some reading material
Dec. 20th, 2010 10:54 pm
What
Level 3 v. Comcast says about the FCC's obsolescence is a
good explanation of what is going on with throttling internet traffic
(link, as with many on this topic, from
osewalrus).
goldsquare writes about why
you should care.
Law and the Multiverse
(now syndicated at
law_multiverse) does fun legal analysis
of superhero law. From their "about" page:
"If there's one thing comic book nerds like doing it's over-thinking the
smallest details. Here we turn our attention to the hypothetical legal
ramifications of comic book tropes, characters, and powers. Just a few
examples: Are mutants a protected class? Who foots the bill when a hero
damages property while fighting a villain? What happens legally when a
character comes back from the dead?" Thanks to
anastasiav
for pointing it out.
The first truly honest
privacy policy sounds about right to me. Link from
cahwyguy.
The semicolon wars
discusses differences in programming languages and some of the religious
wars that have been fought over them. Thanks to
nancylebov
for the link.
Thanks to
brokengoose for pointing me to
Kindle Feeder, which supports
RSS feeds to the Kindle. Now, do any of you know how to get an RSS
feed to cough up the entire article instead of just the first paragraph?
If the publisher didn't set it up that way is there anything I can do about
it?
(no subject)
Date: 2010-12-21 11:42 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2010-12-21 01:02 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2010-12-21 02:12 pm (UTC)Also, it looks like scj's isn't being maintained any more, right?
(no subject)
Date: 2010-12-21 02:57 pm (UTC)Actually, I save the few questions I get (or should I say "we", for Micha Berger helps with the Orthodox answers). I update it about every 6 months, although the Reform section is woefully out of date.
(no subject)
Date: 2010-12-22 01:59 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2010-12-26 03:57 am (UTC)Humph -- doesn't even mention Scala. Piker. Yes, I'm as biased as anybody, but having programming in the majority of the displayed languages, I do feel that I at least have an informed opinion. His core point -- that there is no single perfect language -- is certainly correct, but some at least try harder than others.
More seriously, his argument about the polarization of the programming world looks pretty dated, and is getting moreso with each passing month. Few serious languages are strictly OO or Functional, and the good ones are embracing both paradigms with a will. Scala goes further than any other language in being utterly serious about doing both paradigms *well*, but even Java is giving ground and becoming more functional. (Notably, C# is also doing a good job of stealing all the best ideas from both sides of the argument -- one of those cases where MS is doing it right.)
So the reality is that things are actually getting steadily *less* polarized: while there are outliers, the majority of programming languages are getting more and more alike at the moment...