(from the random thoughts on a Friday afternoon dept.)
Yet another name for the band: Prom Night Dumpster Babies
Damn it feels good to be a gangsta
(from the random thoughts on a Friday afternoon dept.)
Yet another name for the band: Prom Night Dumpster Babies
(from the random thoughts on a Friday afternoon dept.)
Yet another name for the band: Beneficial Nematodes
Other band names:
(from the random thoughts on a Friday afternoon dept.)
Yet another name for the band: Anxious Refrigerator
Other band names:
(more…)(via Dunner’s)
The Rules:
- You have to look up page 123 in the nearest book around you.
- Look for the fifth sentence.
- Then post the three sentences that follow that fifth sentence on page 123.
- And then tag five people, just like you were tagged!
Let’s see… My home office is packed with books, so I’ll also do both fiction and non-fiction.
Fiction: Unknown Means by Elizabeth Becka (by my desk because it just arrived in the mail a few days ago)
Maybe not.
No one wanted to think of Marissa as a victim. Marissa least of all. But if Evelyn tried to avoid the topic, people would assume there has to be more to the story. Nothing beat a good drama like a terrific conspiracy.
Non-Fiction: The ACE Programmer’s Guide: Practical Design Patterns for Network and Systems Programming by Stephen D. Huston, James CE Johnson, & Umar Syyid (I was using it as a reference yesterday)
This is an application of the Strategy pattern [3], which allows you to change your “strategy” without making large changes to you implementation. To facilitate changing one set of IPC wrappers for another, ACE’s are related in sets:
[list deleted]
Each class abstracts a bit of low level mess of traditional socket programming. All together, the classes create an easy-to-use type-safe mechanism for creating distributed applications. We won’t show you everything they can do, but what we do show covers about 80 percent of the things you’ll normally need to do.
I’ll tag (a more or less random selection from my blogroll):
Local Blog O’ The Week (Riverfront Times, January 30, 2008) “Yet Another Web Site” http://rlrr.drum-corps.net Author: James A. Chappell About the blogger: Mr. Chappell lives in St. Louis and works as a software engineer. A graduate of Medina High School in Medina, Ohio, he “did the drum and bugle corps thing” from ’78 to ’81, … Continue reading “Someone’s scraping the bottom of the barrel…”
(via email) 43%
(via Pharyngula) I received 86 credits on The Sci Fi Sounds QuizHow much of a Sci-Fi geek are you? Take the Sci-Fi Movie Quiz
Hungry for knowledge in any internet forum, you demand decorum. Any off-topic remarks, absurd statements, or tomfoolery on the interweb is deeply frowned upon by you. Truth has no room for drollery.
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