So everyone and their mother (including mine) is infatuated with sudoku puzzles these days. There was a point during our annual camping trip this summer when three guys were sitting there on a beautiful sunny day trying to work out their sudoku puzzle instead of, say, jumping off the dock into the lake. They’ve never grabbed me, but maybe they’re your cup of tea. If so, check out this well done web-based sudoku puzzle site.
Awesome xmas gift idea for the siblings
Ok, band together and buy me a Gamepark GP2X. I came close to buying its predecessor, a simple little handheld that had a decent screen and could play a lot of emulation stuff, old NES, gameboy games and so on, several times over the past couple of years. This time around it’s got excellent media support included, mp3, ogg, mpeg video and so on, along with even better emulation support. All for under $200 shipped. The only thing it’s missing is networking, but for the price I’d take one just to play all the excellent old SNES rpg’s and some mame stuff. It’s interesting to see their approach to a handheld as compared to Sony and Nintendo. Their hardware is cheaper and it’s very developer friendly, they work closely with the community, and the hardware has no DRM or copy protection mechanisms. The end result is a vibrant developer community producing all kinds of applications for the device. Mind you most of the stuff you’re seeing there is for the original GP32, but given that Gamepark is following the same strategy as last time but with a more capable device, I’d expect even greater support going forward. It just started shipping this week. Lacking one as a christmas gift, I’ll have one by late winter.
IM messenging overtaking email
Check out this piece over on betanews.com talking about how instant messenger use is on par with email use these days. This isn’t surprising to me. It is a source of minor frustration in that I have had at best mixed success trying to convince educators that they should begin using IM as a way to communicate with their students. I’ve also had mixed success convincing institutions they should be providing IM services to their campuses – at Bowdoin I came within a hair’s breadth of solving this before I left, but I guess after my departure it fell apart. Skidmore’s willing to talk about it but that’s about as far as it goes. I’m blogging about this mainly for myself, so I have this link around later to point to the next time I have one of my ‘would you consider adopting IM as part of your communications toolkit’ conversations at work.
Make your own cd cases
Check out this handy web service that builds a pdf file you can print and fold to make a cd case. The next time you grab a great concert off of archive.org’s live music archive you can make yourself a beautiful case to wrap it up with.
[via downloadsquad.com]
Competition trumps price every time
Microsoft is under price pressure in a variety of product categories from the open source movement and others. Most folks are probably unaware that the true core of this is not Office and Windows, despite how important they are to MS’s revenues. A developer friendly culture and strong development tools are a big piece of what’s contributed to MS’s ongoing success – these lead to a healthy software base for their operating systems and indirectly to the broader use of their products. If folks are writing all the books in your language, it’s the language most folks are likely to use is a way to think of this if you’re a non-technical person. It’s actually a good bit more complex than this, but it’s a really important contributing factor to Microsoft’s dominance.
Meanwhile if you take a look around higher education these days, what you’ll discover is that more and more computer science programs are teaching Java and very few are teaching .Net or C#, Microsoft’s preferred languages. If a school’s not teaching Java it’s teaching C. (or really, more accurately, they’re teaching both, but almost none of them are teaching .Net or C#). There are a variety of reasons for this but a huge one is the free availability of great development tools for Java, especially Eclipse. Additionaly even Apple is releasing its dev tools for free these days, as are Sun and IBM, and there are a variety of free alternatives available for linux.
All of this represents a medium term risk for Microsoft as newer generations of software engineers come up using non-MS development tools. Microsoft is of course not stupid, so what’s a struggling monopolist to do? We should all know by now simply by looking to the past. Release the developer tools for free, which they’ve just announced.
Normally I wouldn’t link to stuff like this since it’s really over the head of basically all of my audience, but here’s the thing: having a windows compatible IDE and compiler available is pretty handy at times, and this deal, at least for now, is only promised for the next year or so. So take a moment and go here:
http://msdn.microsoft.com/vstudio/express/support/install/
And download your tools. Just tuck the CD images away on your hard drive somewhere until the day you need them, in total it’s less than 2 gigs of data. These are unrestricted licenses and the link is to a download location that doesn’t require registration or product keys. These are not full versions of the products, but they’re more than sufficient for any hobbyist’s need or the casual geek who just wants to compile something they’ve grabbed off of sourceforge.
Nice looking little thumb drive
Check out these tiny little thumb drives from US Modular. Nice looking enclosure and a decent price, $99 for a disc-based 2GB thumb drive is not bad at all. This is a worthy holiday gift for the right geek. Me, for example.
Snapstream, one of my favorite apps, gets a major upgrade
Check out this post to the snapstream company blog. Beyond TV is moving to version 4 and adding support for direct DivX encoding, radio recording, and HDTV support amongst a host of other features. I’ve been waiting for this for quite a while. If you’re not familiar with it, BeyondTV is Tivo for the build it yourself crowd. It’s the primary way I interact with video content and an application I use daily. It blows away what you can do with a Tivo. Upgrades are only $30, or for around $100 you can get the software and an HDTV encoding card. I will definitely upgrading the moment this comes out – native DivX encoding alone makes this worthwhile.
A better del-icio.us interface
If you use del.icio.us to store your bookmarks, check out the del.icio.us direc.tor, an ajax-powered take on making a superior interface for del.icio.us’s bookmarking service. The author calls this a prototype but really this is ready for primetime in the sense that it’s well designed and immediately useful. One caveat for the mac folk – due to a safari issue you can’t use that browser. Visit with Firefox if you’d like to tinker with this.
Something for the next AGCW
Now here’s something cool to consider for our next AGCW. It’s a raft some enterprising folks built from 2 liter soda bottles, duct tape, and scrap wood. Imagine this as our own floating platform off the coast of our site next summer. It would be a bit easier to build than the kayaks built from tarps and saplings I linked to earlier in the year, too.
An amusing aside also – I checked the link from make, was scoping out the photos and suddenly realized hey, that’s the Skidmore campus where I work! It’s a small world, even on the internets 😉 The pond they have their raft race on is one I bring Soolin to often.
[via Make:Blog]
jedit ruby integration
Jedit is my primary text editor these days and has been for over a year. What it loses in responsiveness due to being java-based (and truly it’s not that bad speed-wise) it more than makes up for in configurability and extensibility. Today I found the ruby editor plugin. There are easy to follow instructions on the site for getting it installed and configured, which you’ll need since unfortunately it doesn’t follow the normal jedit convention of simply using the jedit plugin manager for install. Still it’s more than worth the effort – ruby code completion, a great code structure browser, and integration with all your other fave jedit plugins.