During yesterday's class, as part of a puzzle-solving team, I wrote a Python program and a comic skit. That was really nice.
If you miss Spamusement, then spamuse yourself by guessing the subject lines that led to these comics. Speaking of trivia quizzes, Leonard and I played this periodic table quiz and some other quizzes from that …
I now grok feedback I've been getting from my superiors for weeks. I need to improve my listening skills and help other people feel comfortable in difficult discussions. Time to reread Carnegie!
Leonard's daily conference call just now sounded like You Look Nice Today. Thus, I thought of an idea for another comedy podcast: a parody of a daily or weekly conference call. Think The Office. Also …
I can't wait to be done with school so I can travel, see friends, get back into How To Design Programs, and generally relax and catch up. Near-future plans of this type include: Yay visitors! …
Yesterday, in the back of the M60 bus coming back home from Columbia, I overheard a group of people discussing hair, phones, cable companies, the wireless auction, etc. I offered a factlet about rotary dial …
in an email I just sent: DTs, SEs, Meetup, WebGrrrls [actually WebGrrls], LinkedIn, WTF, hackathon, Twitteriffic [actually Twitterrific], miniconference, nametags, MoMA, PMing. I wonder if you can deduce what the email was about.
I'm reading Trollope's autobiography and need help understanding this passage: The [clerical] critic, however, had been driven to wrath by my saying that Deans of the Church of England loved to revisit the glimpses of …
I just saw stick-figure whiteboard diagrams and thought for a moment that they were an xkcd.
"Mallory," a near-future sci-fi tale by my husband Leonard, is published at Futurismic. I absolutely love it and hope you do too.