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Spring into freedom

5/04/2010

Mathilde took her first independent steps at home in the living room less than a week ago, and today was the first day with nice enough weather to warrant a trip to the park in order to give her newfound freedom of locomotion a whirl.

While I anticipated she would be thrilled to be allowed and able to run around on her own, the sense of joy she expressed was positively overwhelming. She was running around and screaming and laughing constantly for as long as her energy would allow.

It is my pride and joy to hereby promote my offspring to the rank of Toddler. Ding! Grats!

That is all.


And just for the sake of upholding tradition;

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Another day, another decade

31/12/2009
Throughout the year I’ve been wanting to write a blog post about some of the personal stuff that has been going on lately. There’s been a lot of it. Every time I wrote a post however I decided it was too revelatory, too emo, too whiny or too something else. This is a personal post, and it’s probably too “something”, but I decided to go ahead and post it anyway in the spirit of “not letting shit go unsaid just because you can’t decide on all the words.”

I was twittering the other day about how the noughties have been a pretty eventful decade for me on a personal level, building up to a crescendo and culminating in a pretty spectacular oh-nine.

I feel it’s worth writing a post about. Whether it’s worth reading a post about it I leave to the discretion of the reader.

Read the rest of this article »

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Diplomacy

30/12/2009

Actual conversation between me and Malin about the Norwegian movie “Pathfinder”.
Note: Lapps are the indegenous tribal folk of Scandinavia

  • Me: I saw it ages ago when I was just a kid. I was way too young to understand any of it.
  • Her: I guess you were only nine or eight at the time it was released.
  • Me: Yeah. I can only remember something about some Darth Vader-Lapps out to get the hero.
  • Her: Mmhmm? *Being busy with the baby*
  • Me: Hey! DARTH VADER-LAPPS!
  • Her: Oh, sorry. Let’s go again. I guess you were only eight or nine…
  • Me: Yeah. I only remember something about some Darth Vader-Lapps out to get the hero.
  • Her: Ahhhahaha! Darth Vader-Lapps. Good one!
  • Me: Thank you.
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Ada: We salute you – The worlds First Programmer

10/12/2009

This article was cross-posted on ria.creuna.com.

Hear ye; Codesmiths and Script Artisans. Nay; Hear ye all who labour with keyboard and mouse, for you owe a debt to the singular person we commemorate today.

Ahem. On this day, the 10th of december, a shockingly large number of years ago the First Programmer was born. If this story isn’t old hat to you you might be surprised to learn the bearer of this distinct honorific was born in 1815 in London.
What might also surprise you, a pleasant surprise, is that she was a woman.

Ada Lovelace

Ada Lovelace - The worlds First Programmer
Born Augusta Ada Byron she was the daughter of Lord Byron (he of poetry fame and infamy) and Anne Isabella Milbanke.
Her mother, who was not impressed with Lord Byrons debauchery and loose morals focused her education on mathematics and science, forbidding her to pursue the social sciences in order to prevent her from becoming a bohemian bum like her father. At seventeen Ada showed remarkable aptitude in mathematics and her interest continued even after her marriage; Contrary to the custom of women at the time.

Charles Babbage, her friend and fellow math wiz (amongst other things) had been working with logarithms and in an effort to remove uncertainty and human errors in this line of work he conceived of a Mechanical Computing Device to replace the traditional system of the time which were human clerks with the title ‘Computer’; “One who computes”.

Babbage; For all his genius ground work, was severely limited in his conception of the computer. He saw it as a mechanical means to execute mathematical operations with high precision. Enter our heroine Lady Lovelace.

In 1842-43 she translated a memoir of italian mathematician Luigi Menabrea on Babbages conceptual machine. Her additional notes were longer than the memoir itself, and substantially more visionary in nature. In these notes she conceived of making the analytical device accept, comprehend and execute commands; In essence creating the first programming language.

Babbage was never able to actually create his machine, and Ada never got to see the fruits of her labour. Vindicated in history her notes are published and distributed today, she has post-humously been awarded a medal from The British Computer Society and the contemporary programming language Ada is named in her honor. As a side note; Babbages machine have later been constructed as per his notes and was found to be highly accurate at mathematical operations.

Why should we care?

Adasmall 2 Geek holidays are great, and we need more of them. But if you look at the notable dates and personalities in this industry there are two factors that separate Ada Lovelace from the rest.
Firstly; she is by far one of the strongest examples of the long heritage of brilliant people on whose shoulders we stand to todays technology. Secondly: and it’s sad that this should matters, but it remains to be a factor and an important one at that; She is a woman. Our industry is heavily male-dominated. Not only in our workplaces but also in our heroes and legends.
I mean no slight to Alan Turing, Steve Wozniak, Sir Tim Berners-Lee and their esteemed co-idols, but by god; this sausage party needs some dames.

Searching for “Ada Lovelace” yields among other links a page that declares 24th of March to be Ada Lovelace Day and ask bloggers to pledge to write a post about Ada. Since the site seemed defunct after this date I propose that Ada Lovelace Day should be her birthday; the 10th of December and that we geeks make room for it among Towel Day, Blue Beanie Day and PI Day so this amazing historical figure gets the attention she deserves.

Who’s with me?

Further studies.

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Currently reading

13/07/2009

Yes, all of them. Actively.
I posted this image to flickr in april and since then the state of things have just deteriorated.
Where the hell did my ability to concentrate go?

Books

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