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Highway 61 revisited

As I sit here with a Cesária Évora CD on in the house, I have an update to the car AV system...

Patterns In Randomness: The Bob Dylan Edition

The human brain is very good — quite excellent, really — at finding patterns. We delight in...

Web Page Mistakes And The 'Lazy Thumbnail'

I don’t understand, sometimes, how people put together their web pages. Who really thinks that...

Anti-theft?

The navigation system in my car has an anti-theft feature that’s interesting, in that it...

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Barry LeibaRSS Feed of this column.

I’m a computer software researcher, and I'm currently working independently on Internet Messaging Technology. I retired at the end of February... Read More »

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It’s long been a peeve of mine that some computer programs are programmed to try to sound friendly, cheerful, or just colloquial. It seems out of place to me, forced, overly artificial. I don’t mean that I want all the output from computers to sound like the stilted science-fiction stuff, saying “affirmative” instead of “yes”, and the like. But neither do I ever want to see (or hear) things like “Oops!”, “Hurray!”, nor even “I’m sorry,” coming from my laptop, mobile phone, car, or washing machine.

Some examples:

It’s common when you’ve finished installing new software on your computer for the installation package to wrap up with a message like, “Congratulations!

Chris Anderson and Michael Wolff have written in Wired magazine that, in their words, “the web is dead.” The web, as opposed to the Internet. Michael Wolff was recently on the Brian Lehrer Show on WNYC, our local public radio station, talking about the article. Here’s Brian Lehrer’s introduction:

At its peak around the year 2000, the web accounted for more than 50% of all Internet traffic in the United States.

OAuth — a proposed Open Authentication standard — fills a significant gap in cross-application authentication. It’s common in a world of myriad web-based services for one service you use to want to access another service you use, in order to make things better or easier for you.

For example, you might keep contacts in your mail service, and you might want your photo service to see if people you’re in contact with have photos that you might share. We’ve generally done that sort of thing in one of two ways:

It’s been almost a year since I wrote about how I like Skype, and I noted some legal problems between the Skype founders and eBay, which bought Skype in 2005.

Shortly after I wrote that, eBay completed the sale of the majority share of Skype to a private investment group (eBay kept 30%), and shortly after that, the investment group settled with the Skype founders: the founders got a 14% share and two board seats, and they dropped their lawsuits.  With those problems sorted out, Skype continued to do well.
My esteemed colleague Nathaniel Borenstein recently had an article published in TechNewsWorld, Is the IT Pendulum Winding Down?

New Scientist reports on experiments that give search engines metadata about the person searching, with the hope of increasing the relevance of search results. It seems that some of it’s promising, though some relies a lot on, say, all young white males being roughly alike, at least in terms of what they’re likely to search for:

Demographic data can help, say Ingmar Weber and Carlos Castillo at Yahoo Research Barcelona, Spain. For example, they say that when US women type in the search term wagner, they are most likely to be thinking of the 19th-century German composer.