Geek Quote of the Day
Technology is so much fun but we can drown in our technology. The fog of information can drive out knowledge.
Technology is so much fun but we can drown in our technology. The fog of information can drive out knowledge.
10 Alternatives To Mininova – After nearly five years of loyal service, Mininova disabled access to over a million torrent files when it partly shut down its website. Starting today, only approved publishers are able to upload files to the site, but luckily there are plenty of alternatives.
100 Google Wave Robots – Google Wave Robots are the best way to explore Wave. Here is the huge list of Google Wave Robots that you can add in your contacts and enjoy waving.
61 Free Apps We’re Most Thankful For – LifeHacker has compiled a list of free applications its users are thankful for. There’s a lot of the usual suspects, along with a few little-knowns.
All My Apps and NiNite – These two sites are the only two places on the internet I can find where you can install all the usual apps you load up on a new computer in one fell swoop, including Firefox, Flash, and VLC. Read the rest of this entry » » »
Book: Heat Wave
ISBN-13: 978-1401323820
Author: “Richard Castle”
Series: Nikki Heat series
Publisher: Hyperion
Genre: Mystery
Release: September 2009
Length: 208 pages (Hardcover)
Rating: D+ (60 / 100)
Sadly, what might have been a golden opportunity to add some depth to a funny but often overly simplistic mystery series (Castle) has turned out to be little more than a cheap marketing gimmick. Hardcore fans of the series will enjoy a few chuckles from this book, but anybody expecting any real mystery is going to be sorely disappointed.
Cons: Short, shallow, and seriously simple plotline. Poor dialog. No real twists.
In Brief: The fictional title character of ABC’s hit television series Castle kicks off his new series of books featuring tough and sexy New York police detective Nikki Heat.
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Technology is ruled by two types of people: those who manage what they do not understand, and those who understand what they do not manage.
Technology makes it possible for people to gain control over everything, except over technology.
1877
Thomas Edison demonstrates his hand-cranked phonograph that records sound onto tinfoil cylinders for the first time.
1951
The first US underground atom bomb test, designated “Uncle,” is detonated. The low-yield 1.2 kiloton bomb is detonated seventeen feet beneath the surface of Frenchman Flat, in Nevada as part of Operation Buster-Jangle. It leaves an eighteen hundred foot diameter crater one hundred feet deep.
1961
The first US satellite carrying an animal is launched by Mercury-Atlas 5 from Cape Canaveral. The passenger, a five-year-old chimpanzee named Enos, orbits the Earth twice over the course of three hours and twenty minutes. During the mission, Enos carries out the lever-pulling performance and psychological tests that he had been conditioned for over the past sixteen months. Enos performs the tasks with a high degree of accuracy, receiving shocks for the minimal number of incorrect answers. Even when the controls malfunction and Enos begins receiving consecutive shocks for correct answers, the frustrated chimpanzee continues to the proper sequence through the end of the flight.
1965
Canadian Space Agency launches the satellite Alouette 2.
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The longest holiday weekend of the year is here, and while, for many, that means observing a series of time-honored traditions with their families, for the young adults of the internet generation , new traditions are being are being established.
10. The invitations stipulate that costumes are required.
9. The gathering strictly is BYOEC: Bright your own Extention Cord.
8. Places are set in a Lan Party configuration, to allow for filesharing during the meal.
7. At least one of the guests is present only as an avatar. Read the rest of this entry » » »