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Spent the *entire* day debugging one silly thing, which ended up being ... silly. Some days are like that, so be it. And now for a filter pass...
In case you were wondering: What went wrong in Flint. Many things, seemingly. In the US we have come to take healthy running tap water for granted - despite the huge adoption of bottled water - but this episode shows how technically difficult it can be.
Of interest (to me): the rise and fall of the singular they. Long before it was fashionable, I began using "they" in user documentation, as an accompaniment to s/he; it seemed better than him or her. Or maybe it's just because I'm Dutch :)
You might have thought One Entangled Evening was futuristic fantasy, and it is, but meanwhile quantum entanglement archived in semiconductor wafers. Wow. This new understand is just too weird for my feeble brain. Related: the 17 equations that changed the course of history. All of your favorites in there, including E=mc2 and a2+b2=c2, not to mention the Fourier Transform, Maxwell's Equations, and Schrodinger's Equation but what about my personal favorite, W=UH? :)
Tim Bray: Vancouver Real Estate - the game of homes. "Let’s assume that buckets of overseas money are flowing into Vancouver. The conventional explanation — which I find believable — is that the local real-estate is being used mostly just like a bank account; a safer place to put money than under your mattress." The notion of stored value is so elusive. Perhaps Apropos: How to pull off a bank heist. It's not easy. Especially in comparison to investing in Real Estate. Good to know: You can explore New York's Guggenheim museum with Google's help. They've created a "street view" of all the galleries in the museum. I's cool, but I'm not sure this is actually useful?
Yawn: Oracle announces Java plugin will be deprecated in JDK 9, scheduled for March 2017. Is *anyone* still writing Java web applications? (Another question might be, did *anyone* ever write Java web applications?) I so remember the promise of Java, way back in Netscape 2, with Kim Polese leading the "Green Team" at Sun Microsystems. But the promise of "write once, run anywhere" was never realized.
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