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About
This rollicking mess is fabricated by Daniel Wayne Armstrong [hello!]...
(((^_^)))
Some of my favourite things:
femtotechnology... Linux... Coca-Cola... Salt Peanuts by Dizzy Gillespie... espresso... extropianism... bananas... Lafayette Coney Island... books [all colours and sizes]... on-and-offworld exploration... watching movies in darkened theatres... good questions...
Some things I could do without:
religion... ringing phones... the expression "whatever"... easy answers...
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Contact
Feel free to pass me a note at dwa[at]femtolicious[blot]com
OSCON 2007
July 31, 2007 – 4:21 pm
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Last week, Phillip Torrone and Limor Fried presented the closing keynote, “Open Source Hardware: A Start…” at O’Reilly Media’s Open Source Convention (via MAKE: Blog: Phillip Torrone and Limor Fried at OSCON 2007)
Payday
July 31, 2007 – 3:43 pm
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Imagine you’re going to live in Portugal. You find a lovely farmhouse set on a decent plot of land. The place has been empty for 15 years…
While exploring your new property you find a large barn. The door is padlocked and welded shut and it’s all rusted solid. So you grind the padlock and the welds off and discover…
The (Fabulous) Fibonacci Numbers
July 30, 2007 – 3:49 pm
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New Book: The (Fabulous) Fibonacci Numbers
The most ubiquitous, and perhaps the most intriguing, number pattern in mathematics is the Fibonacci sequence. In this simple pattern beginning with two ones, each succeeding number is the sum of the two numbers immediately preceding it (1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, ad infinitum). Far from being just a curiosity, this sequence recurs in structures found throughout nature–from the arrangement of whorls on a pinecone to the branches of certain plant stems. All of which is astounding evidence for the deep mathematical basis of the natural world.
With admirable clarity, math educators Alfred Posamentier and Ingmar Lehmann take us on a fascinating tour of the many ramifications of the Fibonacci numbers. The authors begin with a brief history of their distinguished Italian discoverer, who, among other accomplishments, was responsible for popularizing the use of Arabic numerals in the West. Turning to botany, the authors demonstrate, through illustrative diagrams, the unbelievable connections between Fibonacci numbers and natural forms (pineapples, sunflowers, and daisies are just a few examples). In art, architecture, the stock market, and other areas of society and culture, they point out numerous examples of the Fibonacci sequence as well as its derivative, the “golden ratio.” And of course in mathematics, as the authors amply demonstrate, there are almost boundless applications in probability, number theory, geometry, algebra, and Pascal’s triangle, to name a few. Accessible and appealing to even the most math-phobic individual, this fun and enlightening book allows the reader to appreciate the elegance of mathematics and its amazing applications in both natural and cultural settings.
Sounds good… I put a hold on the book at my local library…
Linux In Paradise
July 30, 2007 – 3:48 pm
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New Caledonia is a French overseas territory in the South Pacific, about 1,500 km east of Australia. Like most of the islands in the region, it is not wired by an undersea telecommunications cable; instead, all of its Internet traffic comes courtesy of a satellite. Although ADSL Internet has been widely available in Nouméa, the capital city, for some time, due to the limits of a satellite connection and growing user demand, connections to the World Wide Web are often slow and unreliable. New Caledonia, despite being one of the most prosperous territories in the South Pacific, is a place where Linux magazines with cover CDs containing Linux distributions are still in high demand.







