Kewl
Tuesday, April 5, 2005
How to Design Programs: An Introduction to Computing and Programming: A computer’s language of instruction and information is a PROGRAMMING LANGUAGE. Information expressed in a programming language is called DATA. There are many flavors of data.
Wish somebody had taught programming this way in our college!
(12) #Mobshare in 25 Days. Cool stuff! (31) #
I haven’t really seen it mentioned before, but the Leopard terminal is finally up to a Gnome’s or KDE’s terminal’s standards, and as is usual with Apple, especially with some of the window style selections, much better. It has tabs too, and there’s a preset which closely matches the way I used to customize iTerm. Great stuff. (16) #
Just a little tidbit. To know the version of Centos you’ve got installed, do
cat /etc/redhat-release. Various sysadmins have Centos 4 installed in which case you’ll need updated packages too. (19) #Nasscom’s 100 IT Innovators 2007. And there’s MobME in the list. Cool! (0) #
VectorMagic is simply awesome! (0) #
There’s an Apple Leopard Demo Day soon. There’s one in Kochi. Be there if you can. (28) #
We have a mailing list for BarCampKerala now. Join! (0) #
I went and registered for the 12th International Film Festival of Kerala. At 200/- bucks (< $5) a head, it’s the most economical way to a great film experience around here. The film list looks very impressive. (30) #
So we’ve fixed the Barcamp Kerala Venue. It’s at UST Zenith Hall (next to Coffee Beanz) and it’s a fairly large place (seats 150 people) so all of you guys can turn up and make it fun. (6) #
A hint for developers on the Orkut Sandbox, download its two CSS files: here and here and use those classes to style your content. It feels much more a part of orkut that way. To figure out what styles to use, firebug the orkut page. (28) #
I wish OpenSocial was more open!. Just an Orkut Sandbox to play with and that’s invite only. I wonder why Google announced this right now. Just a set of API docs and a video to introduce things feels so Microsofty. At least Silverlight has a working runtime. How am I supposed to test OpenSocial apps today? (64) #
My Gmail switched today to the new v2 UI (ui=2 in the address bar). It’s great, although I don’t notice any obvious UI changes, it feels faster. Most emails open instantly. There is a bit of a delay for the new yellow loading indicator to appear at the top which gives the impression the interface has stalled for a bit. It’s a slow roll out I guess because a couple of my other Google Apps accounts don’t have the change reflected yet. (9) #
So Gmail now has IMAP. Cool. Everybody should use this instead of POP because it’s so much better. A quick tip: A slash (/) splits your label name into folders. So name your labels Lists/Erlang, Lists/Ruby etc. and in your mail client they’ll end up being folders. Hierarchy using tags? Cool. (31) #
So India wins a Twenty20 again. Is it wishful thinking or did I detect a note of bitterness in Ricky Ponting when he asked “It’s not for nothing that India’s the world champions is it?”
(1) #I would like to know what sites like Twitter and Wordpress use messaging solutions like Ejabberd and Spread for. I can’t think of a rational fit. Anyone? (30) #
No, really, it’s up to you.. Radiohead’s spearhead. (2) #
What’s missing from Amazon’s suite of web services? Two things: SimpleDB which provides database-like persistence and SimpleBalancer, which load balances “services” on multiple EC2 clusters. While it’s possible to emulate both using S3 and EC2 right now, it’s hard to do, and feels really clumsy. When Amazon does engineer these things, expect Google to take a peek in as well. Oh, we live in interesting times. (5) #
Nod to Akshay, especially The Bookie. (3) #
I’ve started a new tumblelog to keep track of the snippets that pop into my head. It’s all about a sequel to Harry Potter now (set way way in the future), but that’ll change soon. None of it is probably going to take a coherent form anytime soon, but I find that nowadays I don’t have the energy to finish up a work, so at least this will scratch that itch. (2) #
JRuby Compiler Update, and a Nice Peformance Milestone. Cool stuff. (12) #
I’ve just debuted a new way to stop comment spam on this site (#5 on this list). It’s inaccessible for people with Javascript turned off, but even Akismet wasn’t helping enough for me. (18) #
