Clusters of colour

[Original Link] Now this is one of the most colourful sites I’ve seen in a while. Full of great photos. I want to try this, but am wondering how much dieting I’d need first….

And here’s some more wonderful aerial photography. I’ve always thought that flying radio-controlled aircraft was a pretty poor substitute for the real thing, in the same way that I feel sorry for all those kids who grew up wanting to be astronauts and now end up working in satellite-control-rooms. But attaching a camera to the plane gives it a whole new meaning…

[Thanks to Martin King for the links]

Politely turning down viruses

[Original Link] If, like me, you get a little bit miffed when people unnecessarily send you stuff as Microsoft attachments, you might like to make use of the standard reply that John’s posted on LivingWithoutMicrosoft.

Emacs being Eclipsed

One aspect of my new situation is that I’m writing some code again, having been doing mostly managementy things for the last couple of years. It’s fun to catch up.

I’ve been particularly impressed by Eclipse, a development environment that came from IBM originally, and has a large and growing community behind it. The recent eclipseCon conference had some influential keynote speakers, for example.

In my youth, serious programmers used the Emacs editor, which, if you could program in Lisp, could be made to do much more than just editing. There are Emacs games, mail readers, news readers and every variation of editing under the sun, all available from a few obscure keystrokes. The saying was that Emacs was “not so much an editor, more a way of life”. I know people who still use it for reading news and mail.

“Every program attempts to expand until it can read mail. Those programs which cannot so expand are replaced by ones which can.” Zawinski’s Law. Nowadays he would probably say “until it becomes a web browser”.

Well, I think Eclipse is the new Emacs. Strictly, it’s an environment for building development tools, and there are many many projects out there creating applications based around it. In more down-to-earth terms, the basic download gives you a really nice environment for Java development, and an easy system of plugins so you can get tools for other work as well – C/C++ coding, Quality Testing, GUI design, Nokia phone development, Web site creation, even COBOL programming. Eclipse is now apparently “the most popular Java IDE in North America“. And it’s not just because it’s completely free. Having used it for the last two days, I’m very impressed.

There’s an introduction to Eclipse on Apple’s site, though being written in Java, it will run on most platforms. IBM even offer Eclipse Innovation Grants for people doing interesting things with it.

Moving on

I’ve always considered myself a jack-of-all-trades and master of none, and the challenge is to find situations where that’s an asset!

At Newnham Research, I gradually hired in ‘masters’, who could do all the jobs I had been doing better than me, and so hired myself out of a job, which was always my intention! Newnham is therefore in very capable hands, and, as of about three weeks ago, I’m working on a new project. More information as things become more public…

[untitled]

How many Microsoft
programmers does it take to screw in a light bulb? None. Let’s define
darkness as the new industry standard. [seen here]

Sky pictures

More shots from my recent visit to the Netherlands:


Farming the wind

[untitled]

The good ol’ BBC are now experimenting with making some of their programmes available as MP3 downloads. Melvyn Bragg’s “In Our Time” is the first, and I can now listen to it on my iPod/Italk combo.   I’ve said it before & I’ll say it again.  This is the future of radio.

Public Service Broadcasting is a wonderful thing when it’s as good as
this.  The BBC is the thing I miss most when I’m in the States.

Exploding Phones

[Original Link] A warning for those of us who carry unexploded phones in our, errm, hip pockets.

Rip, Mix, Burn, Sue

[Original Link] Ed Felten’s splendid lecture on understanding digital media and the
associated copyright issues.  You don’t need any knowledge of
technology to understand this one.
An issue Ed doesn’t touch on, which should also be exercising
the minds of the media industry, is that content of this quality is
freely available on the web, and is certainly better than anything on
offer on my TV channels tonight.  There’s always been good stuff
to read on the web.  Increasingly, there’s a lot of good stuff to watch, too.
Thanks to John for the link.

EPIC

[Original Link] A very clever broadcast from 2014. This is beautifully done.

Update, 2012: now seems to be here.

Breakfast in Bruges

Spent a day and a night in Bruges recently – a wonderful city. We stayed in a small hotel by a canal – here’s where we had breakfast:

More pictures from that trip in due course.

iTalk therefore iAm

Well, not only have a recently become the proud owner of an iPod Photo, but today I went and got a Griffin iTalk for it.

italk picture

This works very nicely as a voice recorder, but also incorporates a small speaker. This allows you to play back your memos without headphones, but also to play back anything else that you don’t mind hearing through a tiny speaker. Not great for music, but OK for listening to audiobooks while shaving…

© Copyright Quentin Stafford-Fraser