Saturday, November 08, 2008
I'm not beaten yet: Terry Prachett on the frustration and fury of Alzheimer's | Mail Online
I'm not beaten yet: Terry Prachett on the frustration and fury of Alzheimer's | Mail Online: "Does he fear death? 'No, it isn't death that worries me,' he says. 'Everyone dies. I'd just quite like to be there when it happens.'"
Thursday, November 06, 2008
Ssds: SanDisk's New Flash File System Improves SSD Write Speeds by 100 Times
Ssds: SanDisk's New Flash File System Improves SSD Write Speeds by 100 Times: "SanDisk has developed a new file system for flash-based SSD drives, improving random write speeds by up to 100 times. The system, dubbed ExtremeFFS, should be coming to products sometime next year."
Sunday, November 02, 2008
Oil leak - 2006 Meanstreak - Kawasaki Motorcycle Forums
Oil leak - 2006 Meanstreak - Kawasaki Motorcycle Forums: "That was my posting on Delphi.
The leak is NOT coming from the clutch cylinder itself... that would be hydraulic fluid and your frame wouldn't have any paint left.
1 - Pull the clutch lever in and secure it with zip-ties
2 - Remove the side cover
3 - Remove the 3 bolts holding the clutch slave cylinder and secure it as you would a caliper.
4 - Note the orientation of the plastic spacer under the cylinder and when you put it back together, put the gaps on the same side (I think toward the case, but I don't recall)
5 - If your bike has the same problem as mine, you will see a 'donut' seal on the pushrod. It should be in the cavity in the case. Carefully remove the pushrod, again noting orientation... it is cupped on one end and domed on the other.
6 - Gently place the seal against the opening in the case
7 - Using a washer slightly larger than the seal, press the seal into the case so it is flush. There is NO stop on the inside of the case, so if you push too far it will make for a very bad weekend. The washer also keeps it square.
8 - Grease the ends of the pushrod and reinsert it.
9 - Reinstall the slave cylinder and spacer, replace the side cover, and you're ready to roll.
On an older bike, the seal could in f"
The leak is NOT coming from the clutch cylinder itself... that would be hydraulic fluid and your frame wouldn't have any paint left.
1 - Pull the clutch lever in and secure it with zip-ties
2 - Remove the side cover
3 - Remove the 3 bolts holding the clutch slave cylinder and secure it as you would a caliper.
4 - Note the orientation of the plastic spacer under the cylinder and when you put it back together, put the gaps on the same side (I think toward the case, but I don't recall)
5 - If your bike has the same problem as mine, you will see a 'donut' seal on the pushrod. It should be in the cavity in the case. Carefully remove the pushrod, again noting orientation... it is cupped on one end and domed on the other.
6 - Gently place the seal against the opening in the case
7 - Using a washer slightly larger than the seal, press the seal into the case so it is flush. There is NO stop on the inside of the case, so if you push too far it will make for a very bad weekend. The washer also keeps it square.
8 - Grease the ends of the pushrod and reinsert it.
9 - Reinstall the slave cylinder and spacer, replace the side cover, and you're ready to roll.
On an older bike, the seal could in f"
Windows 7 to scale to 256 processors | All about Microsoft | ZDNet.com
Windows 7 to scale to 256 processors | All about Microsoft | ZDNet.com: "Russinovich noted with the dispatcher-lock roadblock removed, a second set of locks became the new focus for folks working on the Windows kernel. The PFN database inside Windows, which contains information on all of the physical memory in the system, was becoming another scalability bottleneck when trying to get Windows to handle multithreaded apps on massively multicore machines. With Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2 (Windows 7 Server), Microsoft again broke this lock down into finer grain locks, Russinovich said."
Friday, October 31, 2008
Dare Obasanjo aka Carnage4Life - Platform Monetization is a Two Way Street: Lessons from Facebook and Sun Microsystems
Dare Obasanjo aka Carnage4Life - Platform Monetization is a Two Way Street: Lessons from Facebook and Sun Microsystems: "It is interesting to note that after a decade of investment in the Java platform, it is hard to point to what concrete benefits Sun has gotten from being the originator and steward of the Java platform and programming language. Definitely another example of a platform that may have benefited applications built on it yet which didn't really benefit the platform vendor as expected."
transistors per person
Thursday, October 30, 2008
InternetNews Realtime IT News - Big Shifts for EMC Into Server Management
InternetNews Realtime IT News - Big Shifts for EMC Into Server Management: "EMC 'is piecing together automation and control for the infrastructure overall, in which storage is another part,"
PDC 2008 thoughts so far
PDC 2008 thoughts so far: "The crux of the Azure announcement really comes down to Microsoft going into web hosting, and while the cloud provisioning model is qualitatively different to your classic rackspace offering, it doesn’t demo any differently. The point of Azure is to make scaling transparent; transparency doesn’t demo well."
Sunday, October 26, 2008
Web 2.0 and Cloud Computing - O'Reilly Radar
Web 2.0 and Cloud Computing - O'Reilly Radar: "f cloud computing is a commodity business, then the outsize profits that Hugh envisioned are not going to be there. This is a business that will be huge, but it may be more similar to the web hosting and ISP markets, which are also huge, but not hugely profitable"
Friday, October 24, 2008
LessWatts.org - Saving Power on Intel systems with Linux
LessWatts.org - Saving Power on Intel systems with Linux: "It's generally better to run as fast as you can so that you can be idle longer."
Tuesday, October 21, 2008
My Way News - Sun Microsystems swings to big quarterly loss
My Way News - Sun Microsystems swings to big quarterly loss: "Sun also plans to write down the value of its business, a sign of the company's deteriorating competitive position and vulnerability to the economic meltdown. Shares fell more than 8 percent in after-hours trading."
