Monday, December 15, 2008
Robotics Update
On a totally different note, the robotics team is transitioning to C++ this year from straight C. The communications system between the robot and driver control station is 802.11n. Each robot forms an on-board network between its controller (cRIO from National Instruments), camera (etherlink connected), and uses a game controller to talk back to the hub (Linksys/Cisco 802.11n wireless router). The router sits back at the "driver station" so it has access to line power to drive the router. Two USB joysticks (logitec) provide operator control.
Friday, November 07, 2008
I beg to differ
I had a backlog of InformationWeek newsletters to browse and had a slow moment so I dove in. Here is what popped up:
Google's upcoming Android mobile platform could spur consumers to widely adopt smartphones, according to new research from ABI Research.
The report, titled "Smartphone And OS Markets," said Google's platform could push smartphones toward standardization, which could eventually push smartphone adoption beyond the 14% market share it currently holds.
Maybe that is an idea that can only be accepted as true if the reverse is also true. The reverse would be that the lack of standardization has impeded adoption. I'm not buying it. Standardization in this context is referencing the operating system of the phones. We (referring to people of the planet Earth) have several operating system choices for phones; Symbian, Windows Mobile, Palm, Blackberry, Apple, and Android (probably others too, but you get the idea). The research seems to imply that if we could only have one more people would buy them.
When has that ever worked?
Tuesday, November 04, 2008
Neglected for NaNoWriMo
This blog is being neglected due to National Novel Writing Month. The normal level of neglect will resume after the month of November.
In the meantime, please enjoy this image of the Pages icon from Apple. I don't have a Mac at the moment (actually, I have a Mac Plus in the closet but even I don't think that counts), but tell myself that if I did it'd be easier to write a novel.
Saturday, October 18, 2008
An unneeded photo, thankfully
Friday, September 26, 2008
Hitchhikers Guide to make a Fowl stop?
Children's author Eoin Colfer has been commissioned to write a sixth instalment of the Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy series.
Mostly Harmless, the last Hitchhiker book, was written by its creator, the late Douglas Adams, 16 years ago.
Now Adams's widow, Jane Belson, has given her approval to bring back the hapless Arthur Dent in a new book entitled And Another Thing...
Eoin Colfer, 43, is best known for the best-selling Artemis Fowl novels.More at: BBC News
Saturday, September 20, 2008
Fairwell to the Great Minnesota Get Together
With the fair's status as a swan song for summer, I thought this picture I caught as we headed home pretty much said the rest.
Thursday, September 04, 2008
Live Update - Right Now.
Wow, Windows LiveMail apparently updated while I was reading a message, causing this notice to appear. What are the odds that they'd push an update in the middle of the afternoon? Isn't that something that should be done off-peak?
BTW, no - the update did not change the "We only spell check the first 2,000 characters" issue.
=====
ETA (November, 2008). Hotmail has done another update. This time the 2,000 character spell check limit has been removed. Good on you, HotMail, LiveMail, Microsoft, or whatever you're calling yourself these days! Nice job.
Thursday, August 21, 2008
What Makes a Good Blog
Regardless, I thought Mr. Mann's points were good, and worth repeating:
- Good blogs have a voice
- Good blogs reflect focused obsessions. People start real blogs because they think about something a lot. Maybe even five things.
- Good blogs are the product of “Attention times Interest.” A blog shows me where someone’s attention tends to go...There’s a story here.
- Good blog posts are made of paragraphs. Blog posts are written, not defecated.
- Good “non-post” blogs have style and curation. Some of the best blogs use unusual formats, employ only photos and video, or utilize the list format to artistic effect.
- Good blogs are weird. Blogs make fart noises and occasionally vex readers with the degree to which the blogger’s obsession will inevitably diverge from the reader’s.
- Good blogs make you want to start your own blog.
- Good blogs try...A good blog is written by a blogger who thinks longer, works harder, and obsesses more. Ultimately, a good blogger tries. That’s why “good” is getting rare.
- Good blogs know when to break their own rules.
Monday, August 04, 2008
Spell Check Limit? Please...
Tuesday, July 29, 2008
Advocacy for Good Enough
-- Pythagoras
Saturday, July 26, 2008
Saturday, June 28, 2008
Debugging Quote
Therefore, if you write the code as cleverly as possible, you are,
by definition, not smart enough to debug it.
-- Brian W. Kernighan
Wednesday, June 18, 2008
Ambitious, for what...
-Leonardo da Vinci
Wednesday, June 11, 2008
Defining the Vatican
The Vatican at Large: Mysterious, secret, even slightly paranoid, but at its heart, a place of simple beauty & piety.
- Me.
Saturday, May 17, 2008
What makes a good committee
-- Robert Copeland
"To get something done, a committee should consist of no more than three men, two of whom are absent."
Friday, May 09, 2008
Separated at Birth?
Caption: Christina Richie has a twin.
Wednesday, April 23, 2008
Where resistance comes from
-Thomas Jefferson M. deStael, 1807.
