www.nazdrovia.net

Archive for June 2008

More on that later

Jun 29th, 2008 | By admin | Category: Bollywood, Entertainment, Health, Hollywood, Money News, South Asia, Sports, Technology, Top News, World

Jono Bacon, Stuart Langridge, Chris Procter, and Adam Sweet talk about Linux, open source, and all manner of associated things. In this show we’re talking about:

  • Starting out on your own: if you’re thinking of setting up your own company working with technology or the web or open source, what do you need to do to make it successful? Is it possible to compete in the market as a one-man show? Is it just too risky? (1.19) [How can you make money running your own company? Tell us in the LugRadio forums]
  • The State Of the Mozilla: Firefox is the poster child for open source software, but are they forgetting their open-source base and not supporting the free desktop? There have been lots of accusations of this — is it actually the truth? Secondly, Mozilla’s rendering engine, Gecko, seems to be losing the war for being an embedded engine to WebKit. Are people heading away from Mozilla’s technology? (20.00) [What do you think of the Mozilla project's approach? Tell us in the LugRadio forums]
  • We announce that LugRadio will end at LugRadio Live UK this July, and talk about why the show’s going out on a high. Tell us what you think: send us email or post on the forums (37.15)
  • If you could fix any problem in the open-source world what would it be? Thoughts on usability, modularisation, the web, and shared user accounts (44.15)
  • Your emails — this week you’re talking about McGyver, gun control, power metal, freedom hatred at the FSF, other Linux podcasts that we think that you should be listening to, and LugRadio Live UK which is in less than a month! (73.40)


Can the Enemy Build a Super-Soldier?

Jun 23rd, 2008 | By admin | Category: Bollywood, Entertainment, Health, Hollywood, Money News, South Asia, Sports, Technology, Top News, World

A Defense Department report warns of the possibility that exotic drugs or implants could create a fearsome new enemy



One tonne ‘Baby’ marks its birth

Jun 20th, 2008 | By admin | Category: Bollywood, Entertainment, Health, Hollywood, Money News, South Asia, Sports, Technology, Top News, World

By Jonathan Fildes
Science and technology reporter, BBC News

Baby project team

Sixty years ago the “modern computer” was born in a lab in Manchester.

The Small Scale Experimental Machine, or “Baby”, was the first to contain memory which could store a program.

The room-sized computer’s ability to carry out different tasks - without having to be rebuilt - has led some to describe it as the “first modern PC”.

Using just 128 bytes of memory, it successfully ran its first set of instructions - to determine the highest factor of a number - on 21 June 1948.

“We were extremely excited,” Geoff Tootill, one of the builders of Baby told BBC News.

“We congratulated each other and then went and had lunch in the canteen.”

Mr Tootill, and three other surviving members of the Baby team, will be honoured by the University and the British Computer Society at a ceremony in Manchester.

Number cruncher

Baby was the successor to machines such as the American ENIAC and the UK’s Colossus.

ENIAC was built to calculate the trajectory of shells for the US army, whilst Colossus was used to decrypt messages from the German High Command during World War II.

Both computers were able to be reprogrammed but this could involve days of rewiring. Baby was designed to overcome this limitation.

“It was the earliest machine that was a computer, in the sense of what everyone today understands a computer to be,” explained Chris Burton of the Computer Conservation Society (CCS).

“It was a single piece of hardware which could perform any application depending on what program you put in.”

The key to this ability was its memory, built from a cathode ray tube (CRT), which could be used to store a program.

“It was an extraordinary analogue for today’s DRAM (dynamic random access memory),” said Mr Burton.

Electrical charges on the screen of the CRT were used to represent binary information. A positive charge represented a one and a negative charge a zero.

"It really must have been an extraordinary, exciting and heady time"
Chris Burton

A metal grid attached to the screen read the different charges. A graphical representation - dashes for a one and dots for a zero - was displayed on a second CRT wired in parallel to the memory device.

“The operator peered at the monitor tube and he could see the same patterns as in the storage tube,” said Mr Burton.

The memory gave programmers a total of 1024 bits, or 128 bytes, to play with. This had to store both the program and all of the data to be crunched.

By comparison, a modern 1GB DRAM chip can store around 8 billion bits.