Sunday, October 19, 2008
The Progressive Puppy: Ouch! That's Gotta Smart: Newspapers Crucify Palin
The Progressive Puppy: Ouch! That's Gotta Smart: Newspapers Crucify Palin: "'Out of nowhere, and without proper vetting, the impetuous McCain picked Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin as his running mate. She quickly proved grievously under-equipped to step into the presidency should McCain, at 72 and with a history of health problems, die in office. More than any single factor, McCain's bad judgment in choosing the inarticulate, insular and ethically challenged Palin disqualifies him for the presidency.'
Oh my... that's kind of harsh, wouldn't you say? Must be that nasty, liberal, elite, latte-sipping, argula-munching, East Coast, not pro-America media, right?
The New York Times, perhaps? Maybe, Rolling Stone? Vanity Fair? The Nation? Nope. Not even close. That quote was part of the endorsement of Barack Obama from the Salt Lake Tribune. As in Utah. As in the reddest state in the country. Obama has now earned the endorsements of almost 65 newspapers around the country, including some of the most conservative."
Oh my... that's kind of harsh, wouldn't you say? Must be that nasty, liberal, elite, latte-sipping, argula-munching, East Coast, not pro-America media, right?
The New York Times, perhaps? Maybe, Rolling Stone? Vanity Fair? The Nation? Nope. Not even close. That quote was part of the endorsement of Barack Obama from the Salt Lake Tribune. As in Utah. As in the reddest state in the country. Obama has now earned the endorsements of almost 65 newspapers around the country, including some of the most conservative."
Saturday, October 18, 2008
Intel SSDs RAID 0, A Case Study In Speed, Take 2 - HotHardware
Intel SSDs RAID 0, A Case Study In Speed, Take 2 - HotHardware: "ere was no question Intel's SSD flat out smoked the competition in the cost-effective, consumer grade MLC (Multi-Level Cell) SSD market"
Friday, October 17, 2008
IBM profit gains on software, services - MarketWatch
IBM profit gains on software, services - MarketWatch: "IBM noted strong growth in its software division. Revenue for the unit grew 8% from the previous year -- once adjusted for currency fluctuations -- to $5.2 billion. A majority of the business came from its middleware products, which includes brands such as WebSphere, Information Management and Lotus. This unit accounted for $4.1 billion in revenue."
Wednesday, October 15, 2008
CAP ... Palin's Non-Answer Strategy A Hit With Teens
CAP ... Palin's Non-Answer Strategy A Hit With Teens: "Pulling A Palin, or refusing to answer direct questions by stating one does not wish to talk about that topic and then offering an opinion on a totally different and often unrelated topic, is the new 'thing to do' among America's teens."
A comparison of virtualization features of HP-UX, Solaris, and AIX
A comparison of virtualization features of HP-UX, Solaris, and AIX: "A comparison of virtualization features of HP-UX, Solaris, and AIX"
Sunday, October 12, 2008
Hoax Post: Bush's Comments
Hoax Post: Bush's Comments: "Said during an informal meeting with journalists in Rome, Italy, July 22, 2001:
'I know what I believe. I will continue to articulate what I believe and what I believe - I believe what I believe is right.'"
'I know what I believe. I will continue to articulate what I believe and what I believe - I believe what I believe is right.'"
Friday, October 10, 2008
Thursday, October 09, 2008
Who writes Linux: Corporate America | Computerworld Blogs
Who writes Linux: Corporate America | Computerworld Blogs: "Breaking it down farther, in the 2.6.24 kernel, it appears 13.9% of Linux had been written by people without a corporate backer. In the case of 12.9% of the contributors, the Linux Foundation was unable to pin point exactly who the programmers were working for. The rest, 74.2% was written by paid developers.
The top ten looks like this: Red Hat, 11.2%; Novell, 8.9%; IBM, 8.3%; Intel, 4.1%; Linux Foundation, 2.6%; independent Linux consultants, 2.5%; SGI, 2.0% MIPS Technology, 1.6%; Oracle, 1.3% and MontaVista, 1.2%. Just underneath the top ten, you'll find Google at 1.1%."
The top ten looks like this: Red Hat, 11.2%; Novell, 8.9%; IBM, 8.3%; Intel, 4.1%; Linux Foundation, 2.6%; independent Linux consultants, 2.5%; SGI, 2.0% MIPS Technology, 1.6%; Oracle, 1.3% and MontaVista, 1.2%. Just underneath the top ten, you'll find Google at 1.1%."
Wednesday, October 08, 2008
Stay on Target: Real Life Tron on an Apple IIgs
Stay on Target: Real Life Tron on an Apple IIgs: "Writing to random locations in system memory isn't generally a wise design practice."
Tuesday, October 07, 2008
Terry Pratchett: I'm slipping away a bit at a time... and all I can do is watch it happen | Mail Online
Terry Pratchett: I'm slipping away a bit at a time... and all I can do is watch it happen | Mail Online: "That’s the gift or the curse of our little variant. We have problems handling the physical world but can come pretty close to talking our way out of it so you don’t notice. We might have our shirts done up wrong, but might be able to convince you it’s a new style."
Linus' blog
Linus' blog: "The kernel summit was two weeks ago, and at the end of that I got one of the new 80GB solid state disks from Intel. Since then, I've been wanting to talk to people about it because I'm so impressed with it, but at the same time I don't much like using the kernel mailing list as some kind of odd public publishing place that isn't really kernel-related, so since I'm testing this whole blogging thing, I might as well vent about it here.
That thing absolutely rocks."
That thing absolutely rocks."
My Way News - SAP says business turmoil hurting its revenue
My Way News - SAP says business turmoil hurting its revenue: "SAP said it expects software and software-related service revenues for the July-September period to come in between 1.97 billion and 1.98 billion euros, or $2.66 billion to $2.67 billion. That is up about 13 percent from the third quarter of 2007, but SAP said in July it expected the figure to increase between 24 percent and 27 percent for the year"
My Way News - AMD to spin off factories in bid to save money
My Way News - AMD to spin off factories in bid to save money: "chip maker Advanced Micro Devices Inc. (AMD) (AMD) said Tuesday it will spin off its factories into a new joint venture with investors in the Persian Gulf state of Abu Dhabi.
