Random Freezing
Grok Headline matches for Random Freezing
Practically Freezing!
Practically Freezing!
12/13/2003 07:05 AMJust got home and the thermometer in my car said 7.5 degrees Celsius.
Very cold! Maybe where you live it wouldn't be so cold, but here they
don't even sell clothes made for such weather and they certainly don't
make the buildings for it. brrrrrrrhhhh... Must run and stand in front
of the heater....
Global Freezing? Do Tell, NASA Says
Global Freezing? Do Tell, NASA Says
05/03/2004 07:26 PMNASA has clarified its stance on whether its scientists can publicly
discuss the coming disaster movie, "The Day After Tomorrow."
EU to rule on freezing Microsoft curbs
EU to rule on freezing Microsoft curbs
12/19/2004 02:56 PMCNN Money Dec 19 2004 4:23PM GMT
N. Korea considers freezing nuke program
N. Korea considers freezing nuke program
06/24/2004 10:08 AMCNN.com - Bush looking at freezing
domestic spending - Dec 17, 2004
CNN.com - Bush looking at freezing
domestic spending - Dec 17, 2004
12/19/2004 03:52 PMBush looking at freezing domestic spending 12/18 .. cutting the
domestic
budget
cnn.com/2004/ALLPOLITICS/12/17/bush.spending.ap/index.html
track
this site | 2 links
Freezing The Play Order Of A Shuffled
iTunes Playlist
Freezing The Play Order Of A Shuffled
iTunes Playlist
06/22/2005 02:01 AM By Obaum's Delirium
Toronto pumps near-freezing lake water
into its summer office-towers
Toronto pumps near-freezing lake water
into its summer office-towers
08/23/2004 06:36 AMCory Doctorow: A MetaFilter post links to several
information resources on Toronto's new innovative downtown cooling
system, which pumps near-freezing water from Lake Ontario's deeps
through the city's office-towers, eliminating 40,000 tons of CO2
pollution per annum (no word on whether there's an environmental
impact to pumping the atmosphere-warmed water back into the lake).
Toronto's had centralised steam-heat for decades -- a system where
steam radiators in the city's office-towers are all filled with hot
vapour from the same centralised plant, a curious species of public
utility that truly makes all of the office towers (which contain
bitter rivals and competitors) into a single, linked, cooperative
system.
As I type this (but not as you read it -- this is being posted on a
several-day delay), I am sitting just a few metres from the Toronto
Island Water Filtration Plant, where the water-pumping takes place.
The plant has a lot more barbed wire and fences than it did this time
last year: I guess I know why now.
Link
/dev/random for HP-UX 11.00 0.0.3
/dev/random for HP-UX 11.00 0.0.3
12/15/2003 05:59 AMA /dev/random device for HP-UX 11.00 (DLKM).
Net-Random-1.1
Net-Random-1.1
09/07/2004 07:08 AMOM being random - but very
deliberate....
OM being random - but very
deliberate....
07/25/2004 02:12 AMI finally got to meet Om Malik
in person. The fact that I never ran into him in the 90's says
allot about me "taking the 90's off." Quite frankly I just
didn't care.
But now I do!
Great to meet Om!
Here's his recent post...
It is a cold, cloudy drank Saturday afternoon in San Francisco. Go
ahead and summer in San Francisco. I am migh
ty pissed off at the hooligans who started a
fight, got our hottest hitter thrown out of the game and basically
used all underhanded tactics to win when all athletic prowess failed.
(I think they are not even going to make it as the wild cards - go
Athletics!)
Nevertheless, watching the game also gave me some time to ponder
over the last week which involved nearly six conference calls, ten
interviews, one story, one online column, and one conference, BlogOn. So here are some
conclusions from that one conference, and other conversations.
[Om
Malik]
Om is right.
BlogOn was acomplete corporate sellout and a complete bore. The
only thing going on was out in the hallways. All the old Apple guys
are back, AOL, CNN and Yahoo were on stage saying nothing and they
even put abunch of irrelevant PR flacks on stage.
Oh boy.
Next week's OSCON will be exactly the opposire. ONLY OpenSource
folks - no old PR flacks or big irrelevant companies. Sorry I can't
be there.