Tuesday, April 22, 2008
Monkey Business
The undertone is that this applies when people shouldn't be shifting their problem to someone else. Sometimes the monkey really belongs to another person, and the situation is probably more of a case of "I'm returning your monkey, you left it down the hall". The think I'm not pleased about is the temptation I see for people to ignore the undertone, and just go with a "No Monkey Parking" philosophy. I can actually see it now, little signs that have a silhouette of a monkey with a red circle and slash through it.
Maybe I'm just jealous. The chant is a simple to remember (and appealing to enforce), but in my current assignment I'm pretty much a monkey nanny. I can't just tell people to take care of their own damn monkey when I'm being paid to clean up monkey poo. So while those around me act like primate-haters, I'm knee deep in…well, you get the picture.
Sunday, April 20, 2008
Universal Goals
Having a goal is described as a good way to get motivated and stay on target. In thinking about goals, I came across a quote from the white House press secretary describing the President's message to the Pope during his visit to America. This 'goal' is interesting in that it is simply the President echoing the Pope's goal-- the pope says "X", the president says "America needs to hear X".
So X marks the spot, and this X seems like a universal one a lot of people could adopt:
"He will hear from the president that America and the world need to hear his message that God is love, that human life is sacred, that we all must be guided by common moral law, and that we have responsibilities to care for our brothers and sisters in need, at home and across the world," said White House press secretary Dana Perino.
Tuesday, April 08, 2008
When things go really wrong
Sunday, March 23, 2008
Not an Opera Fan, but this might be worth investigating...
More at MSN Entertainment, probably Topix.net too.Illnesses Cause 2 More Debuts at MetMarch 23, 2008, 4:57 PM ESTAt this rate, the surgeon general could issue a warning that singing at the Metropolitan Opera can be hazardous to one's health.
Illnesses have knocked out stars at dizzying speed, with six singers making unscheduled debuts in leading roles over 13 days.
Three tenors appeared as Tristan, one of whom stopped the show when a set malfunction sent him tumbling into the prompter's box. A soprano took over Isolde in mid-performance, and two other sopranos were thrust into Verdi operas on short notice.
Some singers spend years waiting a chance to sing on the Met's stage, working their way up at regional theaters with the hope they can become the next Luciano Pavarotti or Birgit Nilsson. Various viruses have catapulted those waiting in the wings into the spotlight, usually with not even a single stage rehearsal.
Angela Meade, a 30-year-old soprano still in vocal school, hadn't sung a single professional performance before her debut Friday night as Elvira in Verdi's "Ernani."
A little more than 16 hours later, tenor Robert Dean Smith sang Tristan in a performance simulcast to theaters worldwide. He jetted in from Berlin on Thursday, had a few piano rehearsals Friday and planned to head back to Europe on Sunday. Even Met General Manager Peter Gelb joked that the revival of Wagner's "Tristan und Isolde" was "cursed."
Quit Procrastinating
While procrastinating doing some MBA research, I decided to quit procrastinating copying the pictures from last week's robotics competition in Milwaukee. Most of the photos were blah, but this one seemed to sum things up nicely. It is an action photo showing the Eagan Blue Twilight (Team 2220) Robot reaching for a ball on the overpass (blue robot to the right in the photo, arm extended upward) while the Edina Green Machine takes a dive backwards. The Green Machine ended up disabled and laying on the ground, but the team made repairs and the robot recovered nicely in later matches at the competition.
Saturday, March 08, 2008
Naked City writer Malvin Wald Dies
Original Line: There are 8 million stories in the naked city. This has been one of them.
Updated to 2008: There are 8 million blogs on the Internet. This has been one of them.
Malvin Wald dies
Wednesday, February 13, 2008
Six Word Stories
"For Sale: Baby shoes, never worn"
"Bring it to a boil. Often" - Mario Batali
"Revenge is living well. Without you" - Joyce Carol Oates
"Wasn't born a readhead; fixed that." - Andie Grace
- From the Kindle Daily Post, Feb 13, 2008
From the editor of the newsletter:
One Life. Six Words. What's Yours - Molly
Friday, February 08, 2008
On Economic Forecasting
Friday, February 01, 2008
It's time for Carnival- Winter Style
Look up the Winter Carinival in Wikipedia and you will find:
In 1885 a New York reporter wrote that Saint Paul was "another Siberia, unfit for human habitation" in winter. Offended by this attack on their Capital City, the Saint Paul Chamber of Commerce decided to not only prove that Saint Paul was habitable but that its citizens were very much alive during winter, the most dominant season. Thus was born the Saint Paul Winter Carnival.
It's still pretty cold out there, but the sprit seems right and the storyline, with the winter king boreas being banished by Vulcan, thus allowing summer to come is pretty fun.
(fyi, the photo credit for the ice sculpture goes to Gregg at Metro Blogging)
Monday, January 28, 2008
Charlie Rose on Why Bloggers Blog
How do I know what I think until I see what I've written.
This could be the Blogger Mantra.