Links
Honestly, none of these sound annoying to me.
10 Annoying Habits of a Geeky Spouse
Honestly, none of these sound annoying to me. Katie does half of them and they don’t bother me — I do half of them and I hope they don’t bother her!
Bored? Try Doodling To Keep The Brain On Task
The next time you see someone doodling during a meeting, don’t criticize them for drifting off. It turns out that doodling is the mind’s way of keeping itself just busy enough to avoid checking out entirely and slipping off into a daydream, and doodlers actually remember more of that boring talk. (Judging by my college notes, this probably helped me remember a lot of otherwise-boring lectures.)
WTF? Facebook, the king of targeted advertising, knows I’m married, so why is it suddenly
WTF? Facebook, the king of targeted advertising, knows I'm married, so why is it suddenly showing me bunches of ads for dating services?
Now, you can get ads on your mobile phone! Somehow I’m not that excited.
Now, you can get ads on your mobile phone! Somehow I’m not that excited. http://googlemobile.blogspot.com/2009/02/calling-all-carriers-introducing.html
I don’t know why yesterday’s Real Life is so funny:
I don’t know why yesterday’s Real Life is so funny: The Thing: What is it?
Typing Patterns for Authentication
“NPR’s Marketplace is reporting on a new authentication scheme. BioPassword tracks the way you type your password: how long each key is depressed, the time between keystrokes, overall speed. When someone tries to log into your account, it compares the pattern to what it has on file. It only allows you in if both the password and patterns match. The technique has been around a while: World War II morse code operators used it to determine whether a message was sent by an ally or an impostor.”
Browser Wars Declared Over
Opera Watch reports that Microsoft, Mozilla, Opera and Google declared the Browser Wars to be over at a panel at Web 2.0 Expo yesterday. “Instead of trying to trump one another by adding features in point releases, the companies that developed these browsers are instead intent on advancing their use as platforms for a new generation of rich Internet applications and for tackling the hurdles that will come along with that shift in strategy.” ComputerWorld and eWeek have more details. Apple, the remaining major browser manufacturer, was not represented at the panel.