Author Archives: jcs

Emacs and the Unix Philosophy

Ramin Honary has a six part series of posts that presses the claim that Emacs does, in fact, adhere to the Unix Philosophy that a program should do one thing and do it well. Almost everyone else’s opinion is that … Continue reading

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Janet Jackson and Crashing Laptops

Raymond Chen occasionally posts interesting stories from his (long) time at Microsoft. His latest offering tells the story of how Janet Jackson used to have the power to crash laptops. It turned out that playing Jackson’s Rhythm Nation on certain … Continue reading

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Brailsford & Kernighan on AWK

Computerphile has a another wonderful discussion between David Brailsford and Brian Kernighan. We are quickly reaching the time when all the original Unix people will be gone (Kernighan is 79 or 80) so these chats are our last chance to … Continue reading

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Keeping Data and Code in the Same File

John D. Cook has another post in his series on coding in Org-mode. The latest emphasizes how you can keep data, code, and documentation in a single (Org) file. There’s nothing new in that idea for most Irreal readers, of … Continue reading

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More dwim-shell-command

Álvaro Ramírez continues his roll with yet another function for his dwim-shell-command framework. This time, it’s a function to combine several .png files into a single .pdf file. As with the other functions, the point is not to enable new … Continue reading

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Tenacity!

Apropos of nothing, this story really appealed to me. I admire cranky guys like Chaturvedi who just resist being pushed around no matter how small the stakes are. The story doesn’t make clear his motivation but I’d guess it’s less … Continue reading

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Fundamental Laws

For some reason there was a recent pointer to this 6 year post by Matthew Jones on some of the fundamental laws of software development. Most of them will be familiar to Irreal readers but it’s nice to see them … Continue reading

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Red Meat Friday: Emacs Sucks

As you can tell from the title, this is the rawest of red meat. The title comes from a post on reddit by BlackberryPerfect938 entitled Why Emacs Sucks. On the one hand, what else is new? Plenty of people try … Continue reading

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From Unix Command to Startup

Matt Rickard has a whimsical post that really appealed to me. The idea, according to his title, is that every Unix command becomes a startup. His first example is grep. Grep’s a utility to search for a particular string in … Continue reading

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D. J.Bernstein on the NSA Corrupting Crypto Standards

J. Bernsein is my type of guy. He’s opinionated, crabby, curmudgeonly, and brilliant. He’s particularly brilliant when it comes to matters of cryptography. One of the things about being curmudgeonly is that you have little tolerance for lies and nonsense … Continue reading

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