Blog Posts

Ruby on Rails

I’ve been watching Ruby on Rails for a while now. It seems to be gaining some momentum.

Ruby seems like a nice language, and the Rails framework appears to add some WebObjects-like functionality. It looks like it’s got some stuff that approaches Direct-to-web. It still doesn’t look quite as elegant as WebObjects, but it is definitely interesting, and tries to be pretty cleanly MVC, which is nice. It’s also just sitting there at /usr/bin/ruby begging to be dusted off and called into action…

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Ear infections suck

If it was my ear, it might not be so bad. But Evan’s been inflicted by a nasty pair of ear infections. Poor little guy didn’t sleep more than an hour last night (therefore, mom and dad didn’t sleep at all - no sir, no way in hell are we having another one - we had some serious colic flashbacks last night :-) )

We’ve pumped him full of Tylenol to control the fever, and now he’s on yummy banana-flavoured antibiotics to wipe out the little critters filling his eustachian tubes.

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On Permanence (of content)

As we’re creating more content on and for the internet (and computers in general), we’re placing more of our culture into what is really an ephemeral medium. There is no 1000-year archive plan for the internet. The closest thing we have to that is The Internet Archive - but even that is subject to politics, business, and personal goodwill (of Brewster Kahle).

Backups of content are created, sure, but on formats like CD-ROM or DVD - which may have a lifespan ranging from 5-100 years depending on the specific media and storage conditions. They are also stored in (dozens? hundreds? thousands?) of unique storage formats (.Mac backup, proprietary backup tools, custom hacked tools, etc…) which may be difficult/interesting to interpret after the originators have shed their mortal coils.

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Yahoo 360 Thoughts

Thanks to Stephen, I got hooked up with a Yahoo 360 invite. I wanted to kick the tires to see what they’ve come up with in their big fancy social networking system.

The coolest thing I see so far is the concept of friend-of-a-friend. I imagine it’s completely compatible with FOAF, but they expose preferences settings to let you restrict access to stuff (your blog, commenting on your blog, photos, etc…) to a list of options:

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On time "off"

I’m taking this week to spend with the family. Janice is out of town for much of the week, so it’s just Evan and myself baching it. It’s been absolutely great being able to hang out with the boy - we spent the morning at the zoo, and it was fun watching him get all worked up about the efants and muhkees. He’s almost able to carry a conversation, and it’s so cool to be watching him progress. He keeps surprising me about what he understands, remembers, or figures out.

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John Carmack Blogs - without RSS?

OK. A rant taken from Robert Scoble’s playlist.

John Carmack - the guy that wrote Doom, Quake, Quake 2, Quake 3 Arena, Doom 3, and is trying to get into orbit with his own personal venture - has a blog.

But no RSS. WTF? Is he hand-rolling the pages in EMACS? Using some POS app that doesn’t do RSS? Have enough rock-star-zillionaire-programmer-groupies that he can’t imagine people not camping on his page waiting for updates?

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New Theme for Blog

I’d been using the Kubrick theme since well before WordPress 1.5, when it became the default theme. At first, it was a nice, clean theme that stood out from the rest of the other blogs out there. Now, it’s a nice, clean theme that everyone else is using. There’s nothing inherently wrong with that, but I’m getting tired of seeing Kubrick everywhere.

I just changed the theme to Wuhan (which I ever so slightly modified), which is based on Kubrick, but also takes some design cues from Macromedia.

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SubEthaEdit vs BBEdit

I’ve been a hard core BBEdit user since BBEdit 6 (way back before MacOSX). It’s a great text editor, and has many awesome features. I’ve actually stuck at BBEdit 7, since the Big New Features in BBEdit 8 weren’t that big to me, and I couldn’t justify allocating budget for the upgrade license.

I’ve also dabbled with SubEthaEdit, but only seriously as a collaboration tool, never for serious text editing on my own.

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Network Problems at the U of C

If you’re trying to access any services on campus at the University of Calgary - it looks like our network connection took the Easter weekend off… All servers are up and running fine, but the pipe is plugged, so it’s slow going if you are trying to connect to anything on campus.

Which means I’ll have to put my tweaks to weblogs.ucalgary.ca on hold for a bit. Perhaps it’s a sign?

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Subscription Management in NetNewsWire?

I might be missing something obvious, but it seems to be more difficult than necessary to organize subscriptions in NetNewsWire. I’ve got 377 feeds, and sometimes I need to go into my subscriptions list to find stuff, rather than just living in the “New Items” folder (where I do spend about 98% of my time in NNW).

One problem I’m having is that there doesn’t seem to be a “list all subscriptions” view. I can use Smart Lists to list blog posts, but I can’t seem to list all subscriptions anywhere.

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Mavericks/Pachyderm User Testing

The Mavericks online exhibit prototype was tested in a Calgary school on March 10th. It was the first formal evaluation of any content produced using Pachyderm 2.0, and the evaluation report was provided at today’s Mavericks steering committee meeting.

I was braced for negative feedback - a natural reaction when a new piece of software is being tested in the field - and was pleasantly surprised by the feedback we received. I can’t provide the full report (I didn’t write it, and I’m not sure all info is available for publishing), but the abridged version is roughly:

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Buddylist.module and functional relationship mapping?

I’m wondering if there might be a way to visualize the buddylist relationships in a Drupal site. It would seem as though when a user adds a buddy to their list, that they are defining a working relationship between themself and the other person. This is likely more useful than an org. chart, as it’s a real-world, practical, and explicit representation of a link between people.

So… Would it be possible to map the relationships that have been explicitly documented between users of a Drupal site? Kind of like “6 degrees of separation”, but showing the actual interpersonal relationships of the community…

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