- Scrabulous returns as Wordscraper.
- Netflix working with LG only for downloads?
- NASA looking for water on Mars.
- The Greek computer stories I am now convinced are a BS PR stunt.
- Yahoo exec makes Yuil search engine to show up Cuil.
- EDS to be part of HP.
- Microsoft redoes the search engine yet again.
- IE beta up for grabs.
- Madden out on Aug. 11… the game that is.
- Make a computer from spare parts for no money.
- China limiting web access during Olympics. Why?
Right click here and select ‘Save Link As…’ to download the mp3 file.
I’m fairly confident that months will continue to go by for the foreseeable future, at least…
Why aren’t NASA looking for oil, on Mars?
The “Greek Computer” (known as the Antikythera Mechanism because that’s where it was found) is absolutely real, and a fantastic piece of history. A few months ago there was a great article about it in Smithsonian magazine – here’s a story on their web site:
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/ancient_calendar.html
The most irritating thing about IE8 is Microsoft people constantly calling it “I-Yee-Eh”. They can’t seem to get out that last consonant or something.
The new developer tools are kind of OK. The Javascript and HTML editing rate an “OK that’s nice I guess”. The CSS review and history viewing is quite good. Various Firefox developer plugins don’t need to quake in their boots yet.
The Antikythera Mechanism is quite real. I doubt, however, that the latest “it does this” information is accurate. Mostly, I think, because we simply don’t have other examples. Unless the Church trashed them all, and didn’t bother to mention that, you’d expect more of these.
That said, working with bronze to make something like this isn’t really all that difficult. The principles probably are a bit of a breakthrough, but the overall technology isn’t. (Look at the Egyptian and Roman medical instruments. No gears, but the same kind of precision.)
IMHO, there is some Olympics-related hype here, givn the conclusions being delivered, but we live in a world where a lot of popular History is what’ll sell. Does anybody remember “The Scorpion King” and the television special (A&E or History?) that tried to relate the movie to an early Egyptian Pharaoh named Menes because he had a scorpion on a ceremonial object?
(I figured that if the narrator said “Scorpion” one more time, I was going to mail him one.)
Regards
“Everyone knows GoDaddy, it’s the largest domain name registrar in the world. The company is mostly known from pulling shitloads of dollars into the booby Super Bowl marketing campaigns filled full with sexually suggestive material, which get always rejected a number of times before being accepted to air in the television. Anyways, soon it is going to be the renewal season for me, also it’s the final time to purchase a bunch of new domain names, so I was stumbling around in order to find the best offers. The inherent curiosity took me to GoDaddy, and guess what…
How much time may it take to find complete information about pricing on their own website? Five minutes, maybe ten? Well, I’m sorry but this time I simply have no idea – and I can only tell you that after 15 minutes of hard-digging through the all of their marketing brainwash I came up with nothing, so I tried Google Search. And check out what I found under “godaddy renewal prices” – a series of comprehensive articles clearly showing the way GoDaddy deals with people. Go on, find out how the world’s most popular domain registrar does it’s business. It is really interesting and worth reading, just go on and read.
http://wincent.com/a/about/wincent/weblog/archives/2007/01/wincent_vs_goda.php
Bummer that GoDaddy is a scam. And bummer that Danica Patrick is a “GoDaddy Girl”. And bummer that Cranky Geeks accepts an internet scam to sponsor their show.
🙁