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2005 07
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spammer death

posted by jack at 09:17 CET in / compute feed

Famed Russian spammer Vardan Kushnir was found murdered in his home in Moscow yesterday. Kushnir was apparently famous for saying "spam was what e-mails were for".

It's unknown whether he was killed by a group of angry spam recipients, but that's where I'd put my money if I were a betting man.

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Re: spammer death
Jon H wrote on Tue, 22 Nov 2005 08:28

"It's unknown whether he was killed by a group of angry spam recipients, but that's where I'd put my money if I were a betting man"

It's entirely possible that they weren't aware of the act, and that their mere murderous *thoughts* became flesh momentarily and did the deed.

Sort of an "annoyance golem", if you will.


[ reply to this ]

spinvaders 0.0.4

posted by jack at 09:07 CET in / compute / programming / spinvaders feed

New version of spinvaders is out. This is primarily a bug-fix release; the main bug was that 0.0.3 and earlier could not run on Mac OS X 10.4; Now, spinvaders is much more future-proof and should continue to run "forever". screenshot

Changes in this version:

  • This version now works correctly on the latest version of Mac OS X (10.4, "Tiger")
  • Cleaned up some sprites
  • Player weapon now turns partly green when it is in "supergun" mode

And here's where to get it:

  • spinvaders for Macintosh (made for Mac OS X 10.4, but probably works on 10.3 as well)
  • No windows build of spinvaders 0.0.4 is available at this time

Installation is the same as before: The Mac version is in a disk image; you can copy the enclosed application and run it from wherever you like.

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Wil Shipley, my hero

posted by jack at 13:56 CET in / compute / people feed

Back in the mid-90's, when I was a NeXTStep consultant, getting a job at OmniGroup was a sort of recurring daydream to me. Like Integrity Solutions where I worked, OmniGroup did NeXTStep consulting, but also commercial application development. Started by Wil Shipley and Ken Case and surely some other dudes whose names escape me at the moment, Omni seemed like Shangri-La compared to my job. Browsing their website, you'd see descriptions of their work environment, which I'd contrast with mine:

at Omni at Integrity Solutions
all employees worked at omni's office in a casual, fun atmosphere many employees worked in windowless rooms at customer sites, crammed to the point of literally bumping elbows with one another
employees working at the office enjoyed no-cost lunches prepared by on-site chef employees working at the office were supposed to pay a quarter for lousy office coffee
once a month, a professional masseuse came around to rub everyone's shoulders once a month, the CEO would give away a set of hand-crafted juggling bags that he made from old swimsuit fabric
had some sort of gaming room with (then-)state-of-the-art consoles, etc juggling was encouraged
the drudgery of the mind-numbing consulting work was balanced out by being able to design and implement interesting commercial applications the drudgery of the mind-numbing consulting work was balanced out by dreaming of going to work for a better company

As much as I thought about it, for some reason I never tried to get a job there. Probably partly because I didn't want to move, and partly because I was at a stage in my life where, for reasons I don't quite grasp now, complaining about shit seemed like a more useful proposition than trying to actually do something about shit.

Anyway.

At some point (I haven't followed the twists and turns that well), Wil left the company he founded, and started Delicious Monster, which has had a "monster hit" (yuk yuk) with Delicious Library, an application that, to me, seems like cool technology that I would never have guessed would find an audience. Fortunately for Wil and the gang, it has found a huge audience, earning them $250,000 in its first month, receiving awards, etc.

To top it off, Wil has started blogging, which has been fun. One of the more interesting posts lately is about his Student Talk from WWDC 2005, in which Wil gives newbies some advice on starting their own company. Like Wil, I once started my own company; Unlike Wil, I didn't really consider doing commercial app development (if you think the Mac market for commercial software in 2005 is small, try to imagine the miniscule size of the NeXTStep market in 1997!), but focused on consulting, and then let it sort of flounder after I couldn't, on my own, find enough interesting work to do that way.

Three cheers for Wil, the man who proves that nerdery + chutzpah == success.

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