Technology
Gmail: Please Bold the Hidden Labels Button when there are Unread Messages
I love Gmail. It does everything I could possibly want an email client (web or desktop) to do. All of my non-junk email accounts are Gmail or are forwarded to Gmail accounts. That said, occasionally something occurs to me that would make my Gmail experience a little bit better. Sometimes these crop up as Labs features, which I think is great, and is part of why I enjoy using Gmail so much.
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Interfacing C and Python 3 using SWIG
I like Python, and I use it for almost all of my personal projects and whenever I can get away with it in school. Sometimes, however, (rarely, these days) you’re looking for raw speed. Python, alas, is not the fastest kid on the block, and at these times you might have to turn to a different language to give you the necessary speed. (Another option you might consider first is Psyco.) In these situations it is often the case that only particular operations or functions really have to be fast. Even if you want to write the whole piece of software in C, you might like to use Python to write the front end. There are a lot of different ways to do this, but my favorite is SWIG, because it’s easy and I’m lazy.
64-bit Flash Player!
Today Adobe is releasing an alpha version of a 64-bit Flash player for Linux. I cannot explain how happy this makes me. I have been dealing with shitty 32-bit Flash players running on 32-bit emulation in 64-bit browsers in Linux for about the past five years, and it has caused me nothing but endless annoyance and frustration. Half the time I have to refresh a page a few times because Flash keeps dying, and even when it manages to play it’s a complete coin toss as to whether there will be sound. With my current setup I basically have to close Amarok to play a Flash video if I want to hear sound. Adobe is years late to the party with this one, but better late than never, right?
Seven Document Formats Worse than Scribd
The other day while searching for some LaTeX information I came across this page on Scribd, and I was reminded once again how much I loathe this website. If you aren’t familiar with it, Scribd is a site which hosts various books, articles, and other documents. For reasons that are an impenetrable mystery to me, these people have decided that the way to bring together potentially many different formats of print media is to turn them all into shockwave flash. As in, this beautifully typeset LaTeX document, compiled to PDF, was turned into a scrollable flash…thing. Combine this with the rather sorry state of flash on Linux, and you get just about my least favorite website on the entire intertubes. Just getting it in a Google search makes me almost as mad as getting a link to Experts Exchange.
So, to keep my blood pressure down, I put things into perspective for myself by making a list of seven document formats Scribd could have chosen to use, but didn’t.