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lots of trivia about the name miranda.
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some excellent cartoons
Archive for August, 2006

links for 2006-08-08
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fabulous idea for travelling children
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This is a list of flags used by and in the United Kingdom and related territories.
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we can’t recognise cityscapes that have been stripped of their landmarks. sounds fair enough really. i know i have trouble with the manhattan skyline these days.
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or, you can decide to move everything to someone else’s code, but you can’t still can’t keep away from the code….
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generating those “human checking” text images to deter automatic spammers.
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interesting list of books with maths in the plots to peruse when i’m stuck for a book. there’s certainly some complete dross on it, but i spotted a couple of decent books there too.
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bookmarklets to help debug javascript. i hate javascript.

double trouble
i’m happy to type my password twice when i fill in a web registration form. it’s starred out and i can’t proof that it’s right. in fact i often don’t recognise my passwords when they’re presented in plain text, they don’t mean anything to me that way.
but why oh why do i increasingly need to type my email address twice? look, i can see it’s right the first time!
my experience with being “postmaster@” and getting tons of bounced mail from attempted registrees is that you can ask users to type their email address as many times as you like, some of them just plain don’t know what an email address is. they put all dots and no ats. they put spaces in them. they type urls. they just type their names or handles. syntax checking might help. i’m not convinced that typing twice helps anyone, it just takes 17 keypresses off my life (plus a tab.)
Black Swan Green by David Mitchell
I kept picking up David Mitchell's previous book (Cloud Atlas) in bookshops and then putting it down as I wasn't sure about it. So when I read reports of this book, generally saying something along the lines of "Yes, Cloud Atlas was good, but this is better." I decided I'd try this one first.
The story is a year in the life of 13 year old Jason Taylor; the year is 1982, the place is a village in Worcestershire. In the beginning I wasn't at all convinced. It seemed to be "fiction by brand name": give everything from 1982 its proper name and pretend you're evoking the time and place. I don't need to be told what an eighties comprehensive in middle England was like - been there, done that! However I enjoyed the book a lot more as it went on and the story unfolded. The first person narration works because the reader can see what is happening when the narrator himself can't read the signs. Being 1982 we go through the Falklands War and I wonder whether deliberately Mitchell meant to parallel The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole (another 13 year old in 1982).
In the end I really liked the storytelling and the characters, and I will probably go back and read David Mitchell again, and I certainly think I'll read whatever he writes next.
Purchased on 30th July 2006.

links for 2006-08-04
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Fabulous discussion.
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This is neat. Not sure if that email from PayPal or Ebay is real or not? Foward it to spoof@paypal.com or spoof@ebay.com and they’ll let you know
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spoof@ebay.co.uk will work too.
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“What don’t pirates have to do with science?”
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History of the BBC’s 1986 Domesday project.
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More on the rescue of the 1986 Domesday project.

Revamped
I’m revamping my website and moving everything over to being integrated in Wordpress. Nowhere near done yet but if I don’t make it live I’ll just tinker for eternity. Lots of things missing. Plenty more tinkering to come.
All archives etc can be accessed using the “open/close” link in the top corner. Not right obvious at the moment. Update: slowly getting more obvious.
nocto











