Archive for May, 2003

Pattern Repositories

Saturday, May 31st, 2003

Microsoft’s recent releast of various patterns and processes (download the design patterns) is one of many pattern repositories people and (more often)  organizations have been making public.  I think this is one of the most beautiful frontiers of modern data-sharing.


Some of these repositories are intended as singular repositories to eventually encompass all patterns influencing developers or architects… here is an old-school collection of flat patterns, for instance.  Of course merging different repositories is very hard when there is no obvious classification or naming scheme, and when the presentation of patterns varies so widely from one person or group to another.


Individual traditional architects have also been releasing their own pattern languages and repositories.  Christopher Alexander, my hat is off to you, as usual.

Narratives and Tall Tales: New Stories

Saturday, May 31st, 2003

There are some new stories to check out and comment on, about spiral narratives and coral reefs, and about modern tall tales.  The latter would particularly benefit from your knowledge of modern online culture and urban folktales (not urban legends per se, but stories whose plots, morals, or other memes become part of daily narrative and conversation for years afterwards).

Language Choice and National Communication

Saturday, May 31st, 2003

I was discussing modern Hebrew and its kinship with Arabic with John and Anita last night, and mentioned that Arabic is a more richly descriptive language, for having so many centuries to thrive and flesh out its vocabulary, whereas before this century Hebrew long lay dormant as an everyday language.  It turns out that this story of Hebrew’s death is slightly exaggerated (search for “British Consul Young”); it was in common use in Jerusalem, if nowhere else, two hundred years ago.


We also mentioned revolution-era America’s national language debates.  I have often heard of the Continental Congress discussing this matter — with footnotes that German and Hebrew were on the list, and German much favored.  This is true, though one might better say the CC discussed whether we should declare a national language.  The prevailing sentiment was that language choice should be left up to the people.



In 1780, John Adams proposed to the Continental Congress that official language academy be created to “purify, develop, and dictate the usage of English.” He idea was rejected for being undemocratic. (R.Reese, referencing the ACLU)


The story that there was a vote for our national language, and that English won out over German by a single vote, is a popular legend… (read more)

A Little Breakneck

Saturday, May 31st, 2003

Life and conversation have been developing at breakneck speeds.  Today was full of bizarre coincidence, charm, and confusion.  There is much to discuss with all of you, and many observations to share over the weekend.


For now, let me just note that there is indeed an active mail archive intended for general tidbits, from people everywhere, to no particular audience but posterity.  Come back soon with opinions in hand…

Recently: Ducks, Cookie Lore, and Order

Friday, May 30th, 2003

The magical Merovingian Duck; the infamous cookie recipe(s); James G; Adams’s Last Chance to CD; Johnny D’s; the Great American English-German debate; gold lame and shades; engine work… all deserve a mention here. 

Safety in Numbers

Tuesday, May 27th, 2003

As long as we’re trapped in Oni II, we might as well get this dewer where it belongs. All together now…


 lift-safety: giving new meaning to "welcome to the next level".

Man your Playstations!

Tuesday, May 27th, 2003

Distributed computing for fanboys:  WELCOME TO THE NEXT LEVEL

Language constructs

Monday, May 26th, 2003

What if English suddenly became a pictographic language?  A charming parallel of Chinese language construction as applied to English [“Yingzi”] , using modern pictographs and sound-loans.  Insiduously instructive about written Chinese; with reference to that beast of an etymological dictionary, Rick Harbaugh’s zhongwen.comAnyone who can pull of a feat like that while finishing medschool is a frood in my book.

Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Medical Challenge

Saturday, May 24th, 2003

Skilled at high-level meta-analyses of the world?  Full of ideas about how the state of medicine should develop? Submit a Grand Challenge to direct the $200M that the B&MGF has allocated to global health innovation.



A Grand Challenge is neither the statement of the global health problem itself (e.g., malaria or AIDS) nor the request for a specific health intervention (e.g., a drug or vaccine), but the call for a discrete scientific or technological innovation which will break through the roadblock that stands between where we are now and where we would like to be in science, medicine, and public health.


Here is a pdf of the Call for Ideas.

Extra Wisdom

Friday, May 23rd, 2003

For those of you who have never visited more than the link-lined homepage of Jorn Barger’s RobotWisdom (sidebar: Robot! link), take a minute to scan his sitemap. It highlights many of the marvels on the Web, along with his resource pages for [further looking into] some of them.