misc

JuicyBooks soft launch: http://www.juicydata.com/books/

Recently I've been messing around with a way to easily read books from Project Gutenberg. JuicyBooks is the work-in-progress.

It's in alpha at the moment, so your comments and suggestions are welcome! If you have comments or suggestions, please send them to juicydata at gmail dot com.

Current features include:

  • More than 200 works of classic literature and science-fiction,
  • Bookmarks - set bookmarks while you read, for easy reference,
  • Notes - take notes as you read.

 

To start with, I've collected most books on the Harvard Classics reading list, and all from the PG sci-fi collection.

Resident Evil and Devil May Cry comic books!

Misc: [more]Misc: [more]

Breaking with the tradition of franchising popular comics by producing their video games, Capcom and D.C. Comics are teaming up to do the reverse.

The titles set to be immortalized in ink and paper are the best selling series': Resident Evil, and Devil May Cry.

We're quite used to seeing comic and graphic novel heroes and protagonists make their way onto our entertainment systems, but it's not so common to see our jumping, dodging, fighting and shooting entertainments break free of the console. Console to film transitions have been made with mixed successes. Some examples are Resident Evil, Street Fighter, and Mortal Kombat. Console to legitimate comic? I can't think of any (fan fiction doesn't count here, sorry).

Salk Institute replacing exercise with pills - Awesome

Misc: [more]Misc: [more]

The Salk Institute for Biological Studies is well on the way to abolishing exercise. They've managed to simultaneously boost both endurance and weight-gain resistance in sedentary mice by permanaently activating the genetic switch "PPAR delta". Could this be an efficient, effective way to stave of obesity and it's associated side-effects in the future?

Mice were given "GM1516", and "AICAR". "GM1516" activates (or emulate activation of) the PPAR delta gene, and "AICAR" to activate "AMPK", a metabolic master regulator (to emulate exercise).

Congratulations TED!!

Misc: [more]Misc: [more]

On June 10, 2008, TED.com won three Webby Awards, with an acceptance speech of "Millions watching lecturers' who knew?". They won 'Best Visual Design - Function', 'Best Navigation/Structure' and 'Podcasts'. Congratulations TED.com.

TED logoTED logo
From the TED.com site: "TED began in 1984 as a conference devoted to the converging fields of technology, entertainment and design. Over the years, the scope has broadened. But the formula remains the same: Gather the world's leading thinkers and doers; offer them four days of rapid-fire stimulation. The result? Unexpected connections. Extraordinary insights. Powerful inspiration."

BlueBottle free email service to be discontinued

Misc: [more]Misc: [more]

For a good number years, I've used a bluebottle.com email address, for all manner of things including website registrations, job applications, and personal correspondence.

While it lasted, it served it's purpose well. It was a free POP3 email account, before the big guns entered the arena (i.e. GMail).

As of the 20th of June, 2008, the free service will be discontinued, and I'll no longer have that address. Update your address books to use my gmail account, or bob AT juicydata DOT com.

I'm not happy about this, but I kinda understand (running a free service is always tricky). I would have appreciated more notice ( only 10 or so days notice was given ).

Au revoir bluebottle.

Supress Last Accessed times in NTFS (noatime for win)

Misc: [more]Misc: [more]

You might be familiar with the linux mount-time option to supress writing access times back to the filesystem. A similar, but lesser-known switch is avaible on your Windows installs. Urban legends passed around the shadowy enclaves of clandestine BOFH meetings claim between 3% and 8% throughput improvement. YMMV! Your mileage may vary.

The disabling option readily available on linux is a flag noatime and can be specified in the -o part of the mount command line or in fstab.

Command-line usage:

mount -o noatime /dev/hda4 /media/video

As an entry in /etc/fstab

/dev/hda4 /media/video ext2 noatime,defaults 0 1

You can acheive similar supression of access time recording in NTFS, in Windows NT up to XP, by setting the registry key:

JuicyData's well hung art

Misc: [more]Misc: [more]
I hung my first piece of art today! I learnt how to use a hammer drill, identify a masonry drill-bit, and kinda how to hang a painting.
This is a painting by local (Singaporean) artist Michelle Tan. I believe it's name is "Beyond nothing".
Here are a couple of photos:

1) The hole in the wall, the screw in the sleeve in the hole in the wall.
HolesAndScrews
HolesAndScrews

The Joy of Drivel: A story of an EeePC and public transport

Misc: [more]Misc: [more]

Drivel on an Eee PC, running debian

Preamble
A month or so ago I looked briefly at offline blogging apps (or journalling programs, if you prefer). I found Scribe-Fire (a ff plugin), and Blogger, and a couple of other standalones. None of them really worked for me. In these apps' defense, at the time I may have been expecting too much.

