So, the future looks bright for LibreOffice and it looks gloomy for OpenOffice.org.
LOL. actually neither have one.
Sapere Aude
Month: October 2010
So, the future looks bright for LibreOffice and it looks gloomy for OpenOffice.org.
LOL. actually neither have one.
There is a meaningful effort to say, how do we tune for books? We’ve got a lot of people doing very focused on the web. How do we take the lessons from what we learned on the web and invent new things that are unique to books?
starting to pay dividends.
If you thought that the Porsche hybrid was an incredible piece of automotive design, then you’ll be blown away by the Urbee. The entire body of this streamlined new gasoline/ethanol hybrid has been generated using 3D printing technology. The Urbee is the first car ever to have its entire body printed using additive manufacturing processes.
detroit = dinosaurs. the mammals are coming.
a fascinating smackdown for all the metadata whiners, from a member of the google books team. a lot of them have illusions about the quality of the metadata their institutions produce.
In paragraph 3, Geoff describes some of the problems we have with dates, and in particular the prevalence of 1899 dates. This is because we recently began incorporating metadata from a Brazilian metadata provider that, unbeknownst to us, used 1899 as the default date when they had no other. Geoff responded by saying that only one of the books he cited was in Portuguese. However, that metadata provider supplies us with metadata for all the books they know about, regardless of language. To them, Stephen King’s Christine was published in 1899, as well as 250K other books.
To which I hear you saying, “if you have all these metadata sources, why can’t the correct dates outvote the incorrect ones?” That is exactly what happens. We have 10s of metadata records telling us that Stephen King’s Christine was written in 1983. That’s the correct date. So what should we do when we have a metadata record with an outlier date? Should we ignore it completely? That would be easy. It would also be wrong. If we put in simple common sense checks, we’d occasionally bury uncommonly strange but genuine metadata. Sometimes there is a very old book with the same name as a modern book. We can either include metadata that is very possibly wrong, or we can prevent that metadata from ever being seen. The scholar in me — if he’s even still alive — prefers the former.

cutups from maps satellite imagery.
Before today, I’d actually never heard of this group. But if Jack says they’re worth my time, I’ll take a look and see if maybe there are some areas where our interests overlap.
an ode
Beloved for its complex, layered past, Istanbul, where East meets West, may also offer a vision of what’s to come. I don’t think I’d ever stepped inside a cinema restroom to see little video screens along the wall projecting fashion runway footage until I went to Istanbul a few months ago. But then—my life is so sheltered!—I’d never seen mini-screens lining an elevator on the way to the movies, either. The hit song from Slumdog Millionaire, “Jai Ho,” was pulsing through every floor of City’s Mall in Istanbul’s Nisantasi district when I visited, and the restrooms next to the cinema lobby were marked by life-size cutouts of Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie
a home on 3m2.
working theory: Many Americans are used to getting real emails that look like this; something correctly punctuated, spelled, and grammaticized would look obviously fake.
Crash-Only An Android app doesn’t need exit code. Loose Address/Type-Driven Coupling The way you hand off from one screen to another in Android is with an Intent. An Intent has a Target, an Action, a URI, and a data type (as in Internet media-type, MIME type), along with some ancillary stuff. You can specify a target, essentially a class name, and control passes to that class. Or you can specify an action (make a phone call, view something, delete something) and its URI and or media-type, and let the system pick the right software to deal with it. Remove Decoration We advise people that, since mobile-device screens are small, that they have to focus on data not decoration; get rid of all the headers and trailers and sidebars and toolbars that you can, so that the user gets the maximum-possible amount of payload.
android is based on loose coupling (intents) for interactions between apps. that seems to have worked ok for the web.