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What Hath OLPC Wrought

According to the Economist, “The $100 laptop has been a success—just not, so far, in the way its makers intended.” The success is that OLPC inspired the development of machines that are expected to be bigger successes, such as the Asus EEE PC and the Classmate.

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How to Never Finish Your Project

How to Never Finish Your Project is Michal Marcinkowski’s list of things that he describes as “things that I’ve learned during my years as a game developer. This is especially useful if you’re not really trying to do something of value, have a different agenda or simply fear success.”

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The Economist on Jimmy Wales

The Economist’s article, The Free-Knowledge Fundamentalist, looks at Jimmy “Wikipedia / Will trade sex for edits” Wales. “Jimmy Wales changed the world with Wikipedia, the hugely popular online encyclopedia that anyone can edit. What will he do next?”

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Boomers Like Online Recommendations, Not Into Blogs or Social Networking

A ThirdAge/JWT Boom study has data that suggests that “people over age 40 participate heavily in word-of-mouth and value personal recommendations and expert opinions, but they have not embraced social networking or blogs despite being heavy users of other online services.”

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The “Cubicle Rage” Video

Have you not seen the video in which a cube farm worker flips out and starts tearing the office apart? Gizmodo has two videos, one from an overhead security cam and one taken by a coworker on his cell. I have some questions that I’ll pose in a longer post.

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The Moral Life of Cubicles

The final lines of the article The Moral Life of Cubicles: “The cubicle revolution, in fact, was above all ideological. The clichés hurled at cubicles were woven into their sound-dampening fabric board from the beginning. Any discerning criticism of office life will have to take this moral history into account. Indeed, it is precisely the axioms of what makes for a good company and a good person buried within the cubicle that most need to be uncovered and held to critical attention.”

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Men Write Code from Mars, Women Write More Helpful Code from Venus

The difference between code written by men and code written by women, according the senior VP for engineering at Ingres: “Women are more touchy-feely and considerate of those who will use the code later. They’ll intersperse their code – those strings of instructions that result in nifty applications and programs – with helpful comments and directions, explaining why they wrote the lines the way they did and exactly how they did it. Men, on the other hand, have no such pretenses. Often, they try to show how clever they are by writing very cryptic code. They try to obfuscate things in the code and don’t leave clear directions for people using it later.”