7:35 in the morning
April 18th, 2005This is an excellent short film by Nacho Vigalondo.
7:35 in the morning
The song lyrics to the song may be found here.
Also, I figured out the guitar chords:
Verse and chorus: E B D A
Bridge: B A B D
This is an excellent short film by Nacho Vigalondo.
7:35 in the morning
The song lyrics to the song may be found here.
Also, I figured out the guitar chords:
Verse and chorus: E B D A
Bridge: B A B D
I have just started using the Adblock extension for Firefox and I find it absolutely excellent. It is extremely easy to use and enables the user to filter out web advertisements such as banners, flash animations, buttons, etc. One of the most useful features is wildcard filtering, which makes it possible to block anything from a particular site. In other words, the user may block all images from DoubleClick and the page appears without a single banner. Pages load faster and are much more esthetically pleasing.
What I’m interested in is how content providers that rely on advertising as a source of revenue are going to handle this. Firefox boasts over 25 million users and it is only a matter of time before the use of Adblock is widespread. The total downloads for the extension are currently 1.2 millon, with 102000 downloads this week alone. If so many users are filtering out blocking ads, the content provider may end up losing revenue. Not in the sense that users will click on fewer ads - click-through rates are already very low - but in the sense that advertizers may be push prices down, based on the availability of this technology. If all ads on a given page can be filtered by a few clicks, never to be seen again (once all images from a given server are blocked, they are blocked from all sites), the investments in internet ads are suddenly much less profitable.
In fact, this affects not only content providers but virtually all internet sites that use advertizing. It will be quite interesting to see whether this changes the face of the Internet. For my part, I’m reading ad-free newspaper sites and they look great.
Margaret Atwood: Oryx and Crake
Definitely one of the best books I’ve read lately.
Atwood takes the reader into a future that does not seem too far from our time, where the entire human race has been wiped out of existence. We are introduced to a desolate, post-apocalyptic world, where strange animals roam the land and a sole survivor sits brooding on the beach, wrapped in an old sheet, confused and unsure of his past. His musings take us through the past, through the lives of the people he has known, and unravel the events that have shaped the current world.
In contrast to other novels that cover a similar theme, describing an alarming future (1984, Brave New World, We, … ), Oryx and Crake describes the aftermath in addition to the journey; the end and the means. We are given a look back at the past and the issues that have shaped Snowmans current surroundings and state of mind. The story is as much about how life was wiped out as it is about what it is like after the destruction.
The ending of this book is open, and I have read some critisisms about this, however I think it is very effective and serves a good purpose. The more subtle point of the book is that the human race is imperfect and non-deterministic. The search for perfection has had disastrous consequences, partly because it undermined the essence of being human and reduced life to a predictability of beauty, desires, death, etc. The open ending is humanity -we don’t know what Snowman will do because it is not predictable, because he himself is unsure, because of his own imperfections.
A great book. Highly recommended.
An article that I have co-authored has recently been published in Virtual Law Journal. This was a study of the Norwegian law firm Schødt and their strategic use of Knowledge Management Technology.
The article is available at here or on request.
Also, Virtual Law Journal is an interesting read.

Bill Gates poses for Teen Beat 1983! This is a MUST SEE!!!
Bill Stikes a Pose (via BoingBoing)

