Category Computing
The 'Hackintosh' experience.
These past few years have been part of a period in which the computing industry, for the first time after many years, has been in flux. The importance of web applications is growing everyday. Alternatives to well-established platforms and application software, often powered by open source software, are challenging the status quo and there was […]
Εταιρία Ελληνικών Τυπογραφικών Στοιχείων
Από Triple σε Double και πίσω.
Έγραψα στις αρχές Ιανουαρίου για την θλιβερή εικόνα του ελληνικού διαδικτύου και τις αστείες διαφημίσεις των ελλήνων ISPs. Ως παράδειγμα χρησιμοποίησα, μεταξύ άλλων, και τις διαφημίσεις triple play της Forthnet με τη πλαστελίνη. Ένα μήνα μετά, η Forthnet έχει σταματήσει κάθε λόγο για Triple Play και διαφημίζει/προωθεί αυτό που αποκαλούν 2play, ένα πακέτο LLU που […]
This might be a repeat of 2005
Microsoft Natural Ergonomic Keyboard 4000
I admit it. I’ve liked microsoft’s split ‘ergonomic’ keyboards ever since they came out in the mid 90s. I had the original one. I loved the design, hated the feel. A couple of years later I replaced it with the smaller, more elegant Elite version that had the botched ‘cross’ arrangement for the arrow keys. […]
Usability and Eye Candy: The UI Impasse
Microsoft Windows Vista came out just a few days ago. This is a major update to the world’s most popular Operating System and comes with numerous ‘improvements’ in both its underlying frameworks and components and its appearance and user-oriented features. One of the hightlights of Windows Vista, according to Microsoft, has been its renewed æsthetics […]
Adium 1.0
After many months of development and many more β releases, Adium 1.0 was released today! It's got loads of fixes and improvements and it's based on libgaim 2.0. Yay.
I dare anybody to [hack into] once a month on the Windows machine.
Errr, right. Despite his --- numerous --- amazingly bad evaluations (e.g. the importance of the 'net in the mid-1990s), his volatile opinions on important matters (e.g. patents), lack of ethics and piss-poor software, Bill Gates has time and again proven to be an important thinker when it comes to technology and its importance in society. It's a shame to see he's lost it. In this latest interview in Newsweek it's actually surprising to see how he can be so off-base. While there's no doubt that Apple is king in catchy marketing and shameless exaggeration of its value and its products' {importance, features} in its marketing campaigns, Microsoft is no spring chicken either ('Get the Facts' campaign anyone?). Its funny how Gates tries to engage in the pompous reality skewing and typical polemic that his once-ideologically-charged-turned-loser-turned-mighty-tech-salesman rival, the mercurial Steve Jobs, is famous for. Unfortunately for him Gates lacks the 'Charisma +834' rating that Jobs seems to possess. :) 