Experimental, impressionistic sub-paragraph tumblin' (think obstsalat)
16dec2005
The Elements of Typographic Style Applied to the Web, a practical guide to web typography.
The Highs and Lows of Web Design in 2005 by Stephen Bryant. AJAX, Rails… everything mentioned.
Lisp Books, Bill Clementson published his Lisp-related Delicious Library.
IFS Designer animates!, very nice too look at.
Lisp Movies, Episode 1: HTTP Client and Server, more screencasts for you. Good one.
Please don’t take what I’m saying amiss
Or misunderstand at a time such as this
Because if such close friends should ever fall out
What would there be left worth fighting about
— David Gilmour, Cruise
Jingle Bells, Exciting things are happening around Google Talk today. […] Jabber has published the experimental draft Jingle specs, which extend XMPP for use in voice over IP (VoIP), video, and other peer-to-peer multimedia sessions.
Holocaustleugner und Tierrechtsfetischisten, Lars Strojny schnitzelt ab (sorry, den konnte ich mir nicht verkneifen).
Aktion Artenschutz, Das Projekt Bedrohte Wörter bittet um Mithilfe. Wir sammeln vom Aussterben bedrohte Wörter, um sie in einer Roten Liste der aussterbenden Wörter zu veröffentlichen und sie so vor dem Vergessen zu bewahren.
Random thoughts on the cost of software by Dan Zambonini. Luckily, most assertions aren’t that way.
Logic Programming with Perl and Prolog by Robert Pratte. Two evils at once? ;-)
Version 3.0 (alpha) of the Metasploit Framework Now Available, Nitesh Dhanjani writes: “The Metasploit team has just released version 3.0 (warning: alpha) of their framework. This release is a complete rewrite of the 2.0 version, and it is written in ruby!”
Organizing Files by Karl Vogel. I really should write about my method, which is similar but easier.
Well it’s four in the morning by the sound of the birds,
I’m starin’ at your picture, I’m hearin’ your words.
Baby, they ring in my head like a bell.
— Bob Dylan, Under Your Spell
Franz is a Tough Customer, or how you learn to love the open-source Lisps. :-P (Alternative solution: Become fucking successful and buy Franz.)
The Haskell Programmer’s Guide to the IO Monad — Don’t Panic by Stefan Klinger on LtU. Good read.
The Collatz conjecture is an unresolved conjecture in mathematics. Consider the following operation on an arbitrary positive integer: If the number is even, divide it by two. If the number is odd, triple it and add one.