Harry Potter, Software Engineer
I realized something last night. Harry Potter knows Python! For that matter, so does Voldemort, and Salazar Slytherin.
I realized something last night. Harry Potter knows Python! For that matter, so does Voldemort, and Salazar Slytherin.
Posted at 1:03 PM 0 comments
Posted at 11:30 PM 1 comments
I was talking to a friend the other day, giving some general relationship advice. At the end of it, she said:
[Yellow], that was the perfect thing to say.Can I just say how awesome that made me feel? Million bucks, right there.
Posted at 10:03 PM 1 comments
Sometime during the first week of January, I bought Mega Man 9 for our Wii. Having grown up on the original Mega Man, this was a serious trip down nostalgia lane. The developers of MM9 intentionally made the game feel like the originals in the series, right down to the flickering sprites when you get hit.
Posted at 12:04 PM 2 comments
Have you ever browsed to a website, attempted to go back to your previous page, and found that you stay on the same page you're on? And then, when you look at the back history, it turns out you have to jump back four or five pages in order to get out? (See here for an example.)
Posted at 10:26 AM 2 comments
Posted at 12:15 PM 1 comments
It's interesting how you learn things about yourself simply by your own actions.
Posted at 9:25 AM 0 comments
Dear iTunes haters,
High-quality, DRM-free music.So. No more complaining. And in case you're wondering about that funny "AAC" encoding, here's what Wikipedia has to say about it:
iTunes Plus is the new standard on iTunes.
Now, you can choose from millions of iTunes Plus songs from all four major music labels and thousands of independents. With iTunes Plus, you get high-quality, 256-Kbps AAC encoding. All free of burn limits and digital rights management (DRM). So iTunes Plus music will play on iPod, Apple TV, all Mac and Windows computers, and many other digital music players. It’s also easy to upgrade your iTunes library to iTunes Plus. You don’t have to buy the song or album again. Just pay the 30¢ per song upgrade price. (Music video upgrades are 60¢ and entire albums can be upgraded for 30 percent of the album price.)
Advanced Audio Coding (AAC) is a standardized, lossy compression and encoding scheme for digital audio. Designed to be the successor of the MP3 format, AAC generally achieves better sound quality than MP3 at many bit rates. AAC has been standardized by ISO and IEC, as part of the MPEG-2 & MPEG-4 specificationsAnd here's a list from Wikipedia of common portable media players that support AAC:
Posted at 4:17 PM 4 comments