Showing archive results for 2007

Oct 15, 2007
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Nicolas Bourbaki, perhaps the biggest inside joke in mathematics

Raymond Chen

If you've studied advanced mathematics, you've certainly read or at least heard about the books and papers of the great French mathematician Nicolas Bourbaki, whose works in the 1930's set out a rigorous formulation of modern mathematics. Except he never actually existed. The name was created as a front for a group of renegade French mathematicia...

Non-Computer
Oct 15, 2007
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Why aren't shortcuts as easy as unix links?

Raymond Chen

Commenter dingo asks, "Why are shortcuts so hard to manipulate? Why can't they be as easy as unix links?" Well, if you want something like unix links, then you can just create a hard link. Creating them is about the same difficulty ( vs ) and manipulating them is the same since you don't actually manipulate a hard link. You just use it like a regu...

Code
Oct 12, 2007
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Not the best way to start out a form letter

Raymond Chen

Special Welcome Back Offer From the President of The Wall Street Journal Online Dear Do Not Edit These Fields, My name is Todd Larsen and I'm the president of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL ONLINE... Pre-emptive snarky comment: I got a lame form letter from Microsoft once.

Non-Computer
Oct 12, 2007
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No good deed goes unpunished: Free code samples

Raymond Chen

There's no such thing as a free lunch. Or free code either. Many years ago, I wrote some samples for the SDK as a favor, and at each major SDK release, I am reminded that no good deed goes unpunished. I can tell when a major SDK release is coming, because I get a piece of mail that goes something like this: Hi. You are on file as the owner of at...

OtherNo good deed goes unpunished
Oct 11, 2007
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Unlikely excuses: A faulty microchip

Raymond Chen

Last year, a talking action figure was discovered to utter a curse word. A spokesperson for the store said that the problem might be a faulty microchip. Huh? What microchips fail by saying curse words? I mean, I can see the voice chip failing by generating static or chopping up the audio so as to become unintelligible, but what are the odds that...

Non-Computer
Oct 11, 2007
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Whose idea was it to make Ctrl+Backspace delete the previous word?

Raymond Chen

James Manning mentioned in a footnote to a blog entry on PowerShell and WMI that he considers the Ctrl+Backspace shortcut key a Windows-ism. Where did this shortcut key come from? From a fan of the Brief editor. A few people in the early days of the Internet Explorer group used the Brief editor, which uses Ctrl+Backspace as the shortcut key to ...

History
Oct 10, 2007
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Microspeak: Actionable

Raymond Chen

The word actionable has as its primary meaning "providing grounds for legal action", but in the world of management, it is the secondary meaning "capable of being acted upon" that is more common. Something that is actionable provides a specific demand for action. Although I'm not necessarily a big fan of the word itself, I definitely appreciate th...

Non-ComputerMicrospeak
Oct 9, 2007
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The three tiers of a mixing room of a movie studio

Raymond Chen

Kai Jones describes what you see in the mixing room of a movie studio. It's very simple but very telling. I won't give away the punch line; go read it yourself. (It's the paragraph that begins, "We also went into the sound building.") (Via Anita Rowland.)

Non-Computer
Oct 9, 2007
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Why does ICE16 complain about product names longer than 63 characters?

Raymond Chen

If you merge in the Internal Consistency Evaluators into your MSI package, you may run into error ICE16, complaining that the product name is longer than 63 characters. Why is this so bad? Well, it isn't really, at least not any more. The original Windows 95 version of the Add/Remove Programs control panel did limit product names to 63 char...

Tips/Support
Oct 8, 2007
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Which windows appear in the Alt+Tab list?

Raymond Chen

Commenter Phil Quirk wants to know what the rules are for determining which windows appear in the Alt+Tab list. It's actually pretty simple although hardly anything you'd be able to guess on your own. Note: The details of this algorithm are an implementation detail. It can change at any time, so don't rely on it. In fact, it already changed with ...

Code