And here is my entire “Company Loyalty” point in a nutshell

Google fucked up too, I’m not saying they didn’t. But somehow, their fuck ups seem diminutive compared to other fuck ups. When they introduced Buzz, they had privacy issues which they solved by putting a “Turn off Buzz” button. When they rolled out Events, people were flooded but there worst case was an annoyed Robert Scoble who had to delete events from his calendar one by one. Their worst fuck up I can think of right now is collecting wifi traffic data and not being transparent about it but even that was mostly a moral issue of privacy. Here, in one of Facebook’s fuck ups, they practically erased user data! If I had anything on Facebook besides my name and birthday, I would be seriously pissed right now and on my way out the door. If you’re not, may I please know why? (And I’m sorry, the “Everyone is on Facebook” argument just isn’t good enough anymore).


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Graphene as a Water Sieve

Graphene is basically a carbon lattice one atom layer thick. It’s been around for only a few years and the guys who made it got a Nobel prize for it. And we’re figuring out how great that material is about once a month. This time, they’re telling us we can use it to desalinate water, to purify it, a thousand times faster than current methods. The explanation goes something like this: because of one interesting property of graphene, we can make a sheet of it with holes at any size we want, like the size of a water molecule. It goes like this, this is a water molecule.             This is a salt molecule. (It’s not an actual molecule but stay with me for this)             Salt, when it’s in your salt shaker, looks more like this.               But when it dissolves in water, it looks like this.             The salt compound is made from more massive atoms than water. And with the graphene sheet, we can make holes that let water through and keep salt out. Which basically means that you can pour salt water through a simple filter and get pure water on the other side. Yes, this ideal is still a ways off, there is still work to be done, but this idea is just super cool! Science is awesome! :)  


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פיראטיות תלת ממדית

In Neal Stephenson’s The Diamond Age, pretty much every household had their own molecular assembler which they could use to make just about anything, paying only for the raw material the device required. The precursors of that, the 3D printers, are already becoming something that a single person could buy for their home. They are still quite complex, small and expensive but the day in which you could just get one from the store the same way you get a microwave or a toaster oven is not far away. Seeing this coming, the people behind The Pirate Bay have offered a new category which they call Physibles. That is, 3D design files to be fed into a 3D printer to print… well, anything you can design. I just looked at it now and people are offering anything from Mark Zuckerberg’s head through a nerf gun and up to a Warhammer 40K Space Marine. I think this is insanely cool and I hope two things: One, that I would be able to print my own… anything in the near future. And two, that Old Manufacturing (paraphrasing Old Media) companies won’t go bananas with copyright and try to stop the revolution but instead try to follow it and work with it.


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Document Writing, Calendar and Sattelite TV

Three thoughts I’ve just had. Well, one is about a week old but still. I’m writing this from the waiting room of our garage in Haifa, waiting for Bessie to get her check up and polish. There’s a TV here showing a movie on Yes1 and it jumps and struggles and jitters a whole heck of a lot more than my two year old computer playing a 1080p movie. And people wonder why we don’t have a television connection, just a monitor for movies and games. Right now, when classes are finally over and I am moving into exam season, my calendar is freeing up and for the first time in several months I can see into next Monday. That’s kinda cool. I know this is always presumptous to say but _I am_ writing a book. For those of you who know it, it’s the one I started here and took down for a serious rewrite – Nathanel’s story, which I think could really work as a full length novel. The point is, I had it on Google Docs because I thought it was comfortable to keep it there where it allows me to write from anywhere. But a while back, with Google Drive and the, to my opinion, quite horrific terms of use, I decided to move it to Dropbox. I know Dropbox isn’t completely secure and I should probably encrypt it but I can access it, with full WSIWYG editing, through my Office application here on my phone. Continue Reading →


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What Would a Machine Say?

New Scientist had a contest, asking people what a conscious machine’s first words would be. My first thought: “Feed me…” What do you think?


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Portal 3 Anyone?

