Category: linked list (Page 42 of 52)

The Convention on Modern Liberty

Last weekend saw the first Convention on Modern Liberty across the UK. Unfortunately I couldn’t attend due to to high travel costs (one of the disadvantages of living on an island), but thankfully they have posted several of the sessions

For Mac users who may (well, will) have trouble otherwise, here are the direct links to the Liberty videos:

First plenary session (normal)

mms://ms.groovygecko.net/groovyg/clients/dowie/modern_liberty_plenary1_700k.wmv

(high quality – 350MB ish)

Second First plenary session – ‘Can liberty survive the slump?’:

mms://ms.groovygecko.net/groovyg/clients/dowie/modern_liberty_plenary2_400k.wmv

(normal)

mms://ms.groovygecko.net/groovyg/clients/dowie/modern_liberty_plenary2_700k.wmv

(high quality – 350MB ish)

Lord Bingham at the ‘Judges and politicians’ session:

mms://ms.groovygecko.net/groovyg/clients/dowie/lord_bingham_400k.wmv

(normal)

mms://ms.groovygecko.net/groovyg/clients/dowie/lord_bingham_700k.wmv

(high quality – 60MB ish)

Stephen Fry and the Gutenburg Press

I’m late on this one, but then I’ve only just watched it. 

The original BBC 4 link:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/page/item/b009wynj.shtml?order=aztitle%3Aalphabetical&filter=category%3A100005&scope=iplayercategories&start=10&version_pid=b009wy81

If you don’t have broadband or the iPlayer doesn’t work for you, 

It’s due to air on terrestrial TV on Friday 25 April from 9?10PM.

Of course, as with most TV broadcasts of note, it’s available worldwide within a few hours from the usual channels.

Inhabitat » HEINEKEN WOBO: The brick that holds beer


about mission get involved send tips advertise with us support us press contact Inhabitat October 11, 2007 HEINEKEN WOBO: The brick that holds beer by Ali Upcycling is a 21st century term, coined by Cradle to Cradle authors William McDonough and Michael Braungart, but the idea of turning waste into useful products came to life brilliantly in 1963 with the Heineken WOBO (world bottle). Envisioned by beer brewer Alfred Heineken and designed by Dutch architect John Habraken, the “brick that holds beer” was ahead of its ecodesign time, letting beer lovers and builders alike drink and design all in one sitting. Mr. Heineken’s idea came after a visit to the Caribbean where he saw two problems: beaches littered with bottles and a lack of affordable building materials. The WOBO became his vision to solve both the recycling and housing challenges that he had witnessed on the islands. The final WOBO design came in two sizes – 350 and 500 mm versions that were meant to lay horizo [From Inhabitat » HEINEKEN WOBO: The brick that holds beer]

New beta of Garmin Training Center for Mac

http://www8.garmin.com/support/download_details.jsp?id=3945

Here’s the changelog:

  • Added support for Edge 605/705
  • Added capability to change activity type for history
  • Added capability to add notes to any item in the application
  • Added update reminders for map products
  • Viewing parameters are preserved across map products of the same region
  • Added a menu item that allows users to unlock maps online
  • Fixed an issue that caused a crash if the unlock codes were entered in lower case
  • Fixed an issue that prevented converted maps from being detected

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The Real History of WYSIWYG – Bits – Technology – New York Times Blog


HOME PAGE MY TIMES TODAY’S PAPER VIDEO MOST POPULAR TIMES TOPICS Technology All NYT Technology WORLD U.S. N.Y. / REGION BUSINESS TECHNOLOGY CIRCUITS CAMCORDERS CAMERAS CELLPHONES COMPUTERS HANDHELDS HOME VIDEO MUSIC PERIPHERALS WI-FI DOWNLOADS SCIENCE HEALTH SPORTS OPINION ARTS STYLE TRAVEL JOBS REAL ESTATE AUTOS Back to front page » OCTOBER 18, 2007, 6:02 PM The Real History of WYSIWYG By JOHN MARKOFF TAGS: HISTORY, PERSONAL COMPUTING, SOFTWARE, WORD PROCESSOR For those of us who grew up with Wordstar, an early and popular word processing program, as well as other software text editors, What-You-See-Is-What-You-Get text editing was a revelation. Seeing an Alto personal computer at Xerox Palo Alto Research Center in 1979 or 1980 had that impact on me. For writers and researchers a paper-like screen was a huge leap into the world of the Office of the Future, even though it ultimately didn’t happen quite the way Xerox would have enjoyed. Of course that was almost three d [From The Real History of WYSIWYG – Bits – Technology – New York Times Blog]

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