Odds and Ends
Some stuff out there in the Internet.
Copyright Tal Liron. All rights reserved, unless explicitly stated otherwise.
Articles About Programming
- Remote-Control Java (JavaWorld, 7.2002) (Chinese translation)
- Launching into Java (JavaWorld, 9.2001)
- Enhance your Java application with Java Native Interface (JavaWorld, 8.1999)
Articles About Android
Academic Articles
- Franz Boas and the Discovery of Culture (BA thesis, 5.2003)
- Habits of Computerized Communication at Amherst College (5.8.2000)
Articles About Yoga
- The Most Important Yoga Pose (LiveJournal, 2.4.2009)
- On Binding (LiveJournal, 1.5.2009)
- Control: Inverted Balance (LiveJournal, 10.9.2008)
- The Benefits of Being Upside-Down (LiveJournal, 9.23.2008)
- Taste of Chicago Yoga (LiveJournal, 8.2008)
- Mechanics of Breathing (LiveJournal, 7.13.2008)
- Yoga and Breath (LiveJournal, 5.3.2008)
- A Few Benefits of Yoga (LiveJournal, 2.11.2008)
- A Few Tips for Yoga Practitioners (LiveJournal, 12.13.2007)
- Deliberately Finding Joy Through Yoga (LiveJournal, 6.17.2007)
Opinions
- Jews in Space (The New Athenian, 5.6.2003)
- AAS sabotages ideals of liberal arts education (The Amherst Student, 1.29.2003)
- No Need to Argue (The Amherst Student, 5.2.2002)
- One Race to Rule Them All (The New Athenian, 3.25.2002)
- Amherst, Microsoft: Compare and Contrast (The Amherst Student, 2.7.2001)
- Amherst's Multicultural Identity (The Amherst Student, 11.8.2000)
- The Hidden Agenda of Creation Science (The Amherst Student, 9.20.2000)
Angry Letters
(letter titles are by editors, not by me)
- Speakers' hidden purpose (The Amherst Student, 10.23.2002)
- Use a focused approach, not hyperbole (The Amherst Student, 5.1.2002) !
- College news has become irrelevant (The Amherst Student, 4.10.2002) !
- Hillel fails to include all Jews (The Amherst Student, 2.20.2002) !
- Ideological arguments blur reality (The Amherst Student, 5.1.2001)
- The (new and better) Spectator (The Amherst Student, 4.25.2001) !
Articles About Me
- "Firecracker" Tal Liron makes himself heard, by David Chen (The Amherst Student, 5.25.2003)