" /> Minh’s Notes: September 2007 Archives

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September 26, 2007

  • Python: Myths about Indentation. Python tends to care how you indent your code, but as most any Python programmer could tell you, that fact doesn’t change squat. (Towards the bottom there’s even a handy tidbit or two for those of us taking CS 143.) [1]
  • Explaining the Excel Bug. What looks like a comically random error in Excel is caused by a classic problem with storing floating point (non-integer) numbers in binary. To the Office team’s defense, you could write a book on rounding in JavaScript.
  • Google Docs puts Google Users at Risk. Interesting – and, if left unpatched, remarkably powerful – security vulnerability in Google Documents.
  • In Memory Of The Original MySpace.com. Back in the heyday of GeoCities, Netscape Communicator, and dialup, MySpace was a free file-sharing service. Their business model didn’t quite pan out, and we have Tom to thank for transforming the site into the ubiquitous wasteland (map) it is today.

September 19, 2007

Peedy Eating a Cracker

Happy International Squawk Like a Parrot Day!

September 3, 2007

In a filing with the FCC, NBC explains how P2P file sharing hurts the corn growers’ bottom line:

These losses do not merely harm elite, wealthy enclaves of film producers in New York and Los Angeles. Because of our nation’s interlocking economy, two-thirds of the lost earnings and lost jobs are in industries other than motion picture production. For example, in the absence of movie piracy, video retailers would sell and rent more titles. Movie theaters would sell more tickets and popcorn. Corn growers would earn greater profits and buy more farm equipment.

The filing cites this report from the Institute for Policy Innovation, which elucidates:

In sum, motion picture piracy affects not only the movie studios, but all the various businesses that supply the industry or buy from the industry, and the people who work in those businesses. Thus, the impact of movie piracy extends well beyond movie stars, all the way to the teenager selling popcorn and candy at the theater, the company that markets the candy, the farmer that grows the corn, and the workers that pick the farmer’s crop.

In other words, they think it goes full circle: the teenager selling popcorn at a movie theater will be out of a job thanks to his friends downloading movies. Art Brodsky of Public Knowledge debunks this corny load of FUD.

Via John Gruber.