Friday, June 30, 2006
Geeky Friday: Essentials for linux
Wednesday, June 28, 2006
X1 search for free
Friday, June 23, 2006
Geeky Friday: Extra-geeky, extra-fancy search and replace
Emacs 22 sports an amazing new editing feature that's had me drooling in anticipation since I first heard about it, maybe six or eight months ago. As you can well imagine, that's a lot of drool.He gives some cool examples of how this can be useful. (Sorry, non-geeks, this edition of "Geeky Friday" is over the top geeky.)And what might the feature be, you ask? Well, they've enhanced M-x {query-}replace-regxp to accept lisp expressions to be evaluated in the replacement string.
Wednesday, June 07, 2006
Black Apple
I use a BlackBerry for a while and was unimpressed. It does "push email" well and wireless sync well, but that’s about it. The basic PIM tools are weaker than what my PalmOS Handspring Visor had 6 years ago and there is comparatively little third party software. My biggest gripe was having only a thumbwheel for navigating a big screen. A combination of touch screen and wheel/buttons is easier.
I think that many people who rave about their crackberries had never used a PDA previously and were issued one by their offices. Compared to lugging around a laptop or having nothing at all, the BlackBerry is a nice tool.
Apple can, and should, do better.
Perhaps may just license the software for connecting to a Blackberry Enterprise Server. This would enable companies to deploy either RIM or Apple devices and their employees would be able to get their email, calendars, etc.
And about the name "AppleBerry". I don't get why the tech press is using that.
"Black" - color, serving as adjective
"Berry" - fruit, noun, modified by the adjective
"Apple" - fruit, noun
Wouldn’t "BlackApple" be better? and cooler sounding? Or is a black apple a rotten apple? But if black apples are bad, why does Apple charge so much more for the blackbook black macbook?
Thursday, June 01, 2006
World Cup Intro for Americans
Those Americans who are watching sports late at night, say, and they can't find any baseball or football or basketball or golf or NASCAR or lacrosse, wrestling, bowling, scrabble, curling, knitting, might find finally themselves settling on this very odd game where people chase this ball around in a field with no equipment at all. It's called "soccer". It seems very popular in other parts of the world. Well, it's got some sort of big tournament coming up. So to explain this exotic game to us Americans, we put in a call to Steven Cohen, soccer expert and real life British person.Cohen immediately jumps in with a correction:
Cohen: Actually in most parts of the world it's actually called "football". Sagal: Well that's wrong though.They go on to discuss (among other things):
- Popularity of soccer in the US
- Impatience and ADD of US sports fans
- Scoreless draws in soccer vs. pitcher's duels in baseball
- US sports that take 2-3 times longer than actual game time
- What to look for in the World Cup teams
- What would happen if the US were to win it all