The deal should shore up AMD's finances and let it focus on the design and development of computer chips. The new venture, to be based in the U.S. and called Foundry Co., will absorb AMD's manufacturing plants, including two in Dresden, Germany.
In conjunction with the spin off, Abu Dhabi's investment arm, Mubadala Development Co., will invest $314 million to more than double its current stake in AMD to 19.3 percent from 8.1 percent."
The deal should shore up AMD's finances and let it focus on the design and development of computer chips. The new venture, to be based in the U.S. and called Foundry Co., will absorb AMD's manufacturing plants, including two in Dresden, Germany.
In conjunction with the spin off, Abu Dhabi's investment arm, Mubadala Development Co., will invest $314 million to more than double its current stake in AMD to 19.3 percent from 8.1 percent."
Monday, October 06, 2008
Friday, October 03, 2008
I, Cringely . The Pulpit . Data Debasement | PBS
I, Cringely . The Pulpit . Data Debasement | PBS: "traditional database-centric software industry just in time for it to be declared obsolete."
Storage Startups Turn Cache Into Cash - GigaOM
Storage Startups Turn Cache Into Cash - GigaOM: "companies building out large-scale computing systems to deliver software as a service, and even computing clouds, are far more interested in better storage features than tweaks for servers"
Thursday, October 02, 2008
Read me first: Taking your laptop into the US? Be sure to hide all your data first | Technology | The Guardian
Read me first: Taking your laptop into the US? Be sure to hide all your data first | Technology | The Guardian: "Encrypting your entire hard drive, something you should certainly do for security in case your computer is lost or stolen, won't work here. The border agent is likely to start this whole process with a 'please type in your password'. Of course you can refuse, but the agent can search you further, detain you longer, refuse you entry into the country and otherwise ruin your day"
Tuesday, September 30, 2008
IBM, Sun, Microsoft sink differences on VMs • The Register
IBM, Sun, Microsoft sink differences on VMs • The Register: "Language experts from IBM, Microsoft, and others have converged on Sun Microsystems' Santa Clara campus for a three-day workshop to find ways of delivering Java-like performance for Ruby, Python, PHP, and Scala on the VM that drives Sun's platformLanguage experts from IBM, Microsoft, and others have converged on Sun Microsystems' Santa Clara campus for a three-day workshop to find ways of delivering Java-like performance for Ruby, Python, PHP, and Scala on the VM that drives Sun's platformLanguage experts from IBM, Microsoft, and others have converged on Sun Microsystems' Santa Clara campus for a three-day workshop to find ways of delivering Java-like performance for Ruby, Python, PHP, and Scala on the VM that drives Sun's platform"
Monday, September 29, 2008
Articles: The Subprime Lending Industry: An Industry in Crisis
Articles: The Subprime Lending Industry: An Industry in Crisis: "The growth of the subprime industry is largely attributable to the increase in securitization"
Cloud computing is a trap, warns GNU founder | Technology | guardian.co.uk
Cloud computing is a trap, warns GNU founder | Technology | guardian.co.uk: "'It's stupidity. It's worse than stupidity: it's a marketing hype campaign,' he told The Guardian.
'Somebody is saying this is inevitable – and whenever you hear somebody saying that, it's very likely to be a set of businesses campaigning to make it true.'"
'Somebody is saying this is inevitable – and whenever you hear somebody saying that, it's very likely to be a set of businesses campaigning to make it true.'"
Even Heavy-Metal Fans Complain That Today's Music Is Too Loud!!! - WSJ.com
Even Heavy-Metal Fans Complain That Today's Music Is Too Loud!!! - WSJ.com: "'Death Magnetic' has one of the narrowest dynamic ranges ever on an album."
Saturday, September 27, 2008
Intel Thread Checker, Meet 20 Million LOC
Intel Thread Checker, Meet 20 Million LOC: "Wondering how threading thrives in the real-world? The enormous and highly threaded code base at SAS is an example of an application that benefits from the spelunking and debugging the Intel Thread Checker and Thread Profiler tools offer."
Thursday, September 25, 2008
SAP on Microsoft Windows
SAP on Microsoft Windows: "SAP Supports Virtualized Platforms for Windows New!
SAP supports virtualization on Windows 64-bit. In 2007, VMware ESX 3.x was the first available and supported product for virtualization. As of July 2008, also Hyper-V on Windows Server 2008 is available. To find out how to get started with virtualization, see Virtualizing SAP Applications on Windows."
SAP supports virtualization on Windows 64-bit. In 2007, VMware ESX 3.x was the first available and supported product for virtualization. As of July 2008, also Hyper-V on Windows Server 2008 is available. To find out how to get started with virtualization, see Virtualizing SAP Applications on Windows."
Bloglines | My Feeds (1784) (1)
Bloglines | My Feeds (1784) (1): "If you are managing an IT shop and can't write the code to render 'hello world' in C, html, php, and pull 'hello world' from a MySQL database using a perl script, then YOU are in the wrong job."
Monday, September 15, 2008
SaddleSore 1000/Bun Burner 1500 Rules
SaddleSore 1000/Bun Burner 1500 Rules: "he majority of riders will cover their 1,000 miles in about 18 hours (including all stops). The rides do NOT require you to speed. For every hour you are on a major highway riding, you get approximately 40 minutes 'off' rest time. Use that time wisely!"
Friday, September 05, 2008
TaoSecurity
TaoSecurity: "The four challenges to getting the job done can be summarized thus:
Will problem. The party doesn't want to accomplish the task. This is a motivation problem.
Skill problem. The party doesn't know how to accomplish the task. This is a methods problem.
Bill problem. The party doesn't have the resources to accomplish the task. This is a money problem.
Nil problem. The party doesn't have the authority to accomplish the task. This is a mojo problem"
Will problem. The party doesn't want to accomplish the task. This is a motivation problem.
Skill problem. The party doesn't know how to accomplish the task. This is a methods problem.
