As a result of this, the yeah baby!!! post below is now a collectors item! So collect it :) and yes it does work...
Thursday, January 31, 2002
Thursday, January 24, 2002
To be sure, to be sure... is it April the 1st already?
Wednesday, January 23, 2002
This is going to be tragic, yeah baby!!! (might take a while to load...)
Sunday, January 20, 2002
In the event of over consumption ;)
I've always said he's a wanker
Your local ATM could be next :)
Thursday, January 17, 2002
Donut is not a virus? It's a native executable that elects to modify only applications written for the Microsoft .NET Framework in the Microsoft Intermediate Language (MSIL) PE format?
Microsoft release Visual Studio.Net and the free .Net Framework software development kit. But will it work?
Call me paranoid but we are certianly living in strange times. After one of the most controversial US elections in history George Bush becomes President. Then moments before the biggest economy in the world can go into economic meltdown some jerk decides to crash some planes into buildings in America throwing the world into chaos. Recently amidst claims of improper conduct and illegal manoeuvering, Enron the world's largest energy trader collapses financially costing international insurance companies over 3.5 billion US dollars. Enrons stock was worth over $80 a year ago it is now trading at
Enron were a major contributor to the Republican Party and George Bush. In 1998 for example, the Bush campaign borrowed Enron's corporate jets eight times to fly aides around the country, more times than any of the thirty-four other companies that made their company aircraft available to the Presidential hopeful. On Monday morning President Bush appeared to the world sporting a bruise that looked like it could had been administered by mafia thugs and the official explanation was that he had choked on a pretzel? See what the X-Files has done to me?
A Florida-based scientific research company has claimed that it's "multi-dimensional encoding technology" can compress "practically random sequences" of data across many reduction iterations, thereby overcoming fundamental constraints in information theory. The announcement has been met with scepticism but if proved to be true would mean enormous increases in data compression ratios. Imagine taking a zipped file and being able to re-zip "across many reduction iterations" into practically nothing! It appears to defy logic but the company does have some credibility having worked extensively with leading mathematicians at Harvard University, Stanford University and Moscow State University, among others. Wired have an interesting interview with Zeosync's CEO Peter St. George here.
Saturday, January 12, 2002
Friday, January 11, 2002
Apple make such cool stuff. Who cares if its slow and has no software ;)



