Archive for July, 2009

The Best Free Software Books

July 29th, 2009

Behind_The_Green_Curtain

Recently I saw an Ignite Boise presentation from a woman who read 200 books in one year.  Many of these were classics.  You may be interested in some of the classics in computer software. Classics do tend to become free eventually.  Here are some good ones:

Apollo 11: And They took Velcro?

July 23rd, 2009

Apollo-Moon-Mission

Last year at a family gathering, someone from the younger generation commented that they had no idea why NASA was still in the business of shooting people into space. They felt like the money was sorely needed for things like the next generation of renewable fuel, for example.

My father was there, a sixty-something electronic engineer who worked on Apollo. He said many important things came out of the space program. Naturally he was asked how exactly our society benefited from the Apollo program.  He replied that important inventions, like Velcro, had come from the space program. Velcro?

» Read more: Apollo 11: And They took Velcro?

What I Want for Christmas: Google Chrome OS

July 22nd, 2009

santa_claus_close

From the Google Chrome OS announcement:

Speed, simplicity and security are the key aspects of Google Chrome OS. We’re designing the OS to be fast and lightweight, to start up and get you onto the web in a few seconds. The user interface is minimal to stay out of your way, and most of the user experience takes place on the web.

Recently, I failed to notice a Google malware notice on some search results.  In a scene straight from the late 90′s, I clicked on my browser, it crashed, followed by Windows crashing too.  Been a while since I’ve seen that blue screen of death.  Kinda missed it…not!

» Read more: What I Want for Christmas: Google Chrome OS

Malcolm Gladwell’s Outliers: Analytics of Success

July 20th, 2009

malcolm_gladwell_outliersI just finished Malcolm Gladwell’s Outliers.  Sacrificing a few days of library late fees to make notes and do research was well worth it.  My guess is that the library’s hold queue is going to continue to grow with this one.

Though I have enjoyed all of Gladwell’s books, this particular one hit me close to home.  I suspect it will have a similar effect on others.  Who doesn’t want to understand success?  Who isn’t looking for the Midas touch?  Success books might outnumber diet books?

Gladwell demonstrates how numbers can show us more about our world, our assumptions, our illusions and therefore, us.  I treasure his style which reminds me of James Burke’s Connections TV program.  Surprise lay around the corner of each page, and the amazing seems completely staid when Gladwell reveals the underlying back story behind the pattern.

The book is an example of how analytics and statistical research will likely redefine our world, one amazing hypothesis at a time.  It is also a worthy example of how numbers must be paired with logic, deduction, art and instinct to yield their treasured results. I think, Gladwell shows us how data alone gets us nowhere.  But with data, our intuitions can fly much further on the same effort.

Controversy in the Glass Palace of Nerds

July 17th, 2009

glass_palace_madrid

Recently MIT announced that it would change the programming language used to teach freshmen engineers to program.  The change was from Scheme (a language obscure to many outside MIT) to Python (a language enthusiastically used throughout the world, notably at Google).  To most, this may seem a relatively minor curriculum change, the kind that happen all the time in universities, without fuss, and especially in the technology areas.  Not so.

» Read more: Controversy in the Glass Palace of Nerds