[Original Post at my Blogs | My Blogs]
A (rather) senior aerospace engineer pointed me to the Schindler's List theme in youtube played by Perlman. It's a beautiful piece — there's absolutely no doubt about that. But I find it a bit too ... dark, and too ... grim. I really can't explain, but it somehow reminds me to the kind of music played right at the end of an enforced battle between two good friends/siblings/etc.; a battle where the winner wins loses as much as the defeated; a battle where the winner feels empty and full of resignation; where the winner just wants to completely wipe out the undeniable historical fact of his/her hollow victory.
Fortunately, I managed to spot the video of Perlman playing Por una Cabeza, a Tango. And I find this one to be much much lighter and cheerful for my ears, my head, and my heart. Here's the obligatory video on youtube which you could also find below. [PS: Don't be intimidated by the first 20-25 seconds, in case you're not used to classical instrumental songs.]
Perlman played the same piece for the Schindler's List movie, albeit with a different arrangement. I found two audio recordings on youtube, supposedly the original soundtracks: 1st version and 2nd version. Some how I prefer the 1st version than the 2nd, even though it's repetitive. It just sounds ... more cheerful. Might be due to the more upbeat tempo and more variations in the tempo itself [ha, me at my f.k.k.b.l. best]. In any case, the 1st version is also embedded below.
Friday, January 29, 2010
Tango
Sunday, January 10, 2010
The Young Prodigies
[Original Post at my Blogs | My Blogs]
These have been in my locker for quite sometime (yeah, I blame myself for procastinating): two video footage of renowned violinists, born in the early-to-mid of 1900, performing at their (later stage of) childhood. These footage come from circa 1950-ish and therefore, are still in black-and-white.
- Michael Rabin (1936-1972) — he who (tragically) lived for only a short period of time of ~36 years. Here's the video of Rabin performing at the age of 15, in case the youtube video is not embedded below.
- Itzhak Perlman (1945-present) — he who overcome polio and defied the odd to become one of today's most celebrated violinists. Here's the video of Perlman performing at the age of 13, in case the youtube video is not embedded below.
Thursday, October 15, 2009
GPUSVM-0.1 and invalid memory accesses
GPUSVM is a CUDA implementation of SVM which uses the SMO algorithm. This library supports two primary functionalities: training and classification.
The code is written in C++, and the source tar-ball contains an example of how to call performTraining() function once. My woe started when calling performTraining() more than once. This gave me a crash:
*** glibc detected *** bin/linux/release/svmTrain: double free or corruption (out): 0x000000000b6e4820 ***
This was apparently triggered by the second performTraining(). After some (ok, ok, 2 days including CUDA crash course actually) huntings, it turned out that there really are two invalid memory accesses:
- one is during memcpy-ing from device to host memory (occur in the second-order heuristic function);
- another is due to the absence of boundary check in a cache object, which leads to accessing a non-existing object;
in addition to a memory leak (alpha array in performTraining()).
Saturday, August 8, 2009
(i) napping is a trainable skill, & (ii) nap proudly
[Original Post at my Blogs | My Blogs]
Sara Mednick visited Google's Mountain View, CA headquarters to discuss her book, “Take a Nap! Change Your Life.” This event took place on October 15, 2007 as part of the Authors@Google series.
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
An old gem
[Original Post at my Blogs | My Blogs]
Just digging out my old bookmarks, and look at what I found...
An interview with Brian Kernighan (http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~mihaib/kernighan-interview)
Saturday, July 11, 2009
A Nice Fact
[Original Post at my Blogs | My Blogs]
Changi airport is one of the top-class airports globally, as evidence from a series of high-profile awards.
Therefore, it must mean something when its website offers a version in Indonesian, apart from English, Mandarin, and Japanese.
Notice from the picture below, the language selections in top-right of the webpage, and the content in Indonesian language.
Sunday, June 28, 2009
Thumbs up for Incheon Intl. Airport, Big Boo for Google's Language Auto-Detection
[My return flight will be departing in about 1.5 hours. Not surprisingly, there're some time to spend on, and here're the outcome...]
:)
There's a free wifi in the airport. It's one of the few airports with such a service. Most airports I've visited provides only paid wifi.
X(
Google's language auto-detect sucks.
Oh well, to clarify (now I'm a bit calmer), the idea is good. But, the execution is not perfect.
See the following screenshot. The blogger.com by default displays Korean characters. There's absolutely no clue for a layman on how to change the displayed language to English.
After a-couple-of-second's screaming within my head, I somehow became curious enough to click the top-right drop-down box. Luckily, it was what I looked for.
Btw., notice how the Flash ads are still in English?
Monday, June 1, 2009
Idealism vs Realism
Sometimes, just sometimes, idealism must give ways to realism.
As much as I like the idealism of KHTML, I've to be realistic that many Javascript-heavy websites such as “fb.c” work better with Webkit. Well, it shouldn't be surprising since Webkit (which is a derivative of KHTML) is THE engine that powers up Apple's Safari and Google's Chrome. Therefore, it's expected to have a better compatibility with many websites out there.
And the combination of Konqueror+Webkit in KDE-4.3 (beta-1) seems promising enough --- apart from the occasional benign crashes due to “nsplugginwrapper”. In KDE-4.2 (or before), I didn't use this combo because (i) it's unstable, and (ii) Webkit ignored all my settings particularly the font size.
Still, it shows that idealism is not for nothing. In fact, it arguably occupies a significant place in society & history. Without KHTML, would Safari and Chrome be born? In a way, this reminds me to scientific research, where theories and their applications can be separated by decades.
