Month: June 2006

  • Chernobyl caused by a video game

    During a suprise check at the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant, inspectors found a guard so deeply engrossed in his video game on a portable console that he did not see them come (and failed to answer to a security-related radio check call). Of course, the control ends in bad result (it was not…

  • Apple outsources from India to US

    After announcing a month ago that they would open a software development branch in Bangalore, Apple finally decided to stop the adventure and to fire the software development workforce in order to concentrate on US team(s). The Indian engineers already hired will be fired with a two month compensation package. The Bangalore office will still…

  • Sony Alpha A100, first peek

    A very attentive guy found real images of the new Sony D-SLR (Digital Single Lens Reflex) on the Sony-Style web site.

  • WMD better than JPEG?

    It is quite hard to tell but, according to Microsoft, the JPEG file format needed a good lifting or – better – its complete replacement with a new one. So, Vista will recognize the new Windows Media Photo format. They promise smaller files with less visual defects/artifacts. But nothing is said about the actual support…

  • 404 Random page found

    I have been correcting an old need for this web site. There was no page to handle the case where you click on a link to a non-existent page. Now, if you go to a non-existent page you will be greeted with some random message. I hope you’ll appreciate the kind of humour.

  • AMD: 300mm and cycles

    In the recent months, the stage where we observe the battle of the titans of PC microprocessors (Intel and AMD) was not really shaken by the thunder of news or the tremors of falling prices, like in some other times. You may know it or not, but there are major cycles in this industry and…

  • ThePirateBay is back online

    ThePirateBay is back online

    Merely a few days after their server computers were seized by the Swedish police, ThePirateBay.org is already back online. It appears that as any global private company, ThePirateBay.org really had a crash recovery plan prepared to correct extreme circumstances like those found last Wednesday. The new server is located in Netherlands (an additional server has…

  • Firefox is growing up

    At least, that is what I see from my web site statistics. Today, I checked and I can see that Internet Explorer is only 65% of last month’s visits. 23% of the visits come from one or another version of FireFox. By the way, Safari from Apple is still around 2%, while Opera does 3%.

  • ThePirateBay: some more

    ThePirateBay: some more

    The latest news in the battle between the entertainment industry and the (previously) world’s largest BitTorrent tracker site. The owners of ThePirateBay.org, still very sure of the legality of their web site (and it seems that they some good points drawn from the Swedish law), announced that they would be seeking for compensation from the…