Hardy is Here!

The latest Ubuntu release, version 8.04 codename Hardy Heron, has finally arrived!  It’s the early hours of Friday morning here in New Zealand (and it’s a public holiday… which should really be renamed Heron day :) and my copy is toasting as we speak!

www.ubuntu.com

Argh, why didn’t I just use a CD-R???  Dang slow CD-RW!

Enjoy!

-Wayne

Ubuntu 8.04 LTS – First looks

I just wanted to share my excitement at the latest Ubuntu desktop release.  Fantastic!  I have just downloaded and booted the 8.04 Release Candidate and the guys and girls at Canonical really seem to have covered their bases more thorougly.  It’s almost as if they read my complaints post ;-)

The last time I actually managed to even boot the live CD (and this was not even normal mode, it was safe mode) was with 6.06 LTS.  Every release since then just gave me a blank screen including in safe graphics mode and using the alternative CD.  Now not only can I boot in full normal mode, I also get full 1280×800 widescreen resolution!  Woohoo!  I truly expected support for older, weirder graphics adapters like mine to to become worse and worse but I am absolutely thrilled at the work that has gone into this release.

I can’t wait until Thursday when the full official version comes out so that I can hopefully blow away my Windows installation for good.  I have a great feeling that this is it.

-Wayne

Tubecaster Reviewed!

I was pleasantly surprised this morning to find an e-mail in my inbox from a website called “Uptodown.com” informing me that they had tested Tubecaster and thought that their visitors would find it useful and so had written a mini review for it and provided a download link on their site. Apparently they get over three hundred thousand hits on their site every day, and Tubecaster is linked on the front page at the moment. I’m really flattered and hugely pleased that even in this reasonably early stage of development (although it already “Does what it says(TM)”) people are finding it useful. Thanks guys!

The review (in Spanish only) and link can be found here.

-Wayne

P.S. I’m proud to report that Tubecaster is the only Free & Open Source YouTube video downloader on the Uptodown website :-)

To Be, or nt 2 B?

In the age of cellphone text messages, online instant messaging and e-mail we are using written communication more than ever before. It seems ironic then that our language is suffering as much as it is.

Believe it or not but “txt speak” is actually going to be allowed in some schools. Why have we spent centuries developing our language to be so expressive and concise only for it to be mangled virtually beyond recognition?

Worse still, this problem isn’t limited to teenagers and others from the online generation.

We seem to be relaxing on our written language standards even in the workplace. Every day I write far more words in e-mails than I speak in phone calls. Far too much time is spent reading and re-reading e-mails trying to decipher what people are talking about. It seems that many people don’t even read over their messages even once after they’ve written them to detect the most basic of grammatical errors. Spell checkers are obviously useless in this instance even though sadly they have somehow become the one and only check for not only e-mail but much documentation.

I’ve recently even seen job advertisements with horrible “txt speak” adaptations! What kind of people do recruitment agencies hope to attract? If I see a job ad with that kind of rubbish in the title I skip immediately over to the next one.

10 Items or Less? 10 Items or FEWER!

This is obviously more of a vent than anything else. I don’t expect anyone to become a language Nazi like me in the near future just from reading this article. Perhaps people just need to pick up a classic novel now and then to re-learn the basics. Is the problem in schools? I’m not sure. It’s not all that long ago that I was in school myself and there was certainly a decent amount of emphasis on effective usage of the English language.

I think it’s probably just our culture. Maybe it’s just another by-product of our constantly expanding hunger for super convenience. Come to think of it, maybe we will be much more efficient once we devolve back to grunts and basic body language. The integration of basic universal sign language in every day life, particularly on the roads, seems to also be on the rise anyway so why not add in a few grunts and screams for good measure?

Don’t get me wrong, I’m all for the continuing evolution of the language.  I can certainly also appreciate subtle online additions such as the humble emoticon.  Used appropriately these can effectively enhance or emphasise in just the right way ;-)

It’s more important now than ever before to have decent written communication skills. With so much writing going on we can’t afford for effective communication to suffer any further. We’ve already let our standards slide far too much.

-Wayne

“MIT Sketching” software

I first saw the video below a few months ago and I was very impressed at the time. It’s now been featured on YouTube. It seems MIT has developed some natural machine “sketching” software. The video below really explains it best.

[youtube]NZNTgglPbUA[/youtube]

Isn’t that awesome??!??? I could spend hours just playing with that software. Brings back fond memories of The Incredible Machine :-) This is the kind of technology I would love to see included in today’s games.

This also reminds me of a (silly) saying that you can’t get more out of software than you put in. This software clearly demonstrates that it is quite possible to create nearly infinite different outputs by simulating an actual physical environment. I believe this is also the kind of concept that made games like the GTA series so successful. Create a world that manages and maintains itself :-)

I can’t wait for the 3D version of the MIT software!

-Wayne