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Showing posts from April, 2006

Kathleen McNulty Mauchly Antonelli

died this week. She was a computing pioneer during WWII, and described herself as one of the computers which ENIAC made redundant. There only seems to be one, rather sparse, obituary online sadly. I met Kay at GHC in 2004, and she was a witty and insightful woman, with many tales of the early days of computer development which still reflect today's computing realities.

Whee....

Rendezvous - up to 140mph through Paris in 1978 (on google video) . It's as old as me, but still looks like a lot of fun. Makes a change from WEEE which I've been looking into today for work, and which promises to provide me with my very own personal skip of electronics waste some time in the future. What more could I want?

Sutton Hoo

Today we went to Sutton Hoo and Aldeburgh. Mahon got his photos up already, quicker than us, which is probably for the best as they are likely to be better than mine anyway!

Beertinis

Beer-based cocktails in the NYT - not my thing, I suspect, but knowing people who like both beer and cocktails, perhaps there is a market for them.

taking notes

List of online note-taking apps. There are so many nifty sites online now that it is lucky there's a large number of people with nothing better to do than try them all out. Those of us with other work are still left trying to work out which are actually useful without an inordinate effort to configure them in the first place, which are still going to be operational in a few months, and which are secure enough to be useable for work...

Be Constructive

CITB-Construction Skills (a strange organisational name, but a good bunch of people) have a great new TV ad to entice people to consider careers in their industry. You can view it by clicking "How will you make your mark?" at BConstructive (also works with the e, for spelling geeks). One day, all engineering fields will have professional skills bodies like this...

Everything on the web - today, IM

Multiprotocol IM via Meebo for those away from their machines with IM clients or behind firewalls. Still, no Skype, so it's not the all in one solution I'm ultimately looking for. 

scheduling

Just as I was about to seriously start using iCal (which conveniently integrates with my new project management tool, Merlin , which is super btw), Google finally launches their calendar offering. Very nice too, although the SMS alerts seem to be US only at the moment.

Signs of Spring

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The first ducklings I've seen this year, at Sheene Mill . They made it up the stairs, amazingly.

Roofing

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Paul and Ivor next door have been building Ivor's new garage the last 2 weekends. Today they put the roof on.

Squish

Not that I am planning on driving over my MacBook Pro, but this is reassuring...

International Symposium on Intelligent Environments

Laptop count: most people weren't using them. Of those with them, I'd say at least 50% powerbooks (some could be macbook pros, it's hard to tell at a distance, but the ones I got a closer look at are all powerbooks so far), 40% wintel, and 10% weird tablets and other similar oddities. Gender count: 20% women, give or take. That's not a formal count ;-) Unformatted writeup of some of the sessions (straight from my outliner): here

Webcams - this time we have a winner

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Compared to the evil Linksys , I spent a little more for an Axis 207W, which is both dinky and works - really works. Plug into Ethernet, my Mac finds it on Bonjour, set the wifi key, unplug the cable, and it's there, serving up some nice html with actual MPEG/JPEGs too. And it has lovely concentric LEDs around the lens. The web interface is easy to use, and lets me do complex things or simple things. I like this one. Shows what you get when you spend an extra £100, though. Ouch.

Laura blogs a conference

I'm at the International Symposium on Intelligent Environments this week. Like Less Is More last year, this is organised by MSR in Cambridge , and has an unusual (to me!) mix of compscis (mainly on the HCI and AI sides), designers, artists, and sociologists (I think). So far, Don Norman has given an interesting keynote - as usual for such things, nothing especially new, but lightly amusing coverage of fairly obvious high level material. No call to arms in this one. I'll write up my notes at some point; I could of course be blogging in realtime, in a terribly cliched way, but I think I'd rather digest the material before writing it properly. For once I've been happy to take notes electronically - the lighting in the auditorium is rather random and so in general the audience is in pitch darkness, meaning only those of us with glowing screens or amazing writing ability can take notes at all. I've been very glad of my glowing keyboard!