I was thinking, Portal 2 ends with “Want You Gone” and it has the line. “You have you short sad life left. That’s what I’m counting on.” That is, it’s like GlaDOS is counting on Chell not being a problem for very long. So, here’s an idea. Portal 3: Lots of years in the future, Chell’s granddaughter is the first one to take her grandmother’s story seriously. That is, after she finds the age old portal gun in the attic. And she has her grandmother’s persistence and is even more proactive. She follows the parts/serial numbers/sales receipt back to Aperture Labs where she finds an advanced GlaDOS, an advanced testing program, more gizmos, more weird stuff, a better portal gun (that works on more surfaces), adversary robots (Hello, Atlas, P-Body and friends) who try to foil her with their own portal weapons, and where she might need to stop GlaDOS from consuming the world with her testing initiative. Valve… Here’s your pitch. Go.


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Syndicate Reboot Didn’t Work

That’s the quote from a release made a while ago by an “EA Boss”. No, you idiot EA boss, I’ll tell you the nature of resurrecting old IP. You need to make the same game but with newer tech and a new story; Not to completely change the fundamental aspects of what made the previous game awesome. You just can’t take a tactical cyberpunk game and make it into a 3D shooting gallery. As was previously said: Those who aren’t familiar with Syndicate will stay away from it, afraid they won’t get it. And those that are will be extremely disappointed with the new game because it’s not the old one. So you can just admit you already had the game and were afraid to venture on a new IP so you took the Syndicate name and a few gimmicks and called it a game. Gibeau further explained that EA has “numerous brands” that he finds worthy of making a comeback. He did not say what any of these properties were, but said it’s possible these franchises could be reborn on next-generation platforms. Translation: As one of the biggest gaming companies on the planet, we own a lot of your childhood memories and will feel free to rummage through them in search of names that will trigger your insatiable nostalgia and then we will make a 3D shooting gallery out of them just to spite you. And they aren’t the only ones committing this sin. But you know what the worst Continue Reading →


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DOTA 2 will be free to play

After conducting the Torchlight vs Diablo discussion for a bit and after reading this, I have to say that Valve, despite being insanely tardy and negligent on the side of their Half-Life property, still know how to release a game. In summary, it goes like this: “Here is a game, it is of one of the most popular yet least populated (by major releases) genres today. This game is completely free to play. As soon as it launches, you can just go play it. There is an in-game store where you can pay real money for stuff that will make you cooler than others. But if you don’t want to spend money, you don’t have to. The items for sale are just cosmetic, they don’t affect the core gameplay. And you have a creation tool in there where you can extend the game by yourself. We will make your extension official and you will get paid for it if it is good enough.” And they also have a matchmaking multiplayer system, an AI mechanic in case your opponent accidentally disconnects, and tutorial line ups where masters can teach the newbies. I think the only thing missing from this release is a big fluffy bunny you can put on your lap and pet for the enhanced experience.


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The Most Difficult Book

On the last episode of Sword & Laser they asked “What was the most difficult book you’ve ever read?” It’s an interesting question that brings several answers to mind: Crime and Punishment – Had to read it for school at my last year. Being a good reader, I got my hands on the full version and started reading. I broke down around page 50. I tried the abridged version and didn’t last to page 30. I ended up settling for the quick synopsis. It was so boring, with a character I wish I could just shoot in the head (And I’m sure he would thank me for it) and walk away from. The Summer Tree – I took it as my only book for a school seminar. I had several days and only one book. I really did try to read it but fell apart before page 150. It started out good but dragged on and became so boring that I preferred not to read than to read that. The Lord of the Rings – This one is probably an obvious choice. It’s so long and tend to seriously drag on at a lot of parts and only a bit of it is really interesting. But this one kept my interest going all the way to the end. I would probably go back to it at one point in the future, see if my opinion has changed. Anathem – It was also mentioned. Neal Stephenson writes smart books and this Continue Reading →


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יום המגבת

מתנצל בפני כולם, יום המגבת הזה יהיה דיי באנאלי כי כל היום היינו בבית חוץ מהתרוצציות לקניות ולטפל בצינור שהתפוצץ. ועכשיו אני נוסע ואני שוב אהיה בפנים כל היום. אז אני לא רואה ממש טעם להפגין את הוד מגביותה כשאני לא באמת הולך לאן שהוא. הנה הפעמים הקודמות.


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