Archive for October, 2003
More fun on the Sun

Researchers classify solar flares using three categories: C for weak, M for Moderate and X for strong. The largest flare on record, one of two known X20s, occurred on April 2, 2001, but was not directed at Earth. The following is a X17 burst from the sun and is headed straight for us. The solar flares from last week are considered X1 and X5 on the same scale.
Sad
The best game show announcer in the world is gone.
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Seems strange that a couple days after a huge sunspot activity on the sun there is a huge fire sparked by santa ana winds in SoCal. hmmmmm
Sunspots

Here is what sun looked like this week.

Here is what the sunspots makes the northern lights look like. Who says there is nothing interesting going on around here.
Smarts
Some people base your perceived “Brain Power” by your time in college and then above that, what college you went to. I on the other hand have found the opposite to be true.
The people that I find the most brilliant are the ones who did not go to college, or if they did, it was a college without a big name. Rarely have I met an individual, who graduated from a prominent institution of higher learning, that wielded a more than average intellect or emotional intelligence.
What I have found is that employers and collegues use this “Higher Education” footnote as a vetting process by which they can suspend personal judgement and instinct about peoples abilities.
Phrases such as the following are becoming commonplace in corporate America.
“We thought he knew what he was doing, I mean he graduated Harvard.” Or “He came with all the right credentials, it’s not my fault that he ran the company into the ground, I was just doing what he told us to.”
My judgment has always been “Prove it to me”. Make me believe that you are smart, I don’t care whether you are a mechanic or a CEO, there are no free passes as to who I deem intelligent.
[Right On Alanna] [Great Essay] [Salon Article]
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I am very saddened today by the death of Elliiot Smith. Probable one of the greatest american songwriters to come along in a twenty years. Fan Site
Comments are off for this postCSS Site of the day
Paul sent me a link to this CSS tutorial site. Great stuff
Listomatic
Money and software
At a recent Gartner summit Steve Ballmer from Microsoft made the following comments about Open Source VS closed source software programming.
“Should there be a reason to believe that code that comes from a variety of people, unknown from around the world, should be somehow of higher quality than that from people who get paid to do it professionally?”
“There’s no reason to believe it would be of higher quality. I’m not necessarily claiming it should be of worse quality, but why should code submitted randomly by some hacker in China and distributed by some open source project, why is that, by definition, better?”
I think I would like to ask Steve what makes him think that paying people to make closed source code will give him good software?
Granted, guys who go out and play football on sunday in the park are not in the same league as guys who play for the NFL. And the guy who tricks out his 1996 Honda Civic is not Michael Schumacher. But software programming is an art that requires brain power and it does not need a billion dollar company behind it to make a good product. Lord knows it helps, but it is not a requirement.
Open source does not discriminate. It does not care if you went to college for this or not. Or if you have 20 years experience or not. It does not care if you are a bad programmer that has weaseled his way up to lead developer. It does not care if you are warming your seat until your options mature. Your bad ideas and purposeless features do not get included because you have senoirity. The best code and ideas wins and your fellow developers are the ones who judge, not the brain dead Senoir VP of Buttcrack analysis who can’t even work his own email program.
I think Steve should ask his army of programmers to work for the love of the software and the community, not money, and see how many of them still think building another bloated feature into Word is a good idea.
Comments are off for this postElectricity from Tap water
The first new source of electricity in 100 years has just been unleashed onto the world. Waste water treatment plants could soon be generating electricity too.[Read More]
Comments are off for this postWord of the Day
Todays word of the day is “Wommy”.
You can make up your own definition. I think mine has something to do with an article of clothing that is very close to you.
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