Archive for the 'Technology' Category

Winning hearts and minds - and eyeballs

Friday, October 17th, 2008

From the inimitable Randall Munroe at xkcd, I thought this was funny…

Listen, they request that you stop submitting a listing for your house labeled 'WHERE YOU BROKE MY HEART'

Developer mate, international jet-setter, marathon runner and fellow geek, B-T Lim tells me that he thinks Google is going to rule the world.  I’d better not look too deeply into his eyes.

Google Chrome - a great disturbance

Monday, October 13th, 2008

And while I wasn’t looking, Google released Chrome (BETA), a new f*#&ing browser.

Rob Cottingham at Noise to Signal captured the first reaction of many web developers:

Cartoon: a great disturbance in the web development community

Google Calculator outsmarts G-Mail Mail Goggles

Sunday, October 12th, 2008

Peter Black, internet law lecturer at QUT, had an article on “Mail Goggles” in the Curious-Mail last week.  I didn’t realize it at the time, but any drunkard confronted by a maths problem need look no further than Google itself for answers.

Google search results featuring Google Calculator

I suspect the real purpose of Mail Goggles is to get us all talking about Google and G-Mail.  If that’s the case - Mission Accomplished!

Murphy’s Law(s)

Friday, April 11th, 2008

Yes, “Laws” - plural.  I remember being taught that Murphy actually had three laws.

  • Murphy’s Law 1: Whatever can go wrong, will go wrong.
    (We all know this one.)
  • Murphy’s Law 2: Document! Document! Document!
    (All bureaucrats know this one because, when Law 1 applies, one needs to have one’s backside protected.)
  • Murphy’s Law 3: …
    (Nobody knows this one.  Apparently, Murphy forgot to write it down.)

———————
I’ve had some time to sit still and think about this recently after Law 1 applied to me in a medical sense.  I posted this as a comment over on the blog of Western Australian mate, Archie, who promoted it to his list of Collected Quotes About Science (Sort Of).  Thanks, Archie.

April: Jokes

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

It’s April!  You know what that means - April Fools Day jokes.

The Freeze

A local chapter of Improv Everywhere staged a five-minute Flashmob Freeze in Brisbane’s Queen Street Mall at 1pm.  It was all over the local media.  Well done, folks.

The Fake Resignation

Scotty blogged that he had resigned from Microsoft and was off to Pixar.  For a second there, he really had me going.

The Comic Circle

• One of my favourite web comics, xkcd (www.xkcd.com) redirected everyone to another really good comic, Questionable Content (questionablecontent.net).
• Questionable Content redirected everyone to Dinosaur Comics (www.qwantz.com)
• Dinosaur Comics redirected everyone to xkcd.

April Fools Day comic redirection xkcd, Questionable Content, Dinosaur Comics

One poor soul had all three comics bookmarked close to each other and thought that his Firefox was playing a practical joke on him.

The Funniest Joke of All

The funniest joke was one that Randall didn’t even have to write.  At xkcd, all the comics are numbered.  The last comic published before April 1 was number 403 at http://www.xkcd.com/403/.  The next cartoon published after April 1 was number 405 at http://www.xkcd.com/405/.

Why was number 404 skipped?  That’s right, have a look at http://www.xkcd.com/404/HTTP Error 404: Page not found. HaHa!

More on who died in a blogging accident

Tuesday, January 22nd, 2008

It has been interesting to watch the fluctuations in the number of pages returned by the Google search, (died in a blogging accident), referred to in my previous post.  As many commenters have noted, the number goes up and the number goes down.

It seems there are three forces at work here:

  1. Clowns like me, MrCopilot and now Archie, create blog posts containing the phrase “died in a blogging accident”, the number goes up.
  2. Spambots recognise the activity and start creating even more spam blog posts containing the phrase, the number goes up some more.  Here is an example of such a spam blog post.  (WARNING: It’s safe to go there but DO NOT CLICK on the links in the spam blog post.  They don’t take you to where you might expect.)
  3. Google cleverly recognises these spam blog posts and eliminates them from its search results, the number goes down again.

It’s also interesting to note the difference in results returned by executing the same search at google.com and the again at google.com.au.

What’s really happening here is geeks are just having fun.  Some little boys poke reptiles with a stick to see what sort of reaction they get;  Randall Munroe, talented author of the xkcd cartoon, poked the blogosphere with an intriguing Google search phrase.  Same thing.

I know many of my friends have identified themselves as xkcd fans.  I suspect others are probably also fans, they just haven’t blogged about it extensively.

