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The Musical Box (Vol. 4)

Music

It’s a bit overdue due to the site moving, but here’s last month’s collection of musical discoveries.

Hot Springs

While Montreal has a burgeoning indie rock scene, I can’t claim that this is something that I’m especially “hip” to. That is why I was only introduced to the Hot Springs by T’Cha Dunlevy’s (a name so hip you can barely even Google it) best of 2007 list. I think Mark Lepage said it best when he described lead singer Giselle Webber as as “flame shaped like a girl” and touted the music as “a devastating fusion of Bjork and Robert Plant.” This is definitely a band to watch.

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CUSEC 2008

Montreal, Programming

CUSEC 2008

Yesterday marked the end of CUSEC 2008, a three day software engineering conference for Canadian university students. While the conference has been going annually since 2002, this was my first year attending. I had initially planned to be quasi-live blogging the whole thing, but I hadn’t realized how busy the three days were going to be. Instead, here’s a quick recap of some of the terrific people I heard from at CUSEC.

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Battlestar Galactica

Television

I don’t watch much television, but when I do like a show I follow it religiously. My favorite series of all time was Firefly, a peerless science fiction series that was tragically cancelled after 14 episodes. I plan to elaborate on my love for that particular show someday, but for now let’s just say that there’s been a hole in my sci-fi loving heart since 2002. My enjoyment of the new Dr. Who is a poor substitute, with its lack of an overarching narrative and generally poorly developed characters.

Battlestar Galactica

When my friend’s father, Dave, told me that he was enjoying the re-imagined Battlestar Galactica series, I was sceptical at first. Dave is a big fan of sci-fi television, but he also enjoys series such as Stargate and Babylon Five that I never really got into. I also felt that a show whose cast of characters were primarily military and government officials would be too dry; I prefer characters who are on the gray side of the law, such as Malcolm Reynolds and Han Solo.

However, last week on a whim I broke down and asked to borrow his Season 1 DVD set. It took a while to get going, but I’m now 4/5ths in and completely enthralled. Some of the characters, such as President Roslin, Colonel Tigh and Dr. Baltar, are interesting people with complex motivations. The show also does a good job of keeping enough hidden to allow for a perpetual sense of mystery. I’m already speculating as to which of the crew members are really Cylon sleeper agents.

It’s not Firefly, but it’ll do for now.

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The Case of the Mystery Operator

Programming

PythonInspired partially by xkcd and partially by testimony from other programmers, I’ve decided to take up learning Python in my spare time. I’ve been using the free e-book Dive Into Python as a reference, and it’s been an interesting experience so far (whitespace for code blocks!?)

I was showing the Python Shell to my friend Thomas the other day, and he typed in a few equations to try it out. While “2+2” and “3*8” resolved normally, “2^3”, which is a standard notation for two raised to the third power, returned “1”. We were a bit confused, but decided that the caret symbol “^” must mean something else in Python. We entered a few more formulas in an attempt to discover what the symbol meant, and here are the results:

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Uncommon RSS Feeds

Internet

While I possess a startlingly wide array of methods to waste my time, one of my favorites lately has been Google Reader. It’s nice to know that I can sit down at my computer and always find something to read, be it an interesting blog, gaming news or webcomic. However, speckled among the nerdy ones are a few feeds that are quite different from my usual fare. I thought I’d take the time today to highlight some of these strange sites, with the hopes that you too might discover a new quirky feed to liven up your RSS reader with.

Google Sightseeing

Google Sightseeing

Google Earth is a great toy, but like most people I played with it for a few hours before moving on to other things. The folks at Google Sightseeing, however, have been scouring the globe to bring us all sorts of landmarks and oddities. Whether it be rolling snowballs in Antarctica, hippos in Zambia or whales off the cost of Mexico, Google Sightseeing is like National Geographic done accidentally by satellite robot photographers.

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