they should have called it ‘tubes’

internet technology

Poor yahoo. They have a great idea. Get great reviews, and then the darn thing breaks:


Our Pipes are clogged! We've called the plumbers!

is all you see when you click on Yahoo’s pipe project

It does not really matter though: Now the idea is out. The idea is great. There will be 20 other implementations, and some of them will even be working. Should I add one? Nah, busy with other things. I think that ‘pipes’ is one of these things that everybody wants but then gets rarely used. I imagine that 80% of all mechanical tools get sold to the idea of “oh with this I could do that”, but then the urgent need to actually do “that” never arises.

It is kind of sad for Yahoo: The one moment they launch something that people actually care about and it breaks. Good engineering does matter. Even if it looks sometimes as if people could buy their way out of that. In the end they can not.

timeless

misc

then:
sigh

now:

command line airport application

Apple technology


/System/Library/PrivateFrameworks/Apple80211.framework/Versions/Current/Resources/airport --help

beat’s counting bars.

nice video

BlogsNow history internet media

In four minutes this video shows how we got here

Nice. And #1 @ right now. Which is nice, since neither tailrank, nor techmeme nor nor Digg have picked this up yet. They will, eventually. Nice to see that
BlogsNow is still the best source for non maintstream items. Those other tools seemed to skewed towards
the big mainstream and established blog themes and news. BlogsNow just ‘brute forces’ it: All links count,
all blogers do. If it matters to enough real people to link to, then it will make the list. No matter what it is.

just to clear this up

misc

what google said

internet misc

Amazingly dumb rip off of Simon Robslons “What Barry said” .

At first I thought it was a tongue in cheek homage. It seems though that these kids trying to get away with their blatant, uninspired and unwhelmingly rip off act. How lame. And how emberrassing for the University of Ulm.