Habla Livehelp

Tom Lawrence

Oh my god, so much good sport on tomorrow.

  1. Formula 1 Chinese GP (check out Sébastien Buemi’s crash from Friday’s practice)
  2. World Championship Snooker (Ken Doherty vs Mark Selby and Stephen Hendry [<3] vs newcomer Anda Zhang); a sport annually hosted in my wonderful hometown of Sheffield. Here’s hoping Hendry plays on form like he did last year with this awesome 147 break or during his infamous 7 title streak in the 90s. Love it!
    [for Americans who are unfamiliar with the sport, 147 is the maximum scoring break. Although incredibly difficult, a player is awarded with £147,000/$225,000 for a successful 147 game during tournament play]
  3. NHL Stanley Cup Playoffs. More specifically: Game 3 - Pittsburgh Penguins at Ottawa Senators. Best of luck to the Pens while they’re away. Here’s hoping no spoilers on Tumblr this time as well, unlike the last game. Still have to wait a good 24 hours before I catch the game commercial-free in 720p over in the UK and I hate watching low quality streams. Sucks :-/
  4. Indian Premier League Cricket (some AMAZING catches from the 2010 season so far, plus IPL are now broadcasting every match (archived and live) on the official IPL YouTube channel page)
  5. All the Rugby League/Union matches taking place too.
  6. Oh, and Premiere League Football (Wigan vs Arsenal and Portsmouth vs Aston Villa). LOL, don’t care.

And during all of this I shall be working on my dissertation. Macbook Pro ftw.

Simple Reblog API

staff:

We’ve just launched a simple developer API for reblogging posts with automatic formatting, automatic attribution, and optional commentary.

See the Reblogging API documentation for details.

Finally, reblogging support. Thankyou! All we need now is reply support via http://www.tumblr.com/api/reply and I’ll be damn happy with you guys for now.

I worry about the quality of your code sometimes Tumblr, I really do.
The fact you actually pass that value on to your payment system is a little odd although I can’t say I’ve tested it so I can’t be sure. I hope to god that&#8217;s merely aesthetic purposes but I don’t exactly wanna try and find out either.
And while I’m on the subject, please finish implementing all your features in the API, I’m sure there’s developers on here that would like to try and create third-party software that’s actually half-decent.
KKTHXBYE.

I worry about the quality of your code sometimes Tumblr, I really do.

The fact you actually pass that value on to your payment system is a little odd although I can’t say I’ve tested it so I can’t be sure. I hope to god that’s merely aesthetic purposes but I don’t exactly wanna try and find out either.

And while I’m on the subject, please finish implementing all your features in the API, I’m sure there’s developers on here that would like to try and create third-party software that’s actually half-decent.

KKTHXBYE.

My fellow Tumblr friends, please welcome shinaku.

So glad to see this guy finally on Tumblr. He’s the first real friend I made back when I was in college and we’ve stuck together since. We both happen to take the same course (Computer Science) at the same university (University of Hull) and used to share a house together back in 2008/09 and come September this will once again be the case.

He’s a techie like myself who dedicates much of his spare time to programming yet somehow he remains much cooler than me so please give him a warm welcome and expect to see several reblogs of his content from me.

You know, ‘cause I’m nice like that.

Remember when the Millenium Bug was the biggest threat coming?

jonmtm:

Since then:

  • We’ve been in a perpetual war in the middle east
  • Created a fear about a religion based on the actions of some of its extremists
  • Turned 18, turned 21, turned 24
  • Lived dreams
  • Said goodbye to the Concorde
  • Said hello to Flight of the Concords
  • Seen an increase in ukulele popularity
  • Seen bands split and reform
  • Seen the end of the boy band stronghold, and increase in singer-songwriters
  • Seen the rise of social networking websites
  • Been given MySpace, Facebook, Bebo, Twitter, Tumblr, Hi5, and more
  • Been given the gift of video hosting online, including Vimeo, YouTube, and all the porn star equivelents
  • I guess broadband internet speeds are faster
  • Were given iPods, iPhones, and other smart phones
  • Had the first black President
  • Seen an insanely high roster of celebrity deaths
  • Watched Disney Stars fall to pieces (see Britney Spears, and maybe that chick from High School Musical who’s nudes were all over the place)
  • Justin Timberlake
  • Watched Fame Acadamy, Pop Idol, American Idol and X-Factor run around making a mess
  • Had the tragedy that is Big Brother
  • Saw the follow ups to The Matrix and Star Wars Prequels and left feeling molested
  • Had Lord of the Rings
  • Learned what alcohol is BAD for you (read: none)
  • Created new mistakes, and didn’t regret
  • Listened to Millenium by Robbie Williams fourhundredthousandtimes
  • And used Last.fm to scrobbl that.