And speaking of friends, our local cinema chain has re-introduced allocated seating.  It’s caused all sorts of problems and I bet they didn’t once think about this…

Movie Seating

PS. When you go to xkcd, don’t forget to hover your mouse over the cartoon and read the pop-up alt text.  If you don’t, you’ll miss half the joke.

Who died in a blogging accident?

Saturday, January 12th, 2008

Statistics derived from Google died in a blogging accident, that’s who.  Publication of this xkcd cartoon is an extreme demonstration of the Observer Effect.  To paraphrase: You cannot measure something without changing it in some way.

xkcd: DangersCartoon by xkcd.

Bloggers everywhere linked to it and now even the spammers are getting on the bandwagon.  Search Google now for “died in a blogging accident” and the count is in the thousands.  Interestingly, I’ve noticed the number trim back slightly over the past few hours - possibly as Google identifies the spammers?

———————
Update: Sun 13 Jan
Google Trends charts for “died in a blogging accident” make interesting reading.  The chart for January 11 shows a spike 1 hour after the XKCD cartoon was posted; this is expected.  However, January 12 shows a spike at 6am PST; what caused this?

Old farts taking over Facebook

Wednesday, December 19th, 2007

I fell about laughing (That’s oldie-speak for I ROFL’d) when I saw this.  Pensionbook has been around for a month or so but it was too funny to let slip by without comment.

Old farts on Facebook
Pensionbook by Steve Wildish at Straight from my brain.  (click picture to enlarge)

Most of it is just too true.  The only inconsistency I can spot is that I know for a fact that my mate Al Bridges has been friends with Cliff Richards for several decades.

There now seems to be quite a buzz* around Edgar Jones.  Please excuse me while I race off to register edgarjones.com before it goes. :)

———————
* That “buzz” turned out to be flies.

MicroISVs and Pen Computing

Sunday, November 18th, 2007

Qld MSDN User GroupA packed agenda for .Net developers this month with two speakers.

First up, Leon Bambrick (aka secretGeek) and then International award winning PDA and TabletPC developer, Robert Crago.

Coming out of the garage: Build your own MicroISV

Leon, developer of TimeSnapper, will walk us through what’s involved in turning latent ideas into a source of passive income and establishing your personal software empire, without resorting to cyber crime.

Also don’t miss Leon’s blog, secretGeek; entertaining as well as educational.

A Pen is NOT a Mouse

Robert’s passion is the TabletPC (”The coolest thing Microsoft has done.“)  He is currently contracting to Education Queensland assisting in the introduction of SmartPhones to senior staff.

Robert will demonstrate:

  • why today’s applications on pen-powered devices leave a lot to be desired
  • how to harness the full power of the pen and dramatically improve ease of use
  • several innovative pen-centric controls for both TabletPC and Windows Mobile devices
  • Windows Mobile 6.0 WispLite ink and handwriting recognition, and
  • saving precious screen real estate.
Date: Tuesday 20 November
Time: 17:30 for 18:00 - 19:30
Location: Microsoft Brisbane office,
Level 9, Waterfront Place, 1 Eagle St, Brisbane

These details are also available on our QMSDNUG website at www.qmsdnug.org.

Please RSVP Early
All invited; attendance is free.  Catering this month sponsored by Candle ICT.  Because of this, please rsvp by email to mike@fitzsimon.com.au before 8:00 Tuesday.  Thanks.

Facebook (aka. Crackbook)

Saturday, September 22nd, 2007

Mike Fitzsimon's Facebook profile. Don't go here. You might never get out!OK, so after ignoring many “Friend Requests” over the past few months, I’ve finally caved in and joined Crackbook Facebook.  It appears some people use that other name for it because it’s possible to waste a lot of time in there.

What tipped me over the edge was the fact that the upcoming Australian Blogging Conference has a Facebook page.  This, I had to see.

As it turns out, I’m glad I had a look.  What caught my eye was the “Developer” link at the bottom of each page.  Here I discovered excellent documentation on the Facebook Platform, the API used to develop Facebook Applications.  As one who is always interested in new ways of delivering data to the masses, I paid attention.

Now imagine that I had access to some data that a large number of people were interested to see (eg, the World Championship Marbles League, the Southern Oscillation Index, the countdown to Mrs Fitz’s next birthday).  I’d be keen to publish this as widely as possible.

First, I would publish a web service to supply this data.  Then I would distribute

  • a Vista Gadget
  • a SharePoint web part, and now
  • a Facebook Application.

Here’s a link to my Facebook Profile.