Random notes
Random notes
05/14/2004 03:01 PM
I
noticed with some amusement and glee on Monday that the Wall Street
Journal published a list of the fastest-growing employment sectors in
the latest jobs report, and what was at the head? "Internet content
producer"! OK, it's not 1999 all over again, and thank goodness for
that; the actual number of new jobs in the field (2000) was small. But
hey -- after what this business has been through, any good news is
good news.

I
haven't gotten it together to spend the money on one of those
PC-to-stereo bridges that lets you stream music from your computer to
your home audio systems, but when I do, I'll look first and most
closely at the Slim Devices
Squeezebox -- not
only because it looks like a good product, but because the company
that makes it lets anyone play with the open-source software that runs
it:
Slimserver.
I've been having fun with Slimserver: You install it on the computer
that has your music library and you can then access your library from
any remote computer with a decent Internet connection. Requires a
little effort to get the hang of it, then seems to work like a charm.
A browser interface lets you control what's playing. Very cool.

I've turned on "item level titles and links" in Radio Userland, so
instead of handcoding my little headlines, they should appear in RSS
2.0 feeds as properly coded titles. You can do this too -- just look
under Radio's preferences under "item level titles and links." Thanks
to
Tim Bishop for the tip.

Another useful piece of open-source software I'm making a note of
(thanks to
Jon Udell
for the pointer):
Audacity, an audio-file
editor.
The Perils Of Random
The Perils Of Random
06/15/2004 06:03 PM"It was not until Pennsylvania that we realised that we had neglected
to turn off the 'random' feature of the iPod, so we were getting
chapters in arbitrary order, the plot entirely in the mischievous
hands of fate."
By Leander Kahney, Cult Of Mac (via MyAppleMenu)
Random ID checks are next
Random ID checks are next
06/08/2004 10:27 AM
Unreasonable Search and
Seizure? Boston's MBTA to begin randomly searching passenger bags
and packages next month on subway and commuter trains. Last month they
started playing frequent Big Brother-type announcements as part of
their
See
Something? Say Something(pdf) -
Transit Watch program. I'm either
reminded of
"Loose Lips,
Sink Ships" or Starship Troopers'
"Do you want to know more?".
Crypt-Random-1.23
Crypt-Random-1.23
06/02/2004 04:47 PMCrypt-Random-1.22
Crypt-Random-1.22
06/02/2004 12:58 AMMath-Random-MT-1.02
Math-Random-MT-1.02
05/08/2004 12:38 AMThe Random Map Generator
The Random Map Generator
05/01/2004 02:24 PMA beginning
Random comics
Random comics
04/26/2004 05:00 AM
Earlier this month, we
posted Monochrom's call-for-submissions for jpegs of random
punchline-text from comic strips. Now, Monochrom brings us the
outcome: a web page werein a single-frame comic and a punchine are
combined at random. The results are funny-esque and very weird. Reload
often.
Link
(
Thanks, Johannes!)
"Random Drawings"
"Random Drawings"
04/24/2004 03:25 AMCrypt-Random-1.20
Crypt-Random-1.20
05/21/2004 11:33 PMThe Joy of Random Shuffle
The Joy of Random Shuffle
04/16/2004 02:22 PMCrypt-Random-1.21
Crypt-Random-1.21
05/25/2004 12:39 AMRandom links
Random links
05/26/2004 09:22 PM
Fascinating tale of
documentary maker Errol Morris's "Interrotron" device, which makes his
interviewees appear to be addressing the camera directly, while
they're really talking to a teleprompter-like image of him as the
interviewer (Link courtesy
Kottke)
Dan Bricklin reports on an interesting
onstage conversation between Malcolm Gladwell and Scott
Kirsner.
Transcript of brilliant Bruce Sterling rant, turning the saga
of an open party he throws each year at South by Southwest into a
parable for Internet development, electronic security and more.
Math-Random-MT-1.03
Math-Random-MT-1.03
05/09/2004 12:17 AMRandom Question
Random Question
12/19/2004 03:02 PMMost people have a few moments in their lives that they regret. But
what moment if any would you like...
