
Powered by patent-pending XG3 technology, the DataPower XA35 XML Accelerator is the industry’s first and only network device capable of offloading overtaxed servers by processing XML and XSLT at wire speed.
wonders never cease. xml accelerators huh.
Sapere Aude
Month: February 2003

Powered by patent-pending XG3 technology, the DataPower XA35 XML Accelerator is the industry’s first and only network device capable of offloading overtaxed servers by processing XML and XSLT at wire speed.
wonders never cease. xml accelerators huh.
Recently I have been reading A new kind of Science before falling asleep. Besides being just plain beautiful, its main message so far has been: Complexity rises out of simple conditions
I’m not yet fit enough with the concepts to generalize and apply the book to other areas, but then again I have barely read 10%
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2024-05-07: Wolfram continues to work in this area, and this recent post using automata as a model for evolution is a masterpiece.
The intuition of physics tends to be that there are ultimately simple models for things, whereas in biology there’s a certain sense that everything is always almost infinitely complicated, with a new effect to consider at every turn. But presumably that’s in large part because what we study in biology tends to quickly come face to face with computational irreducibility—whereas in physics we’ve been able to find things to study that avoid this. But now the commonality in foundations between physics and biology suggests that there should also be in biology the kind of structure we have in physics—complete with general laws that allow us to make useful, broad statements. And perhaps the simple model I’ve presented here can help lead us there—and in the end help build up a new paradigm for thinking about biology in a fundamentally theoretical way.
For PHP to serve on mission critical web sites, quality assurance becomes essential. However, since it is not a strongly typed language with variable and function declarations, the static error checking is very limited. Many errors, such as missing arguments to functions, are only reported when particular lines of code are run.
By translating the PHP to C , the excellent static analysis that produces errors and warnings in modern C and C compilers can be done on PHP.
hmm.. i recently ran static analysis code over the wyona codebase, and it was very helpful. i would love to have the same for php. id rather it would work with java, but there may be hope.
we now have the contenders for our logo contest online: 47 logos. to be honest most look rather crappy, but there are some nice ones too. fun fun fun.
i believe machines will .. reach human levels of intelligence, including the ability to understand and respond appropriately to human emotion, including to be able to give and receive love, within 30 years
AI struck me as a rather good movie that asks the right questions. as we go more cyborg, will we respect machines? what will guide our body enhancement choices? gigolo joe, another mecha remarks to david:
you are being loved for what you do to them, they don’t love you
at some point, we will have to face this question too. maybe we already do.
Superhero search engine Google leads the global choice with 15% of the vote, climbing to the top from last year’s 4th place position. Runners-up were Apple, Coca-Cola, and Starbucks.
a friend is pissed that i apply the concept of ROI to social contacts. in her view (and i’m not completely sure what her view is, since she is too pissed to tell me) social contacts are outside the realm of input-output calculus. to her, it is preposterous to even consider the idea. i strongly disagree. here is why.
social contacts are conversations at their core. and conversations are fundamentally reciprocal. each participant in a conversation has certain goals, or would like to bring topics dear to him on the agenda. to that end, each participant invests time and energy to keep the conversation afloat.
conversations vary in their degree as to how much they succeed in capturing the goals of the participants. sometimes, for various reasons, a conversation participant may feel that his topics either fall on deaf ears, or are pondered inadequately. clearly, in such a situation, the investment of that participant has not paid off, his questions remain unanswered.
what to do? before frustration sets in, it may be beneficial to reconsider whether it makes sense to keep a conversation going with the same intensity, or whether it may be more appropriate to shift the conversation to other topics. maybe a particular conversation is not well suited for a topic, and the topic would be better discussed in another context (and possibly different participants)
and by doing so, this particular participant has already optimized his return. this outcome seems more desirable than a drawn-out conversation where all participants are increasingly frustrated. but then again, i’m a man of the persona, not the anima.
Broken pipes and rusty fences. If that ain’t scary, few things are.
The main entrances to Los Alamos are only marginally better defended than TA-33’s land. The military-like guards keeping watch at these points certainly look fierce in camouflage paints and black bulletproof vests. But there’s little to back up the image. Their belts have gun holsters, but no guns to fill them. Around facilities like the biology lab, where anthrax and other biotoxins have been handled, no sentries stand guard at all. Nor is there any kind of fence to keep the curious and the malicious away — not even a piece of string.
2006-10-09: Might it all be posturing?
