Haul 1.20 Waiting Torture

26. May, 2010

Finally I managed to post the next scene. Sorry again for the delay but RL took its toll. Don’t forget to post a comment if you like the story (and you must post a comment if you don’t like it!)

1.20 Waiting Torture – To his surprise, Forne Rako finds himself alive. He’s not so sure how happy he should feel about it.

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Endlich habe ich es geschafft die nächste Szene hochzuladen. Vergiss nicht einen Kommentar zu posten, wenn dir die Geschichte gefällt (und wenn sie dir nicht gefällt, dann musst du einen Kommentar posten!)

1.20 Wartefolter – Zu seiner Überraschung stellt Forne Rako fest, dass er noch lebt. Er ist aber nicht sicher, wie glücklich er darüber sein sollte.

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Next scene of Haul on hold

24. May, 2010

Haven’t been able to post the next two scenes of Haul because of RL. Working on it.


Gall’s Law

21. May, 2010

I just stumbled over Gall’s Law:

“A complex system that works is invariably found to have evolved from a simple system that worked. The inverse proposition also appears to be true: A complex system designed from scratch never works and cannot be made to work. You have to start over, beginning with a working simple system.”

I you ever join a software project and someone mentions “complete rewrite”, you know two things for a fact:

  1. The current software sucks
  2. The rewrite will suck more.

Not convinced? See what Joel Spolsky has to say: Things You Should NEVER Do, Part I

If you still won’t believe, come back after the complete rewrite.


hg convert and “abort: Interrupted system call”

20. May, 2010

If you get “abort: Interrupted system call” when running “hg convert”, then see this issue for a workaround.


Worse-is-better

18. May, 2010

I just stumbled over “The Rise of “Worse is Better”“. The article deals with the “get it right the first time” and the “get it as right as possible” dilemma. In Software development, you often have a situation where you don’t know enough for “get it right 100%” and you don’t have the time to learn. Or “get it right 100%” just isn’t possible.

In the end, “do it as good as you can” is, all things considered, better than the alternative. Or as Bill Gates allegedly said: “Windows doesn’t contain any bugs which any big number of users wants to have fixed.”

Which explains nicely why programming languages which strive for perfectionism (like Lisp) never really caught on. There are just too few perfectionists – and it’s a recessive trait.


env.js has a new website

17. May, 2010

env.js has a new website at http://www.envjs.com/.

Just in case you don’t know why you need it:

Envjs is a simulated browser environment written in javascript.

If you still don’t know: You can use env.js to simulate a web browser in unit tests (among other things).


Uploaded first snapshot of ePen 0.9

15. May, 2010

I’ve just uploaded the first snapshot of the 0.9 prerelease on Sourceforge. Changes since 0.8:

  • Make text links in translations work
  • HTML: Use outline title in changelog
  • HTML layout. Index section in scene files needs some distance from the window border
  • Remember the editing position and open the same file with the cursor at the same place when the project is opened again
  • Editor for feedback page
  • HTML: Scroll mini-toc to the current scene
  • Going back and forward in the editing history will now scroll the text and place the cursor where it has been.

You can find it in the download area of the project.


Haul 1.18 Chances and 1.19 Hero’s Death

9. May, 2010

Two more scenes from chapter 1 are ready. Don’t forget to post a comment if you like the story (and you must post a comment if you don’t like it!)

1.18 Chances – Rarrarar asks Raor to translate Forne’s words.

1.19 Hero’s Death – Raor works on the translation of Forne’s words.

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Zwei weitere Szenen aus Kapitel 1 sind online. Vergiss nicht einen Kommentar zu posten, wenn dir die Geschichte gefällt (und wenn sie dir nicht gefällt, dann musst du einen Kommentar posten!)

1.18 Chancen – Rarrarar bittet Raor die Worte von Forne zu übersetzen.

1.19 Heldentod – Raor arbeitet an der Übersetzung der Worte von Forne.

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ePen 0.8.0 released

6. May, 2010

I’ve just uploaded the ePen 0.8.0 release on SourceForge.net. You can find it in the download area of the project.

To install, follow the instructions in the README.txt (either in the archive or in the download area).

To get an idea what the software can do, see my story “Haul” (auch in Deutsch verfügbar).


Aliens

3. May, 2010

Recently, Stephen Hawking warned: Don’t talk to aliens. His argument: Aliens could be dangerous for us, either because they are like us (just think how the Native Americans were treated to get an idea) or because the very contact with an advanced culture will ruin us (think of the Australian Aborigines) or because they could simply wipe us out since we could become a threat or simply because they like our planet more than us. Let’s have a closer look at these arguments.

Which is more simple: To build artificial mini-planets (only a few kilometers across) which orbit around a star in the habitable zone or send an arch over thousands of light years to another system? A system which has a different star with a different light spectrum. Could we live under a class A star without adjusting our bodies? Anyone know that? Would we still be human, if we did? My conclusion: If aliens make the trip, it’s not for site development or the beaches. If they can build an ark, they can much more easily build their own fancy planets in a place that is much more like home.

Resources maybe? There is no indication that our star system is especially rich in terms of resources. The sad fact is that we can’t reach most of the resources; we can’t mine the Moon, Mars, the asteroid belt, Jupiter (for gases) or the Oort cloud. We can’t even harvest more than an insignificant amount of the energy the Sun sends into space. If we could mine those resources and we really needed more, why fly thousands of light years when you have hundreds of uninhabitable star systems that are much closer? Why mine resources which are potentially defended when you can have billions times that in places where no one will bother you? Do you really think the rare unobtanium from Pandora exists only in that single place? And if they came here, why bother with Earth when you have so much more resources in places that are easier to reach?

Life tends to spread. I find it hard to believe that aliens would all evolve in a single place without spreading. If they spread, they will know about the devastating effect of the contact of two cultures at a different level. Maybe they would ignore it but what for? Even evil people act for a reason. A single madman won’t be able to build an ark. A society of madmen would do even worse and all the rest will be stopped by their bureaucracy.

America wasn’t conquered for fun, they did it for space (as in area to build a house on and the freedom to think and talk). If you don’t need more room and you can simply retreat to your own private mini-planet, why conquer space? Why invest a thousand years on something that you already have for free?

Slave labor? My guess is that evolved aliens will pay to work because all work will be done by machines. Today, robots aren’t cheap enough (in terms of money, time to train them or energy they consume) for widespread usage. But they will become smaller, cheaper and learn to train themselves. They will need maintenance but won’t go on strike because we will program them this way; there is just no reason to make a screw driver smarter than it being able to lock on the screw head and recognize the strength of the nut so it won’t break anything.

So in the end, I agree with the old joke:

Q: Why were we never visited by aliens?

A: Because they are intelligent.

If that were not the case, they wouldn’t get here (= too dump to build ark). And there simply is no reason to get here because there is nothing here for them. All the people hoping for alien visits expect that they will solve our problems. What smart person would want to visit a place like that? Maybe a parent. Or a friend.

My conclusion is that alien life out there is probably actively ignoring us. If they are technologically advanced, there is no reason to believe we can hide from them. And if they are advanced, I can’t find a reason to fear them either. Can you?