This is my first post using Drivel... hopefully all will go smoothly, and you'll enjoy more juice queued up from public transport, from the WiFiDark areas and TXed when I surface :).

Let's see how it goes.

RSSOwl 2 - my new favourite newser

Misc: [more]Misc: [more]

I've been generally unsatisfied with RSS readers. A few posts back I mentioned Raggle, which is good (though text-based, and not for all). Raggle is still good, but I'm wanting more.

Enter The Owl!

RSSOwl codename Boreal is soon to be released. I tried out version 2.0.0 Milestone 8, and it's looking pretty good.

debian on the Asus Eee PC

Misc: [more]Misc: [more]

I recently bought an Asus Eee PC, the 4GB version, with slightly upgraded RAM. I'm chuffed. debian logo: The Debian logo.

I wasn't so happy with Xandros, or perhaps what Asus had done to it; the default flavour of linux installed on the Asus Eee PC, though.

Goodness of Xandros:

iShaft Q1 2008 - Apple TimeCapsule

Misc: [more]Misc: [more]

So, the nerd-world is somewhat ablaze with talks of lack-of-integrity from Mr Jobs' minions. Apparently, the TimeCapsule (herein referenced as iShaft Q1 2008) ships with a consumer-grade HDD, when it's touted as serving up a Server-Grade backup solution.Gruntzooki: Antique steamship clock
Gruntzooki: Antique steamship clock

 

Let's play Apple's advocate:

""

Japan in bloom would be beautiful

Misc: [more]Misc: [more]

Perhaps we got to Japan a month or two too early... the cherry blossom trees along the river in Meguro, Tokyo, would have been in full bloom, a hanging carpet of pinkness. As we saw, in winter they're barren and bleak, having shed all non-essentials for the winter.

Deciduous cherry blossomsDeciduous cherry blossoms

Adam Gilchrist (SmashyMcSmashSmash) retires on a high note

Misc: [more]Misc: [more]

On his last day at bat, on his last appearance at the WACA as an Aussie International Cricket representative, on his last swagger with the team, Adam Gilchrist does what he does best. He smashed some balls.

But it didn't stop there. His wicket-keeping turned out to be as superb as his time-at-bat was sensational.

I remember a few years ago, as Mr Gilchrist was just coming into the scene, as a predominantly one-dayer, he seemed very up-startish. He kept smashing. He was unstoppable, a veritable over-the-fencing machine! I like to think that he revitalised cricket amongst my generation, giving it that extra zest, or oomph, that us MTV generation needed.

His last game saw him saving the team from defeat, earning a century from around 120 balls. That's a nice run-rate, right there.

Strength and honor!!!

BuildYourOwnPC: Beige box PCs: Yous specify, they build, deliver and guarantee

Misc: [more]Misc: [more]

Thanks to Ajay for this awesome find!

After putting together countless PCs, after suffering all the nics, abrasions, and head-trauma that goes along with building your own PC, I'm thinking maybe it's time to trust someone else to fill the slots.

This is where www.googoo.com.sg comes in. I haven't used this service yet, but it looks pretty cool.

Please drop a comment here if you've tried / used this service. It looks cool, and we should support it if it's worthy!!

Optimism bob:

Man, gone are the days I'm forking out $15 for a taxi home from SimLim, a sore shoulder from carting my new toys/junk, the abrasions and war wounds from stuck IDE power cables. These guys look real competitive, they deliver free, and you can shop while reclining. Awesome.

Gong xi fa cai - Happy Lunar New Year

Misc: [more]Misc: [more]

JuicyData took a little break over CNY (Chinese New Year, or Lunar New Year). Look forward to some new juicy content, over the next few weeks. juicy offeringjuicy offering

The current year is year of the Rat. Last year was a Pig (particularly auspicious though, it was actually Golden Pig). Here's a small offering to a Chinese Buddha. Juicy gourd?

I've done most of my hang-bao (ang-pao) giving and collecting this year I think (hope). And I've eaten my fill of cakelets, nibblies and sweets. There's still 8 or 9 days left in the CNY celebrations, happy Year of the Rat!

Table of Equivalent Linux / Windows Applications (software)

Misc: [more]Misc: [more]

Link: http://www.linuxrsp.ru/win-lin-soft/table-eng.html

This table is huge! It's a well compiled list of applications, by fine-grained categories, in Windows and Linux.

Next time you're at a party, and someone asks you: How do I run this application in Linux? You can tell them to go to juicy data, and then to linuxrsp.ru.

No but seriously, this list is very useful for planning transitions, but it does seem a little optimistic. I'm not sure, for example, that TuxRacing is quite up to the same standard as Need For Speed.

