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How many people do you need to have in a room before the chances are more than 50% of a shared birthday? If you haven't seen this before then I urge you to have a guess now. Is it 180 people? More than that? Fewer than that? What do you think? Most people who haven't seen this before get it very wrong, and then are surprised by the answer. In case you are one of the many, many people who get this
I've recently had to upgrade a machine, and have tried to set up various things to happen at initialisation (or "initialization" if you use American spellings). In the process I've had to look at which files get read and executing during the startup, and I thought I'd make a little diagram to share my findings, and record them for my own reference next time I have to do this. The diagram is here o
Introduction In an essay Paul Graham wrote: Kevin Kelleher suggested an interesting way to compare programming languages: to describe each in terms of the problem it fixes. The surprising thing is how many, and how well, languages can be described this way. http://paulgraham.com/fix.html Here is a chart of the resulting dependencies. Oh, and - added later - the original from PG is undated, but the
Experimenting with neato ... As mentioned on Colins Blog, while reading some of Paul Graham's essays I wondered how they were all interconnected. I tried a quick experiment and got an interesting picture, so today I spent another hour and made the map clickable, and slightly better laid out. The result is interesting, and here it is. Quite effective. You can also see Paul Graham Essays Ranking. Th
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