"According to the 2000 census, Iranian-Americans have the highest percentage of graduate degrees among any of the ancestry groups surveyed by the census. A report compiled by the Iranian Studies Group at MIT also points to the financial success of Iranian-Americans and their strong role in the U.S. economy."
According to a report compiled by the Iranian Studies Group at MIT (ISG), based on the recently released socioeconomic data of the 2000 census, Iranian-Americans are still among the most successful ancestry groups in the U.S.
This one is also interesting: "20.8% of Iranian-Americans live in houses valued at >$500,000 in comparison to only 3% of the U.S. population."
Guardian:
"Social networking sites are spreading like a rash through the internet, but are they sustainable."
"In the beginning, way back in 1996, it was SixDegrees. Last year, it was Friendster. Last week, it was Orkut. Next week, it could be Flickr. All these websites, and dozens more, are designed to build networks of friends, and they are currently at the forefront of the trendiest internet development: social networking. But unless they can start to offer more substantial benefits, it is hard to see them all surviving, once the Friend Of A Friend (Foaf) standard becomes a normal part of life on the net."
Orkut - named after its creator, Orkut Buyukkokten - is the hot site of the moment.
Buyukkokten, a computer science doctoral candidate at Stanford University before joining Google, created Orkut.com in the past several months by working on it about one day a week--an amount that Google asks all of its engineers to devote to personal projects.
[CNET]
Because Friendster-style software is easy to produce, Orkut's biggest advantage is its close association with Google. This has helped it attract the "alpha geek" bloggers and commentators on social software. But being new is an advantage in itself. Join a new service and there are lots of things to do, such as tracking down friends and entering your lists of favourite movies, and so on. Perhaps not until the initial activity has died down, in a few months, will many users start to wonder if there are any practical benefits.
The idea of creating a machine readable data format (a vcard type of thing) is fabulous. Imagine having a web address -say, profiles.friendster.com/unique_name.xml - where everyone can pull up your information and you (and only you) can edit your
information through an interface. That's what makes all the social networking sites one - and makes the largest of that kind.
Orkut's interface is unique, and much faster than friendster. What makes is so different from friendster
is the fact that it's a closed invitation-only system. It's all started in the bay area, so the chances are
high you ran into many random people who you know.
What kind of social software are you?
Have a good weekend :)
Computers History
History of Unix: I have printed this one out and put it on my office wall.
With a delay of one week: Be my valentine :)
Interesting list/text of some books in Farsi by Khabgard.
Play this color game and discover your personality.
SEATTLE - Microsoft Corp. said late Thursday that parts of its Windows source code - the tightly guarded blueprint of its dominant computer operating system - had been leaked over the Internet.
Microsoft spokesman Tom Pilla said in an interview with The Associated Press that some incomplete portions of the Windows 2000 and Windows NT 4.0 source code had been "illegally made available on the Internet."
Compelete Story
|
List of Files
Update: List of the files used to be available via the above link but
it's gone now. There were files such as win2k/private/[username]/src/[filename].c
as far as I remember...
We should be expecting a
new look for Google soon. They're not
official yet though...
Update [March, 10]: To view the demo yourself, just visit
this page
and follow the instructions. You need to drop a link to your bookmarks, visit
google and click on that link to switch your view. *Very Interesting*!
And, did you notice Google showing
Julia Fractals
on its logo? Well, read
an interesting story
here...