Steven Hanley
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email: sjh@svana.org
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Wed, 10 Nov 2004
Print me a cpu - 14:26
Maybe the title of this post is not entirely accurate, however
arstechnica has an
article
about Epson using inkjet technology to print thin multi layer circuit boards.
So sure you can not exactly print out a modern computer
cpu,
and as the article points out, the boards printed this way are fragile so
hobbyists would have difficulty mounting them and attaching components. Still
a cool application of technology and it definitely has uses.
[/comp]
link
Bad food and bible belt hypocrisy - 12:37
Some schools have good cafeteria food
A times
article
about a secondary school in France in which the cafeteria food is cooked by a
top flight chef sounds good. Apparently the chef who has previously worked in
some of France's more prestigious restaurants decided he preferred working in
the school environment and so far has been quite successful in convincing
students to eat real food rather than MacDonald's or similar.
Why wouldn't we all be somewhat jealous of the students, cheap good food at
school. At the university I work the university union provided food is easily
defined by two parameters. 1. Usually low quality/unappetising and
2. Expensive. There are fortunately exceptions, such as the Purple Pickle,
though it is not a union supported cafe. The University union in theory can
operate their eateries cheaper due to lower rent and other overheads all of
which are provided by the University, they also supposedly should provide
cheaper food for the students than they are able to purchase from eateries in
the nearby city centre or other nearby shops. Neither of these are true.
Bible belt divorce
Julis Schorzman in his blog brought
to my
attention
the divorce rate statistics from the last US census. He points out a Boston
Globe
item
"that shows the hypocrisy of the Bible Belt lecturing the rest of the country
about the sanctity of marriage.", I am not particularly surprised to see this
data, Bible belt residents often do not appear to have a good understanding of
reality.
[/various]
link
Software patents, branding and broken revenue models - 12:12
Hugh Macleod of Gapingvoid wrote
again why
Branding
is dead, a lot of the points he makes tie in to other problems with big
companies in the modern era. How these companies want to hold on to the old
way of doing things and don't seem interested in trying new ways of making
money that would be less offensive to their customers throughout the
world. The problem for these companies is that they lose out in the end trying
to hang on to dying revenue models. One point in particular caught my
attention, "4. "Branding" is backwards looking. It's all about capturing past
associations. It's never about what the business could become, but protecting
what came before." as this is at the centre of how companies seem to want to
do all their business. Patents (notably
software patents)
are another similar backward looking mechanism that is broken in the
current
application of them. More of the points on branding being dead and are
provided
by Cory at boingboing, and though I have not read it this wired
article on
the subject is recommended.
[/comp/ip]
link
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