Experimental, impressionistic sub-paragraph tumblin' (think obstsalat)
30mar2007
Talking to God…, “I met god the other day.” On the train. Great read.
HaMLet-S and Successor ML, “Andreas Rossberg has updated HaMLet, a reference implementation of SML in SML, to support many of the suggestions for Successor ML (sML).” Somehow I now like the syntax…
And I can change the world,
I will be the sunlight in your universe.
You would think my love was really something good,
Baby if I could change the world.
— Eric Clapton, Change The World
Deep Fryer PC, even better than the fish. WJW.
ICANN Board votes against .xxx, Joi Ito says. Great!
XInclude Processing in XSLT, by Erik Wilde. “The XInclude Processor (XIPr), written in XSLT 2.0, implements XInclude and thus may help to reduce the dependency on numerous software packages if XInclude is used in an environment where XSLT 2.0 is used anyway. XIPr is implemented as a single XSLT 2.0 stylesheet.”
Introducing Regular JSON Expressions, for matching null, true or false, integer, double and decimal, irregular and regular strings, numeric ranges around and from zero, collections, relations, dictionaries and namespaces.
…weil sich – glaub ich – durch Twitter tatsächlich unsere Wahrnehmungskompetenz von atomisierten Informationseinheiten verschoben hat. — Timing II
World’s hardest Sudoku puzzle: AL Escargot, nice one.
It’s late in the evening; she’s wondering what clothes to wear.
She puts on her make-up and brushes her long blonde hair.
And then she asks me, “Do I look all right?”
And I say, “Yes, you look wonderful tonight.”
— Eric Clapton, Wonderful Tonight
Fish hatcheries, barrier trees, and a new architectural Tokyo, sketches by Mark Goerner.
Why was Rails only possible with Ruby?, by Curt Hibbs. It is possible in every proper language. Of which there are not many.