Jan 22, 2018 15:17
- I regret to report that Robert Bruce Thompson has
left us, at age 64, of heart problems. He's best-known for his
books PC Hardware in a Nutshell and Building the
Perfect PC, but he's also written several books on astronomy
and telescopes that I much admire, as well as several books on
home-lab chemistry. He was one of the best technical writers of his
generation, and has been blogging as long as I have, which later
this year will have been 20 years.
- Apple will be releasing the source code for the
Lisa OS this year. The machine came out in 1983 and didn't sell
well due to its $10,000 price tag. (That would be almost $25,000
today.) I'm interested because Lisa OS was written in...Pascal!
I've heard rumors from the FreePascal community that a port to the
Raspberry Pi is likely and might not even be especially difficult.
Imagine the OS from a $25,000 machine running on a computer costing
$35. I'd do that just to say I did.
- I didn't know anything about ArcaOS until a few days ago, but
it's
basically a continuation of OS/2 Warp, based on Warp 4, MCP2.
Legal, not free, but also not hideously expensive, and supported to
boot. If you ever used OS/2 and liked it, take a look.
- Back before we truly understood the dangers of nuclear
radiation, scientists experimented with nuclear fission by moving
neutron reflectors around a softball-sized core of PU-239 by
hand, and recording the nuclear reaction's strength from
Geiger counter readings. This was called "tickling the dragon's
tail," and when done clumsily, led to the death of several
researchers and shortened the lives of others. Here's a good summary.
- The last house designed by Frank Lloyd Wright before his death
in 1959 is in Phoenix, and it's for sale. Got $3.25M in your wallet?
You're set! (Thanks to my own Carol for the link.)
- Here's an excellent long-form piece on Amazon
Go, the online retail behemoth's experiment in checkout-free
B&M retailing. Take if off the shelf, toss it in your bag, and
when you're done shopping, just leave. You need an Amazon account
and ideally a smartphone, but with that you're in business. No word
on when the concept will move beyond Seattle.
- The Dark Crystal is coming back to movie
theaters in February. That was a butt-kickin' movie, and I will
probably hand over the $14 ticket price without a great deal of
grumbling. A really big screen is worth something!
- IO9 mentioned some teasers for Cloverfield
III. III? Was there a Cloverfield II? You guys
never tell me anything!
- A Canadian sniper team in the Middle East nailed an
ISIS terrorist at 3,871 yards. This is about 1,000 yards
farther than the previous record for a sniper kill. I have a lot of
respect for marksmen (my father was one) and a sense of awe before
the skill of snipers at this level.
- Every time I crank up Waterfox, it asks me if I'd like it to be
my default browser. Every damned time. Something appears to be
redefining my default browser without my permission. This support page hasn't been especially helpful.
Haven't cracked this one yet, but I'll report here when I do.
- Something the AGW crowd should keep in mind: If you say that
any hot summer's day means global warming, don't be surprised if
people unroll the syllogism and assume that any cold winter's day
means global cooling. Climate isn't simple, and we know a
lot less about it than we claim.
architecture,
pascal,
eulogies,
rpi,
science,
software,
movies