Visual Eclipse.NET is a skin that makes Eclipse look like Visual Studio .NET IDE UI. Not bad.
Month: June 2005
Father’s Day Gift
What did I get for Father's Day? Moleskines: a pocket addressbook and a fullsize notebook. Along with the pocket notebook I had, it's almost a family. I'll have to get a mama moleskine (fullsize diary) though so the papa moleskine (fullsize notebook) won't feel lonely. And perhaps a fully figured sketchbook from Volant on the side…
Unofficial Donation Boxes for Musicians
I wish there were money boxes for musicians for people who download music illegally for convenience sake. I know it's kind of crazy but at least the money will go directly to the musicians. That is if they claim the unofficial donation boxes. If Paypal is interested, we can open an unofficial donation box for every musician that every lived for people to pour money into and assign a trust to help the musicians claim the boxes. Officially, they are just donations unrelated to anything so music publishers will have some difficulty getting their unfair share.
As frownable as the idea is, I think it's possibly a practical way to cut the sagging sack and connect the emerging dots, if you know what I mean.
Scoble’s New Job Title: *
That asterisk is a wildcard, not a star. The way I see it, he has done amazing things for Microsoft inside and out. How he does it is just as amazing. He is to Microsoft what the Schrodinger's cat is to Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle: his observations of Microsoft and the view of world beyond it changes the company itself, from the ground up!
So I think he should be freed from his Longhorn/TabletPC chains and let loose with simply the asterisk as his job title, meaning his role is to simply do what he has been doing for the company: the wildcard. He is smart enough to know when to swing and when to duck so I doubt he'll get into anything he can't get out of as long as the company knows he is just doing his job. I know he is not perfect but imperfect is part of his magic formula, whatever that is. Meow.
Visual Basic 6
It's interesting that Microsoft AntiSpyware (in beta currently) is written in Visual Basic 6. Polished consumer-oriented GUI like that is difficult to code in C++ because of all the detailing work that has to be done. Since .NET still hasn't reached primetime as a client platform, VB6 makes a lot of sense.
Update:
By primetime, I didn't mean that .NET platform is less capable than VB6. The problem with building client software on .NET currently is that a) it's still moving at a speed some might find unstable, b) .NET Framework footprint is quite a bit bigger than VB6 runtime and is not yet available widely enough, and c) Visual Studio .NET series remains half-cooked.
Delegated Authentication
Delegated authentication differs from federated authentication model in that the authentication authority delegates authentication yet again. It's a double-sided star system where the authentication authorities sits in the middle acting as a directory of sort.
Delegated authentication model is not appropriate for weak authentication uses. So I doubt we'll see banks pushing customers to some federated authentication authority whenever they click on the sign-in button. Where it makes sense is protecting high-value transactions with strong and/or multi-party multi-factor authentication.
As cryptic as what I wrote above may sound, the net effect is that a) consumers will be able to buy their favorite secure token at Fry's and use it to protect their bank account without worrying about whether the bank supports the device or not, b) banks of all sizes will be able to support a wide range of authentication methods cheaply, and c) strong authentication vendors will be able to market their products and services directly to consumers.
The biggest hurdle for delegated authentication is that the cost of fraud risk have already become part of the balance sheet. Risk exposure is aggregated and taxed horizontally so that finanical risk is shared as part of operating cost. The net result is that individual customers face minimal financial risk which leaves them little incentives to be interested in strong authentication unless they are required to use them by their banks.
Instant Outlining and Wiki
While there are similarities between Instant Outlining (IO) and Wikis, there are subtle differences. Instant Outlining is more about people and relationships where Wikis are more about documents and collaboration. Instant Outlining is more about now and decentralization where Wikis are more about history and centralization.
I think the two can be combined to get the full benefits of both: a beast with multiple heads of Instant Outlines and the body of a Wiki with full versioning support. Ross, I think you need to ask Uncle Fluffy to tell you a story.
Education Revolution Ahead
It hasn't happened yet but I think the situation in South Korea is perfect now for the birth of the next generation in education. I think most of know what it will look like but the gap between theory and practice must be bridge and I think the bridge will be built in South Korea soon which give the rest of the world solid enough delusions to dive into it, delusions because the bleedging edge is always wider than one expects.
The necessary ingredient is the unseemly mixture of despair and hope heated over high tech and righteousness which South Korea has in abundance unlike countries like Japan where changes come in longer breaths and elders are still strong enough to suffocate the foolish youngsters. Given enough time and right circumstances, shortcomings of a society will become unexpected assets.
Smoke Day
I smoked today. Actually, I smoked just now with only 31 minutes left in the day. Not really a cigarrete even, more a mini-cigar that was sitting in a forgotten corner of the house until now. So horrible yet so comfortable. I've been on nicotine candy for the past three months and haven't been able to get off it. That's not really quitting, more like pausing. And I've been in an irritating state of mind for the past three months. Damn. I feel like a loser. The worst part of smoking these days is the guilt. I don't know if I am back to smoking or not yet. I am taking it one day at a time at this point. For now, allow me this pleasure of hating myself for this self-inflicted wound.
More on Daily Witchhunt
English article from a Korean newspaper on the Internet witchhunt problem in Korean. Apparently, the college the girl attended (note the past tense) got stepped on as well. I also found a series of links on another Korean phenomenon, snitch economy, but they are all in Korean unfortunately.
According to some eye witness accounts of the incident, she was just 'slow'. She had a lot of bags (?) so she put her dog down on the floor. When her dog pooped, she made the mistake of cleaning her dog first. The old women in red jacket got upset at that and threw a plastic bag at her. The girl then panicked and ran, after cussed at the women. Her manner sucked but I don't think she deserved to be lynched.
BTW, the girl appologized in public via a Cyworld 'hompy'. Again, she apologized like a clueless badly mannered person. No surprise there. Would she have learned to behave better if people on the train took turns bashing her face in? I don't think so. But then 'beating sense' into a person is a popular practice in Korea.