Richard, I see your 34 matches and counter with 46 players named “Jeppe” in Europe and 9 in the American World of Warcraft. ;-)
(Of course “Jeppe” is a fairly common name in Scandinavia, especially in Denmark.)
Richard, I see your 34 matches and counter with 46 players named “Jeppe” in Europe and 9 in the American World of Warcraft. ;-)
(Of course “Jeppe” is a fairly common name in Scandinavia, especially in Denmark.)
Oh my god, it is full of stars…
I got my first computer pretty much 20 years ago. I’ve been a gamer and I’ve followed the cool stuff the demo scene put out. I thought I was a hardened user, one which simply doesn’t get “wow’ed” anymore.
Enter Apple and iTunes to prove me wrong.
Their new visualizer is simply stunning. Words would be wasted, take a look:
Needless to say… I am currently going through my classical music collection. The Blue Danube is playing as I write this, and it is stunning.
As promised, here is the other cool thing IronPort did with Lego bricks:

The little sign reads:
IronPort 3D Logo 2007 Built by New York-based artist Nathan Sawaya in the IronPort booth during the 2007 Interhop event in Las vegas, this Lego exhibit was awarded “Most Ludicrous Promotion” by Smart Exhibits magazine. More about the artist: Nathan Sawaya creates awe-inspiring works out of the most unlikely things. His recent North American museum tours feature large-scale sculptures using only Lego bricks. www.brickartist.com. No Legos were harmed in the making of this piece. 42″ x 42″ x 60″
This sculpture now stands in the lobby of the IronPort HQ in San Bruno.

Okay – Do I work for the coolest company ever, or what? This is a LEGO model of an IronPort appliance, something they gave out last year at a trade fair. I just found it on Flickr.
I’ll try to get my hands on one of these, but I am sure there are none left. There’s something else I’ll post a photo of. Stay tuned.
I met a coworker of mine on the Lufthansa shuttle bus yesterday. She is a trainee at Lufthansa Systems, and she had another female trainee with her.
After introductions were passed, this other girl said, “Ah, you are the guy who runs around with the Turbo Linux T-Shirt.”
Now, I’ve worn this shirt I think once since I started to work for Lufthansa Systems. And already I am "the guy with the Turbo Linux Shirt". Gee. I am not sure whether I should consider this a good thing – after all people did take notice of me – or a bad thing – after all people did take notice of me as being a Linux geek.