Monthly Archive for August, 2005

Wed
Aug
31
2005

Poseidon computer system detects drowning girl and alerts pool lifeguards, probably saving her life 0 cmts

Poseidon computer system detects drowning girl and alerts pool lifeguards, probably saving her life – Watch the video footage to see how cool and useful this is. It is hard to have any kind of job where you are forced to sit and watch something all day. But not only do computers not have the problem of boredom and split attention, they also have the ability to see things people can’t. A fine supplement to the human lifeguard presence at public swimming pools.

New Orleans in Peril 0 cmts

bq. Those of us in New York watch the dire pictures from Louisiana with keen memories of the time after Sept. 11, when the rest of the nation made it clear that our city was their city, and that everyone was part of the battle to restore it. New Orleans, too, is one of the places that belongs to every American’s heart – even for people who have never been there. Right now it looks as if rescuing New Orleans will be a task much more daunting than any city has faced since the San Francisco fire of 1906. It must be a mission for all of us.

New York Times editorial

Mon
Aug
29
2005

Maybe, just maybe, the Republicans will get us out of this Iraq mess 0 cmts

Maybe, just maybe, the Republicans will get us out of this Iraq mess – Well, Frank Rich is right inasmuch as the Democrats continue to be completely useless.

Sun
Aug
28
2005

The future of television distribution 0 cmts

The future of television distribution – In a presentation to the Australian Film, Television, and Radio School, Mark Pesce proposes moving back to the 1950s model of television sponsorship, where one advertiser sponsors the entire show. The new twist? The advertiser also provides the distribution — internet bandwidth, millions of free DVDs, etc. — and networks simply aren’t relevent anymore. I love this. I absolutely love this. I think he is right on target here, this model makes more sense than anything I’ve heard of so far.

And The Bandwidth Played On 0 cmts

And The Bandwidth Played On – A 1996 rant about how faster internet connections would be the death of the web. Still an interesting read today. The web certainly is nothing like what it used to be.

The story of Suck.com, possibly the internet’s first blog (among other things) 0 cmts

The story of Suck.com, possibly the internet’s first blog (among other things) – Unfortunately this article is really, really, really long.

Our search problem 2 cmts

Apple's Spotlight searchLots of people are playing with Google’s Desktop Search as an alternative to the terrible built in Microsoft Windows search features. On the Mac, of course, we have Spotlight, and Microsoft claims that their new Longhorn product, now called Windows Vista, will have wonderful integrated search as well. These search systems index the entire computer, allow you to search from the desktop, and display a combined list of all different document types that contain the relevent words.

Which is all well and good.

So here is my problem. On the web I have Google, which gives me powerful searching. It also has taken away some of the tools that other search engines allowed, like boolean operators (Windows AND Doors NOT Microsoft). They don’t seem inclined to put them back. Sure, this makes search easier for normal users, but it takes away some of the power. Even more powerful are things like regular expressions, a language for constructing highly complex searches looking for different combinations of letters and numbers and patterns in very sophisticated (and confusing to understand) ways. Again, not a tool for Joe User, but if search is really becoming central to our lives as Google (and Apple, and Microsoft) claim, we need more sophisticated tools for searching. Booleans and regular expressions are some of those tools.

Other tools we need: pluralization and spelling derivation. If I’m searching for “color” I also probably want “colour,” “colors,” and “colours.” If I’m searching for “person” I might also want “people.” And I want accents. If I’m searching for “facade,” I also want “façade.”

Some search tools do some of these things, some do all. Some are better than others at indexing and at finding. If search is so pervasive, I want good search *everywhere.* Sure when I use Google to search the web I get good results, but when I use the search field in my blog I often can’t find what I’m looking for. Spotlight on my desktop is good at finding some things, but doesn’t let me do sophisticated queries. The search built into my mail client has some good filters but is not very extensible or customizable. And the search built into my web browser is nearly useless.