Bill problem. The party doesn't have the resources to accomplish the task. This is a money problem.
Nil problem. The party doesn't have the authority to accomplish the task. This is a mojo problem"
Thursday, September 04, 2008
BBC - Today
BBC - Today: "The most common response in most disasters is not panic, but rather the opposite."
people costs
An inflection on costs has occurred over the last two decades. People cost
dominate.
1995 2000http://www.cra.org/Activities/grand.challenges/goyal.pdf
dominate.
1995 2000http://www.cra.org/Activities/grand.challenges/goyal.pdf
Apache Geronimo - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Apache Geronimo - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: "Geronimo is currently compatible with the Java Enterprise Edition (Java EE) 5.0 specification. When compared to other application servers such as JBoss, WebLogic and WebSphere, Geronimo's most distinctive features are its:"
Apache Geronimo - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Apache Geronimo - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: "Geronimo is currently compatible with the Java Enterprise Edition (Java EE) 5.0 specification. When compared to other application servers such as JBoss, WebLogic and WebSphere, Geronimo's most distinctive features are its:"
Wednesday, September 03, 2008
John Resig - JavaScript Performance Rundown
John Resig - JavaScript Performance Rundown: "A new JavaScript Engine has hit the pavement running: The new V8 engine (powering the brand-new Google Chrome browser)."
H3RALD : Chrome: Google did it again!
H3RALD : Chrome: Google did it again!: "Google showed us once more that their “innovation” can be summarized with the following:
“Do not invent new things, just make them better”
They didn’t invent Internet search: they just made it better and smarted. The same philosophy applies to Chrome, too. Some examples? Sure:
They didn’t create a new rendering engine, they used an existing one
They analyzed Safari’s neat GUI tricks and implemented something even better.
They added an IE8-like domain highlight in the URL.
They got the Firefox’s AwesomeBar and improved it.
They got Opera’s Speed Dial and improved it.
They got IE8’s one-process-per-tab architecture and improved it.
They didn’t think of a Javascript JIT first, they just made it widely-available first.
They didn’t think about merging the address bar with the search bar, Mozilla announced it first, but Google released it before they did.
Safari 4 allows users to create shortcuts for their favorite web apps, but unfortunately it’s only out for developers…"
“Do not invent new things, just make them better”
They didn’t invent Internet search: they just made it better and smarted. The same philosophy applies to Chrome, too. Some examples? Sure:
They didn’t create a new rendering engine, they used an existing one
They analyzed Safari’s neat GUI tricks and implemented something even better.
They added an IE8-like domain highlight in the URL.
They got the Firefox’s AwesomeBar and improved it.
They got Opera’s Speed Dial and improved it.
They got IE8’s one-process-per-tab architecture and improved it.
They didn’t think of a Javascript JIT first, they just made it widely-available first.
They didn’t think about merging the address bar with the search bar, Mozilla announced it first, but Google released it before they did.
Safari 4 allows users to create shortcuts for their favorite web apps, but unfortunately it’s only out for developers…"
Ajaxian » JavaScript JIT: The Dream Gets Closer (in Firefox)
Ajaxian » JavaScript JIT: The Dream Gets Closer (in Firefox): "I’m extremely pleased to announce the launch of TraceMonkey, an evolution of Firefox’s SpiderMonkey JavaScript engine for Firefox 3.1 that uses a new kind of Just-In-Time (JIT) compiler to boost JS performance by an order of magnitude or more. [Emphasis ours.]"
Tuesday, September 02, 2008
Windows Administration: Taking Your Server's Pulse
Windows Administration: Taking Your Server's Pulse: "There are five major resource areas that can cause bottlenecks and affect server performance: physical disk, memory, process, CPU, and network. If any of these resources are overutilized, your server or application can become noticeably slow or can even crash. I will go through each of these five areas, giving guidance on the counters you should be using and offering suggested thresholds to measure the pulse of your servers"
Windows Administration: Taking Your Server's Pulse
Windows Administration: Taking Your Server's Pulse: "There are five major resource areas that can cause bottlenecks and affect server performance: physical disk, memory, process, CPU, and network. If any of these resources are overutilized, your server or application can become noticeably slow or can even crash. I will go through each of these five areas, giving guidance on the counters you should be using and offering suggested thresholds to measure the pulse of your servers"
InternetNews Realtime IT News - IBM's Got SSD in Its Storage Sights
InternetNews Realtime IT News - IBM's Got SSD in Its Storage Sights: "New research from IBM claims the vendor's solid state disk (SSD) storage efforts are attaining greater performance capabilities than competitor's to the tune of a 250 percent increase in input/output per second in current data-transfer rates, while proving more cost efficient.
IBM's (NYSE: IBM) SSD storage research, code-named 'Project QuickSilver' is an 'ongoing cross-IBM initiative' for developing integrated information infrastructures, according to a press statement"
IBM's (NYSE: IBM) SSD storage research, code-named 'Project QuickSilver' is an 'ongoing cross-IBM initiative' for developing integrated information infrastructures, according to a press statement"
Sunday, August 31, 2008
PowerShell Team Blog
PowerShell Team Blog: "On Monday VMWare offically released their PowerShell cmdlets in a ship vehicle called the VMWare Infrastructure (VI) Toolkit"
Thursday, August 28, 2008
How Fast Can Humans Go? - TIME
How Fast Can Humans Go? - TIME: "Bolt's step was 1 ft. longer, allowing him to cover 100m in 41 steps. The other athletes needed, on average, 47"
What Is Google App Engine? - Google App Engine - Google Code
What Is Google App Engine? - Google App Engine - Google Code: "Google App Engine lets you run your web applications on Google's infrastructure. App Engine applications are easy to build, easy to maintain, and easy to scale as your traffic and data storage needs grow. With App Engine, there are no servers to maintain: You just upload your application, and it's ready to serve your users."
Wednesday, August 27, 2008
Latency is Everywhere and it Costs You Sales - How to Crush it | High Scalability
Latency is Everywhere and it Costs You Sales - How to Crush it High Scalability: "Amazon found every 100ms of latency cost them 1% in sales."
