May 11 2010

What’s different about the new Google Docs?

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Link: What’s different about the new Google Docs?

To get around these problems, the new Google document editor doesn’t use the browser to handle editable text. We wrote a brand new editing surface and layout engine, entirely in JavaScript.

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May 11 2010

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Impressive Flash Player demo on the Nexus One (via ryanstewart)

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May 11 2010

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Trek World Racing In Pursuit Episode 1 (via trekworldracing)

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May 11 2010

April Search Numbers Out.

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Link: April Search Numbers Out.

Excluding the changes, Google gained share, while Yahoo and Microsoft both lost a bit of share,

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May 11 2010

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UK election drama gives newspapers a front-page mediagasm – Boing Boing

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May 10 2010

The Incumbent’s Curse: HP | Monday Note

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Link: The Incumbent’s Curse: HP | Monday Note

Last week’s acquisition of Palm by HP makes a clear statement: HP recognizes we are at the beginning of the end of the classical PC era — and we’re witnessing the birth of a new generation, really personal computers, currently called smartphones (and tablets).

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May 10 2010

Central Otago Rail Trail cycling guide | Spectacular and simple

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Link: Central Otago Rail Trail cycling guide | Spectacular and simple

Cyclist looking for a spectacular, but relatively easy, journey should head for New Zealand’s South Island, writes Rachael Oakes-Ash. The Central Otago Rail Trail is New Zealand cycling’s pride and joy and the inspiration behind the country’s $50 million, 3000km national cycleway initiative announced last year. The three year project will offer cycling trails through some of New Zealand’s iconic terrain from the tip of the North Island to the far reaches of the South Island for all levels of cyclists.

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May 10 2010

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How fun can change people’s decisions – The Piano Stairway (via benfolds11)

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May 09 2010

Help! We’re trapped by "Lost"!

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Link: Help! We’re trapped by “Lost”!

(some spoilers) Damn you, “Lost”! We went and jumped on your bandwagon way back in the first season, got sucked into your endless jungley maze and suspenseful chords, and waited breathlessly for the next shoe to drop, over and over again.

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May 09 2010

Geeks Love HTPCs

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An HTPC is a Home Theatre PC. I’m assuming you know what the ‘PC’ stands for, but in this case it doesn’t necessarily mean a Windows computer—it could also be a Mac or Linux variant too. A geek will tell you that they love their HTPC and that it never fails and that it revolutionised the way they watch TV or videos or photos, etc.

But what they won’t tell you is the World Of Hurt (WOH) that you need to be prepared to endure just to get it running perfectly. And even then, when you think you have it running perfectly, you need to prepare yourself for the WOH for when things go wrong.

And they will go wrong. And they will go wrong at the worst of times, like when your wife is watching the season finale of Desperate Housewives and the computer pops up a warning message, mutes the audio, then freezes just before they get to the climax of the episode. Or when your wife calls you while you’re out because all she wants to do is watch a TV episode that was recorded but she keeps getting a ‘funny message’ on the screen.

The reason why geeks love HTPCs is that it gives them something else to tinker with and it fills them with pride when they see their wife happily watching a recorded TV episode without any skips or stutters. But the reason there are no skips and stutters is because the geek was up until 2am the previous night, updating graphics card drivers to a beta release which fixed an issue that only occurred when watching a particular TV channel because the broadcast encoding differed slightly from the other channels.

And when the geek’s wife changes channels and sees the channel lineup displayed nicely on the screen, the geek grins at his wife while proudly stating how cool it is to have the full EPG available. Of course the wife doesn’t understand: shouldn’t it just be that way? Unfortunately our heroic geek had spent the previous two nights hacking away at an open-source program which scrapes TV program information off various websites, compiles it all into nice confusing XML file, and then parses it into a readable format for display on your screen. The geek even went to the effort of scouring the Internet for the TV channel icons so that it looks just like MySky or Tivo.

In case you haven’t seen the problem yet: if you’re not a geek and you’re not prepared for the WOH enduring endless nights hacking away at drivers, software, hardware… just to come up with something that will probably/maybe/sometimes reliably work, you should give up now and buy a MySky or Tivo.

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