Perhaps contemporary art isn’t dead.

January 4th, 2007

Head On

This is nothing short of incredible and deeply moving. It’s a shame this installation was in Berlin
and now over.

It’s just to me a very gorgeous metaphor. About resistance. About frenzy. About collective will. About sacrifice. About failure. And the use of wolves, which are symbolic outlaws. Others. It’s a political piece, I guess. And it’s just so interesting to look at.

I have never heard of Cai Guo Qiang before, but…. just amazing. Well done.

One-Laptop-Per-Child User Interface revealed

January 4th, 2007

One Laptop Per ChildThe $100 laptop the product of the One-Laptop-Per-Child initiative (OLPC) and MIT Media Lab founder Nick Negroponte’s near-realized dream to provide laptops to schoolkids in the third world, seems to be hopping along. The final hardware form factor and supply chain questions seem to now be mostly resolved, with the effort shifting to the operating system and final usability.

Since it’s inception, $100 Laptop has been using various versions of Fedora Linux. Apparently the people at Red Hat have taken Fedora and customized it into a child-friendly UI known as “Sugar”. Videos of it have started appearing online, with instructions on how to run the OS within Mac and Windows.

Video link: http://www.ivr-usability.com/olpc/olpc.html

My impressions: It’s a curious little thing and it looks like a straightforward repackaging of common gnome applications such as Abiword.

It will be interesting to see how this thing tests. The interface — for all of it’s reliance upon primitives and oversized icons — seems pretty complex for the kindergarten crowd. Even though I was a precocious tot when it came to the blinky terminals of the Commodores and Tandys of my youth I still find it hard to imagine that the laptop will be intuitive to very young children. Perhaps older kids will truly appreciate it. Perhaps the device will be self-selecting, and the same apple-cheeked youths will be using it to ping-attack your enterprise network during their later pimply adolescent years. By then we can only hope they will have moved on to Dells.

BTW: In memoriam:

Sinclair 1000
I wuv you Timex Sinclair 1000. Still miss you.

One of the best damn cartoonists I ever saw

January 3rd, 2007

Back in the pre-911 days, I ran a cartoon website called Cartoonlandia which allowed cartoonists to submit their works in a collegial-style atmosphere. It did really well and needed some additional nurturing but a full-time job took away my energies and I had to eventually abandon maintaining the project.

One of the contributors was a fellow called William Bredbeck. His cartoon series, Meow, was perhaps one of the most offbeat, hilarious things I ever read. I am pleased to see he’s put his entire collection back online.

This article is about fusion.

January 3rd, 2007

And by fusion I don’t mean tilapia with miso rub sauce. You’ve been officially nerd warned.

One day in the year 1936, an inventor named Philo T. Farnsworth had a conundrum. He could continue working on his novel idea for a electrostatic fusion reactor, or he could work an another novel idea he had for an electronic gun that would spray a beam of electrons onto a phosphor-coated surface inside a vacuum chamber.

He decided to pursue the latter project and this is why he’s known in the history books as the Genius Who Invented Television(tm).

So what happened to his other invention? Farnsworth shelved it, and for a while the US dept. of defense took interest, but ultimately dropped the research. Over 70 years later, Farnsworth’s forgotten fusion reactor design is suddenly developing a storm of interest among fusion researchers, and for it’s promise of the previously unfathomable goal of practical fusion power.

Read the rest of this entry »

Linuxbloggin’

December 31st, 2006

Part of this site is going to be my nerd devotional. Fair warning before the non-nerds go crosseyed. :-P

I have been a Linux user for many years, but started exclusively using it for the desktop starting in 2004. Familiarity with the platform allowed me to explore using it in the home, but as a Windows user, getting my PC virused to death every month was certainly enough to push me over the edge. So one day in December of ‘03, I installed a copy of Red Hat over Windows.

It was a crude, clunky experience at first. And since then I have made the progression through various Linux releases, and increased my technical competency to the point where I’ve fashioned my desktop to be many times more useful and powerful than it could ever be under Windows.

I’ve created a video to give a peek of what my new environment is like. By no means do I have a blazingly fast computer. It’s just a testament to what good software, unburdened by institutional practices and refined by thousands of dedicated open-source developers, can do to the humble PC.

Photographs are online

December 31st, 2006

I have thousands of photos from my travels. I’ve been trying to find the right solution for accommodating all these. I wrote a neat script in PHP which will create thumbnails and autosize expanded views using only one source image. Plus it reads from the directory so all I have to is drop in a folder. Nice. :-)

First up: A highlight of my better photos.

Jesus Drove A Hummer

December 30th, 2006
Actually, everybody knows that Jesus was a Volvo-driving liberal. It so happens they were out of midsizes at the rental agency and he got a free upgrade. Oh all right. I was bored one day and whipped this up in Photoshop. By the way, the Son of Man can parallel park like nobody’s business.

Minneapolis

December 30th, 2006

I’ve been here for six months now.

I’m pretty content with the life I’ve made for myself here. I have a great job, nice friends. I am close to my older sister. I have much less stress, and a more money in the bank than before. I’m officially counting my blessings.

The winter will subside and bring on the spring. What will life be like by then I wonder?

Hello World!

December 29th, 2006

This is my first blog entry.

Just who the heck am I?

A Venezuelan-born Jersey boy who moved from NYC to Minneapolis but not before taking lots of photos of stuff around the world.

Presently:

  • Mastering Linux for the desktop
  • Still without an I-pod
  • Happily Minneopolitan

Reachable at:

What's with the giant banner on the top of your page? That's bad web design dontcha know.

No doubt. But I love Colorado's garden of the gods, and this is perhaps one of my better photos of it. So enjoy it! But if it really bothers you, click here to minimize it.

So what else is on this page?

Haven't quite decided yet. I believe this will end up being a Linux-focused blog, but I also have a few other things I'd like to share.I have a trove of photos -- thousands of them. I've traveled to different parts of the world in search of the perfect shot. I also have some cartoons I've drawn so I'll share a few online. Enjoy these for now.

Are you famous?

I am in fact, the inventor of the :sadbanana: emoticon, now on bulletin boards everywhere. That has brought me both filthy lucre and a 15 minute spot on The View.

What else do you do?

Ok, check this! *does something amazing*. Did you see that? Want me to do it again?

You're cool, Leo! How can I learn more about you?

Check out my about page

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