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The Google search engine reminds me that things that seem impossible aren't.

  • Search BILLIONS of complex documents INSTANTLY. done!
  • Recognize normal human input and give useful results. done!
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The new, the neat, and the unfamiliar.

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Google Search Engine

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vote up 9 vote down

Internet! ;)

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Haptics! I recently developed an OpenGL project with a SensAble Phantom Omni haptic device. 'Touching' virtual objects is damn cool if you ask me.

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As a year-long java developer it inspired me to think different when I stumpled upon Groovy, Grails (and now Griffon). It made me think different on OOP and Java. That was the most inspiring technology I found this year

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WPF! Not a day goes by when you don't have a "wow" moment.

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windows presentation foundation, warren. – Scott Oct 13 at 15:44
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vote up 14 vote down

The iPhone. Its sheer beauty in terms of interface design led me to want to create software that was similarly glorious to use. Not that I necessarily succeeded, but the iPhone was (and continues to be) inspirational.

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Machine Intelligence. Just a small advance in something like image recognition could enable so many new technologies.

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scala maybe the next great programming language

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Erlang: When I read Joe Armstrongs book I felt the lightbult turn on

Microcontrollers: Killbots in 3 2 1 ...

The internet: Now it has porn AND google

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I'm part of a team that is developing a cross-platform ERP/CRM software, with a single, very compact code-base written in C++, that is composed of an UI engine, a very fast database engine and a virtual machine (that runs the business logic).

The C++ engine is being built for Symbian S60, Windows CE, Mac OS X, Windows, Linux, Solaris and AIX. We do both 32-bit and 64-bit versions, and use both 32-bit and 64-bit file access. And the same engine is running both server and clients, and is being used for many quite different products that we offer to our customers. All of our products is translated into 26 languages, and the user can switch language on the fly by pressing a key.

With all this, we still have no problem adopting platform-specific technologies such as Cocoa and .NET, performance is great on all platforms, and even though the oldest parts of the code are from the late eighties, we have a straighforward and easy code to work with. We release new versions of our products several times every year, always on all platforms and in all languages at once.

What inspires me is great architectural groundwork that makes this kind of thing feel really easy.

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vote up 10 vote down

StackOverflow.com :)

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Microprocessor design. Hard disk innovation. Do you realize how insane it is to have a 3GHz laptop with a 500GB hard drive? That will be the high-end before 2009.

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I find Unix and the C Programming Language very inspiring. Also not to forget about Python.

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World of Warcraft.

Im a sad geek, aren't I?...

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Browing the sources of a Smalltalk implementation in the Smalltalk Refactoring Browser is always a great source of inspiration. The language kernel is very inspiring for everything OOP related, like the relations between:

  • ProtoObject
  • Object
  • Behavior
  • ClassDescription
  • MetaClass
  • Class

The Smalltalk libs, like the Collections are full of ideas as well. And browsing the Seaside classes is something too.

Browsing the Emacs Lisp part of Emacs, inside Emacs, is also always a great place to find nice ideas.

So if I have to design some feature, I regularly have a look to see if some similar feature exists in Smalltalk or Emacs. It almost always helps me to come up with a design that is simpler, closer to the domain, and more easy to change.

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Every thing from the wheel to the discovery of heliosphere diminishing

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XNA inspires me, it allows me to have game development as a hobby, doing something I've always thought was interesting without having to work too hard.

Without XNA I wouldn't have the time to mess about making mini-games, which also has improved my skill as a programmer.

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Stuff like Shedskin (http://shed-skin.blogspot.com/) and the CrossNet (http://www.codeplex.com/crossnet) which take higher level languages and convert them (w/ restrictions of course) to C++. It seems that a strategy like that is an awesome way to get the best of both worlds...

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Cocoa, Cocoa Touch, the iPhone, Mac OS X, Objective-C. Ruby on Rails was a real awakening for someone who was getting sick and tired of Java and it's million and one frameworks and XML config files.

I don't do any .NET programming professionally, but I've followed it a little and I'm impressed with the core technologies like the CLR, too bad it's so windows oriented. Mono is an impressive project.

Every few years I sit down an read Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs. Spending some time writing LISP really helps me be a better programmer in other languages.

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.NET and all the opensource made with it, inspires me. The great IDE, I've never used an IDE that rivaled Visual Studio. Projects like this one, Subtext, DNN all inspire me and want to make something cool.

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Edsger W. Dijkstra (Algorithms, Critics, Problems), Donald Knuth (The Art of Computer Programming), Alan Turing (Turing Machines), Bjorne Stroustrup (C++), Compiler implementations, Mono compiler, Mono framework.

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Ideas such as spreadsheets are just simple concepts - but the simplicity of new ideas is what makes them so powerful and ingeniously beautiful. What I'm trying to say is that I wouldn't have thought about spreadsheets in million years on my own and I admire those people with enough creativity to come up with these ground breaking ideas.

Basically all new concepts which make computing power easy to use and therefore available to wide audience inspire me.

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In terms of programming, it's the GNU Linux project. Years ago I would have never guessed that it would have done so well. It's amazing that this whole new paradigm of what free actually means has become so mainstream and has gotten so much discussion. It's also amazing that so many people with so little in common could come together to make something so amazing with only one person for oversight. It's a real credit to Linus's ability to herd cats.

As far as technology in general, Augmented Reality. The idea of actively pulling extra context sensitive information out of the environment is just so cool. I wish I could have it implanted into my eye or head though. Those technoglasses still look wayyyy too nerdy to wear in public.

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Microsoft Office.

Say what you want about Microsoft, but the amount of features they threw into their office suite is wow.

They are so far away from the closest competitor and running so much faster....

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Robotics

For instance this robot

Amazing animal-like movements.

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Linux inspires me. The reasons are hard to quantify but the IBM Prodigy Linux Ad pretty much covers it. I encourage you to watch it. I have watched it hundreds of times and it never fails to get me out of a rut.

alt text

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Computers.

Without the invention of computers all the above mentioned technologies would not have been invented.........

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1 - Code injection
2 - F#

Edit: Why these inspire me?

1 - The idea of injecting code dynamically is an amazing idea, could make your life as a programmer so much easier and provides so much flexibility.

2 - F# .Don't know much about F# yet, but from the little that i know it seems that functinal programming is so fundamentally different, so unlike oo programming, that its like a breath of fresh air.

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