And really, what was the Millenium Bug going to do? Reset all our calendars and clocks to thinking it was the 1900s? Is that the biggest thing we had to fear back then? ‘Oh crap, I’ll have an appointment booked for Tuesday but I’ll be 100 years late for it oh no’.

I can’t believe its nearly 2010, you guys. Seriously, that is insane.

Interesting list, I have yet to type up some posts regarding the year and the decade myself but I’ve reblogged this as a response to your comment on the Millennium bug as it was theoretically a serious issue.

Warning: Geek Out Session Below

Many date systems focused on the last two digits of the year (those being ‘99’ and ‘00’ respectfully). Now, to a human, this is quite obvious that the century has rolled over and we’re now in the year 2000. However, to a computer this meant various things. For example, in the C programming language, the date/time function in the standard library would pass back the value -1900. The problem here is that a HELL of a lot of software out there is programmed in C (including software found in banks) and as a programmer, it would seem obvious to store a year in a variable as an integer - a whole number that can only be positive.

So if a programmer had not inserted code for correct validation and exception handling, this could cause a whole bunch of data catastrophes (ESPECIALLY if we’re talking about banking software) and we’re only talking about ONE programming language here. Any software based on a programming language that focused only on the last two digits could produce any type of result (not just ‘00’ as you would expect), depending on how the language was designed. Even logic systems found in electronics could completely fail with inverted bit patterns, causing many electronic devices to just stop working.

It sounds absolutely stupid in many respects, but it got many programmers worrying about how they had actually implemented date and time into their software and how those systems would cause other elements of their software to react.

Imagine if a nuclear facility’s monitoring software was to crash and perform improper exception handling due to a radiation logging system using two digit dates. It’s something most people didn’t want to know what the result would be.

Thankfully, with funding from various sources into patching and correcting software to either support the use of 4-digit dates or insert the correct validation or exception handling code, there were very few incidents that occurred due to what many claim as the so-called “Y2K bug”. It was somewhat pot luck for most as the majority of programmers just thought to themselves “Shit, exactly HOW did I implement date and time into that piece of software for that particular company? Is that my problem? Should I charge them to correct the program?”.

One good thing to come from the situation is we now know the importance of validation and exception handling for ALL systems in software, even the basic implementations, and storing our year variables as four-digit integers :p

Sorry for the total geek out post there, but it was something I felt the urge to discuss! Hope you enjoyed the read.

I never want to see another teapot again after this assignment.

I never want to see another teapot again after this assignment.

It’s over an hour and 20 minutes long, but the Google Wave preview from Google I/O 2009 is well worth watching. I can’t wait to get my hands on this service. The end was just mindblowing!

Really awesome AI for a modified version of a Java-based Infinite Mario Bros engine. Apparently it’s for a Mario AI competition so all the best for that, I can imagine this being a winner, though I’ll admit I’m totally unaware of what any other competitor has to offer.

davereed:

The computer nerd in me couldn’t resist
via klaatu

A classic programming joke, but still funny to this day.

davereed:

The computer nerd in me couldn’t resist

via klaatu

A classic programming joke, but still funny to this day.

This is one of those &#8220;WTF?&#8221; moments that I would love explaining to me as why this is happening.
Every time I make a post on Tumblr, it appears on both mine and my friends wall! Anyone seen this problem before or know why it&#8217;s happening?
Funniest shit I&#8217;ve seen all day.

This is one of those “WTF?” moments that I would love explaining to me as why this is happening.

Every time I make a post on Tumblr, it appears on both mine and my friends wall! Anyone seen this problem before or know why it’s happening?

Funniest shit I’ve seen all day.