Random Rants
Random Rants
04/15/2005 04:40 AM US Government Bans Books: According to the security guy that patted
me down, it's not just lighters not allowed on flights, but our book
capacity has been trimmed from 4 to 2. Tivo and Netflix Need Each
Other: Why...
How To: Random quotes in PHP
How To: Random quotes in PHP
03/15/2003 11:29 PMI’m sure you’ve noticed my love of random quotes by now as
I’ve stuffed them at the top, bottom, and side of all my pages.
While I know how to program, I’m also a bit lazy and would have
rathered...
Random PHP Oddity
Random PHP Oddity
03/19/2003 10:27 PMRandom PHP Oddity
Here's an interesting one. I was using strtotime() and I
noticed it failing (it returns -1 when it fails). So here was my
input:
$pubdate = "March 18, 2003, 06:20:15 PM";
When I tweaked it until it worked, I ended up with this:
$pubdate = "March 18, 2003 06:20:15 PM";
Yup. That's right -- I removed 1 comma. I
wonder if this is a) php bug b) gnu time bug or c) by design.
And so it goes.
Oh and a quick regex to fix it and Voila! Dates
that parse.
Random Acts of JD
Random Acts of JD
03/13/2003 10:25 AMJD Lasica talks about blogging as "random acts of journalism." Good
phrase, good thoughts....
A few more random thoughts
A few more random thoughts
03/27/2005 01:39 PMThere are a few things that continue to grate on my nerves as we near
the start of the second half of Apple’s fiscal year, so I though I’d
throw them all out there at once. Have fun.
Why can’t Apple allow first- or second-generation iPod users enjoy its
Lossless Encoder? If a simple firmware update can bring it to the mini
or the later-model players, why not all of us early adopters, too? If
you’re like me, there are at last 10 CDs that haven’t made their way
to your iPod, because you’re too last to re-encode them.
Do the actors in their commercials reflect what Dell really thinks of
its customer base? From the “Dude, you’re getting a Dell” guy, to the
trio of geeks fighting over control of their gadgets — one watching
cartoons, one singing hopelessly out of key and the other looking
playing a video game that involves the obligatory silver key — how
does this help expand its marketshare? If I was in the market for a
computer, those three fools certainly wouldn’t sway me.
Why is Apple the only company that gives any thought to naming its
music players. Dell and Creative both names theirs Jukebox (Creative
came first) and most of the others merely use a series of letters and
numbers to distinguish between models. On Dell’s commercials, they
shirk the name entirely. The guy says, “Just listen to your Dell.” Who
says that!?!
If, like me, you thought the $16.99 price was too high, but PodBrix’s
black Lego figurine holding a miniature iPod is currently selling for
more than $150 on eBay. And you guys wonder why Mac people are so
misunderstood.
Since I downloaded the $35 coupon from Amazon.com before it was
pulled, will I be able to use it? And will I once again get three
utterly useless software update coupons?
And why has Apple not built a store in Rhode Island? The Providence
Place Mall is a four-story behemoth in the heart of the capital city,
and with Brown University within walking distance, it only seems
logical. Oh, and Spymac’s weekend columnist lives right around the
corner.
Seventeen of the top 20 items selling at the Apple Store are iPods or
iPod-related. And to think, when it was released less than four years
ago, it was riled as an overpriced niche product.
These days, signing a contract with Apple is a bad luck charm. Teaming
with Hewlett Packard and Pepsi were disappointing, IBM has struggled
with supplying G5 chips, and now Motorola, who has struggled with
Apple in the past, has sputtered twice with the unveiling of its
iTunes phone. Maybe Apple should start partnering with its
competitors,
On the subject of IBM, what happened!?!? Back in July 2003, Steve
promised 3GHz inside of a year and now, nearly two years later, we’re
still 500MHz away. There’s nothing necessarily wrong with missing a
goal, but Apple and IBM seems to have all but forgotten it existed.
And it’s been nearly a year since the Power Mac has seen a speed bump.