Just an observation. If my bittorrent goes flat out, I can download a movie in ten hours. In a day, I can download two movies, which is about what a healthy adult should watch in a day. I wonder what’ll happen when my bandwidth doubles. (Oh, and people who only go by DVD-rips - or worse - can… wait.) So what did I watch recently? Bourne Ultimatum, Bridge to Terabithia, and Transformers. In reverse chronological order. (48) #
The new orkut look is frankly amazing. It’s got the Google sense of simplicity finally and looks much less crowded than even Facebook! (if it hasn’t rolled into your account yet, it will). (69) #
Experts exchange sucks big time. If I go there via a Google result it asks me to register before giving me content, but it allows Google in. See this link versus a direct one. (22) #
Surprise, surprise! Facebook code sucks as much as anything else out there. For people who don’t get the sarcasm, it’s what gets stuffed onto the browser that matters in the end. Having said that, clean aesthetics and a professional layout, a pluggable architecture, and even a PhD. paper doesn’t mean your code is of the Field-Medal caliber. Capish? (Bonus: funny comments). (20) #
I’ve just noticed that people who’ve been trying to contact me via my sent.com email address haven’t been reaching me. This is distressing because at one time I thought Fastmail would rule the world. Now they can’t even forward mail properly. I’ve changed my email to Google’s solution wherever relevant. (32) #
I highly recommend people to switch to RubyNetBeans (the Netbeans support in Ruby) for people who prefer an IDE-heavy approach to development. I still use Textmate, but the integrated webserver support, shell script automation, and esp. the new debugger (which is still slow), is really useful. (35) #
So my article on benchmarking Glassfish got picked up by the Aquarium. Cool
(16) #So both Sajith and Kenney have started blogging (and have been for a while it seems, it’s just recently that they told me). Go Torque
(17) #So the old mustache was getting to be a bit long in the tooth, so I have a new stainglass one. To go with it, a tightened sidebar too. What do you guys think? (30) #
So now, Vysnu is WP 2.2. Nothing major seems to have changed however. Wordpress upgrades are still a bit clumsy. What’s hard about a one-click upgrade process built into the console? (54) #
I’d forgotten to update my resume with contact information. It’s done now, and although it doesn’t reflect my current status, it should do for now. (3) #
Tim Bray likes/writes a lot of technical stuff but it’s pieces like this that make him more human and infinitely more readable. (8) #
One Sentence - True stories, told in one sentence. I recently found out that my husband’s regular password for all of his accounts is “titties2.” (15) #
I’m thinking of attending LinuxAsia 2007. Got myself the free Community Pass. Anybody else going to be there? The programme seems decent if a bit enterprisey. (28) #
Hey, I just updated to Wordpress 2.1. Whatever said & done, Wordpress is still the KING of blog usabilty. (8) #
So I’ll be there at BarcampDelhi-2 and talking about some holy writ: The One True Answer to Making your Web Applications Quicker. So be there
(0) #Wired In : Click and enjoy. That’s my bro in the papers. Proves he takes after me
(6) #Debasish. Him who designs SlideShare
(9) #Long been a fan of urlgreyhot, michael now has a profile on SlideShare (albeit a small one). Amazing-o! (7) #
MoMo Mumbai: Be there! (1) #
Guidelines for Platonic Friendship, by moreanonymous. Wish I had this 2 years ago. All my (girl)friends read it now! (11) #
Apple - MacBook Family: So they’ve finally gone and made the Macbook C2D. This is my next computer.
(5) #Cluetrain at SlideShare: This is something that I’ve always talked about & believed, nice to see a presentation about it at SlideShare
#From Pattom to Arjun Nagar. Kerala to Delhi.
(12) #Getting Rich with PHP 5, some good optimization tricks too by the guy who made PHP. (7) #
Vysnu is now running on WP2 with Akismet spam protection and comment moderation disabled. Three of Six. (17) #
Read Wired News’ This Is a Computer on Your Brain. I’m a big fan of augmented intelligence. Don’t think about cyborgs and so on, but rather the simple extension of the fact that computers are tools to improve human intelligence. (18) #
I’m working at the Uzanto Delhi office, don’t yet have a computer/internet at home, so detailed blogs about my experience will have to wait. Just a ping to let you guys know I’m having fun
(28) #
Via Pangu, The Day My God Died. Pretty dismal. (22) #
Perspective: The endangered joy of serendipity. Amazing. Recommended read. (12) #
Of gender differences in text messaging: cool, funny read!
