Catch up on stories from the past week (and beyond) at the Slashdot story archive

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
The Courts

Journal Journal: Analogy of the day

This new Mac trojan that masquerades as a codec and allows your DNS to be manipulated -- why, it's just like ... Crispus Attucks!
Quickies

Journal Journal: NASBLA 1

NASBLA seems like a useful group, but rather unfortunately named. I've got to imagine lots of people have the same reaction upon hearing it that I did: "We need to have our course certified by who?"
Star Wars Prequels

Journal Journal: What's happened to South Park? 1

South Park has really jumped the shark, huh? The last few seasons have been hit or miss, with some really great episodes but this batch (technically, the second half of season 11) has been uniformly godawful.
Perl

Journal Journal: Now *that's* quite a bug! 1

ALERT - File::Remove reported to "rm -rf /" during tests

Err, yeah, that might be a bit of a problem. At least it's not as bad as the guy in the Lisp newsgroup giving similar code to a newbie *deliberately*.

I'd submit this as a story, but don't know enough about Perl to explain what it's in.

User Journal

Journal Journal: Announcing the release of my new book 22

This feels like a mega-spam entry, and I'm very self conscious about posting it, but I'm excited about this and I wanted to share . . .

I just published my third book, The Happiest Days of Our Lives. I mention it here because it's all about growing up in the 70s, and coming of age in the 80s as part of the D&D/BBS/video game/Star Wars figures generation, and I think a lot of Slashdot readers will relate to the stories in it.

I published a few of the stories on my blog, including Blue Light Special. It's about the greatest challenge a ten year-old could face in 1982: save his allowance, or buy Star Wars figures?

After our corduroy pants and collared shirts and Trapper Keepers and economy packs of pencils and wide-ruled paper were piled up in our cart, our mom took our three year-old sister with her to the make-up department to get shampoo and whatever moms buy in the make-up department, and my brother and I were allowed to go to the toy department.

"Can I spend my allowance?" I said.

"If that's what you want to do," my mom said, another entry in a long string of unsuccessful passive/aggressive attempts to encourage me to save my money for . . . things you save money for, I guess. It was a concept that was entirely alien to me at nine years old.

"Keep an eye on Jeremy," she said.

"Okay," I said. As long as Jeremy stood right at my side and didn't bother me while I shopped, and as long as he didn't want to look at anything of his own, it wouldn't be a problem.

I held my brother's hand as we tried to walk, but ended up running, across the store, past a flashing blue light special, to the toy department. Once there, we wove our way past the bicycles and board games until we got to the best aisle in the world: the one with the Star Wars figures.

I'm really proud of this book, and the initial feedback on it has been overwhelmingly positive. I've been reluctant to mention it here, because of the spam issue, but I honestly do think my stories will appeal to Slashdotters.

After the disaster with O'Reilly on Just A Geek, I've decided to try this one entirely on my own, so I'm responsible for the publicity, the marketing, the shipping, and . . . well, everything. If this one fails, it will be because of me, not because a marketing department insisted on marketing it as something it's not.

Of course, I hope I can claim the same responsibility if (when?) it finds its audience . . . which would be awesome.

Networking (Apple)

Journal Journal: Comment of the morning

MillionthMonkey, on "Time Dimension To Become Space-like".

In general, it seems like people here equate peer-review with Absolute Truth, which isn't remotely true even for the vast majority of research, let alone for wild theorizing like this.

Slashdot Top Deals

If you want to put yourself on the map, publish your own map.

Working...