Monday, August 25, 2008
NBC's $1 billion Olympic "research lab" good, not great
NBC's $1 billion Olympic "research lab" good, not great: "BCOlympics.com served 72 million video streams as of this weekend in addition to 1.2 billion web pages. That's pretty darn good for only a couple weeks of coverage, and compared to the 2.2 million video streams total from the Athens games, it's downright explosive. And it wasn't just NBC that benefited online from Olympic coverage—Yahoo came out on top, too, thanks to a number of hot Olympic stories and photo galleries over the last two weeks, according to data from Nielsen Online."
Sunday, August 24, 2008
ScaleMP pools x86 servers to vie with high-end systems and clusters
ScaleMP pools x86 servers to vie with high-end systems and clusters: "vSMP Foundation Embedded, which has been on the market for 18 months and can utilize up to 16 x86 systems to create a single shared-memory system with between four and 32 processors (or up to 128 cores) and up to 1 TB of RAM."
Friday, August 22, 2008
IDF: SSD Myths and Hardcore Gamers - Tom's Hardware
IDF: SSD Myths and Hardcore Gamers - Tom's Hardware: "IDF: SSD Myths and Hardcore Gamers"
Thursday, August 21, 2008
WARNING: Satan is Using Olympics Volleyball to Get Young Boys to Masturbate!
WARNING: Satan is Using Olympics Volleyball to Get Young Boys to Masturbate!: "From this day forward any member of our congregation caught watching Olympic volleyball or even mentioning Olympic volleyball will be asked to pack their belongings and find a place to live where your filthy, sinful, disgusting, depraved masturbation lifestyle is accepted!'"
Wednesday, August 20, 2008
Motherboard Chipsets and the Memory Map : Gustavo Duarte
Motherboard Chipsets and the Memory Map : Gustavo Duarte: "Motherboard Chipsets and the Memory Map"
The mythical bitmap index
The mythical bitmap index: "you have that the compressed size of a bitmap index is at most proportional to the size of your table! Irrespective of the number of distinct values!"
Annals of Mathematics: Manifold Destiny: The New Yorker
Annals of Mathematics: Manifold Destiny: The New Yorker: "“To do great work, you have to have a pure mind. You can think only about the mathematics. Everything else is human weakness. Accepting prizes is showing weakness.”"
Tuesday, August 19, 2008
Intel thinks big with solid-state drives | Nanotech: The Circuits Blog - CNET News
Intel thinks big with solid-state drives Nanotech: The Circuits Blog - CNET News: "Initially, Intel will have 80GB and 160GB solid-state drives based on multilevel cell (MLC) technology for the consumer and notebook markets, and 32GB and 64GB drives based on single-level cell (SLC) for the enterprise market. In 2009, Intel expects to have MLC drives with capacities up to 320GB.
MLC allows drive makers to build higher-capacity drives at lower cost but is not as fast as SLC nor inherently as reliable. Though SLC solid-state drives are used currently in some ultralight laptops, in most cases they will be replaced by MLC drives in future laptop models."
MLC allows drive makers to build higher-capacity drives at lower cost but is not as fast as SLC nor inherently as reliable. Though SLC solid-state drives are used currently in some ultralight laptops, in most cases they will be replaced by MLC drives in future laptop models."
Our Electric Future — The American, A Magazine of Ideas
Our Electric Future — The American, A Magazine of Ideas: "We live in a world where just about everything—from a hairdryer to the Internet—runs on electricity. A big exception is the transportation sector"
Monday, August 18, 2008
IBM launches 'Green Sigma' business consulting | Green Tech - CNET News.com
IBM launches 'Green Sigma' business consulting Green Tech - CNET News.com: "IBM on Monday detailed its 'Green Sigma' consulting practice for reducing energy and water usage at businesses by using networked sensors and data analysis software."
Quantum Physics Gets "Spooky" -- Berardelli 2008 (813): 3 -- ScienceNOW
Quantum Physics Gets "Spooky" -- Berardelli 2008 (813): 3 -- ScienceNOW: "there 'really is an intrinsic connection between entangled particles, not that some signal passes quickly between them when an observation is performed.'"
Neowin.net - AMD Readies Shanghai to Battle Nehalem
Neowin.net - AMD Readies Shanghai to Battle Nehalem: "According to AMD Senior Vice President Randy Allen, the chip will ship in Q4 2008, and his company will be ready with its server products before Intel. 'They [Intel] won't be factoring our 45-nanometer Shanghai product and be making shipments of that by the end of the year,' Allen said.
However, despite much talk about how Shanghai will be competing against Nehalem, there was a notable absence of details about Shanghai during Allen's press conference, held on the eve of the Intel Developer's Forum, including specifics on performance improvements. AMD has previously said Shanghai will contain 6MB of Level 3 cache compared with the 2MB of L3 cache in the company's current crop of quad-core Opteron processors."
However, despite much talk about how Shanghai will be competing against Nehalem, there was a notable absence of details about Shanghai during Allen's press conference, held on the eve of the Intel Developer's Forum, including specifics on performance improvements. AMD has previously said Shanghai will contain 6MB of Level 3 cache compared with the 2MB of L3 cache in the company's current crop of quad-core Opteron processors."
Saturday, August 02, 2008
Intel, Facebook Sign Infrastructure Solutions Agreement - MarketWatch
Intel, Facebook Sign Infrastructure Solutions Agreement - MarketWatch: "Intel has a wealth of software engineering expertise as well as such tools as Intel VTune(TM) and Intel Thread Checker to help companies improve application performance on multi-core Intel processors. Since Facebook's applications are mostly built on open source technologies, the companies believe that some of the insights from this collaboration may be contributed back to the open source community, benefiting other companies that use similar underlying technologies."
Tuesday, July 29, 2008
FAQs about Mailinator
FAQs about Mailinator: "So if the government issued a subpeona to Mailinator to divulge emails or logs, you'd rat me out?
