Hardcode
Making it happen
Making it happen
Oct 24th
… from Nokia, and 6301 is its first mobile phone to support it. I’m still wondering how many operators will support this considering the wlan-based free calls – a business model may be installing hotspots in crowded areas and charging for voip (less than for gsm of course) ?
Oct 23rd
Dragos points me to mobilecomplete, well, Nokia has something similar: RDA.
Oct 22nd
Bluetooth async connections in J2ME can theoretically be implemented by using another thread to timeout blocking operations … except, just a second, how can you stop Connector.open ? Let’s leave that to the server where I am trying to authenticate – oh wait, that doesn’t timeout neither ?
Oct 21st
Until the official HashSet
Oct 17th
Here’s a nice collection, I particularly like the stock exchange one even if it’s not very mainstream and the webcam one, albeit kind of useless
.
Oct 15th
From here:
MEDICINE: Brian Witcombe of Gloucester, UK, and Dan
Meyer of Antioch,
Tennessee, USA, for their penetrating medical report “Sword
Swallowing and Its Side Effects.”PHYSICS: L.
Mahadevan of Harvard University, USA, and Enrique
Cerda Villablanca of Universidad de Santiago de Chile, for studying how sheets become wrinkled.BIOLOGY: Prof.
Dr. Johanna E.M.H. van Bronswijk of Eindhoven University
of Technology, The Netherlands, for doing a census of all the mites, insects,
spiders, pseudoscorpions, crustaceans, bacteria, algae, ferns and fungi
with whom we share our beds each night.CHEMISTRY: Mayu Yamamoto of the International Medical Center of Japan,
for developing a way to extract vanillin — vanilla fragrance and flavoring
— from cow dung.
LINGUISTICS: Juan
Manuel Toro, Josep B. Trobalon and Núria Sebastián-Gallés,
of Universitat de Barcelona, for showing that rats sometimes cannot tell
the difference between a person speaking Japanese backwards and a person
speaking Dutch backwards.
LITERATURE: Glenda Browne of Blaxland, Blue Mountains, Australia, for
her study of the word “the” — and of the many ways it causes
problems for anyone who tries to put things into alphabetical order.
PEACE: The Air Force Wright Laboratory, Dayton, Ohio, USA, for instigating
research & development on a chemical weapon — the so-called “gay
bomb” — that will make enemy soldiers become sexually irresistible
to each other.
NUTRITION: Brian
Wansink of Cornell University, for exploring the seemingly
boundless appetites of human beings, by feeding them with a self-refilling,
bottomless bowl of soup.
ECONOMICS: Kuo Cheng Hsieh, of Taichung, Taiwan, for patenting a device,
in the year 2001, that catches bank robbers by dropping a net over them.
AVIATION: Patricia
V. Agostino, Santiago A. Plano and Diego A. Golombek of Universidad Nacional
de Quilmes, Argentina, for their discovery that Viagra aids jetlag recovery
in hamsters.
Oct 12th
Highly exaggerated but on the other hand presenting some well-documented truths, not very socialist because Naomi Klein only asks for boycotts, selective purchasing and transparency for companies and the products they are selling, definitely worth reading. The book was written in 1999 and I’m very interested to find what the activists have accomplished in 7 years.
Oct 12th
Many of the things written are common sense now, but that is explainable as it’s kind of old. Studies traditional product development (that is, shrink-wrapped products that are sold in boxes) and services that at that time were mainly consulting and custom software development. While can be boring at some times or too verbose, it is still an interesting read for beginners
.
Oct 12th
Ok so Microsoft finally decided to release the source code for the .net framework libraries – cool except it’s about 6 years late! Let’s see what they could have avoided if they did this in the first place …
35000 threads in the .NET forums at microsoft.com
200000 threads about ASP.NET issues / inquiries