Dashing times

However, the size of the memory did not prevent the Manchester University team writing relatively complex programs.

“You can write very sophisticated and interesting programs even with that limitation,” said Mr Burton.

“They’re not efficient, but nobody was talking about efficiency, it was about feasibility.”

The first program was written by the late Tom Kilburn to work out the highest factor of a prime number.

“We used this, of course, to test the machine,” said Mr Tootill.

“It took it a very long time, so we had our leisure to see how the circuits were working - to see if any were on the verge of failure, that sort of thing.”

Because of the limitations of the display the team tested the machine using prime numbers.

“If you give it a prime number to try then the highest factor of that is one,” said Mr Burton.

“If what they saw when they ran the program was a one - in other words, a dash when everything else was dots - then bingo, they knew it was working.”

The team eventually refined their techniques, writing more complex programs and adding to the computers memory.

Baby morphed into the Manchester Mark I and eventually the first commercial general purpose computer, the Ferranti Mark I.

“It really must have been an extraordinary, exciting and heady time,” said Mr Burton.

A working replica of Baby is on display at the Museum of Science and Industry in Manchester.

<p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.



Burning Sensation

Jun 16th, 2008 | By admin | Category: Bollywood, Entertainment, Health, Hollywood, Money News, South Asia, Sports, Technology, Top News, World

Jono Bacon, Stuart Langridge, Chris Procter, and Adam Sweet talk about Linux, open source, and all manner of associated things. This show includes us answering the burning questions that you want answered, and also:

This episode includes the tune Steady B, from Trafic de Blues’ Fin de cavale album, which is licenced as CC Attribution-Noncommercial-Sharealike 2.5, which means that this episode is also under the same licence (a minor change from our normal licence for episodes).



Medical notes

Jun 16th, 2008 | By admin | Category: Bollywood, Entertainment, Health, Hollywood, Money News, South Asia, Sports, Technology, Top News, World

A comprehensive guide to clinical conditions



Live Writer

Jun 16th, 2008 | By admin | Category: Bollywood, Entertainment, Health, Hollywood, Money News, South Asia, Sports, Technology, Top News, World
  • Live Writer supports  many different types of blogs including SharePoint blogs. So this post came via Live Writer
  • Just use the drop down Weblog menu to add a new blog and point it at your SharePoint blog, in my case MySite. The wizard will then download the templates and graphics needs for the site automatically

lw

  • You can add pictures, videos, Silverlight applications, maps etc. Just go visit the live.com site for more add-ins

– Rob Atkinson
– MSIT Ireland



10 things

Jun 13th, 2008 | By admin | Category: Bollywood, Entertainment, Health, Hollywood, Money News, South Asia, Sports, Technology, Top News, World

Even a collector of beer mats has a special name



Ask the Experts: 5 Steps to Clutter-Free Living

Jun 8th, 2008 | By admin | Category: Bollywood, Entertainment, Health, Hollywood, Money News, South Asia, Sports, TIME: Most Popular Stories, Technology, Top News, World


Through the drinking glass - Rhodadendrum

Jun 7th, 2008 | By admin | Category: Nature Photos, SEO, World

DamnBeavers posted a photo: I’m really liking this effect through the drinking glass. I’m grilling out right now (well, I am inside on the Mac at the moment) and decided to try this out on the Rhodadendrum next to our deck.



Bloglines Expands Embedded Video Support

Jun 2nd, 2008 | By admin | Category: Bollywood, Entertainment, Health, Hollywood, Money News, South Asia, Sports, Technology, Top News, World

We’ve been spending a lot of time working on improving the back-end of Bloglines, but we wanted to share some fun for you Blogliners out there.

More and more of our feeds have embedded video, so it was a no-brainer to offer greater video support. We’ve cleared over 30 different video sites to stream video through Bloglines. It’s a broad list including Blip.tv, Break.com, Brightcove, Cnet, CNN, CollegeHumor.com, Dailymotion.com, Metacafe, Myspace, Revver, Videoegg, and oh yeah, YouTube, among others.

Here’s an example where I’m about to watch Jake and Amir of College Humor. The video is embedded in the Silicon Alley Insider feed inside using the Vimeo player.

Have Fun!

- Eric Engleman and the Bloglines Team