post 129

By anders pearson

Consolization
a follow-up to ander’s post #126…
there are growing numbers of embedded linux appliances already. an investing-savvy friend of mine has asked that i keep him informed and, not that they are well hidden, these are the major companies i keep running in to:

because i am a game-console follower: “Indrema’s revolutionary high-end game console will capitalize on embedded Linux and open-source software development.”

what will Indrema’s product be? “The Indrema Entertainment System (IES) is packaged in a sleek enclosure with the look and feel of a top-of-the-line VCR. ‘You don’t know that it has Linux in it,’ said Gildred [Indrema’s CEO] ‘You turn it on and it runs like a consumer electronics device. You can watch TV as you normally would. But you can also pull up a screen and start playing your MP3s. Or start the web browser and begin browsing on the Internet.” although primarily a high-end gaming system, because it allows lots of additional audio/video capability, some likely other uses include “providing enhanced HDTV and downloading and playing music video, and TV from partner sites.” Also, “Personal TV” where users will be able to download and play specific TV programs on demand.

the first company to get behind the “home music network” concept was S3 which owns the Rio line of portable MP3 players. The Rio Receiver uses embedded linux, which provides “out-of-the-box networking and enough power to handle downloading, ripping, streaming and listening at the same time.”

the Kerbango Radio (now owned by 3com- thanks to $80 million)“looks like a cross between an old Wurlizer jukebox and the dashboard of a ’54 Buick.” “Right now, the Kerbango has three unique properties, the radio, its tuning system and its website, which give computer users direct access to thousands of stream sources- the ‘stations’ the Kerbango radio will tune when it sits on your kitchen counter plugged into the household network…” The operating system for the Kerbango is linux.

for all other home appliances, check out Adomo who “wants to fill your home with a network of low-cost, easy-to-use information appliances.” All of which have linux inside. It’ll use voice commands mostly and can run just about everything you’d want it to… microwaves, lights, heaters, radios, dishwashers… the true “intelligent home” that Gates spent millions building for himself, soon available for all of us at a decent price.


there are more- but you all probably know of most of these anyway.

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post 128

By jp

anders & tuck —

I got a free DVD release of Bjork’s All is full of love video when I bought her new CD. You’re absolutely right, it’s probably one of the coolest visuals I’ve ever seen.

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post 127

By anders pearson

someone who knows emacs lisp really really well and is looking for something to do:

i would be much more productive if emacs had completion like bash for variables and functions in code. eg, if i’m writing a program and i have:

int a_very_long_variable_name = 0;

and later on, i’m typing

a_very_long_variable_name = (a_very_long_variable_name < 0) ? 0 : a_very_long_variable_name;

i would love to, instead, be able to type:

a_very[tab] = (a_very[tab] < 0) ? a_very[tab];

and have it just complete the variable names for me when i hit tab. i realize that this it would probably take a pretty significant amount of programming to get this to work, but i think it’s far from impossible, and anyone who programs could see that this would save an enormous amount of work and prevent numerous errors from mistyping a variable name in the same sort of way that syntax coloring helps prevent errors from missing ‘}‘s and such.

the various modes for different programming languages are already smart enough to know what is a variable, what is a function, what is a string, etc, in order to implement syntax coloring. it seems like it shouldn’t be that hard to have it autocomplete say, just variables that have already been declared/defined earlier in the same source document. i think Word even has a feature similar to this in that it allows you to define some commonly used words and if you type the first few letters, it will let you hit enter and complete it.

i may have to learn elisp myself if only to make sure that there is never a worthwhile function that Word has that emacs doesn’t. i should probably learn elisp anyway…

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post 125

By jp

Shu lives!

“So whatup
whatup
just allow me to get this one thing off my chest
fuck you
no
fuck you
Tokyo
no fuck you…”

(I told him where I was going for new years)

”…at the moment i have but one goal.to be working in australia by march. havent quite figured out how yet but its time to tap into that shu ware charmed life and make it happen. Heaven forbid I let you and tuck be the only globe trotters”

good for him. he’s apparently working for IBM or something now. has something called a t20? and a slush machine.

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post 123

By jp

I bit a nice piece of lip-meat off my lip and walked into a door before class this morning. someone please get elected president so we can make monday part of the weekend. it’s going to kill me if I’m not careful.

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post 121

By anders pearson

notice anything different?

a new design and a few changes. first of all, i got rid of the skins because i don’t think anyone was really using them and they weren’t terribly useful without some sort of cookie mechanism for persistence. cookies are a pain in the ass so i’m not bothering with that anymore.

haven’t tested this out in multiple browsers yet so let me know if you have any problems. and since i’ll probably be tweaking things in the next few days, now is a good time to make suggestions for things that could/should change.

and anyone who knows the identity of the karate chick on the left is officially the king or queen of obscure counter-culture references.

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post 119

By anders pearson

Brian Froud, the artist who brought us all the kick-ass creatures in Labyrinth and the Dark Crystal, (along with Giger of course) probably had the most significant impact on my own development as an artist with his book on faeries, which i spent a good part of my high school career painstakingly copying. turns out he has a surprisingly entertaining website too.

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post 118

By jp

just got an e-mail from my friend yuki in tokyo. titled “2months and harf”. I rove that they forget to build L’s into japanese.

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