If you’re into cooking, and you want clear, accurate, concise instructions on how to cook something, Cooking For Engineers is the place for you. Even if you’re not a cook, by looking at one of the recipes, you’ll immediately see why this website is popular. Specifically, check out the instructions table at the end of the recipe.
The Subway Parasite
In Berlin some artists did something cool using a suitcase with a Mac Mini and a projector inside. They installed it on the side of the subway train, and… well, just see this Quicktime movie for yourselves.
Babel Fish Translation
If you have some text in Chinese, Dutch, French, German, Greek, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese, Russian or Spanish or you see a web page which contains content in one of those languages, AltaVista‘s Babel Fish Translation page will translate either the text or the entire website for you. I found it very useful quite a few time times.
ScummVM
ScummVM is a great open source project for running old quest games like Simon The Sorcerer, King’s Quest, Maniac Mansion, Day Of The Tentacle, and… I can go on with the list forever. Basically, this project was created to run old Sierra games, but since then has been developed to do a lot more than that.
Note that ScummVM is only the runtime engine for the games. To play an actual game you have to find the files on the Internet (this is due to legal issues). It’s not that hard, eh hem eMule eh hem… excuse me, I had to cough ;-)
Music Map
Music Map is a cool experiment from Gnod. Just click the Music Map link and enter the name of a band you like to see what happens. Maybe you’ll find something new to listen to.
(via Dave Barry’s blog)
Microsoft’s “We Share Your Pain” program
If you saw the “Send/Don’t Send” dialog box when a program crashed inside Windows enough times, I’m sure you get pissed at it. Microsoft has a new program, called “We Share Your Pain”. Check it out (streaming video).
Digger
If you’re old enough, then you know what Digger is, so I’m guessing no introduction is required. There’s even an online Java version of the game.
Did you know that you can sometimes meet people that know the game very well, but don’t know that you can use F1 to shoot?
Encountering the same new word twice in one day
Does it ever happen to you that in one day you encounter a new word twice? It happened to me yesterday. The word is homeostasis, which is basically resistance to change. Anyway, yesterday I heard it for the first time on Channel 9‘s interview with the creators of a completely new, experimental OS by Microsoft called Singularity. About an hour later I encountered the word in a book I’m reading, “The Lure Of Happiness” by Raphaella Bilski.
Feels really weird when stuff like that happens.
Introduction To Tagging
Tagging, also known as labeling, is a pretty new concept in software. This concept is so simple, it’s surprising that it took so long for it to become popular.
I’ll explain what tagging is by example. Assume you send an email to all your friends about a party you’re throwing. In your email program you created a special folder for the party. You already have a folder for each of your friends, where you store emails you previously got from them. Now you start getting replies from your friends about the party and you have a problem – should you put the emails in the party folder or in the folder designated for each and every friend? Or maybe you should save a copy of each email message in both folders?
What if you could do both without copying the email message? Using tagging, instead of the traditional hierarchical concept (like the folder tree structure), you can apply the tags “Bob” and “Party” to the only copy of an email message. You can think about it as if the email message “belongs” to both “Bob” and “Party” categories.
Tagging has become very popular lately. GMail, Google’s mail service, has labels instead of the traditional folders. It takes a while to get used to it, but later on you realize how much better labeling is. Another example is the website del.icio.us, which not only lets you store bookmarks (aka favorites) to access from anywhere, but also lets you tag them. What’s especially nice about this is that you can see how many people have tagged a certain link, like the links tagged “programming”.
There’s more to tagging, but I think that’s enough as an introduction.
Cool Fonts
If you’re looking for good looking, free English fonts, then here are two links:
SimplyTheBest Fonts archive
25 Best License Free Fonts
(via Lifehacker)