Friday, 30 December 2005

Chronicles of Narnia

narnia.pngWe went to see The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe last night. Three words: Go See It.

Weta Digital and Weta Workshop definitely had their hands all over this one. Lots of flashbacks to Lord of the Rings. It’s amazing what they’re able to do with CGI nowadays. Not a single “creature” in the movie was real (animal or otherwise), but it was very convincing onscreen.


Thursday, 29 December 2005

Schools These Days

Not exactly what you might think the title implies, but The Perils of JavaSchools by Joel is an excellent read. All I can say is Amen.

…what I’d like to claim is that Java is not, generally, a hard enough programming language that it can be used to discriminate between great programmers and mediocre programmers. It may be a fine language to work in, but that’s not today’s topic. I would even go so far as to say that the fact that Java is not hard enough is a feature, not a bug, but it does have this one problem.

If I may be so brash, it has been my humble experience that there are two things traditionally taught in universities as a part of a computer science curriculum which many people just never really fully comprehend: pointers and recursion.

The thing that makes me nervous is that there is an ever decreasing number of people (especially coming out of today’s CS programs) that actually “get it”. And by “get it” I mean people that actually understand the inner workings of the systems they build upon. How the languages that make things easy for them actually translate to the ones and zeros that do things.

The attrition of those individuals (people of my generation and earlier) will turn out to be one of the largest problems the computer science field will face over the next 10-20 years.


Media Circus, again

I can’t believe this story is getting any airplay at all:

The National Security Agency’s Internet site has been placing files on visitors’ computers that can track their Web surfing activity despite strict federal rules banning most of them.

That’s the first sentence of a AP article that’s getting front-page play on all major news sites over the past 24 hours:

The media, in typical fashion, is so desperate to run a “Look how scary our government is” story that they don’t even bother to fact-check it.

Sorry, but “cookies” just don’t work the way this story implies that they do. This is very similar to the “cookies are bad because they can infect your machine with viruses” junk that went around in the mid-90’s.

It’s painful that the general population knows so little about the technology they’ve come to rely upon. Including the reporters in these stories that speak as though they thoroughly understand what they’re talking about. But, as usual, the problem is we live in a headline-driven society. And now popular blogs are picking up the story and reporting it as well, driven only by the desire to have something to criticize the current administration about:

This story is only interesting to left-leaning organizations/blogs, those that are desperate to pile-on the current wire-tapping stories that are going around (which is a whole ‘nother pile-o-smelly that I just won’t go into now).

Let’s make this simple:

  1. Cookies are simply snippits of text that a website can ask your browser to send back the next time you visit. They’re not executable code. They don’t carry viruses. They don’t propagate.
  2. Cookies are controlled by the BROWSER, not the web server. A browser (i.e. the user) can decide not to accept cookies. Or can toss their cookies at any time (pardon the pun).
  3. Cookies will only be sent back the web server that sent them in the first place. A server cannot “poll” a browser for all it’s cookies. The browser sends the cookies that a server sent to it when a page on that server is requested.

Getting a little more technical: cookies are persistent state devices that allow the web to have a session oriented experience. Without them, most of the web wouldn’t work.

If your desperately looking for someone to be afraid of, look to the media agencies themselves: the ad agencies, google, etc. Because of the ubiquitous presence of these ads, they can truly track where an individual browser is going, because references to their servers are embedded in the pages you visit. I don’t know of many sites that embed image references directly to the NSA in their pages.

Think before you panic, and read past the headline before you jump to conclusions.


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Cars
Blu-ray
Ratatouille
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The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian
Blu-ray + Digital Copy
Star Wars: Clone Wars
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The Dark Knight
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Dr. Seuss'
Horton Hears a Who
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Sleeping Beauty
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