By Martin on 29.04.2009 16:12
Today, 10 years ago a few people started a new company based in Dortmund, Germany. It’s goal: Realize a pure software-based Voice over IP PBX running on Windows Server. We called the company: 
Astonishing that it’s already ten years. And it’s still a lot of fun :-) Update: I found a photo from that time. That’s Swyx in 1999:
I’m not sure of the exact date of the photo. It’s sometime in 1999.
|
By morten.rokosz on Tue, 28 Apr 2009 10:48:00 GMT
We decided to start our own company! I am no longer an YIT employee. Read More » |
By morten.rokosz on Tue, 28 Apr 2009 07:23:28 GMT
Check out this ‘game’ from Microsoft. Don’t limit yourself to be a geek in real life, step into your virtual parallel universe.
Designed to look like any C64 game, it’s fun (and yes, of course it is some kind of advertising) Click the picture to play (requires Silverlight)
|
By morten.rokosz on Wed, 22 Apr 2009 22:33:02 GMT
Are you into the business of sharing your screen. Here are two free tools to help you do just that. Read More » |
|
By Tom Wellige on Montag, 20. April 2009 09:03
If this has been produced 25 years ago, the world would defiantly be a different one today ! Just imagine that...
|
By Martin on 18.04.2009 22:21
That’s incredible: http://vimeo.com/keithloutit Look closely. It’s no stop-motion animation, even if it looks like it.
Bathtub II from Keith Loutit on Vimeo.
... Read More » |
By Tom Wellige on Freitag, 3. April 2009 08:50
It's been 400 years since Galileo Galilei pointed for the first time in history the newly invented telescope (a set of lenses) into the skies instead of using it for military purpose (for which it was invented for). He quickly discovered that the sky is much larger than expected and things up there do not match with current believes about how the world is functioning. The "knowledge" back then was highly influenced by the church(es) i.e. religions.
He first discovered that the moon is not flat but instead found craters and mountains to be plastic (3D) objects.
When pointing his telescope to the Jupiter the first time he figured three new stars close by the planet. The next night he was quite surprised that these "stars" had moved and also a fourth "star" appeared additionally. He concluded that these were no stars but instead moons orbiting around... Read More » |