primatology | 13 years ago | on: Redesigned MIT OCW Website
primatology's comments
primatology | 13 years ago | on: Psy Makes $8.1 Million By Ignoring Copyright Infringements Of Gangnam Style
I'll agree that copyright in the digital era is a mess, but the line in this case is fairly clear. Yes, fair use (regarding parodies/satires) is convoluted, but the general rule makes intuitive sense to me: unless your parody is blatantly for-profit/self-advancement, you're covered.
primatology | 13 years ago | on: News about Mark Crispin (author of the original IMAP specification)
primatology | 13 years ago | on: Google Free Zone - Share and search on your phone with no data charges
primatology | 13 years ago | on: Google Free Zone - Share and search on your phone with no data charges
primatology | 13 years ago | on: North Carolina teacher's resignation letter
We're discarding some of our most valuable data. In most schools, student evaluations of teachers aren't even administered, let alone analyzed and weighted in teacher assessment. Skeptical? See the research below. Properly-constructed surveys yield very accurate results; students are surprisingly honest in their responses, and students truly value a hard, fair teacher who actually teaches his students over an "easy A" teacher.
Take a look at Ronald Ferguson's work and the MET Project [1]. I can't find the original article, but this New York Times article [2] is a decent summary.
[1] http://www.metproject.org/downloads/met-framing-paper.pdf [2] http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/11/education/11education.html
primatology | 13 years ago | on: Amazon.com High on IPO. So Is Its Valuation (1997)
Might've been a negative in '97, but no investor today wishes Bezos were a diehard bookseller.
primatology | 13 years ago | on: Chrome DevTools could do that?
primatology | 13 years ago | on: Netbot: An App.net Client from Tweetbot Creators
primatology | 13 years ago | on: Why Responsive Design Is Not Worth It
primatology | 13 years ago | on: The Social Dynamics of the R Core Team
ripley's lead is probably undeniable, but the differences in commits between the next four could be developer preference of code per commit.
primatology | 13 years ago | on: Leaving Github
And the original, "expert" workflow is still available for those who want it.
primatology | 13 years ago | on: John Siracusa's OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion Review
primatology | 13 years ago | on: An Amazon Education
> What are the maximum benefits under the program? > Amazon will pay up to 95% of the tuition, textbook and associated fees up to a maximum of $2,000 per year for four years.
Tuition for an associates degree is usually upwards of $5000. I was impressed at first; now I'm deeply disappointed and see this as little more than a PR stunt.
primatology | 13 years ago | on: Tesco Discount Barcodes, Cracked
primatology | 13 years ago | on: Gittip stats
You probably won't log out, and chances are you'll end up on GitHub again sometime soon. You'll discover the wonders of social coding now that you have an account, and soon enough, you're a paying customer.
primatology | 13 years ago | on: Gittip stats
primatology | 13 years ago | on: Quick Nexus 7 Comments By Linus Torvalds
I'll take a beautiful product that sacrifices minor functionality (in my case) for aesthetics. My point is not that a MacBook is right for you, but that Apple seems to have rightly assumed that most people don't care about the function keys, and spared the ugly buttons.
In any case, you're probably saving a grand every time you buy a laptop, so maybe the joke's on us.
primatology | 13 years ago | on: All of the available CSS color names
primatology | 13 years ago | on: Quick Nexus 7 Comments By Linus Torvalds
I'm with Apple on this one. The back-arrow button in the toolbar reminds me I'm in a hierarchal app, and the label reminds me what the prior screen was. It's just the opposite for me: every time I use an Android I hunt around the screen for the software back button.