(17) #Amit’s Building world class web products - A Survivor’s Checklist is an excellent read. In this vein, the Getting Real Book by 37Signals is also a must read for the new entrepreneur. #
The reason that ‘time’ needs special care for redirecting its output is one of those mysteries of the universe. The answer will probably be solved around the same time we find dark matter.
(45) #I’ve uploaded my website creation presentation out here, download and enjoy. (20) #
DP has roped me (again) to give a talk in school. I’ll be giving a short and to-the-point talk tomorrow (6th June) on creating websites, with a specific focus on the Lafest website. My dear aniyanmare, prepared to be bored (again)
(48) #From Memepunks, a quote by Alan Turing:
(23) #“In attempting to construct such machines we should not be irreverently usurping His power of creating souls, any more than we are in the procreation of children. Rather we are, in either case, instruments of His will providing mansions for the souls that He creates.”
I have one small suggestion for increasing wireless reception and stability for wireless routers: upgrade firmware. I’ve had a D-link DI-624+ for a while now and my wireless connection had intermittent faliures. Upgraded my firmware, and I not only have a stable signal, but increased speeds, more features, etc.
(29) #Rohypnol (for people spamming me with emails about it) is a date-rape drug, but it cannot cause permanent sterilization. Gosh, please think about stuff that you forward! (15) #
Dech from Fintan Darragh. I love this design. Clean, readable and trendy. (72) #
Impostor by Philip K. Dick. Really nice short story. (16) #
Google, Fuzzy Maths at the Economist, good read. (17) #
How Opal Mehta saved our lives Pretty interesting
(16) #It’s high time I uploaded a cool Mac screenshot, so here it is! That’s my Mac mini running Win XP in the background with native Intel virtualization. The speed is almost as good as the real thing
As soon as I get some time, I’ll post a good set of articles both here and over at Sig9 on how to get a nice development environment for MAMP/RoR/Java etc. on the Mac. (9) #Fastblood is back, on the latest Symfony release and now with spanking new communities. (16) #
The images that the United States doesn’t want you to see. (39) #
Do check out Windows Live. It seems to be much cooler looking than any other interactive homepage I’ve tried out. And please do look at the search engine, it’s amazing! (18) #
I’ve uploaded the Tatwa Web/Programming contest files up here, anyone interested may take a look: Programming Prelims, Finals; Web D Finals (design photo) (24) #
Found a most elegant way of embedding Flash in webpages today. None of that clutter! (25) #
GoodRecruits: 25 Most Difficult Job Interview Questions (and their answers) (36) #
I’ll be hosting the web designing and programming contests at Tatwa ‘06 tomorrow and day after. (Nishagandhi/Palace Hall) Interested people should be there, I’ve prepared something unique
(38) #Apple Boot Camp: Why should you not switch to an Apple Computer now? This is simply amazing
(20) #Entrepreneurial Proverbs: Some of these really make sense, some are counter-intuitive. (4) #
Sleep no more. Maybe this is a cure for sleeplessness? I could use it
(37) #Boom town Dubai: essential read (34) #
I’d made an initial mockup, but Vinod ran away with the idea and made a beautiful Dishaa ‘06 website. Kudos to him
(34) #bibliofile: I suggest every book-lover immediately start using this service. Here is a link to my RSS feed for completed books. (23) #
I’ve updated Menacing with some rather cool features. It is now rather refactored, has fine-tuned
(27) #--debugmessages, an--initmode so you don’t have to save a dumb matchbox to the same folder, and a spanking new--train [iterations]feature that allows you to train the matchboxes using a bare-minimum intelligent computer trainer (Thanks spacecro). And it’s rather good too. A--train 5000for instance, produces a nearly unbeatable matchbox combo. This is at version 0.9, and almost 1-oh ready. If there are more feature requests, please mention em here.Was featured in The Hindu Metro Plus Thiruvananthapuram, Saturday, March 04, 2006: Climbing Corporate Ladders (that’s me on the far right) (62) #
My article: A Nice C++ Linked List over at Sig9 (18) #
It’s around 30 minutes, but Is Google Book Search “Fair Use”? is an amazing watch. Highly Recommended! (40) #
Are we a Nation of Guinea Pigs? (20) #
Yahoo! Design Pattern Library and Yahoo! User Interface Library. The first one definitely seems worth a look… interface guidelines for the web, is that a first? (24) #
Symfony 0.6 released. Will upgrade my projects to this really soon. (18) #
Denmark’s problem with Muslims at the International Herald Tribune. (5) #
Keep an eye out for Blag, this is going to be something I’m working towards in the near future
(22) #I’m considering switching to lighttpd on all my projects online. Currently one third runs Apache 2 with lighttpd proxied in, but I wonder what it would be like to have lighttpd take it all. Somewhere down the line, I imagine managing a dedicated server network, and then I’d like it to be all lighttpd+FCGI+PHP/Perl/Python/Ruby. (13) #
Register for Stardust@Home - pre-registration, another in the evolving breed of distributed computing projects. (35) #
Just to prove that I’m ominscient, my ever-seeing eye has spotted Andrews and Aks with spanking new blogs
And I’m planning something which should be a happy surprise to both of em.
