Cyblog.ru has some pictures of the new marina project for Larnaca. I have no idea where these are from and if that is at all reliable, but one thing is for sure – it does look super cool!
Year: 2011
Day in brief – 2011-10-27
- I just wrote yet another poem in Greek: kafenaki, frapedaki – tou Leonida filoraki. :) #
- And how about you? Have you ever written a poem in the language that you don't speak? :) #
- Every time I hear someone saying "Oh my god", I say "No, honey, that's just me". :) #
- @feios Thank you :) #
- They say social networks are killing email. BS! The only way for me to follow all these social networks is via email notifications! #
- I just learned something new. Ladies and gentlemen, without further ado, I give you Bulbus Stercum. LOL :) http://t.co/Y6MvAiim #
- Shared: WPTavern: Alex King Releases Post Formats Admin UI Code http://t.co/NuVDJAD0 #
- Shared: Alex King: WordPress Post Formats Admin UI http://t.co/HTjDURTl #
- Shared: WPTavern: Service To Help Migrate From Drupal To WordPress http://t.co/fFsYfqm1 #
- Shared: WPTavern: Chip Bennett Working On New Template Hierarchy Diagram http://t.co/SzpCJBZm #
- New note : http://t.co/48P7ilbU – Collaborative translation tool http://t.co/ZAH85xfg #
- I favorited a @YouTube video http://t.co/6FAdXZJw Галя! (ОСТОРОЖНО! Ненормативная лексика!) #
- I'm at Green Apple http://t.co/r5CaG4bw #
- I just became the mayor of Green Apple on @foursquare! http://t.co/2mvFcddG #
Limassol twilight
Lessons learned from a social news website
Back in February 2009, Paul Graham shared the lessons he’d learned from a side project of his – social news website Hacker News. I’ve read it back then, of course, but once again someone pointed out to me the value of that article and I went back. It is a must read for any web developer or even anyone who participates in online discussions, social networks, or just maintains a blog. Here is my favorite section that explains bad comments.
There are two main kinds of badness in comments: meanness and stupidity. There is a lot of overlap between the two—mean comments are disproportionately likely also to be dumb—but the strategies for dealing with them are different. Meanness is easier to control. You can have rules saying one shouldn’t be mean, and if you enforce them it seems possible to keep a lid on meanness.
Keeping a lid on stupidity is harder, perhaps because stupidity is not so easily distinguishable. Mean people are more likely to know they’re being mean than stupid people are to know they’re being stupid.
The most dangerous form of stupid comment is not the long but mistaken argument, but the dumb joke. Long but mistaken arguments are actually quite rare. There is a strong correlation between comment quality and length; if you wanted to compare the quality of comments on community sites, average length would be a good predictor. Probably the cause is human nature rather than anything specific to comment threads. Probably it’s simply that stupidity more often takes the form of having few ideas than wrong ones.
Whatever the cause, stupid comments tend to be short. And since it’s hard to write a short comment that’s distinguished for the amount of information it conveys, people try to distinguish them instead by being funny. The most tempting format for stupid comments is the supposedly witty put-down, probably because put-downs are the easiest form of humor. [5] So one advantage of forbidding meanness is that it also cuts down on these.
Bad comments are like kudzu: they take over rapidly. Comments have much more effect on new comments than submissions have on new submissions. If someone submits a lame article, the other submissions don’t all become lame. But if someone posts a stupid comment on a thread, that sets the tone for the region around it. People reply to dumb jokes with dumb jokes.
Maybe the solution is to add a delay before people can respond to a comment, and make the length of the delay inversely proportional to some prediction of its quality. Then dumb threads would grow slower.
Doctor ibn Engineer
I had an interesting idea today, which somehow transformed into a rather lengthy thought train, which, in turn, pushed me to browse quite a bit of Wikipedia, and, finally, to write this blog post. It’s just one of those things that I spent some time thinking about which has no practical purpose rather then annoy and entertain readers of this blog and confusing Google into bringing in more people, searching for rather random things.
I started off with names and naming conventions. People names, to be more precise, and how different cultures approached the naming. Remember, those Arabic names that trace the ancestry of a person using the “ibn” word, which means the “son of”. Abdul ibn Hasan ibn Abdurahman ibn Foo ibn Blah ibn .. it can go for ever. No, remember those surnames based on the profession of a person, used by many cultures. Baker, Fisher, Hunter, Miller, Parker, and so on.
Wouldn’t it be fun to see these two paradigms mixed up. We’d still use “ibn” to indicate the “son of” part. But instead of meaningless father’s name we’d use father’s profession. In conjunction with the regular first name and last name that could give some really awesome names. For example, my son could have been Maxim ibn Programmer ibn Engineer ibn Projectionist Mamchenkov. How cool is that? For a change, most people’s full names would be interesting. The downside? Those families with the same profession running through generation would be really boring. But they would still have something to feel proud about. John ibn Doctor ibn Doctor ibn Doctor ibn Doctor ibn Doctor Healer. I’d be more than willing to trust my health into his capable hands!
What would your name be like?