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Fast Food Apple Pies and Why Netbooks Suck

Many a true word is spoken in jest… Fast Food Apple Pies and Why Netbooks Suck | The Adventures of Accordion Guy in the 21st Century

Mac geekiness: WWDC 2009 Predictions

If you’re not into Mac’s this isn’t going to be of much interest but if you are then John Gruber the “Mac geeks Mac geek” has posted his prognosis for possible announcements at the upcoming Apple World Wide Developers Conference… Daring Fireball: WWDC 2009 Predictions

Keybag.jpg

The WWDC keynote will be delivered by Apple Marketing head honcho Phil Schiller, set to kickoff Monday, June 8th 2009. 10am PDT. That’s around 1:00am Tuesday morning Beijing time.

As usual there is a miniscule amount of facts amidst a metric ton of rumors, gossip and speculation so if you’re going to be a dedicated Mac geek and want to get the details as they come to light, a couple of links to live blogging sites that have servers that “shouldn’t” die from the strain of the event…

- Ars@WWDC

- Macworld | Live Update: WWDC 2009 Keynote

Image [Joao Sabino | Keybag]

Update: Mr Gruber absolutely nailed the predictions and just the Ars@WWDC live coverage alone had an astounding 53,000 people logged in to catch the updates! The new iPhone 3GS due in stores this month and Snow Leopard due in September.

Update: Did I mention new laptops with up to 8 gigabytes of RAM!

TinEye

A reverse image search engine. More useful than you might think, still early days but the more it’s used the better it’s going to get… TinEye

Centenary of Rutherford’s discovery

You can bet he wasn’t thinking about starting new fields like nuclear physics and making world politics so much more complex…

Exactly one hundred years ago, in June 1909, Lord Ernest Rutherford, published a paper on the results of the Geiger-Marsden experiment, which, for the first time, revealed an atom, putting two and a half millennia of speculation to an end and demonstrating that the building blocks of matter have internal structure.

Rutherford was one of the greatest scientists of the 20th century and a pioneer of the nuclear age. His Geiger-Marsden experiment led to a whole new field of study: nuclear physics.

A man whose work changed our world forever

[The Institute of Physics blog]

China’s Creative Community

I’m starting to sound like a fanboy of Adam Schokora but there is no escaping the fact that he seems to be absolutely everywhere when it comes to the Chinese creative community and he does a brilliant job in this interview with Jenny Zhu distilling the themes and threads of a complex and rapidly evolving scene.

Some excellent links in the interview and Jenny’s blog is also well worth spending some time exploring.

Bing

Speaking of Google and new waves, is Microsoft finally going to give them some competition in the search arena? Bing

[Via TechCrunch]

Google Wave

Imagine if email was invented today? HTML 5 is on it’s way and it looks like it’s also going to enable a new Wave of communication platforms.

Working With Your Hands

Work is a hell of a lot more than just the thing we do to earn a living…

A gifted young person who chooses to become a mechanic rather than to accumulate academic credentials is viewed as eccentric, if not self-destructive. There is a pervasive anxiety among parents that there is only one track to success for their children. It runs through a series of gates controlled by prestigious institutions.

A good job requires a field of action where you can put your best capacities to work and see an effect in the world. Academic credentials do not guarantee this.

Nor can big business or big government — those idols of the right and the left — reliably secure such work for us. Everyone is rightly concerned about economic growth on the one hand or unemployment and wages on the other, but the character of work doesn’t figure much in political debate. Labor unions address important concerns like workplace safety and family leave, and management looks for greater efficiency, but on the nature of the job itself, the dominant political and economic paradigms are mute. Yet work forms us, and deforms us, with broad public consequences.

In the boardrooms of Wall Street and the corridors of Pennsylvania Avenue, I don’t think you’ll see a yellow sign that says “Think Safety!” as you do on job sites and in many repair shops, no doubt because those who sit on the swivel chairs tend to live remote from the consequences of the decisions they make. Why not encourage gifted students to learn a trade, if only in the summers, so that their fingers will be crushed once or twice before they go on to run the country?

There is good reason to suppose that responsibility has to be installed in the foundation of your mental equipment — at the level of perception and habit. There is an ethic of paying attention that develops in the trades through hard experience. It inflects your perception of the world and your habitual responses to it. This is due to the immediate feedback you get from material objects and to the fact that the work is typically situated in face-to-face interactions between tradesman and customer.

[Matthew B. Crawford | The Case for Working With Your Hands | NYTimes.com]

Gravity waves

The fine art of detecting gravity…

About 1 per cent of the noise you see on the screen of a badly-tuned analogue TV is the cosmic background radiation–the echo of the Big Bang. Wouldn’t it be cool to know that your old Sony Trinitron could also tune into the sound of black holes colliding.

[Read more Technology Review | How gravitational waves could generate radio signals]

Auto-translation in Gmail

If you’ve ever wondered what all that Russian and Chinese spam was saying Gmail now does auto-translation, just go to the “Settings” panel, choose “Labs” and then enable “Message translation”.

I guess it will also help the Russian’s and Chinese figure out all the English spam they’ve been getting.