Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Language Log » Fucking shut the fuck up

I love the Language Log. Only on the Language Log would you get a sentence like this:
[E]ver since “fuck” became a human-denoting noun (“You've killed my Burmese python, you stupid fuck!”), it has been possible for “the fuck” to occur in NP slots on a fairly broad basis. But not as a semantically inert pleonastic epithet with the affective function of conveying personal irritation.
No. Absolutely not. No fucking way.

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Matasano Chargen » Blog Archive » Matasano PFI (as seen on TV!)

Security dude's written a Port Forwarding Interceptor that lets you modify a raw TCP stream on the fly. I know it's wrong, but this guy makes me grin. Don't worry, my coat's just here.

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Nikos Kazantzakis' "Askitiki": The Saviors of God

Holidaying in America, I took myself to a small town in Vermont, described intriguingly in guides as an artists' colony. My lodging seemed a fairytale house in the woods; I explored its environs, and took the advice of its proprietress to visit a restaurant in the centre of the town, where I met a trio of boisterous septuagenarians - Princeton professor, psychologist poet, and salty seadog - who regaled me each with tales from his own experience, alternately impressively erudite, unobtrusively insightful, and strikingly swashbuckling, before dragging me on to the bar over the road for beers and cheesy lines to local ladies. The poet-philosopher saw something in me, I know not what, but which moved him to share this piece of Kazantzakis' wisdom with me: "we come from a dark abyss, we end in a dark abyss, and we call the luminous interval life". It hit the spot; it helped me through some dark moments, and I’m in some way forever indebted both to the author and his representative.

Sunday, May 10, 2009

Wolfram|Alpha

I registered early and so got to see the Wolfram Alpha webinar presentation on Friday evening. The depth of the analysis and the breadth of the scope Alpha was apparently able to apply to any given field made me reel at the possibilities; the coherence with which the four key components of "curated data; computational algorithms; linguistic processing; automated presentation" (Wolfram's categorisation) had been married gave the impression of a genuinely capable successor to Google, not in the form of a better search engine, but of a more likely first port of call for genuine information. On seeing the demo myself, I realised not only why the questions Mr. W. addressed in the webinar painted a slightly disappointing picture of the actual information stored in Alpha - it relies on curated data, and obviously they've not got round to curating all of it yet, so it didn't know all the answers - but also why whether it knew about a particular topic was the wrong question. It will.

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Nati Shalom's Blog: Designing a Scalable Twitter

Article about using a 'spaces'-based architectural approach to building a Twitter-like pub-sub/db hybrid system

Sunday, April 19, 2009

The Big Takeover : Rolling Stone

This is a shortened version of an article in the print edition of Rolling Stone #1075 which I happened, unusually, to pick up on Friday night. I'm glad I did; in conjunction with a piece in the otherwise fairly uninspiring new UK Wired about banks using David Li's 'copula' formula to correlate risk, it lends a much clearer understanding of the current situation, and it isn't pretty. From the declawing of Glass-Steagall, through the creation of ever-more complex derivative instruments to the eventual rejection of Congressional audit by the Federal Reserve under an obscure 1950 statute, the road to takeover by bankers of regulators and the Fed has been signposted, if only we'd known how to read the signs - or even that those strange daubs consituted signs. A companion analysis of the UK landscape would be, how you say ... fascinating.

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Agile Testing: Experiences deploying a large-scale infrastructure in Amazon EC2

Nice article from OpenX guy about automating deployments at scale. Via Nilesh.

Thursday, April 2, 2009

space invaders > the story of an invasion

Space invader mosaics. I love this shit.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

The Guardian Open Platform

I've been working with the dev team here at the Guardian on the API section of the Open Platform: a fully searchable XML, JSON and ATOM API for all Guardian content. It launched into private beta this morning, and quickly took the top two "trending topics" on Twitter. Tom Watson MP had some nice things to say about it, too.

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Serving an iPhone website with nginx