False Positives , Ian Irving's Adventures in Tech, Toronto (and HK), Sci and SciFi

Saturday, March 27, 2004

Boolean Logic : George Boole's The Laws of Thought published 150 years ago.

The Globe and Mail has a piece about the man behind Boolean Logic : George Boole : The Isaac Newton of logic

It was 150 years ago that George Boole published his classic The Laws of Thought, in which he outlined concepts that form the underpinnings of the modern high-speed computer. SIOBHAN ROBERTS chronicles the man and his method

Here's the Wikipedia entry on Mr Boole

I've cross posted this on SlashDot. I've been able to cull 23 factiods from the resulting Slash-trolling :
  1. George Boole tutored Ada Lovelace,one of the earliest programmers / pioneers of computer science.
  2. Boole's book is available from MathBook.com, although not (yet) as part of Project Gutenberg (maybe soon?).

  3. the first bug report by Grace Hopper, 1945 : http://www.eecis.udel.edu/~mills/pic/h96566k.jpg, or http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/images/h96000/h96566k.jpg

Friday, March 26, 2004


Popularity Growing For Open-Source Databases and MySQL Gets Ready for Enterprise-Level Database Reliability
http://update.internetweek.com/cgi-bin4/DM/y/efrp0BzAN20V30CQQA0AR

Open-source database software maker MySQL AB plans to unveil next
month an enterprise-level capability that automatically shifts
workloads to another database server when one fails.

Four-Way Fusion Demands Discussion

A Thorough Look At The Real Issues Around Offshoring

Thursday, March 25, 2004

Bring Back Kirk

Via The Adventures of Accordion Guy in the 21st Century

Bring Back Kirk is a fan made nine-minute trailer for a proposed film. Made from CGI and clips from all the Star Trek Series. It's a Hoot.

Holy Prime Directive, Captain!

Wednesday, March 24, 2004

Someone Comes to Town, Someone Leaves Town

An excerpt of Someone Comes to Town, Someone Leaves Town By Cory Doctorow, an urban fantasy about wireless networking, dumpster diving, and screwed up families, set in Toronto's Kensington Market.

Cory just finished it. I'll ask him on firday when it will be published.

Just when you were starting to figure out what a Blog is, along comes Wiki

Next up in the Economist Tech Quarterly is Blogging goes to work which introduces the curious to wiki's.

Two useful links in this regard are : What is Wiki and, for the more technically inclined, the Wiki Engines Page.

What is a wiki? Where as a blog is primarily a linear (most recent first) and single author web space, a wiki is more category / cross-link driven and multi-author collaborative web space. Some blogs can be viewed by categories, and Wiki's can be viewed by most recent or by author, but generally blogs are a functional subset of wiki's. Both are variations of very simple content management, with the focus on content, informality, trust, and ease of use. The word comes from "wikiwiki," which means "fast" in the Hawaiian language.

Return of the homebrew code

In the most recent Economist Tech Quarterly (from 2 weeks ago, I'm still way behind) there are several stand out articles:

Return of the homebrew coder,

Most modern software is written by huge teams of programmers. But there is still room for homebrew coders, at least in some unusual niches...

Such difficulties are typically faced by just a few thousand people with specific and unusual requirements—too few to merit the attention of the big computer firms, but enough to provide opportunities for a growing band of homebrew coders who set out to develop niche products...

In many cases these programmers are making a decent living in the process, thanks to the availability of high-speed internet connections, cheap web-hosting services and online-payment systems such as PayPal and Kagi—all of which make it quick and easy to distribute software and collect money from customers. The trend is also a response to the sorry state of the technology industry, following the bursting of the dotcom bubble. Where they could once command salaries of $100,000, programmers now worry about their jobs disappearing to India. So instead of waiting for things to improve, some have decided to strike out on their own....

Various developers are mentioned such as Brent Simmons:
Brent Simmons is one such programmer.. he runs Ranchero Software from his garage in Seattle. They make a clever piece of software called NetNewsWire, which runs on the Mac OS X operating system and makes it easy to read news and then post comments on to a weblog. “I like being able to design and implement software and have the final say,” says Mr Simmons. “It's a higher level of creativity than working on someone else's software. I get to refine and market my own ideas.” At $40 each, Mr Simmons needs to sell 2,000 copies of his program each year to earn what he would be paid as an employee elsewhere....

and Jonas Salling of Salling Software, Gaurav Banga and Saurabh Aggarwbi (PDAapps sells VeriChat, IM for PDA's), and Nick Bradbury of Bradbury Software, know for HomeSite (sold to Allaire/Macromedia), TopStyle and a news-reading program called FeedDemon (all wonderful products). Brent and Nick both have blogs.
While new opportunities abound, however, this world of independents is an unforgiving meritocracy. For homebrew coders, the fact that their fortunes depend directly on the quality of their products is both the risk and the reward.

Tuesday, March 23, 2004

Back from Sking, and buried

Yes, I'm safely back from 6 glorious days of skiing at Quebec City. The weather was good ( -8 to -2 C) Snow was very good (although the mash on Monday was tough on the legs) at Mont Ste Anne, Le Massif and Stoneham. The Hotel (Manoir Victoria in old Quebec City) was most excellent with great accommodations, staff and hard to beat location. We had a great crew of High Park Ski Club crazies, some of whom I knew / had been warned about, and we (Elicia and I ) made some new friends. And the food was to die for. If you don't believe me just look at the expanding tummy, despite my efforts to burn it off on the slopes.

So I'm back, buried under a pile of work, reading (although I did get Eastern Standard Tribe read / consumed, yum yum), email and blog feeds. (Oh the spammers seem to be back from their vacation too.) I can tell that spring is just around the corner, because a pile of ants found the remains of my yogurt.

And now I'm suffering from ski withdrawn.