The water mill at Kampa Island in the center of Prague, taken during my short stay there just after Christmas.
The All Free Dictionaries project maintains free online dictionaries in over 43 languages. They are developing a new concept that will unite all the different dictionaries into one universal dictionary. This basically means that one only one SQL query will be necessary for retrieving all the available translations, which is very practical both in terms of table structure and query time. They intend to make this dictionary available for free (GPL).
It is possible for everyone to contribute, and I have added several English-Norwegian translations myself.
A great project!
(via Slashdot)
I have added a feature that displays the most recent blog posts on my website. Sometimes playing around with CSS is a real chore; it took quite a bit of time to position that box correctly. And in the end, it didn’t display right in Opera or IE. Firefox, on the other hand, displayed exactly what I wanted. Some minor issues remain, like resizing the window in IE, but that shall be fixed eventually. I must now leave the computer and do something socially productive - set up my neighbours ADSL connection
An interesting article on how censorship does not work. MSN Spaces is Microsofts blogging service that turns out to contain censorship controls. However, they are far from perfect, and many titles that we, as humans, would deem inappropriate, make it through. Why try to censor blogs in the first place?
On another note, read this article that mentions Microsofts terms of use for this service. They own you….
Everything is going digital! I found this on BoingBoing. Go pop some bubblewrap and get into the holiday spirit!
Imagination Cubed is a very interesting idea. You can collaborate with others by scetching drawings using this tool. It looks really cool, and the different pens and brushes are nicely designed. I have played around with it and the results are pretty good, considering my lack of artistic qualities.
The service is free - anyone can visit their website and start drawing and inviting friends, etc. So this got me thinking, what’s the catch? Enter the Terms of Use agreement. Point 5 basically states that by using the service you agree that all copyrights and intellectual property rights will be assigned to GE. In other words, don’t draw anything on that board that you don’t want to hang on to.
The link to Imagination Cubed from GE’s website says “Share your imagination”. So it’s a give and take operation: GE provides you with the tool, and you give them whatever brilliant ideas you may have.
The same Terms of Use agreement states that GE encourages using Imagination Cubed for your personal, non-commercial use. So this may seem ok. After all, they do tell you not to use the tool to design a revolutionary microprocessor. But say that I want to design a new logo for my personal website - what then?
I am currently reading Neal Stephenson’s Cryptonomicon, so I may be overly paranoid, but the fact remains that collaboration along GE’s terms would be very limited if people were aware of what they are agreeing to.
(To see the Terms of Service, go to Imagination Cubed, launch the tool, click on ‘Invite a Friend’, choose ‘By E-mail’ and click on ‘Terms of Use’ in the popup window. The site is done entirely in Flash, so I can’t link to the Terms of Use directly.)
Mark Twain: Letters from the Earth: Uncensored Writings
This is a collection of writings that were not published during Mark Twain’s lifetime. After his death, the editor of this collection presented the manuscript to Clara Clemens, Twain’s daughter, who objected to its publication because certain parts of it gave a questionable view of her father’s beliefs. She eventually consented, and we are fortunate enough to see a different side of Mark Twain in these writings.
The best piece is the one entitled Letters from the Earth, where Satan is banished to earth for a period of 1000 years in order to see how the Human-Race experiment is coming along, and writes letters describing his experiences. The result is a critique of society, religion and morals, that sheds light on the contradictions between actions and words, and the subtle discrepancy between what we are and what we want to be.
Religion is an element in this volume, so Clara’s objection may be understood; Satan critisizing earth is not exactly how she would want her father to be remembered. However, the intellectual sharpness that is demonstrated in this volume is superb.
Read this book, and enjoy a very clever satire.
Also, check out Mark Twain Quotations for a great collection of Twain’s quotes.
Tom Robins: Still Life with Woodpecker
The back cover of this book proclaims it to be a love story that takes place inside a pack of Camel cigarettes. Actually, the love story revolves around the pack, but that is a minor detail.
Robins explains to us the mysteries of the pyramids, complains constantly about the uselessness of his Remington SL3 typewriter, discusses the difference between criminals and outlaws, tells us about the nature of redheads, all while sticking to his Camel cigarettes-agenda. He analyzes the pack thoroughly, so if you’re trying to quit smoking, you should probably wait some time before reading this book.
This is definitely worth reading. I was left with a very good feeling when I finished this book. I just sat there, contemplating life, love, and all the choices we make that seem small, yet have incredible consequences.

This is what the bar looks like at Den Gamle Majors Lab in Oslo.

The first snowmen of the year, made on Nov. 17, 2004, just outside of the Norwegian School of Management. I wish I could give credit to the sculptors, however I don’t remember who they are. Perhaps one of them will stumble across this entry and let me know. Although the chances of that are slim, I am keeping my fingers crossed.
Lynne Truss: Eats, Shoots & Leaves
This is an excellent read! It is very cleverly written and actually had me laughing a number of times. Truss wants us to become punctuation vigilantes, correcting our deteriorating language whenever signs such as “Come inside for Book’s” make us wince in pain. The following are just some of the weapons of choice:
big pens
tin of paint with big brush
strong medication for personality disorder
The last item is essential. Try telling a friend that you are reading a book about punctuation and enjoying it immensely. The look you will get will explain everything. Nevertheless, I highly recommend this book. It will leave you feeling slightly more nerdy than before, but you will be more watchful of punctuation. This is not to say that reading it has made me use correct punctuation in emails or SMS messages. On the contrary, I still send emails that are written exclusively in lower case letters. I have, however, become more careful in my writing.
The weblog has been added. I am feeling quite good about this accomplishment. Hopefully I will start to use it and update the site more often. I have recieved many requests for a Pictures section, but I am honestly not sure whether I will make one or not. There is only so much of one’s life that should be available in the public domain. So it’s an issue of my privacy, combined with the fact that I really don’t want to go through my pictures and pick out the good ones.
Several papers have been added to the Writings section. In fact, the entire section has been added. The site is slowly growing…
A brand new site with a somewhat new look. This time around I’m using PHP, CSS and XML to make things interesting. The drink database that was my pride and joy shall be put up in due time. It’s a matter of embedding the perl scripts that run in into the new php code and getting it all to work. In the meantime, look around and, if you’re prone to commenting, send suggestions.