👓 Solomon Golomb (1932–2016) | Stephen Wolfram

Read Solomon Golomb (1932–2016) by Stephen WolframStephen Wolfram (blog.stephenwolfram.com)

The Most-Used Mathematical Algorithm Idea in History

An octillion. A billion billion billion. That’s a fairly conservative estimate of the number of times a cellphone or other device somewhere in the world has generated a bit using a maximum-length linear-feedback shift register sequence. It’s probably the single most-used mathematical algorithm idea in history. And the main originator of this idea was Solomon Golomb, who died on May 1—and whom I knew for 35 years.

Solomon Golomb’s classic book Shift Register Sequences, published in 1967—based on his work in the 1950s—went out of print long ago. But its content lives on in pretty much every modern communications system. Read the specifications for 3GLTEWi-FiBluetooth, or for that matter GPS, and you’ll find mentions of polynomials that determine the shift register sequences these systems use to encode the data they send. Solomon Golomb is the person who figured out how to construct all these polynomials.

A fantastic and pretty comprehensive obit for Sol. He did miss out on more of Sol’s youth as well as his cross-town chess rivalry with Basil Gordon when they both lived in Baltimore, but before they lived across town from each other again in Los Angeles.

Many of the fantastical seeming stories here, as well as Sol’s personality read very true to me with respect to the man I knew for almost two decades.

👓 How I Twitter | Leo Laporte

Read How I Twitter by Leo Laporte (Leo Laporte)
As you may know I deactivated my half-million follower/bot twitter account last August. I don’t miss it at all except as a newsfeed. Twitter practically killed RSS readers by providing a firehose of instantaneously “curated” news. With all its flaws, that firehose is useful for a variety of re...

👓 #44067 (Refactor get_avatar and related functions to make Gravatar a Hook instead of a Default) | WordPress Trac

Read #44067 (Refactor get_avatar and related functions to make Gravatar a Hook instead of a Default) (WordPress Trac)

👓 Reverting the Bulk Ticket Closing | Make WordPress Core

Read Reverting the Bulk Ticket Closing (Make WordPress Core)
Recently, a bulk modification was performed on Trac affecting 2,300+ tickets that had not seen any activity in 2 years or more. These tickets were closed and marked as wontfix. To read a more detai…

Burrowing owl by Scott Gruber | Dribbble

Read Burrowing owl by Scott GruberScott Gruber (Dribbble)

Charley Harper inspired

Artistic image of an owl that looks a bit like a microphone in shape and decoration

Scott mentioned this wonderful bit of his artwork at the vHWC tonight. While it’s an owl, I thought from some perspective that it looked a lot like a microphone and might make a good logo for Marty McGuire’s Screech Micropub app for podcasting. If you need some artwork, Scott says he’d love to see it used…

👓 Data sharing and how it can benefit your scientific career l Nature

Read Data sharing and how it can benefit your scientific career (Nature)
Open science can lead to greater collaboration, increased confidence in findings and goodwill between researchers.

👓 Why Are So Many Longtime L.A. Bookstores Closing? | Hollywood Reporter

Read Why Are So Many Longtime L.A. Bookstores Closing? (The Hollywood Reporter)
Despite the recent shuttering of Circus of Books, Caravan Book Store and Samuel French, bookstore experts say the end for the city's brick-and-mortar stores isn't nigh: "There is a sea change happening, and it is noteworthy."

🎧 This Week in Google 504 Gelato in Perugia With Craig | TWiT.TV

Listened to This Week in Google 504 Gelato in Perugia With Craig by Leo Laporte, Jeff Jarvis, Mathew Ingram from TWiT.tv

Facebook Hell, Julian Assange, Notre Dame

  • Documents "Confirm" Facebook Used Your Data Against Rivals
  •  Google I/O Plans: Will Pixel 3a Be There?
  •  YouTube Falsely Hints Notre Dame Fire was Terrorism
  •  Defending Assange: Hard but Necessary
  •  The Open Internet is Under Attack
  •  YouTube Wants to Reward "Quality Watch Time"
  •  Congratulations 2019 Pulitzer Winners!
  •  Facebook's 15 Months of Hell
  •  Twitter "Prioritizes" Abuse Flags
  •  Jack Dorsey Floats Controversial Twitter Changes
  •  Secret Service Mishandle Mar-A-Lago Malware
  •  Illinois' Anti-Alexa Law Has No Teeth
  •  Pixel Camera Adds Kiss Detection
  •  Galaxy Fold Review Units Breaking
  •  Twitter Deletes Journalists' Tweets about Torrent Story

Picks of the Week

  •  Jeff's Numbers: Mayor Pete speaks Binary, Get naked to protest social media
  •  Mathew's Thing: Assassin's Creed Unity will be used to rebuild Notre-Dame cathedral

👓 Umberto Eco’s Antilibrary: Why Unread Books Are More Valuable to Our Lives than Read Ones l Brainpickings

Read Umberto Eco’s Antilibrary: Why Unread Books Are More Valuable to Our Lives than Read Ones (BrainPickings)
How to become an “antischolar” in a culture that treats knowledge as “an ornament that allows us to rise in the pecking order.”

👓 My Library of Unread Books | Rhoneisms

Read My Library of Unread Books by Patrick Rhone (patrickrhone.net)
“A library of mostly unread books is far more inspiring than a library of books already read. There’s nothing more exciting than finishing a book, and walking over to your shelves to figure out what you’re going to read next.” — Gabe Habash Here’s an incomplete sampling of mine (and many...