Blog Archive

F# Observations

I’m feeling all mad-scientistic tonight, sipping coke, with 30 tabs open in Opera :)

On my journey into the weird world of functional programming on the .NET CLR, I continue to stumble upon interesting stuff. Papers, articles, interviews, each worthy of hours of dedication. Alas, my day still has only 24 hours (I need to work around that somehow), so at the time being I can’t do much more than glance over everything. more…

Hey Hey OCaml

Wie’s aussieht hat sich auch Steve Yegge schon damit beschäftigt:

OCaml has threads, exceptions, call-with-continuation, calling conventions to and from C, a rich standard library with collections, networking, I/O, graphics, a complete interface to the Unix programming API, and a powerful module system that blows Java’s packages away. It has interfaces and bindings for Oracle, MySQL, postgres, berkeley DBs, CORBA, COM, xml-rpc, SOAP, XML, perl-compatible regular expressions… the list goes on. You name it, it’s there.

OCaml has the potential to make me happy as a programmer, finally.

Mjamm :) more…

An apple a day…

Wie heisst die Faustregel doch so schön? “Lerne jedes Jahr eine neue Programmiersprache”

Bisher schlage ich mich damit ganz gut:

2007: ein bißchen Python
2006: C#, Ruby, Javascript
2005: genug C++ um da in Zukunft einen Bogen herum zu machen, genug Haskell um ein permanentes distanziertes Interesse zu erhalten das vielleicht irgendwann durchschlägt in ernsthafte Auseinandersetzung.
2003/2004: Java
1999-2002: PHP, SQL more…

TED Talks: Blaise Aguera y Arcas Photosynth demo

http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/view/id/129:

Using photos of oft-snapped subjects (like Notre Dame) scraped from around the Web, Photosynth creates breathtaking multidimensional spaces with zoom and navigation features that outstrip all expectation. Its architect, Blaise Aguera y Arcas, shows it off in this standing-ovation demo. Curious about that speck in corner? Dive into a freefall and watch as the speck becomes a gargoyle. With an unpleasant grimace. And an ant-sized chip in its lower left molar. “Perhaps the most amazing demo I’ve seen this year,” wrote Ethan Zuckerman, after TED2007. Indeed, Photosynth might utterly transform the way we manipulate and experience digital images.