dTective
A system for video evidence analysis.
August 31, 2004
New iMac
All of the hardware is behind the screen, hopefully it doesn't look ugly with a bunch of cords running out of it.
August 31, 2004
Here’s an excerpt from a Time interview with Laura Bush:
TIME: Have you ever had a gay couple stay with you in the White House or in Texas?
BUSH: I’m sure we have.
TIME: You wouldn’t have any objection?
BUSH: No, of course not.
This one is curious, I’m not sure if she’s lying. Anyone know if the Bushes have let a gay couple stay with them? Cheney’s daughter maybe?
August 30, 2004
A song about walnuts (mp3)
I made it during one of the computer camps, before teaching a Fruity Loops lesson to kids. It's not about walnuts, it's a bunch of beats.
August 29, 2004
The Van Gogh family tree
There was a Vincent born a year before the one we all know
August 29, 2004
The Blessed Damozel
A poem by Dante Gabriel Rossetti. There's also a painting by the same name.
August 29, 2004
2 more Conform Project updates
Check out the 11th and 12th images in the current series, created by Anton Sten and Simon Daoudi respectively.
August 28, 2004
My second summer with Science and Computer Discovery Camp is over. It’s hard to believe that the summer has gone by this fast. It was a lot of work, but a lot of fun at the same time. I’m going to miss it.
Now, it’s break time for a little while. But not long enough, I could use an extra week or two to relax. I have to move apartments in the next few days and school starts up again in about a week.
August 28, 2004
U.S. Army Chief of Staff's Reading List
Recommended readings for various levels of the military.
August 23, 2004
The Earth at night
Yesterday's astronomy photo of the day
August 23, 2004
New Conform image
by Jason Thompson. I need to fix the navigation on the site a bit so that it's easier to get to the next image.
August 23, 2004
Spiderman!
Fun flash game
August 23, 2004
Wheee, did a bunch of web work tonight. I tweaked the site header a little bit, so the green is flush with the left hand side.
The newest installment of the Conform Project is up. This one is by Piero Desopo, a guy who used to be part of suffocate.org. If you haven’t been to his site, you should check it out: PhoenixArt.
I changed the account hosting BolderStone, but the domain had to change machines. There’s a new look to the site, but it’s pretty minimal for now.
That is all.
August 19, 2004
Magazine predicts future
A 1996 Cracked article that jokes about a television show where illegal immigrants humiliate themselves for Green Cards
August 18, 2004
Google Boner
August 16, 2004
Google's Playboy interview
the complete article
August 15, 2004
The Faint
Wet From Birth sounds pretty damn good
August 14, 2004
Jonathan Hoefler typeface courses
thorough style and design introductions
August 12, 2004
We made a great dinner tonight, which included my new favourite salad. Not that Manadarin salads aren’t normally good, but this was kickass.
Ingredients:
- organic leaf lettuce or romaine
- green onions
- can of mandarin oranges
- bag of almonds
- brown sugar
- oil/vinegar dressing
- salt/pepper
- tobasco
Instructions:
Take the bag of almonds and smash them up with a hammer. Put them in a frying pan and cover them with a bunch of brown sugar. After it’s all melty, get the gooey mess out of the pan and onto some wax paper or tinfoil. When it cools, you can break it up and throw it in the salad.
Meanwhile, you want to be putting the lettuce in a bowl. Chop up some of the onions and put those in too. Then strain the oranges and dump them in. Take the left over orange juice, mix it with equal parts of the oil/vinegar dressing. But a bunch of a pepper in it, a bit of salt, a few teaspoons of brown sugar and a few hits of tobasco. Mix it into the salad and you’re good to go.
August 10, 2004
Donky Konga
Crazy Japanese trailer for the game
August 9, 2004
There are some articles popping up on news sites about Northface University, a new computer science school in the States, that’s heavily backed by corporate sponsors (not that most schools aren’t). You pay $60000, do a CS degree in two and a half years and get a bunch of certifications. I equate it with a diploma mill or maybe a nerd mill. Yeah, they’re going to pound out good corporate citizens that have tons Microsoft and IBM training, but they won’t be well-rounded.
Meanwhile, my school has been heading in the other direction, trying to give their computer science students a more balanced education. I was one of the first to get a redundant sounding degree, that I can see them renaming: Bachelor of Computing, Subject of Specialization Computing. It’s essentially the same program as the old B.Sc but they require at least 5.0 credits to be in courses other than Math or Stats and 1.5 of those credits in the humanities.
One of the big things that people are starting to realize is that computing is everywhere now. It’s not just mathematical theory and producing hardware. Almost everyone in a modern environment uses some form of computing at home and work every day. And they’re not all dorks. What may seem like a simple and intuitive interface to the programmer is not for the end-user. Computer Science should act as a technological bridge between Arts and Science; their needs to be programmers with backgrounds in fields like biology, chemistry, economics, english, and fine arts, that help produce intuitive software.
The world needs hardcore dorks like the ones Northface will produce. But we’ll also need computer scientists who understand people as well machines, so we can stave off a citizen’s revolt against computers and technology.
August 6, 2004
Was sick of the red. Here’s something different but the same.
August 4, 2004
Bush campaign photo
it seems appropriate
August 4, 2004