Archive for January, 2004

你会看下期的"Talk Asia"吗

Saturday, January 31st, 2004

CNN 网站国际版有个”Talk Asia”栏目,和CNN电视节目中的Talk Asia节目对应,网站上可以看到以前几期的电视节目对话全文,下一期是……自己看吧:

以下引用CNN原文,不代表对所引用文章的全部或部分内容的同意,验证,许可或授权。

COMING UP NEXT WEEK

Chinese pro-democracy activist - Wu’er KaiXi was one of the key student leaders of the Tiananmen square demonstrations in 1989.

Clad in pyjamas with an oxygen mask on his side, he captured the world’s imagination with his fiery speeches and his defiant stance against then Chinese Premier Li Peng. Living in exile since then, Wu’er is still committed to promoting democracy in China.

到时你有兴趣看看他们谈了些什么吗?你会问,我们还不够忙吗?会有空关心这些事?跟我们哪有什么关系?是的,我们忙,和我们确实没什么关系,可是,我们忙,我们忙碌又麻木,我们忧心昨天和他/她的不快,抱怨今天难吃的外卖,感叹明天就会过去的这个礼拜,这不是我们的错,我们中大多数人没法把握生活的节奏,只能洪流一样被冲走,看夜幕中霓虹和车流,觉得恍如隔世,城市里什么都不属于自己,付出青春和热情的地方变得和自己毫不相干,生活的回报如此吝啬,伤心,疲倦慢慢堆满心头,我们自己--或者我们和其他人一道--构造的世界好像在反过头来报复自己,我们尚未完成的功课和明天的梦想似乎永远都不能成真,我们还有没有机会关心另外一片天空的东西,哪怕是没有关系的更多一点的东西?哪怕只是多那么一点点?每个人的答案不一样,我会,我不要禁闭自己,我要看另一片天。

CNN International TalkAsia

 

‘CtrlAltDelete’的发明

Saturday, January 31st, 2004

原载 CNN技术新闻

Meet the inventor of ‘CtrlAltDelete’

David Bradley: Microsoft’s Bill Gates ‘made it famous’

Thursday, January 29, 2004 Posted: 1702 GMT
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Thursday, January 29, 2004 Posted: 12:02 PM EST (1702 GMT)

David Bradley wrote the code for one of the most well-known key combinations around: Ctrl+Alt+Delete.

David Bradley wrote the code for one of the most well-known key combinations around: Ctrl+Alt+Delete.


RESEARCH TRIANGLE PARK, North Carolina (AP) – David Bradley spent five minutes writing the computer code that has bailed out the world’s PC users for decades.

The result was one of the most well-known key combinations around: CtrlAltDelete. It forces obstinate computers to restart when they will no longer follow other commands.

Bradley, 55, is getting a new start of his own. He’s retiring Friday after 28.5 years with IBM.

Bradley joined the company in June 1975 as an engineer in Boca Raton, Florida. By 1980, he was one of 12 working to create the IBM PC. He now works at IBM’s facility in Research Triangle Park.

The engineers knew they had to design a simple way to restart the computer should it fail. Bradley wrote the code to make it work.

“I didn’t know it was going to be a cultural icon,” Bradley said. “I did a lot of other things than CtrlAltDelete, but I’m famous for that one.”

His fame depends on others failures.

At a 20-year celebration for the IBM PC, Bradley was on a panel with Microsoft founder Bill Gates and other tech icons. The discussion turned to the keys.

“I may have invented it, but Bill made it famous,” Bradley said.

Gates didn’t laugh. The key combination also is used when software, such as Microsoft’s Windows operating system, fails.

Bradley, whose name was once mentioned as a clue in the final round of the TV game show “Jeopardy,” will continue teaching at North Carolina State University after retirement.

His office is filled with memories of his time at IBM and the keys that brought him fame in the tech world. He says he has almost every cartoon that featured CtrlAltDelete. There are video clips of the “Jeopardy” show and the panel with Gates.

“After having been the answer on final ‘Jeopardy,’ if I can be a clue in ‘The New York Times’ Sunday crossword puzzle, I will have met all my life’s goals,” Bradley said.

 

Google Galore!

Friday, January 30th, 2004

 

    不要小看google哟,其实有好多有意思的地方呢

Googles Galore!

这是在首页上都看得到的

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