an awesome way to explain subtle issues. well done whoever came up with this idea.
Tag: software
Adeona
We tackle the problem of building privacy-preserving device-tracking systems — or private methods to assist in the recovery of lost or stolen Internet-connected mobile devices. The main goals of such systems are seemingly contradictory: to hide the device’s legitimately-visited locations from third-party services and other parties (location privacy) while simultaneously using those same services to help recover the device’s location(s) after it goes missing (device-tracking). We propose a system, named Adeona, that nevertheless meets both goals. It provides strong guarantees of location privacy while preserving the ability to efficiently track missing devices. We build a version of Adeona that uses OpenDHT as the third party service, resulting in an immediately deployable system that does not rely on any single trusted third party. We describe numerous extensions for the basic design that increase Adeona’s suitability for particular deployment environments.
covertly records and sends crypted comms. very cypherpunk
flickredit
time to look into solutions to get data out of flickr before the ship sinks
FontStruct
a free font-building tool brought to you by the world’s leading retailer of digital type, FontShop.
very cool of them
Spaced Repetition
Wozniak realized that computers could easily calculate the moment of forgetting if he could discover the right algorithm. SuperMemo is the result of his research. It predicts the future state of a person’s memory and schedules information reviews at the optimal time. The effect is striking. Users can seal huge quantities of vocabulary into their brains.
need to check out supermemo. it sounds very intriguing.
NanoEngineer

an open-source 3D multi-scale modeling and simulation program for nano-composites with special support for structural DNA nanotechnology. It features an easy-to-use interactive 3D graphical user interface for designing and modeling large, atomically precise composite systems.
Neat Eclipse features
hah. even rms likes eclipse
IE Apologists
98% of the world will install IE8 and say, “It has bugs and I can’t see my sites.” They don’t give a flicking flick about your stupid religious enthusiasm for making web browsers which conform to some mythical, platonic “standard” that is not actually implemented anywhere. They don’t want to hear your stories about messy hacks. They want web browsers that work with actual web sites
spolsky is such a moron. it never fails to amaze how many people listen to a guy selling bug trackers.
Visible Workings
This isn’t just an innovative approach to software testing and workflow visualization. It’s also a radical statement about business process transparency. For most of us, most of the time, business systems are black boxes whose internal workings we can only discern in the outcomes of our (often painful) interactions with them. But what if you could find out, before pressing the Save button, what’s going on in that black box? And what if your way of finding out wasn’t by reading bogus documentation, but instead by probing the system itself using its own test framework?
Origami ReferenceFinder
software to help you fold origamis