(11) #Houses Woven Out of Trees Proposed. Really love this, the only problem perhaps is the time required to grow those trees. A decade to wait for a house? Kind of unrealistic. Perhaps some kind of accelerated growth would help. As an aside, in all fantasy/scifi books, elves are able to “sing” the wood and make it malleable enough to mould. (58) #
Fiftyfoureleven.com Web Development Resources and Weblog (22) #
MVC and web apps: oil and water. A pretty detailed examination of the MVC model, a good, long, but rather confusing read. (44) #
I’ve updated my Fastblood blog with the interim project report I promised. (29) #
I Will Teach You To Be Rich: The Myth of the Great Idea. Amazing article. Recommended read. (21) #
Saw a CAPTCHA being used over at Anoop’s blog the other day and today found an article that describes using PEAR’s Text_CAPTCHA to Secure Web Forms. PEAR is a pretty good resource once you get over the dependency problems that seem to plague every package management system. (14) #
Had to post this Dictionary.com/Word of the Day: jollification. Yeah, so there are weirder words out there! (20) #
Bryant scores career-high 62, Lakers rip Mavs. Enough said. (59) #
µTorrent seems to be the best small Bittorrent client available. It even supports a DHT. (28) #
My internet connection seems almost twice as fast today. Asianet, my internet webhost seems to have done something radical with their bandwidth allocation. It’s still only 12K (pretty measly, I know), but for subsistence-level net users this comes as a pretty good surprise. Maybe it’s the competition: Reliance, Airtel, BSNL, whatnot. This upgrade makes Asianet’s plan the best out here I think: 880 bucks for a month of unlimited bandwidth 12K connection. Decent. Finally.
(52) #Same-Language Subtitling: Google awards a grant to a great idea :-). (28) #
Driven by the force, Torque featured in the Hindu Metro Plus. Also at Metro Plus Kochi: An enterprising lot. (32) #
Nothing new, but xampp is the best/easiest way to get Apache/PHP/MySQL and goodies onto your system: Linux, Windows, or OSX. (31) #
Portal:Kerala at Wikipedia (18) #
Do e-voting machines in the US cause this much of a problem? India has been using electronic voting machines too, for some time now, and as far I could see in the last election I voted, it seemed to work without a hitch. Of course, it’s no touchscreen, but maybe in this case, low-tech is a boon, not a bane. Every voting booth in India had at its disposal 3 times more voting machines than was required (because it’s so damn cheap), so when some machines broke down (as some do, with Murphy’s insistence), they were replaced with amazing alacrity. Do read more. (43) #
Psychology of Usability: Another list that I’ll have to peruse, seems interesting
(23) #RustyShack Gallery: some really amazing photos out there. Anoop, buddy, you rock! (32) #
Amazon.com: So I’d Like to… acquire fundamental Human-Computer Interaction knowledge! 38 books? <sigh> I’ve just started reading the Alan Dix book, lots of theory to delve into. (0) #
B.Tech Question Papers 1998 Scheme made available by the Kerala University. Wish they had more though, but it’s a good start
(17) #Patch and Diff for Windows: two essential UNIX code-management tools that no sane developer should live without. Note: more packages are available. (0) #
One of the things that I notice people neglect when they blog avidly is the faliure to provide traditional notification mechanisms. RSS, pingbacks, trackbacks, related terms & posts, technorati trickery etc. is fine, but an opt-in mailing list feature (where the user is notified of new posts) like say, the subscribe2 plugin for Wordpress, should never be neglected. I’m planning to correct this oversight (along with many others) in a future Vysnu/UR revision. (12) #
There’s a new version of metapad out after almost two years. This is the best (small) notepad replacement I’ve ever found. (0) #
