| Why are far things small? | 2 0 0 8 |
May 30 |
Where, but the web, would you find someone like Oliver Steele? This ain’t no metaphor. That name was a link. I’m not talking about Oliver Steele the person, I haven’t met him (though I apparently am 1-degree of separation from him; weird, that). I’m not talking about the sweating, walking, pinchable, space-and-time-and-flesh-bound avatar, I’m talking about his online persona. And either I’ve gotten crazy enough or technology has advanced enough that I’m ready to treat Oliver Steele —the link, his blog, words, diagrams, code, and further media— as a person by its own merits.
And, boy, is he an interesting guy:- My no TV. It is, too, one of my most valuable possessions.
- Functional JS is a sweet, sweet library, with one of the best documentations I’ve ever seen. Stuff like this is what makes the interwebs the best place on earth. And no, I don’t mean that as a metaphor either.
- Addition fractions. Y’know how fractions deal with multiplication? They need not be!

- Interactive regular expressions. Live regex! Nothing like interaction to make easy and fun once chores.
- Why are far things small? and other really hard questions from Steele’s kids.
- Visualizing basic algebra.

- Fluently: a construction kit for chainable methods. Finally, a word for the programming style I’ve been hinting at: Fluent interfaces!
- Learning about constraint diagrams

- A metaphor of computer’s history.
- The true advantages of Macs. I agree.
- The metaphor of the rock.

- Aargh!. How to spell it? It’s genius’s mark to have this much fun with such a trivial question.


