david galbraith's blog
April 29, 2004
Couleur Cafe

Playlist from April's Casanova lounge session: Uppers | Nick Rossi and David Galbraith @ The Turnaround, April 2004

Anyone welcome to show up for the next scintillating installment.

Posted by david galbraith on April 29, 2004
April 23, 2004
Origin of the word bug

Edison, the Man was made in 1940, in it, I have a recollection that a machine stops working because 'there is a bug in it'.

If that is true, this clearly predates the accepted origin when a moth appeared in the Mark I computer at Harvard in 1945.

Can anyone confirm?

Posted by david galbraith on April 23, 2004
What the Dickens

The phrase 'what the dickens', has nothing to do with Dickens, but was ironically coined by Shakespeare hundreds of years earlier.

Trivia: Shakespeare top 10

Posted by david galbraith on April 23, 2004
April 21, 2004
Unnatural pagerank - are scientists more web savvy than bloggers.

Why does Nature magazine which is not one of the world's highest traffic websites have a pagerank of 10?

With 45,000 inbound links, perhaps the scientific community with its peer review process and history of open collaboration is more adept at mutual linking than webloggers?

Posted by david galbraith on April 21, 2004
April 16, 2004
Subservient Chicken changes rules of advertising

Alexa today shows a traffic rank of 1,255 and a 1.5% reach for Burger King's subservient chicken. Related Info for: subservientchicken.com/

Trying to create an Internet meme like this is hard, but Burger King have pulled it off.

What is likely in the future is that savvy advertisers will track sites like Technorati and endorse new memes as they take off.

Posted by david galbraith on April 16, 2004
April 14, 2004
Imagine the fuss if Google did hybrid desktop and web search - well the new Hotbot toolbar already does

HotBot's New Desktop Search Toolbar:

"HotBot's new Desktop Search utility not only searches the web, it indexes files and email on your computer, making them searchable as well."

It's only a matter of time before Google do this and perhaps what has held them back was fear of being too aggressive against Microsoft.

As I've said before, it is crazy that we can search millions of other computers, thousands of miles apart, more quickly than our own machine.

Microsoft should have done this 8 years ago, we should not have to wait because of the stagnation created by a monopoly.

Posted by david galbraith on April 14, 2004
The world's craziest dictator

"Last year Mr Niyazov instituted a holiday in honour of the muskmelon, a relative of the watermelon, complete with lavish festivities"

link

Posted by david galbraith on April 14, 2004
April 08, 2004
Sergey Brin in drag on Hot or Not

Another meme spreads round the web, the Sergey pic is on Hot or Not:

Is Sergey HOT or NOT?

Posted by david galbraith on April 08, 2004
How to debate Creationists without being boring

The problem with arguing with Creationists and the like is that it is not worth it and no fun. Who can be bothered to read through 5 pages of futile debate?

If someone persists in holding a view that they try and defend in quasi scientific terms, despite overwhelming contradictory evidence, then it isn't likely that rational argument will change anything. A better challenge is to argue against irrational belief from that very standpoint.

In order to do this for evolution I have invented the notion of 'Spiritual Darwinism' a spiritual challenge to Creationism much as Intelligent Design is an attempt at a scientific challenge to Darwinism. Now you can use religious debating techniques:

Creationist: Blah blah blah - goes on for ages.

Spiritual Darwinist: You are wrong.

Creationist: Prove it.

Spiritual Darwinist: God spoke to me and told me that you are wrong.

Creationist: No he didn't.

Spiritual Darwinist: You do not respect my faith - and you are wrong. Lucky for you that we Spiritual Darwinists do not burn heretics.

Posted by david galbraith on April 08, 2004
April 01, 2004
Kinja - blogroll reading lists for non geeks

Kinja launches, well done Meg and Nick.

My first impressions:

Categorizing weblogs is difficult because weblogs are not often about one subject, so the Kinja categories are not the thing that interests me most.

The single thing that I like most about Kinja is the public digest. Weblogs are about people and Kinja allows to me to read what another person is reading arranged how I am used to reading weblogs - as a weblog. In geek terms I can now read the posts from the sites in someone's blogroll as a weblog.

I would like a link at the top of my blogroll that says 'get on the same page as me' by reading the sites in my blogroll as a Kinja powered blog. Others could read the daily newspaper that I read and I could read what they do.

Posted by david galbraith on April 01, 2004
Blog tool is bigger than Friendster

Xanga is in the top 200 of all websites, overtook Friendster in January and is growing fast.

Is the decentralized weblog world, where people have pages under their own domain, missing something?

Xanga, which is a walled garden service, is not only bigger than all the other blogging tools put together but is actually more viral than Friendster.

Posted by david galbraith on April 01, 2004