I just downloaded a nightly build (RC1, actually) of Wordpress 2.0 to test out locally and was mighty impressed. AJAX has been used subtly to enhance the interface. While it still requires a degree of polish, WP2 looks much more pleasing to the eye. Drupal, incidentally, is also polishing up its next release. (1) #
The End User: Internet for the small screen: Do note the IHT article layout… sweet
(0) #In search of the One True Layout at PositionIsEverything (11) #
Uncle Orson’s Writing Class: Orson Scott Card and lessons on writing (7) #
Planet HCI: RSS Aggregator for HCI sites. (12) #
CHI 2006 Workshop: Sexual Interactions. Just goes to show the variety in the field
(15) #Brainbench’s offer for Indian professionals: $30 for their entire test series. Do check out their entire list, lots of completely free certifications. (14) #
Javascript Primer at Crockford. Very good articles. (24) #
Javascript libraries roundup: pretty amazing collection in one place. (7) #
Tinn is an excellent editor, sadly discontinued. Wish somebody would take this up. (19) #
Behaviour : Using CSS selectors to apply Javascript behaviours. Simply amazing. (25) #
HFcareers.com. Jobs in HCI/related fields. (7) #
An interview with the IPod Designer… Good! (31) #
Wink: Generate Flash Movies out of your desktop, probably the easiest way to get a video screencap. (12) #
symfony is an opensource PHP5 framework that promises to be the Rails for PHP. Looks professional and well done. It’s still PHP though. Please try Turbogears and Python goodiness if you need an alternative badly. (2) #
Without me realizing it, it’s been two years and counting since I started Vysnu. The first post, believe it or not, came on September 5, 2003.
Read more about Vysnu here. (I’ve also put in a note to celebrate my anniversaries in more pomp from now on). (31) #ACM: Student Membership Form for Indian students, only 850 bucks anually for an ACM membership. Please, oh please, ditch that computer magazine subscription and read the Digital Library. (21) #
A graduate school survival guide: “So long, and thanks for the Ph.D!” (22) #
FOSS.IN/2005: India’s Premier FOSS Event! Why does every interesting event have to happen in the middle of my exams? I rue the day I took btech
Look, even Jeremy Zawodny and Alan Cox are speaking.
(10) #My Geek Desk, flickr with envy! (17) #
Flock is based on Firefox, but has a cooler default theme, integration with Flickr and delicious, and blogging solutions inbuilt. Have tried it out and it seems very nice. Is it the Web 2.0 browser? Aside from a lot of hype about that, maybe yup. (7) #
Om Malik’s Broadband Blog » Inherent Truths and Value of Community. (28) #
Opera Affliate Program: Get Opera for free! (almost) (29) #
Poornima finally publishes. Pretty amazing blog, very evocative imagery. Recommended read! (22) #
Everybody please switch over to Google Talk. It’s free, it’s minimalistic, and it’s what I’ve wanted in an IM since ages. Hope Google continues to evolve this service, but still keep it cruft-free. Make all em smilies and girlie features into a plugin, and let people who like them actually use them! (29) #
What You Can’t Say, Paul Graham. Pretty intense. (8) #
“He needs Shock Therapy”. Blog, a friend of a friend. (4) #
Microsoft Shared Computer Toolkit for Windows XP seems like a good and easy way for all Internet Cafe Managers to secure their systems. (14) #
Unofficial Ubuntu 5.04 Starter Guide is perhaps the best guide for Linux installations (perhaps aside from Gentoo’s documentation) I’ve found on the net. It really adds on to the amazing starter-distro that Ubuntu is. (10) #
Google PageRank Checker and Button maker… really interesting tools. (29) #
Wez’s Evil Shell: a new replacement shell. (38) #
Earth Day Footprint Quiz: I need two planets. (0) #
Omnipelagos.com finds the shortest distance between two topics in the Wikipedia. Try this one!
