Daily Links
Archived Posts from this Category
Reading for Thursday, 31st of May 2007 :
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A terrific idea — utilising the now ubiquitous CAPTCHA systems employed on many websites to digitise old books, one word at a time.
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Comprehensive listing of common distortions that affect our perceptions of reality. Fascinating reading.
Reading for Sunday, 25th of March 2007 :
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A rundown of various sites harnessing the wisdom of crowds — using the users of the site to shape its content. Based on the premise that if you ask 100 people to guess the number of jellybeans in a jar, and then take an average of their responses, you will end up with an answer that is closer to correct than the vast majority of their individual responses. (See also a counterpoint.)
Reading for Friday, 2nd of March 2007 :
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A captivating, beautiful music visualisation.
Reading for Tuesday, 27th of February 2007 :
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ABCs for geeks. Hit “Learn” to see how you do.
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Of all the lists I’ve created and checked off since starting to use Getting Things Done, this one has been one of the most rewarding. Still a way to go!
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Like everything else Bruce Shneier writes, this is excellent. This describes the mental tradeoffs we all make automatically, balancing security with everything else. See also the Economics of Information Security.
Reading for Sunday, 18th of February 2007 :
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Documenting known patterns and trends that lead to successful wikis.
Reading for Thursday, 15th of February 2007 :
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A discussion on “mirror neurons”, the parts of your mind that make you instinctively act like those around you, for better or worse.
Reading for Wednesday, 14th of February 2007 :
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“Limits on time, money, people, resources can channel your creative energy, drive innovation and focus.”
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A paean to the URL, and a furtherance of the concept of URL as UI.
Reading for Wednesday, 7th of February 2007 :
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I’ve recently heard of guys who are able to do this (and who are ridiculously productive as a result). Still need a bit more convincing, but it sounds great.
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Steve Jobs raises a few eyebrows by asking music companies to let him sell music with no DRM frippery in the way.
Reading for Tuesday, 6th of February 2007 :
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Programmers don’t like coding, they like problem solving.
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Clay Shirky on the idea of the LazyWeb: If you wait long enough, someone will write/build/design what you were thinking about.
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Thoughtful piece by Tim O’Reilly on digital distribution of commodity items like songs and books.
Reading for Sunday, 4th of February 2007 :
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Why profiling cannot work, and could actually decrease security.
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Contrast with What I learned from the Month of Apple bugs.
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Matt’s resolutions echo my own quite closely.
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Terrific instructions on building all the programs you need to have a Ruby on Rails-ready development machine.
Reading for Thursday, 1st of February 2007 :
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An interesting view on software versioning, and the problems that can occur when a new branch comes out with a bumped version number. “Attempting to force differing approaches onto a numeric and ordered scale increases social friction.”
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I’m still a little sceptical about some speed-reading claims, but this seems like a practical start.
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Comparing mindmaps and linear notes for learning.
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It gives good stats, but Google Analytics delivers a surprisingly woeful user experience. This is just one small example of why.
Reading for Tuesday, 30th of January 2007 :
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Complex sensor-based features are turning up in cars, though it seems there’s a way to go yet.
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Anti-patterns are classes of commonly-reinvented bad solutions to problems.
Reading for Sunday, 28th of January 2007 :
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I’m looking forward to doing a few user studies.
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JavaScript is being taken seriously again as a truly capable language, but as seen here there is years of detritus left over from the days when it was mostly hacked together.
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Eventually I will need to rewrite all of my own tutorials for these reasons.
Reading for Tuesday, 23rd of January 2007 :
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Nice experiment in plotting social networks, and an illustration of the difference your choice of tool makes.
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“It is often easier to not do something dumb than it is to do something smart.”
Reading for Thursday, 18th of January 2007 :
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The next generation disc format anti-piracy battle looks like it’s going to be a hopeless endeavour.