Holy crap, yes. I'm not going to jail for you, I have a boyish face and very (very) supple skin."
Holy crap, yes. I'm not going to jail for you, I have a boyish face and very (very) supple skin."
Bloglines | My Feeds (3516) (1)
Bloglines | My Feeds (3516) (1): "I have this theory about the behavior of squirrels and how they are like certain large software companies, especially SAP, the giant Enterprise Resource Management vendor headquartered in Germany. But obviously the most interesting part is the squirrels, so let's start there.
You are driving down a street in your car and up ahead there is a squirrel at the side of the road eating a nut. You aren't on an intercept course, there is no way you are going to hit that squirrel. So what does the squirrel do? At the very last possible moment, rather than watching you drive by, THE SQUIRREL DARTS STRAIGHT FOR YOUR CAR, passing inches in front of or behind the front tires.
Why does he do that?
Obviously I'm a guy with too much time on my hands because I've given this quite a bit of thought."
You are driving down a street in your car and up ahead there is a squirrel at the side of the road eating a nut. You aren't on an intercept course, there is no way you are going to hit that squirrel. So what does the squirrel do? At the very last possible moment, rather than watching you drive by, THE SQUIRREL DARTS STRAIGHT FOR YOUR CAR, passing inches in front of or behind the front tires.
Why does he do that?
Obviously I'm a guy with too much time on my hands because I've given this quite a bit of thought."
IEEE Spectrum: Vegas 911
IEEE Spectrum: Vegas 911: "He and his team are currently working on upgrades to IBM DB2 Anonymous Resolution, previously known as ANNA. A more sophisticated spin on NORA, ANNA, in Jonas's words, 'anonymizes' data before it is shared and analyzed. 'It's a new way to find a few bad guys without shaving down the Constitution at the same time,' he says. He also works on data privacy issues with the Task Force on National Security in the Information Age, run by the Markle Foundation, in New York City, and with the Center for Democracy and Technology, in Washington, D.C"
Shared nothing parallel programming - O'Reilly Radar
Shared nothing parallel programming - O'Reilly Radar: "Our small database footprint project had the goal of externalizing as much computation off the database engine - pushing this processing into share nothing parallelizable pipelines. So we also did such things as externalized serialization (no more using the database engine to dole out unique record ID’s) and eliminated virtually all stored procedure and triggers - placed more computational weight on these 'n' wide pipeline processes instead"
Monday, July 28, 2008
Interactive Map Shows Deadliest U.S. Roads | LiveScience
Interactive Map Shows Deadliest U.S. Roads LiveScience: "Driving is one of the most dangerous activities people engage in; the lifetime risk of dying in a motor vehicle accident for U.S residents is 1-in-100. About 57 percent of highway deaths happen on rural roads, according to the Federal Highway Administration"
Wednesday, July 23, 2008
IBM's eight-core Power7 chip to clock in at 4.0GHz | The Register
IBM's eight-core Power7 chip to clock in at 4.0GHz The Register
The IBM documents have the eight-core Power7 being arranged in dual-chip modules. So, that's 16-cores per module. As IBM tells it, each core will show 32 gigaflops of performance, bringing each chip to 256 gigaflops. Just on the gigaflop basis, that makes Power7 twice as fast per core as today's dual-core Power6 chips, although the actual clock rate on the Power7 chips should be well below the 5.0GHz Power6 speed demon.
In fact, according to our documents, IBM will ship Power7 at 4.0GHz in 2010 on a 45nm process. We're also seeing four threads per core on the chip.
The IBM documents have the eight-core Power7 being arranged in dual-chip modules. So, that's 16-cores per module. As IBM tells it, each core will show 32 gigaflops of performance, bringing each chip to 256 gigaflops. Just on the gigaflop basis, that makes Power7 twice as fast per core as today's dual-core Power6 chips, although the actual clock rate on the Power7 chips should be well below the 5.0GHz Power6 speed demon.
In fact, according to our documents, IBM will ship Power7 at 4.0GHz in 2010 on a 45nm process. We're also seeing four threads per core on the chip.
Tuesday, July 22, 2008
Mark's Blog : Pushing the Limits of Windows: Physical Memory
Mark's Blog : Pushing the Limits of Windows: Physical Memory: "The Memory Manager keeps track of each page of memory in an array called the PFN database and, for performance, it maps the entire PFN database into virtual memory. Because it represents each page of memory with a 28-byte data structure, the PFN database on a 128GB system requires about 930MB"
Saturday, July 19, 2008
My Way News - AMD changes CEO as turnaround pressure intensifies
My Way News - AMD changes CEO as turnaround pressure intensifies: "One notable fumble happened in the aftermath of the original Opteron chip's success. A technical glitch delayed the launch of the Opteron's successor by eight months, forcing AMD to slash the price of its existing chips to stay competitive."
Wednesday, July 09, 2008
A Nickel's Worth: Optimizing CL
A Nickel's Worth: Optimizing CL: "This blog is about mechanically optimizing CL code."
Monday, July 07, 2008
How Prozac sent the science of depression in the wrong direction - The Boston Globe
How Prozac sent the science of depression in the wrong direction - The Boston Globe: "In recent years, scientists have developed a novel theory of what falters in the depressed brain. Instead of seeing the disease as the result of a chemical imbalance, these researchers argue that the brain's cells are shrinking and dying. This theory has gained momentum in the past few months, with the publication of several high profile scientific papers. The effectiveness of Prozac, these scientists say, has little to do with the amount of serotonin in the brain. Rather, the drug works because it helps heal our neurons, allowing them to grow and thrive again."
Wednesday, July 02, 2008
AMD Improves CPU Market Share - With Little Impact On Intel - Tom's Hardware
AMD Improves CPU Market Share - With Little Impact On Intel - Tom's Hardware: "iSuppli said that AMD’s market share was at 10.9% in Q1 2007, which climbed to 14.1% in Q4 2007 and fell slightly to 13.00% in Q1 2008. Overall, the trend appears to be positive for AMD."
treatment of bundle branch block
treatment of bundle branch block: "Incomplete bundle branch block sometimes indicates underlying heart disease. But, especially when it occurs on the right side (i.e., incomplete RBBB,) it often has no significance at all."