(7) #Behind the Name: the Etymology and History of First Names (9) #
Usable GUI Design: for FOSS developers. Pretty nice. (12) #
JSON is a pretty simple serialization format. The current trend seems to be to stray away from markup-heavy formats. It’s already been spec-ed and implemented. Looks very promising. (18) #
thenewblueline, a nice place to post/read poetry for critique. (27) #
New, Obscure, and Say What? word lists from Answers.com. It’s useful for your GRE. (23) #
Jon Udell interviews Kevin Hakman about TIBCO General Interface: Video Interview… see this and be amazed, what you see is actually running inside a browser
(15) #The Science of Word Recognition: Interesting, if a bit heavy read. (24) #
The .NET Show Home: Transcript: Win64. Must Read, I’m looking to switch to Win64 on my main box soon. (2) #
Friends and Enemies. Basketball. (26) #
ffdshow and Media Player Classic: this is how you should watch DVDs on Windows XP. (10) #
Shakti’s book of secrets over at this page is indispensable if you’re going to be a power Morrowind player. (12) #
Yub.com: Meet. Hang. Shop. Good. (0) #
MacZealots: Beginning Mac Development, a very good read and an interesting take on Objective C. (0) #
Baen CDs… in addition to the free library, Baen also releases books on CDs, this is an archive for them. (0) #
Listmania: Sci-fi and Fantasy Recommendations : I’ve finished 11 out of 24. Heavily tilted towards Ringo. (0) #
sproutliner: simply amazing task management website. Uses extensive creative client-side management that makes it feel like a desktop app. It requires no registration… try it out! Or look at one I made. The source code is also available. (30) #
Ray Keshavan Design India.: A very good design firm based in India. (21) #
mezzoblue’s Markup Guide: Very useful. (0) #
Sniff This and Fork It Over… trust in a box. (24) #
Developing Nations License: Seems to be a very focused license, and I’m thinking of adopting this for my projects.
(12) #Playlist: Downloads, free legal downloadable music. Some of them are NICE. (27) #
Talkr converts blogs to podcasts. Combined with this, it makes for a very sexy innovation. I’ll look to integrate this soon. (18) #
Google: Personalized Homepage. After you’ve customized it, try dragging the boxes around! (34) #
Cheat Sheets: Mod_rewrite, CSS, PHP, RGB HEX… Bookmark now! (22) #
Temporary admin for your Limited User account: This sounds like a much needed “sudo” for Windows… One of the most ironical things is that for XP Home and Professional, a non-administrative account (a limited user account) is essentially useless since it’s so crippling whereas in *nix, you can run pretty much anything as non-root. Having some sort of su (”Run As…”) or sudo can ameliorate several security concerns. (24) #
Test Linux through a browser!: Very interesting! (27) #
SCons looks like a very superior build tool. A rethink of the Makefiles drama was long overdue
(34) #Unofficial OpenBSD ports: Currently trying out the openoffice one… I can’t live without having a decent writer. (0) #
Gallina: Seems interesting, using Gmail as a blog medium
(25) #A History of the GUI, excellent read. (18) #
Seems like Tiger is not all roses after all… (1) #
Didn’t know PCQ Linux was enough of a major distro that it gets reviewed… I remember this was my first intro to Linux way back. =) (10) #
End of the Traditional Operating System?: A very interesting article on Xen. (9) #
I was searching around for forum software… the criteria? It has to be fast, clean and opensource… Vanilla seems to be nice. So does bbpress, I especially adore the tags feature… see it in action over at the Wordpress forums. (8) #
Oyzterbay: I love diamonds (and modern jewelry). Dear Oyzterbay, please hire a better webdesigner when you get the time
(12) #The Kingdom of Heaven Is Near: The cinematography seems so much like that of the Gladiator that I instantly knew it was a Ridley Scott movie. Is it a good thing or bad to be that distinctive? (12) #
myGmaps enables you to create, save and host custom data files and display them with Google Maps. (25) #
Guess-the-google: Really addictive game
(39) #Zootella.SetupCreator.Design - A personal developer’s rant on installation programs and user interfaces. Incidentally, you “install” a program on OSX by following much lesser steps… you download an archive, and you drag the archive to your Computer icon - it seems a lot more intuitive. (31)
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