Sunday, March 31, 2002
Saturday, March 30, 2002
Friday, March 29, 2002
Thursday, March 28, 2002
Wednesday, March 27, 2002
Tuesday, March 26, 2002
Monday, March 25, 2002
"And I'm not sure which way it is going to go."
Sunday, March 24, 2002
Saturday, March 23, 2002
Friday, March 22, 2002
To Raise Revenue During Ad Slump "The Sunnyvale, Calif., company said it would stop providing free access to users who check their Yahoo e-mail from outside services such as Eudora and Microsoft Corp.'s Outlook. Starting April 24, users will have to pay $29.99 a year for the mail-forwarding service, though users that sign up for it prior to that date can pay a discounted price of $19.99... The announcement, which was sent out in an e-mail to Yahoo users, marks the first time the company has transformed a free communications feature to a paid service. Yahoo has added several other enhanced services that it charges users for, such as extra mailbox storage space or real-time stock quotes. It has also converted some once-free services that aren't primarily associated with communications, such as auction listing fees."
The various types of e-mail software used by employees aren't the same as those used by America Online subscribers at home. Instead, the divisions customized AOL products, such as those from its Netscape unit."
Thursday, March 21, 2002
More fun: "Judge Kollar-Kotelly questioned Sullivan's use of the states' 100 hour allotment of time to ask questions of Barksdale that seemingly repeated some of those facts as well as his written testimony." "Time is ticking away," she said. But she added: "if you want to go through repetitive information, go ahead."
Should the Urge Strike You "Beyond Global: The World Wide Web is now accessible to surfers from out of this world. Google Inc.'s Google.com offers its Internet search interface and help pages in a half dozen alien, nonexistent and dead tongues such as Klingon, Elmer Fudd, Bork Bork Bork, Pig Latin, and H4x0r -- a hacker tongue. They receive some 150,000 queries on the zany language pages daily."
Wednesday, March 20, 2002
Tuesday, March 19, 2002
Monday, March 18, 2002
Sunday, March 17, 2002
Saturday, March 16, 2002
Friday, March 15, 2002
Wednesday, March 13, 2002
Tuesday, March 12, 2002
Monday, March 11, 2002
"Whenever you hear someone say it has to be 'easy to learn and natural to use,' put up a little flag and go question it. ... Engelbart declared, "What's natural is what we've grown to accept"... To Engelbart, the desire to make things easy to learn and use was often the path to second-best solutions. He pointed to the tricycle, so much easier to learn than a bicycle; yet once trained, the bicycle rider had so much more speed and range." (p. 147)
"Java is a language where the rules are the rules," Gosling said. "Once you adapt, it is really an incredibly liberating thing." He compares the criticism of Java with the outcry heard from early fighter pilots, irritated when aircraft manufacturers sealed off cockpits. In the old days of propeller-powered planes, pilots stuck their heads out to navigate and sniff the air, sending the winds and the weather. "But when you are in a plane that is flying at Mach 3, if you open up the cockpit to look out you'll get your head ripped off," he said, warming up to his programming point. "To free yourself up for the next level of scale, you have to give up things that used to feel like freedom." (p. 196)