32 Sci-Fi Novels You Should Read | How To Split An Atom
32 Sci-Fi Novels You Should Read How To Split An Atom: "Below are 32 books that have pushed the boundaries of the genre, inspired generations of thinkers and in some cases have even predicted key aspects of societies development."
Research@Intel · Unwelcome Advice
http://blogs.intel.com/research/2008/06/unwelcome_advice.php: "The second path usually requires at least some degree of going back to the algorithmic drawing board and rethinking some of the core methods they implement. This also presents the “opportunity” for a major refactoring of their code base, including changes in languages, libraries, and engineering methodologies and conventions they’ve adhered to for (often) most of the their software’s existence."
Tuesday, July 01, 2008
Corbin Motorcycle Seats & Accessories | Victory Motorcycles | 800-538-7035
Corbin Motorcycle Seats & Accessories Victory Motorcycles 800-538-7035: "Beetle Bags for Victory Vegas & Kingpin"
Motorcycle Saddlebags / Saddle bag bolt-on hardware supports easy on/off system
Motorcycle Saddlebags / Saddle bag bolt-on hardware supports easy on/off system: "Easy on/off Bolt-on Saddlebag Support System for Motorcycles"
Robert Hilliard's Website of the World Kawasaki Vulcan Nomad
Robert Hilliard's Website of the World Kawasaki Vulcan Nomad: "Trip's Kawasaki Nomad Page"
Monday, June 30, 2008
BetterExplained | Learn Right, Not Rote
BetterExplained Learn Right, Not Rote: "BetterExplained Learn Right, Not Rote.
Home All Posts About FAQ Contact
Explanations for everyone"
Home All Posts About FAQ Contact
Explanations for everyone"
Vulcan Nomad
Vulcan Nomad: "It was a perfect day for a hike and a ride so I did both. It took the usual three and a half hours to ride up, four and a half to hike in and out of Indian Gardens and another three and a half to get back home. A full day and was it beautiful!"
Saturday, June 28, 2008
vanroy-mc-panel.pdf (application/pdf Object)
vanroy-mc-panel.pdf (application/pdf Object)
The challenge of programming
multi-core processors is real, but it is not a technical
challenge. It is a purely sociological challenge.
Technically, we have known since the 1980s how to
program multi-core processors (in the guise of sharedmemory
multiprocessors) and how to write programs for
them (in terms of parallel algorithms). There is a
simple, natural, and powerful approach for
programming these machines: dataflow programming.
Many languages and systems implement this approach
(see, e.g., Wikipedia for a long list). They are
descendants of the venerable Id, Id Nouveau, SISAL,
and other early dataflow languages. Google's wellpublicized
MapReduce is one of the most popular new
tools that takes advantage of dataflow ideas [1], but
these ideas are not new. In fact, they date from the
1970s [2]. A good exposition is given in chapter 4 of
[3]. The basic insight is that there exists a form of
concurrent programming, deterministic concurrency,
that has no race conditions, is as easy to program as
sequential programs, and can exploit parallel processors
as a bonus. Deterministic concurrency is enjoying a
renaissance thanks to clusters and multi-core processors.
The challenge of programming
multi-core processors is real, but it is not a technical
challenge. It is a purely sociological challenge.
Technically, we have known since the 1980s how to
program multi-core processors (in the guise of sharedmemory
multiprocessors) and how to write programs for
them (in terms of parallel algorithms). There is a
simple, natural, and powerful approach for
programming these machines: dataflow programming.
Many languages and systems implement this approach
(see, e.g., Wikipedia for a long list). They are
descendants of the venerable Id, Id Nouveau, SISAL,
and other early dataflow languages. Google's wellpublicized
MapReduce is one of the most popular new
tools that takes advantage of dataflow ideas [1], but
these ideas are not new. In fact, they date from the
1970s [2]. A good exposition is given in chapter 4 of
[3]. The basic insight is that there exists a form of
concurrent programming, deterministic concurrency,
that has no race conditions, is as easy to program as
sequential programs, and can exploit parallel processors
as a bonus. Deterministic concurrency is enjoying a
renaissance thanks to clusters and multi-core processors.
My Way News - Credit scores hit by card limits
My Way News - Credit scores hit by card limits: "For instance, someone taking out a $25,000 36-month auto loan would see an interest rate of about 6.4 percent and a monthly payment of $765 if they were in the highest range of FICO scores of 720 to 850, according to Fair Isaac's Web site myFICO.com.
That then jumps to an interest rate of 7.3 percent and a monthly payment of $776 for those with a score of 690 to 719 and as much as 15 percent or $866 a month for those with the lowest FICO range of 500 to 589."
That then jumps to an interest rate of 7.3 percent and a monthly payment of $776 for those with a score of 690 to 719 and as much as 15 percent or $866 a month for those with the lowest FICO range of 500 to 589."
Thursday, June 26, 2008
Many degrees of multi-tenancy | Software as Services | ZDNet.com
Many degrees of multi-tenancy Software as Services ZDNet.com: "multi-tenancy — the architectural model that allows them to serve multiple customers from a single shared instance of the application — is an article of faith, the one thing that marks them as a tribe apart from traditional software vendors."
Wednesday, June 25, 2008
The new geek sheik: Data centers | Outside the Lines - CNET News.com
The new geek sheik: Data centers Outside the Lines - CNET News.com: "Forget about flashy Web 2.0 applications. The real, geeky coolness of the Web is the growing acreage of data centers that deliver bits to billions of devices. At GigaOM's Structure 08 conference in San Francisco on Wednesday, infrastructure--'clouds' of servers, storage and networks--was the headliner"
Tuesday, June 24, 2008
My Way News - World now has 10 million millionaires, report says
My Way News - World now has 10 million millionaires, report says: "Ten million may seem like a big number for such an elite club, but it still represents less than one-fifth of 1 percent of the world's 6.7 billion people.
