Events

Later items

Unintelligent designs

   David Braverman 
Politics
Praise be! MSNBC is reporting this hour that the judge hearing the Dover, Pennsylvania, school board case has ruled that Intelligent Design is not science. I think Doonesbury's strip last Sunday put the case into perspective quite nicely. Tell me: would it be an appropriate response to the neo-Creationists to demand that we preach evolution in their pulpits? Just wondering. Update: Full story from the New York Times (reg.req.)
Teran Loeppke, Boycott Organizer at UNITE HERE Local 1 in Chicago, sent us this information about the picket line at the Congress Hotel on South Michigan Avenue. As UNITE HERE says, Workers at the Congress Plaza Hotel have been on strike since June 2003, after hotel owners cut wages and benefits. Hundreds of customers complained of poor service and hazardous and unsanitary conditions. Dozens of groups and conferences have moved or canceled their events after learning of the strike. Yet, the Congress...

Quick update

   David Braverman 
Weather
There's a lot going on this week as Anne and I prepare for the holidays. I expect to have some really interesting things to report soon. But I don't have them yet. I will say, -18°C (-2°F) is really quite cold. One thing of interest: Apparently there's a storm off the Pacific Coast that's generating some heavy surf. I'll be in Carmel, Calif., the day after tomorrow. I hope to have some photos of really big waves by Thursday.
Late addition, 26 March 2006: We have a dynamic version of this in beta over at http://beta.wx-now.com/Sunrise/SunriseChart.aspx. Last week, I posted a short chart of how sunsets are getting later. Today, because I wanted to know for myself, and therefore I can't imagine anyone else not wanting to know also, I've figured out when certain sunrises and sunsets will occur for the next year. Here is the chart for Evanston, Illinois: Date Significance Sunrise Sunset Daylight 21 Dec Solstice, 18:35 UTC 07:16...

Sad week in politics

   David Braverman 
Politics
Four stories from past week (two of them today) sadden all of us who love American democracy. First, and most importantly, the President revealed today that he authorized secret surveillance of Americans because of—wait for it—9/11: "This authorization is a vital tool in our war against the terrorists. It is critical to saving American lives. The American people expect me to do everything in my power, under our laws and Constitution, to protect them and their civil liberties and that is exactly what I...
For a couple of years, Inner Drive has had a webcam pointing out the window. We've moved twice since the webcam first went online. From time to time, we've adjusted the webcam slightly. And, every so often, the webcam adjusts itself. For example, the first cam image is from when we left the office last night, and the second from when I woke up this morning: (The images are displayed at half-size, but you can view them at full-size by saving them from your browser. You'll notice that they have...

I mean, who <i>didn't</i> know that?

   David Braverman 
The San Francisco Chronicle today ran a long-overdue correction: A story Nov. 15 about mathematical references on "The Simpsons" TV show mistakenly said that 1,782 to the 12th power plus 1,841 to the 12th power equals 1,922 to the 12th power. Actually, 1,782 to the 12th power plus 1,841 to the 12th power equals 2,541,210,258,614,589,176,288,669,958,142,428,526,657, while 1,922 to the 12th power equals 2,541,210,259,314,801,410,819,278,649,643,651,567,616. (Linked from today's Romanesko. In the "Anne"...
I've finally added an explanation of Evolutionary Delivery to my corporate site. I wrote this as part of a proposal to a client in September, and for reasons that passeth understanding, I neglected to publish it online. By the way, I write software for a living, so if you're reading this and realize you need a small, agile development team for a .NET project, send us a message.

Code smells

   David Braverman 
SoftwareWork
A code smell happens when a piece of software code looks like there might be something wrong with it, but you can't quite tell what. You use the smell to figure out where the bad code is hiding. Martin Fowler has devotes an entire chapter of Refactoring to code smells. Here is an example, from a class that returns configuration information: public string Read() { ... } public double ReadD() { ... } public int ReadN() { ... } public string ReadString() { ... } What's wrong with this code? Several things...

Boffo fantabulous book

   David Braverman 
SoftwareWork
Addendum to my previous reading list. I'm now reading Microsoft's Framework Design Guidelines, written by the guys who wrote the .NET Framework. Add this to my list of recommended books.

Earlier items

Copyright ©2026 Inner Drive Technology. Privacy. Donate!