Sean McGrath, CTO, Propylon

Sean McGrath's Weblog.

Saturday, January 31, 2004
    Need a challenge? Try typesetting Burmese
Some beautiful examples of the complexity of typesetting the world's languages.


posted by Sean 5:40 AM
[Link]
. . .
    Multimedia with Python book
Mark Guzdial, of Squeak fame, has announced a multimedia cookbook in Python . The textbook is for the course "Introduction to Media Computation" at Gatech. In December it will be published by Prentice-Hall "Introduction to Programming with Python: A multimedia Approach".
First three chapters are available online here.


posted by Sean 1:42 AM
[Link]
. . .
Friday, January 30, 2004
    E-Government site on xml.org
http://egovernment.xml.org/.

posted by Sean 6:07 AM
[Link]
. . .
Thursday, January 29, 2004
    Sane XML
Simon St. Laurent gets some good stuff off his chest. What the world needs now is chicken soup.

posted by Sean 7:25 AM
[Link]
. . .
Wednesday, January 28, 2004
    A hot startup
Tim Bray talks about a room with multiple sources of heat. One is obvious but wait! Isn't that a Python book on the table? I can feel its warm glow from here!

posted by Sean 11:50 PM
[Link]
. . .
    I talk to myself but I'm not crazy, honest!
Its just that I find digital voice recording to be an increasingly interesting idea (ITWorld article.).

posted by Sean 6:46 AM
[Link]
. . .
Tuesday, January 27, 2004
    contretemps
An except from today spam:
    contretemps ternary cranny pander straddle intricate precess niacin potpourri kitchenette nymph zirconium ahmadabad aptitude kombu dishwater warrant stopband gable
.
It has a certain exasperating, sad poetry to it don't you think?

posted by Sean 2:27 PM
[Link]
. . .
    Maybe I can get a vocaloid to sing my XML documents to me?
More on the audio theme. Maybe vocaloid is what I'm looking for rather than a conlang? Here is a sample by LEON. Funky. Very funky.

posted by Sean 12:50 PM
[Link]
. . .
    Solresol for schema languages?
What if you took a constructed musical language like solresol and allocated tones to element type names or maybe xpath expressions into XML documents? What would it sound like if you "played back an XML document"? Would listening to structure provide a twist on the concept XML validation? Would the ear's ability to pick out dischordances provide an alternative to eyeballing structure to catch exceptions to business rules? In the past I've supplemented logic with vision (colour coding) but never sound. Hmmmm.


posted by Sean 2:51 AM
[Link]
. . .

. . .
Weblog Commenting by HaloScan.com