The United States Geological Survey is now reporting the magnitude of the claimed North Korean nuclear test as 4.2. This seems to be curiously low. Now, estimating explosive yield from the body magnitude of a seismic event is a tricky business, and requires knowledge of details such as the depth of the detonation and the geological properties of the surroundings, but a magnitude around 4.2 is what you’d expect for a detonation of 1 kiloton. The “natural size” of a crude fission bomb is in excess of 10 kilotons, from which you’d expect a magnitude closer to 5. It is very unlikely that a low kiloton yield device would be used in an initial test.
2006-12-03: The Agony of Atomic Genius, biographical sketch of J. Robert Oppenheimer
Now I am become death, destroyer of worlds
2008-06-28: Man-made nuclear explosions in the 1940s and 1950s released isotopes into the environment that do not occur naturally, allowing the dating of works of art.
2010-09-21: The Atom Bomb on Film. Or you could go to the atomic testing museum in Vegas and see these and much more in person.
2010-11-25: Nuke Detector. Turn a supertanker into an antineutrino detector by kitting it out with the necessary photon detectors and filling it with 10^34 protons. Then station it off the coast of suspicious countries and submerge it.
2013-11-26: India nuclear assassinations and the Indian government is mum about it. Nuclear scientists have very high mortality in Iran too, but the government there is making a huge ruckus about it.
Indian nuclear scientists haven’t had an easy time of it over the past 10 years. Not only has the scientific community been plagued by “suicides,” unexplained deaths, and sabotage, but those incidents have gone mostly underreported in the country—diluting public interest and leaving the cases quickly cast off by police.
2014-02-05: Nuclear backpacks
during the Cold War, the United States did deploy man-portable nuclear destruction. If Warsaw Pact forces ever bolted toward Western Europe, they could resort to nukes to delay the advance long enough for reinforcements to arrive. These “small” weapons, many of them more powerful than the Hiroshima bomb, would have obliterated any battlefield and irradiated much of the surrounding area.
2014-11-15: X-Ray Man
In 1957, a young man named Darrell Robertson enlisted in the US Army and participated in a secret training program in the middle of the Nevada desert. He and his fellow recruits were sworn to secrecy and, for decades, told no one of their experiences. In 1996, the US government declassified the project and Robertson was finally able to tell his story. In X-Ray Man, Robertson recalls training exercises in which the Department of Defense used him and other soldiers in nuclear tests more than 10 years after the horrors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were already well known. Kerri Yost’s powerful short documentary is an account of how Cold War-era fears allowed for shocking treatment not just of supposed enemies, but also of those enlisted to fight against them. Though cancer has attacked his body, Robertson, supported by his wife, remains stoic and dignified, offering the quiet but forceful observation that ‘any person in the military becomes part of military science’.
2015-09-09: Nuclear wars for SETI. Nuclear explosions might be the first thing we see of other life at interstellar distances. Gamma rays are much easier to detect than radio waves, but would only last a few days at most. You’d have to be extremely lucky to catch that, but then we can spot GRB like that all the time.
2016-07-17: The H-Bombs in Turkey
Among the many questions still unanswered following Friday’s coup attempt in Turkey is one that has national-security implications for the United States and for the rest of the world: How secure are the American hydrogen bombs stored at a Turkish airbase?
2019-03-12: Trinity Test. The first detonation of a nuclear bomb
2021-02-20: $100b nuclear deterrence
To avoid being destroyed and rendered useless—their silos provide no real protection against a direct Russian nuclear strike—they would be “launched on warning,” that is, as soon as the Pentagon got wind of an incoming nuclear attack. Because an error could have disastrous consequences, James Mattis testified to the Senate Armed Services Committee in 2015 that getting rid of America’s land-based nuclear missiles “would reduce the false alarm danger.” Whereas a bomber can be turned around even on approach to its target, a nuclear missile launched by mistake can’t be recalled.
diana is quickly adopting state of the art blog tech for fun. way to go. (she is my hope that this blog stuff will someday be adopted by non techies) nice photoshop touches too 🙂
just discovered this blog meetup (which is stillborn in zurich, so far). an opportunity to try it out, maybe good things will come out of it. i have opted to be a host for the first meeting:
Wednesday, Mar 19 @ 19:00
the location is not set yet. i wonder if my homies feel like joining? 🙂
i’m usually not a big fan of these regulars tables, but having been at the junto i’m convinced that there is some appeal to the idea, and assuming it attracts the right people, lots of serendipity to be had.