And finally, someone should start an iPod recycling company, With four
million sold in three months, there are going to be an awful lot of
discarded iPods in a year or so. Perhaps a modern art exhibit can be
opened. Or maybe they can be donated to starving rap artists in need
of bling.
Michael Simon is a freelance writer and editor, and paginator for The
Times in Pawtucket, R.I. He is the author of Failed Attempt, written
under the moniker of Morlium, which may be purchased for $9.99, either
through the iTunes Music Store or as a full-color paperback. He can
be reached for comment or inquiry by e-mail at morlium@mac.com.
Random aphorism
Random aphorism
03/19/2005 03:28 AMThere's no "I" in "team" but there are two "me"s in meme....
Some Random Thoughts
Some Random Thoughts
12/02/2003 03:11 AMNaturally, I love that Cingular is using Tommy
Tutone's song "867-5309" to
promote number
portability! (Isn't it weird that G
ooglism is a Google search
result?)
With the holidays fast approaching, it's important to note that
there is an RSS
feed for What's
New at ThinkGeek!
I can tell that PC sales are up because I am busy dispensing
computer advice in my neighborhood. One neighbor bought a new computer
tonight, while another needs lessons to burn CDs. Neither has
broadband access, so we're still a pretty typical neighborhood.
There's a new link on the right over there for pointers to my past
Presentations and Articles.
And yes, I'm truly loving my Treo 600, thanks for asking. I promise to write up my
experiences with it to date later this week!
Math-Random-0.67
Math-Random-0.67
03/14/2003 06:16 PMMath-Random-OO-0.10
Math-Random-OO-0.10
12/28/2004 07:05 PMRandom Absurdities
Random Absurdities
02/01/2005 09:07 PM
A few recent occurrences that have me wondering about the
general sanity of publishing online.
Math-Random-OO-0.11
Math-Random-OO-0.11
01/04/2005 11:08 AMRandom Noise
Random Noise
12/31/2004 01:24 AMSonicMood might not be everyone's cup of tea, but surely I can't be
the only person in the world who occasionally wants this sort of sound
to emanate from the computer, and in any case it has certainly been
helpful to me in my work. By Matt Neuburg, TidBITS
More on Random-Access Audio
More on Random-Access Audio
05/18/2004 07:31 PMNow that I've had an hour to think about it , I would prefer not to
modify my server. Many reasons, but one is that IT Conversations would
not be able to deliver these "clips" from our worldwide
content-delivery network provided by Limelight Networks. So that
leaves out the new URL scheme, at least so far as requiring the server
to understand start/stop inherently.
I also don't want to start messin' with customizations to Winamp. It's
not that common an app and it won't run on all platforms.
So I'm back to a modified Plan A: a customized embedded player written
in Flash. This little guy would understand how to play excerpts of MP3
files using the same random-access methods discovered by Jon Udell.
That part is now solved thanks to Jon. The only other issues are (a)
how to communicate the start/stop offesets to the player, (b) how
users who want to "virtually create" clips determine and specify those
start/stop points, and (c) how users add the virtual clips to their
own web sites and blogs.
Working backwards, (c) if we make the Flash player (with a small
visual footprint) publicly available, then anyone can stick it
anywhere with an tag, etc. Easy, I think. (b) At the very least, an
person wanting to create a virtual excerpt can obtain the start/stop
offsets using their existing MP3 players. We could eventually support
and simplify the process within the Flash player. (a) I don't know
enough about Flash, but I would guess we can pass data to the player
from the server in response to an HTTP GET.
To put it together, we create a URL with start/stop arguments, but we
don't expect the HTTP server to deal with it. Instead, we use PHP,
Perl, etc., to process the arguments and return the file that loads
the Flash player and communicates the arguments. That mechanism can
vary site-by-site. There's no need to standardize it so long as the
mechanism that communicates with the Flash player is consistent.
(Gotta learn more about Flash!)
There's a random painted highway
There's a random painted highway
04/15/2005 09:30 AM
Painted beehive panels (accompanying article
here) from the
Mus
eum of Apiculture [virtual tour, flash] in Radovljica,
Slovenia.
Grok Description matches for Random Freezing
GrokA matches for Random Freezing
Random Freezing