![]() I wrote three more book reviews for the Tietoyhteys magazine (in Finnish). These will be slightly edited for the magazine, so the published versions may not be identical:
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![]() The Aardvark Speaks: "The results of the World's Most Stupid Security Measures Competition are in."
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![]() Download Fiasco a Downer No More: "Author Glenn Fleishman won't be charged a penny for an online publishing experiment that appeared to go horribly wrong. For a while, though, he was pretty worried about the whole thing. By Leander Kahney." [Wired News]
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![]() Joi Ito points to Social Capital of Blogspace (Ross Mayfield): As previously described in the Ecosystem of Networks, people use weblogs in different modes: Publishing, Communication and Collaboration. By dramatically lowering the cost for these modes on the public internet -- they are rapidly increasing the value of social capital. Each mode provides different valuation methods:
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![]() This GridToday report is dated April 7th, not April 1st. I liked especially the description of quantum-mechanical spam filtering. Here follows the text just in case the web page is retracted: GRIDS SEE BLACK HOLES POWERING SUPERCOMPUTERS
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![]() I finally had the time to draft a review of the book Bioinformatics for Dummies (by Claverie and Notredame). I also experimented with the examples given in the book, and managed to find a (small) mistake. According to the book, the Dotlet program doesn't work on a Mac. There are indeed problems if you are using Internet Explorer, but at least Mozilla (version 1.2 or later) works all right. (I have Mac OS X 10.2 and Java 1.4.1.) Although the book has the words "Windows-friendly" on the cover, almost all of the examples work as such on Mac OS X. And some things are easier on Mac OS X. For example printing to the PDF format is possible just by pressing a button in the "Print..." dialog. Some things are of course different, such as making a screen capture (Command-Shift-4 on a Mac). As a bonus, most of the Unix applications mentioned in the book work on Mac OS X. One such application is EMBOSS, which is also available through Fink. When the review is ready, I'll post it here (in Finnish).
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