Sunday, July 26, 2015

Wool socks

On wool socks:
"That said, the suit-wearing man should usually be donning wool socks year-round. Wool socks do a better job of keeping feet warm in cold weather, and cool in hot weather. This is because wool socks are much superior at wicking water, keeping feet dry and regulating their temperature. All else being equal when it is warm cotton-encased feet will get hotter and sweatier, and when it is cold, they will get colder."
Via

Interested in the Dore Dore 100% Wool Over-The-Calf sock, but ... so expensive! Even on sale at $28/pair.



Smog Checks for California Hybrid Vehicles

The smogpocalypse! ; o )

http://www.bar.ca.gov/Industry/Industry_Resources/Q&As_Hybrid_Vehicles_in_the_Smog_Check_Program.html

Diploma frames

http://www.amazon.com/Lawrence-Frames-Certificate-Document-Mahogany/dp/B00G7KGU60/

http://www.target.com/p/room-essentials-back-bevel-document-frame-black-8-5x11/-/A-10353622

Friday, July 24, 2015

UCSC McHenry Library Digital Newspaper Displays


Collecting info on the newspaper displays in the lobby of the McHenry Library, which rotate frontpages from around the world.

Lee Jaffe's installation photos:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/ldjaffe/albums/72157626824825533
  • Modeled after installation at UC Berkeley International House
  • "These photos document work on a 6-screen installation that will feature front pages from newspapers worldwide. The architects left us with pretty much nothing we could use and in fact added some extra surprises. I'm working with Doug Russo, a carpenter, to design and build this installation that we hope will compensate for the deficiencies of the space in an attractive and secure manner."
  • "...the electrical raceway [was] added for a different project just before we started our installation. Nobody thinks this was done well -- there is conduit all throughout the wall and it could have been routed differently -- but there is no money to fix it at this point. We were able to reposition our installation a bit to cover some of the raceway but we cannot hide it completely." (photo)
  • Installation occurred during summer 2011
Gifts funding the creation: "UC Santa Cruz receives $350,000 to create global café and reading garden at University Library"
http://news.ucsc.edu/2007/01/1028.html
  • "Stephen Silberstein--cofounder and former president of Innovative Interfaces, a library software company in Emeryville, California-has donated $250,000 to create a global cyber café in the campus's newly expanded and renovated McHenry Library."
  • "Plans for the UC Santa Cruz café include a rotating digital newspaper display that spotlights up-to-date front pages of approximately 140 newspapers from around the world. Representing the varied geographic areas of Asia, Europe, South America, Africa, the Middle East, and the United States, the newspaper exhibit is designed to contrast different global perspectives of current events."
UPDATE, 8/3/2015: A UCSC staff member writes:
"The person who was most directly involved with the implementation of this system has retired. I will try to answer your questions as best I can. 
The current newspaper display was installed in 2011 based on an earlier pilot installation in 2009. It uses Mac Mini computers and 30" Dell monitors. The image swapping is managed by the MacOS screen saver application. The newspaper images are .jpegs managed by newseum.org and those images are updated on that site daily. The library contracted with a programmer to do some customized scripting to automate the daily download of new newspaper images. Unfortunately, I do not have any contact information for that developer."
So, it sounds like a script downloads the fixed image URLs, from Newseum, which updates the image URLs, daily. For example, the Centre, Alabama, USA newspaper, "The Post". The script may copy the images to a folder on the computer driving each display (or perhaps a server folder). The computer then displays the images, in the configured folder, via native screensaver utility.

Seems pretty straightforward! I had wondered if Newseum represented the source; nice to see it confirmed. The script just iterates over a configured list of newspaper images, probably calling something like wget.

Note: Lee Jaffe may represent the retired staff member referred to, above. The 2009 installation seems to represents the install seen in several photos from Lee's Flickr account, prior to the McHenry Library remodel.

UPDATE: 04/08/2023 - 
Newseum as an organization dissolved in 2019. 

We stopped by the iHouse at UC Berkeley today and it looks like they removed their newspaper displays.

Here's how the UC Berkeley iHouse cafe displays looked as of September 17, 2019:

Photo courtesy IHouse UC Berkeley

 

Tuesday, July 14, 2015

"Computer Programming: What is the difference between developer, engineer, programmer, coder, architect, and consultant?"


  • A programmer knows how to program computers.
  • A developer is a programmer who sits in a cubicle and gets paid for it.
  • A coder is a programmer who sits on a beanbag listening to techno in a black T-shirt and gets paid for it.
  • An architect is a programmer who thinks up something really big for the other programmers to program, and gets paid for it
  • A consultant was a programmer, but now wears a suit and tells developers, coders, and architects how they ought to develop, code and architect, and gets paid a lot for it.
Jon Peterson, via

Monday, July 13, 2015

Traceroute

oh?
"The default starting port in UNIX traceroute is 33434. This comes from 32768 (2 This comes from 32768 (2 15 ^ or the max value of a , or the max value of a signed 16-bit integer) + 666 (the mark of Satan)."
Via 

Wednesday, July 08, 2015

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