The rarefied group of the superrich - those with at least $30 million in assets - got richer, too. There were 103,000 of them around the world last year, 9 percent more than the year before, and their wealth grew by nearly 15 percent."
The rarefied group of the superrich - those with at least $30 million in assets - got richer, too. There were 103,000 of them around the world last year, 9 percent more than the year before, and their wealth grew by nearly 15 percent."
InternetNews Realtime IT News - Improving Virtual IT Management
InternetNews Realtime IT News - Improving Virtual IT Management: "That sort of deeper understanding ties into what Forrester analyst Evelyn Hubbert calls business service management (BSM).
Ultimately, the goal of BSM is to correlate the performance of an application or IT service to the expectations of the business"
Ultimately, the goal of BSM is to correlate the performance of an application or IT service to the expectations of the business"
Linux Graphics Essay - The Linux Foundation
Linux Graphics Essay - The Linux Foundation: "Around 2005, Intel took the decision to dominate the Linux graphics market using the Open Source philosophy. It formed a team within its Open Source Technology centre to work with the community to produce and distribute drivers for all of its graphics chips which were released to the world in 2006. This strategy has been resoundingly successful in that today the best way to get a laptop that will work with Linux involves the simple question 'does it have an Intel graphics chip' rather than having to get the graphics specs before purchase and check a variety of sources to see what the support is (or indeed whether it is likely to work at all)."
Monday, June 23, 2008
Intel Denies Rumors of SSD Market Exit
http://www.tomshardware.com/news/intel-ssd-drive,5735.html
Samsung for example recently announced SATA 2 SSD drives that delivery very fast performance. According to Samsung, its new drives deliver a read speed of 200MB/sec. and 160MB/sec. write speeds
Samsung for example recently announced SATA 2 SSD drives that delivery very fast performance. According to Samsung, its new drives deliver a read speed of 200MB/sec. and 160MB/sec. write speeds
Rackable Systems Unveils High-density Servers
http://news.yahoo.com/s/pcworld/20080623/tc_pcworld/147418
The high-density servers pack two motherboards into a 2U unit with a single power supply, increasing the available processing power while consuming less energy, the company said
The high-density servers pack two motherboards into a 2U unit with a single power supply, increasing the available processing power while consuming less energy, the company said
Wednesday, June 18, 2008
Red Hat Partners With Amazon.com On SaaS | MSPmentor
Red Hat Partners With Amazon.com On SaaS MSPmentor: "At Red Hat Summit in Boston, the open source company disclosed that JBoss Enterprise Application Platform is now available within the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2). Red Hat claims JBoss is the first cloud-based application server."
Tuesday, June 17, 2008
Linux.com :: A virtual appliance primer
Linux.com :: A virtual appliance primer: "So, for example, Bugzilla, the popular bug tracking app, is available as a 2.4MB download tarball from Mozilla, as well as a 150MB appliance from appliance vendor Jumpbox So, for example, Bugzilla, the popular bug tracking app, is available as a 2.4MB download tarball from Mozilla, as well as a 150MB appliance from appliance vendor Jumpbox"
Monday, June 09, 2008
WikiAnswers - If one has precancerous polyp cut out is this considered a history of cancer
WikiAnswers - If one has precancerous polyp cut out is this considered a history of cancer: "Adenomas are quite common -- approximately 40% of men over the age of 55 will have at least one. Only one in every 200 adenomas will turn into cancer, but we don't know which ones those will be. On the other hand, all colorectal cancers arise from an adenoma."
Saturday, June 07, 2008
Big fat lie - Telegraph
Big fat lie - Telegraph: "'The natural question is, 'What regulates fat accumulation?'' he begins, swivelling gently in his office chair. 'That was actually worked out 50 years ago. We know that the hormone insulin is what puts fat in fat tissue. Raise insulin levels and you accumulate fat; lower insulin levels and you lose fat. And we secrete insulin as a response to carbohydrates in the diet."
Wednesday, June 04, 2008
David Mandelin\’s blog » Blog Archive » SquirrelFish
David Mandelin\’s blog » Blog Archive » SquirrelFish: "The basic idea is to keep a table of relative offsets to the cases, and then jump using that offset."
Saturday, May 24, 2008
Linux.com :: Comparing Linux USB flash disk distros
Linux.com :: Comparing Linux USB flash disk distros: "Some Linux distributions, such as Mandriva Flash, are specially designed to work from flash devices. Some provide installers to get them onto thumb drives, while others can be coerced onto a USB flash drive with some simple modifications. I tested five Linux distributions -- Damn Small Linux (DSL), Puppy Linux, Pendrivelinux, Ubuntu, and Mandriva Flash -- to see how they fare running from a flash disk.
Of the five, only Ubuntu doesn't offer a native method for getting it to run from flash, while Pendrivelinux and Mandriva Flash are designed to run exclusively from flash. The five Linux distributions can be divided into two classes: the small, compact distributions (DSL and Puppy Linux), which are less than 100MB in size, and the full-blown distributions (Mandriva, Pendrivelinux, and Ubuntu)."
Of the five, only Ubuntu doesn't offer a native method for getting it to run from flash, while Pendrivelinux and Mandriva Flash are designed to run exclusively from flash. The five Linux distributions can be divided into two classes: the small, compact distributions (DSL and Puppy Linux), which are less than 100MB in size, and the full-blown distributions (Mandriva, Pendrivelinux, and Ubuntu)."
Monday, May 12, 2008
Stevey's Blog Rants: Dynamic Languages Strike Back
Stevey's Blog Rants: Dynamic Languages Strike Back: "I like the story about refreshing the title bar 140 times. It's an example of the principle I always tell everyone: your performance bottlenecks are usually something you would never think of in a million years. You absolutely must use performance tools rather than trying to reason from first principles."
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