Some categories seem a bit dated also. When was the last time your boss was pushing you for that ASCII art? Perhaps it's high time to retire the category: "Program for ASCII-drawing".

Bonus Round!!!

Link: http://www.icculus.org/lgfaq/gamelist.php

Plant plague identification time

Misc: [more]Misc: [more]

Plant PlaguePlant Plague

We've got a citronella plant, which is awesome at keeping away mosquitos, but also seems to be good at being diseased.

Does anyone recognize these white, round, oily looking little things? Perhaps they're aphids?

If you have an identification, or suggestion, please comment :). I'm hoping that this is normal, and non-detrimental to the shrub.

Free book: Down and out in the magic kingdom

Misc: [more]Misc: [more]

Link: http://craphound.com/down/Cory_Doctorow_-_Down_and_Out_in_the_Magic_Kingdom.htm

This is a little old, but it's good to resurface these things now and then.

Google search for the significance and / or philosophy / culture of this book. Cory wittingly published this simultaneously in the formats:

a) traditional dead-tree,

b) creative-commons, multi-format, share-disperse-be-free.

I'm exagerrating (b) here, but, his experiment is interesting, and paved the way for his work / ideas over the last few years. When you read boing boing, it's good to keep this history in mind. Crazy lefties changing the world under us! :)

-- end rant , start review --

Hobbits!

Misc: [more]Misc: [more]

It's official. There's to be more hobbitses, and their controller will be: Guillermo del Toro!

Guillermo del Toro's history reads: Cronos - Mimic - The Tequila Gang - Espinazo del Diablo - Blade II - Hellboy - Laberinto del fauno, El.

His trade mark is insects, or insectology. There ya go.

Guillermo del Toro may be currently working on Hellboy 2: The Golden Army. And he has a photographic memory and his father was kidnapped in 1997 (returned after ransom).

 

Rules for life : Artsy

Misc: [more]Misc: [more]

Just posted by Cory Doctorow (boingboing), citing Michal Migurski's blog, re-typing 'Sister Coria Kent'.

Cory's post missed the John Cage quote. But that's ok coz it only made sense to Mr Cage.

 

  1. Find a place you trust and then try trusting it for a while.
  2. General duties of a student: pull everything out of your teacher, pull everything out of your fellow students.
  3. General duties of a teacher: pull everything out of your students.
  4. Consider everything an experiment.

South of the border, West of the Sun - review

Misc: [more]Misc: [more]

Haruki Murakami's lyrical style doesn't disappoint, I felt this was in some ways similar to Wind-Up Bird Chronicles (although alot lighter on the bookshelf). The ideas of finding ones' place within oneself, honest introspection and the passing of time, flow through the pages beautifully. The main characters are very human, very, um, everbody's normal until you get to know them. They're all well written, solid characters.

 

It's just a really beautiful book. (I am a Murakami fan though..).

Synopsis

Hajime meets the love of his life when he's twelve. They move apart, go to different schools and lose touch. After taking on a family and building a career, Hajime meets Shimamoto again. He finds his feelings are still strong, and faces a dilemma...

Edgar Allan Poe the hoaxy trickster

Misc: [more]Misc: [more]

Edgar Allan Poe

I always thought of Edgar Allan Poe as a dark, brooding, possibly misanthropic type, interested in science, the macabre and delighting in his audience's shock and awe.

Should I have been expecting that he was also a trickster? Perhaps yes. He is after all an all-time great story-teller, so drawing people into his confidence, into his perception of relity, was kind of his thing. And he had to eat.

I have a tendancy to think of all historical figures as stand-up citizens, all acting sensibly, reasonably and with honor and fidelity. Naive?

I was reading a collection of flight-themed short stories today, and came across 'The Balloon Hoax'. Poe submitted this to the Sun newspaper, claiming it was non-fiction. The Sun published it in good faith, and had to retract it a few days later.

UMDH (Memory profiling a la Debugging Tools for Windows) - User Mode Dump Heap

Misc: [more]Misc: [more]

I'm looking at analysing our memory usage to get a few metrics at work, and haven't had much luck with the 'usual' tools .. purify, bounds checker, manual instrumentation, typeperf.

OK, I lie, typeperf rocks. It's super-uber-mega-hypo useful. But it'll only give you an overview, you won't have visibility inside your app with that one.

IBM Rational Purify was complaining about no large enough contiguous blocks, and BoundsChecker refused to start (perhaps my installation has bugged out).

So, I returned to my favourite Windows debugging suite, the excellent, superb, unsurpassed, Debugging Tools for Windows (google, download, install it now). Trawling through it's documentation (and after looking at !va_dump and !heap commands for a while), I came across UMDH.

UMDH

Syndicate content