Updated: 2/15/2004; 12:08:07 PM.
a hungry brain
Bill Maya's Radio Weblog
        

Thursday, January 29, 2004

VB.NET class starts soon.

Any Visual Basic 6.0 users out there wanna discover Visual Basic.NET? Here's a 15-part class that starts on February 3 to do just that.

Thanks to MSDN's Duncan MacKenzie for the link.

[The Scobleizer -- Geek Aggregator]    

Helmut Newton passes away. Photographer Helmut Newton died in LA today. Link to news, Link to online archives of his work. (Thanks, Susannah) [Boing Boing Blog]    

Review: Ark Linux 1.0 Alpha 10.1. Adrift in a sea of difficult Linux distros? Sick of treading water with Windows? Climb aboard Ark Linux and discover smooth sailing! [Extremetech]    

Build Your Own PVR [Slashdot]    

Interactive Zip-code explorer. Darren sez, "Okay, get this: You look at a map of the United States, with each zip code represented as a single white dot. You punch in a zip code - say, your own - and watch as the applet zooms down on that specific location. For example, the entire country is white dots to begni with; then, when you hit '9', only the West Coast lights up; with '0', Los Angeles, and then '210' narrows it down to Beverly Hills in specific. It's frighteningly addictive."

Link

(Thanks, Darren!) [Boing Boing Blog]    

Will Your Home Survive?. Fire-proofing your suburban home [Cool Tools]    

Peer-To-Peer. Theory behind file sharing [Cool Tools]    

Tube Gauze. Handy finger bandages [Cool Tools]    

Jon Udell: Agitar gets it- their front page is a blog. I agree, Agitar's blog is a cool example of how a company doesn't always need a 'normal website'. A blog is good enough! [Roland Tanglao's Weblog]    

Jon Udell - RSS flowing in and and out enables a superior colloborative process. Increased productivity is the message. Hard to get this benefit across. [Roland Tanglao's Weblog]    

Dan Gillmor - RSS may be the perfect vehicle for delivering news to small devices. e.g. HandRSS for Treo [Roland Tanglao's Weblog]Dan Gillmor - RSS may be the perfect vehicle for delivering news to small devices. e.g. HandRSS for Treo [Roland Tanglao's Weblog]    

Dan Gillmor - RSS may be the perfect vehicle for delivering news to small devices. e.g. HandRSS for Treo [Roland Tanglao's Weblog]    

Jon Udell - Never have had affordable writing tools that generate well formed XHTML tables. Which causes XHTML not be as powerful a force as it could be. Need better XHTML writing tools. Agreed! [Roland Tanglao's Weblog]    

Bayesian decision-making rules our unconscious. Bayesian statistical modelling is a tool used to compare new events to past experience, something useful for applications as diverse as predicting whether a message is spam and whether a Web-page is relevant to a given subject. New research indicates that we do a lot of Bayesian comparisons in our heads, particularily when engaged in athletic tasks:

"Most decisions in our lives are done in the presence of uncertainty," Dr. Körding said. "In all these cases, the prior knowledge we have can be very helpful. If the brain works in the Bayesian way, it would optimally use the prior knowledge."

The researchers drew the analogy to tennis in their paper, and it is not the first study to suggest that athletes have a more sophisticated understanding of mathematics than even they may realize.



Link

(via K5) [Boing Boing Blog]    

Home Servers - here we come. The Home Server.

The Home Server

Martin Geddes of Telecopalypse (gotta love that name) saw yesterday's item about home servers and was move to comment.

The key word he adds to the discussion is database. Home PCs will become personal database servers.

This makes sense from an Always-On perspective. After all, what are medical, personal inventory, and security applications doing other than building databases, often huge databases?

But this brings up a key impediment (today) to Always-On, which is the price of software.

As hardware is mass-produced its price declines with Moore's Law. That's not true with software. In fact, complexity (or the ability to handle complexity) increases the price of software.

Look at the price of a Windows server license, for instance, next to the price of a Windows client license. Or look at the price of an Oracle license against that of any client program.

Martin notes in his piece that he's putting his databases onto a Linux PC, and that's a key point.

I've been noodling over the question of whether Windows or Linux will drive Always-On applications for some months. (Windows does have some advantages.) It's the question of price that is determinative. It's not so much that Linux is free as that the cost of Linux solutions move toward free, without the corporate overhead of Windows applications.

What are software companies delivering, after all, once you get the software? They are delivering support. Linux separates the cost of support from the cost of the software, so the initial cost can drive toward zero (especially in volume). That's a key Clue.

An ISP, or telco (is there any difference), or some other company, can earn itself monthly maintenance fees from the Always-On software in your home server, which they can maintain remotely.

I think that's the model for the future. And you won't get it through Windows.

Dana Blankenhorn

[Corante: Moore's Lore]

Marc's comment.....

If I was a betting man - that Linux home server will be running java with struts and Itabis or Turbine, with some coolio basicPortal frameworks - all wrapped inside a social software and personal publishing embrella. All open source.

All designed for talking XML and serving up one's digital lifestyle.

OK - so I was off by 10 years. Maybe building the MediaBar back in 95-96 was too early. maybe spending all my money on research was EXACTLY the right thing to do.

I guess we get to find out now.

PeopleAggregator is back on it's feet and it's sister - WebOutliner - now has accounts. Various pieces of the puzzle - from the Laszlo rich media front-ends, to JahShaka high-end editing tools, to pre-built jukeboxes and photo albums Portal software or knowledge management utilities - are all falling into place. Open standards - like ATOM and FOAF - are taking off. This train is leaving the station.

[Marc's Voice]    

X# Is Alive and Kicking. Microsoft has confirmed that Contrary to some rumors, its X# programming language is not dead; it has simply been re-named Xen. [Microsoft Watch from Mary Jo Foley]    

© Copyright 2004 William J. Maya.
 

January 2004
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
        1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31
Dec   Feb


Click here to visit the Radio UserLand website.

Click to see the XML version of this web page.

Subscribe to "a hungry brain" in Radio UserLand.

Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog.