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Hand Written Clock 86

a3buster writes "This clock does not actually have a man inside, but a flatscreen that plays a 24-hour loop of this video by the artist watching his own clock somewhere and painstakingly erasing and re-writing each minute. This video was taken at Design Miami during Art Basel Miami Beach 2009."
Programming

Good Books On Programming With Threads? 176

uneek writes "I have been programming for several years now in a variety of languages, most recently C#, Java, and Python. I have never had to use threads for a solution in the past. Recently I have been incorporating them more in my solutions for clients. I understand the theory behind them. However I am looking for a good book on programming threads from an applied point of view. I am looking for one or more texts that provide thorough coverage and provide meaningful exercises. Anyone have any ideas?"

Comment Just fell off the 'tater truck? (Score 1) 519

Were you guys born yesterday? Any reporter in the Bay Area could wallpaper his office with bogus PR releases from Silicon Valley startups.

A quick look at the company website shows two things: 1) no prices are listed for any products; and 2) you can't see the product specs without signing an NDA.

So no one has any possible way of judging whether they *actually* have any solar panels for $1/watt. They can make any damn claim they want.


PR Flack: "Our company invented a car that runs on water!"
Reporter: "Great. Let's see it."
PR Flack: "No."
Reporter: "Well, how does it work?"
PR Flack: "I can't tell you."
Reporter: "Thanks for wasting my time."

Feed Digg Rebellion Highlights How The Community Is In Control (techdirt.com)

While the press has jumped all over the story of Digg users rebelling against Digg management concerning the AACS HD-DVD encryption key takedown notices, one of the more interesting points in all of this was ignored by the press, but picked up by more perceptive folks like Ed Felten and Michael Arrington: that the Digg community is clearly in control over what happens on the site. In the past few months, some in the press and folks such as Nick Carr have been hyping up the idea that sites like Digg somehow exploit their users by getting them to take part in the community without getting paid. This seemed silly, because if the users weren't getting value out of the community, there was nothing holding them there. However, what yesterday's revolt showed was quite the opposite. What the Digg community showed yesterday was that it is absolutely in control over the site. This can be risky, as in any case where a worked up crowd can quickly go vigilante and become judge, jury and executioner in the blink of an eye. However, it should (hopefully) end any talk claiming that Digg or these other sites are using its community. It's becoming clear that it may be the other way around.

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