Kaj 28-Apr-2008 [2902x3] | Yes, the design work is done in the US, so that gets cheaper to pay for foreign countries |
Production is in Asia and it's shipped all over the world, so it would be silly to tunnel that through the US | |
The tag price in dollars may go up, but if the rate between Asian currencies and the currency of the buying country stays the same, it would compensate it | |
Henrik 28-Apr-2008 [2905] | http://ejohn.org/blog/running-java-in-javascript/ Well, there you go. :-) |
Kaj 29-Apr-2008 [2906] | Ah, finally proof that the world is backwards :-) |
BrianH 29-Apr-2008 [2907] | The funny part is when you click through to the running Ruby in Javascript article, where they show that Ruby-in-Javascript runs 10 times faster than standard Ruby. |
Henrik 29-Apr-2008 [2908] | interesting |
BrianH 29-Apr-2008 [2909x2] | Sorry, 2.71 times improvement on Firefox 2, 5 times on Firefox 3. |
I think a lot of the improvement is the Ruby 1.8.2 versus 1.9.0 improvement, where they made changes to the language to make it faster. | |
PatrickP61 1-May-2008 [2911] | For the security minded, there is a new startup at www.Yubico.com with a cool new usb wafer that generates OTP (one time passwords). It is small, light, and cheap (currently $35.00). But the really neat thing about it is it can be combined with a service like www.MashedLife.com which can manage all of your website accounts with a secure login. With OTP, keyloggers are not effective anymore. It seems like a neat idea. You can listen to Steve Gibson review at www.twit.tv/sn141. If you want just the Yubico stuff, advance the audio stream to about 3/4 the way through at about 1:15 to skip the RSA stuff before. |
Henrik 1-May-2008 [2912x2] | http://www.adobe.com/openscreenproject/ |
Adobe are opening the FLV and SWF format. | |
btiffin 1-May-2008 [2914] | I get a feeling that's an important piece of news. Whoa. |
Pekr 1-May-2008 [2915] | ... and another nail in the coffin for the View .... |
Henrik 1-May-2008 [2916] | it would be, if we kept the focus on View being a Flash competitor. :-) |
Pekr 1-May-2008 [2917] | We should start to think, how to use various situations to ours advantage - e.g. - R3 implemented in JavaScript? (would be slow) R3 core being able to use with JavaScript? R3 Core and GUI using Flash/Silverlight? R3/View and output generators to Flash/Silverlight/Web (httml, css, js)? |
btiffin 1-May-2008 [2918] | Petr re nails; I don't think so ... maybe, but not in the grand scheme. I only got into flash because Oldes has a REBOL dialect. I only got into REBOL, because it Rocks! Feel sad for those that don't get it. It really is a "secret weapon" for those that use it. If you believe the TIOBE numbers, REBOL is still well below 0.09 percent (the lowest they list of the top 50) We have lots and lots of wiggle room. Paul's new database, Henriks work on Forum, the Doc, R3; all positive moves. I think the only thing that may give REBOL a 'quick explosive adoption boost' is a Free Software announcement, but I like and respect Carl's decision in that area. So slow and steady may win the race in the long haul. REBOL is well beyond the 'hype' phase and we still love it. And every few days now, people like John give others yet another reason to check it out. Long live R2, Longer live R3. Once Reichart gets his empire built, that will only be another boost to the public face of REBOL as well. Gabriele, BrianH, Ashley, Graham, umm everybody; making large and small contributions adds to the fire. Well and you doing some high level marketing can't hurt either. Keep it up and keep digging. REBOL is in for the duration from what I can see. And hey, I'm trying my best to drag some of the up and coming coders on compsci.ca to the REBOL light. At least we know that REBOL is not a flash in the pan. We do need to promote people like Sunanda a little more perhaps. The base of rebol.org is terrific but it's mosly hidden, much like Altme. Go rebols go! |
Pavel 2-May-2008 [2919] | I don't think moving to the free software change as much as btiffin expect. There are relatively low number of programmers able to do "low level" works in rebol iself, and I don't expect there would a number of it by the miracle of going to Freesoft. Anyway the most awaited change, opening the library acces already happend and nothing great was heard/changed. |
btiffin 2-May-2008 [2920] | I actually agree Pavel; I was hinting, that it would be the "news" of the announcement, that would hit the services that would pique interest and give a quick boost to adoption (and I didn't mention it, but by quick, I was thinking a one or two day "news" boost). And yeah, so far, the 2.7.6 release hasn't even blipped on many of the news services, so you've made me rethink the original statement as well. I still believe slow and steady will win more than anything. Back to the TIOBE, lower than some 0.09 percent (magical stats) number; we could double the number of rebols tomorrow and still only be 20 per 10'000 programmers. :) Lots and lots of wiggle room. |
btiffin 3-May-2008 [2921] | Wine 1.0 is close. Release Candidate expected next week. http://www.winehq.org |
Oldes 16-May-2008 [2922x2] | http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2008/05/google-translate-adds-10-new-languages.html |
Flash Player 10 beta version - http://labs.adobe.com/technologies/flashplayer10/ | |
Pekr 16-May-2008 [2924] | post that to r3-alpha All group, please .... it is not to make us more nervous, but to be realistic. If the speed of View development is as-is, we might as well close the door soon ... |
Pekr 21-May-2008 [2925] | OLPC 2.0 plans - http://www.forbes.com/2008/05/20/olpc-laptop-microsoft-tech-personal-cx_ag_0520olpc.html?partner=yahootix |
Pekr 22-May-2008 [2926] | Quite nice AJAX widgets - http://www.componentart.com/default.aspx |
Pekr 25-May-2008 [2927] | RISC vs. CISC makes sense after 20 years - http://arstechnica.com/articles/paedia/risc-vs-cisc-mobile-era.ars |
Henrik 28-May-2008 [2928x2] | If one has to criticize NASA, it is that they aren't spending enough money on toilets: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/24841375/ |
I stand corrected: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19623499/ | |
RobertS 29-May-2008 [2930x2] | maybe if they had spent 30,000 USD on a hammer they could give it whack ! |
What became of those custom hammers? (Everything may look like a nail, but not all nails reverberate quite the same) | |
Henrik 29-May-2008 [2932] | soon we'll be getting the news that the first plumber is about to go into space. |
Pekr 10-Jun-2008 [2933] | OS-X Snow Leopard - http://www.apple.com/macosx/snowleopard/ |
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