What I suspect and hope will happen is that Apple will release a SearchKit system to integrate search across their operating system, much as they have integrated displaying web pages with WebKit. This ensures that everything displays the same and takes advantage of all of the built in features of the operating system. A powerful SearchKit framework should make it trivial for programs to incorporate powerful, extensible, customizable search. Apple seems to be ahead of Microsoft on this one, integrating their Spotlight search into the mail and address book programs. But I expect Microsoft to do something similar. And hey, maybe Google will release something like that as well, and let people built Google search functionality into their programs.

Of course we will continue to have the same problem — different search systems with different algorithms and different features will behave differently, continuing to make our lives interesting. But at least things will be, on the whole, better, just as they are continuing to get better, slowly, in fits and starts, on the pervasive search front. Next thing we need to figure out: something more useful than our file and folder and desktop metaphor for interacting with our computers. Because come on folks, I love the current concept, but there are have got to be some interesting new ideas out there for things that do it better.

Thu
Aug
25
2005

Bush’s proposed new car mileage regulations are rife with loopholes and far less stringent than those already put forth by California 1 cmts

Bush’s proposed new car mileage regulations are rife with loopholes and far less stringent than those already put forth by California – Not only will SUVs still get a free ride, so to speak, the savings estimates are based on gas prices of $1.50 per gallon and thus drastically understate the potential of regulations like those in California to decrease US oil consumption and cut down on the emission of greenhouse gases that cause global warming.

Wed
Aug
24
2005

The Batkin wedding 1 cmts

The ceremonyWell, that happened. My first wedding experience, and it sort of felt like a birthday party, ya know? Like you’re celebrating something supposedly monumental, but nothing has really changed? Yesterday they were engaged, today they are married. Tomorrow, well, tomorrow they’ll be in Scotland. I guess that is a somewhat monumental change, after all. The moment that really did it for me is one that barely anyone else really noticed, wrapped up as they were in the winding down festivities and getting on their way. It was at the end of the party when Adam and Jess and company walked off towards the car, and I realized that the receding back I was seeing was the last glimpse I would get of Adam in the flesh for, well, who knows how long. But this is not unprecedented — other friends have moved away. It just makes things different. So very different.

After that Amy was anxious to get on the road but for some reason I felt like dawdling. I helped Adam’s dad, Steve, load and unload a few things, but really I just enjoyed meandering around, petting the kittens, realizing that I was pretty close to touching an electric fence, saying hi and by to people, and just enjoying the beauty of Rhinebeck. It is a very, very neat place. Eventually we did get back on the road, and so it was, 3 hours there, 6 hours of excitement, and 3 hours going back the way we came. Oh, by the way, the pizza place in town is really yummy, they even had toasted ravioli!

Anyway, I’ve pared down my 150+ pictures to the eighteen best, I have some more good ones that I can put online if there is demand, but mostly they’re similar scenes, and I wanted to keep the impact high. Here are the photos of the day and here is the same thing in slideshow form.

Goodbye for now, Adam, and good luck.

Wed
Aug
17
2005

Evangelical Scientists Refute Gravity With New ‘Intelligent Falling’ Theory 0 cmts

Evangelical Scientists Refute Gravity With New ‘Intelligent Falling’ TheoryThey insist they are not asking that the theory of gravity be banned from schools, but only that students be offered both sides of the issue “so they can make an informed decision.” (via Kevin)


Your Proprietor

I'm Danny Silverman, a guy in Cambridge, MA with an interest in law, culture, media, and using technology to bring people together even as we work ever harder to push ourselves apart.

My day job is maintaining computer systems. I like exploring the outdoors. I catch and throw flying discs for sport. My cat is fuzzy.

To contact me: zeno@ this site.

Archives

2776 posts since May 2001.

Twitter Updates

  • NYTimes: Getting Obama Right http://s.nyt.com/u/FLw -- remarkable how *everyone* mischaracterizes the president's political philosophy. 1 day ago
  • Just eliminated 1/3 of my RSS feeds, strongly focused on the most prolific writers. Currently no unread items. What an odd feeling. 3 days ago
  • Plan to write my own server health check framework for my web apps again validated...but it seems silly I can't find anything else to do it. 3 days ago