travel
August 8, 2006 1:39:41.754
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movies
August 8, 2006 13:11:50.599
SCI FI Wire reports that we have to wait until 2008 for the 6th Harry Potter movie. That's a long time...
While no director has been set and casting has not been confirmed, Warner Brothers has staked out a Nov. 21, 2008--Thanksgiving--release date for its proposed Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, the sixth installment in the lucrative franchise, according to The Hollywood Reporter.
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humor
August 8, 2006 13:28:44.578
Boy, this TV contest is pretty harsh to contestants who can't say the tongue twister. Man, that's got to hurt :/
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music
August 8, 2006 15:04:52.487
I got some Dolphin-based code from Blaine Buxton that connects Smalltalk to the iPod. I've just gotten it loaded into VW, and posted the "file-in" port - meaning, the code is in the public store (package iPod), but does not work (I've not ported any of the Dolphin specific code yet). I plan to take this forward so that the Enclosure Handler plugin for BottomFeeder can slam stuff straight across.
Yes, the code exists :)

Technorati Tags:
iPod, mp3, smalltalk
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general
August 8, 2006 17:47:26.222
So it turns out that my car's battery is dead, and the belt that runs power from the generator snapped. Ok, that's pretty small beans. Sadly, the Catalytic Convertor's time was up at the same time, so that's a bit more expensive. I'll have the car back tomorrow though.
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sports
August 8, 2006 18:58:52.560
Baseball has long been a game of numbers, but software has made it possible for managers to immediate access to information of value - information that previous generations of managers only had a feel for. Take the radical shifts you see teams using against power left handed hitters: here's a shot from a NY Times story on the way the Mets stacked the right side of the field for Giambi last July:

That's the second baseman out there in shallow right. Right handed hitters don't see as much of this, since the first baseman has to be near the bag, and the shortstop has a longer throw. teams do similar things against David Ortiz of the Red Sox (who's been a one man wrecking crew this year: 40 home runs, 109 RBIs, and a .290 average). Here's some speculation on what this does to Ortiz (and other left handed power hitters like him):
Short of reviewing every at-bat, it would be impossible to know exactly how many hits players like Ortiz or Giambi have lost or gained from the shift. Ortiz estimated that the shift has robbed him of 40 points on his average. When a reporter who has seen most of his games suggested it was 20, Ortiz said: “I’m hitting. You’re watching.”
The reason we see more of this now (it goes back to the 1920's, when teams shifted for Cy Williams) is the large amount of data that managers can get before a game. Want to know how often a guy like Ortiz hits to right field? Just ask the team's IT guys, and they'll pull it up, updated to the most recent game.
Access to this kind of data is why so many retailers have affinity cards - they want the same kind of research data that the baseball people have. Armed with that kind of information, they can move from mass marketing to more of a one to one model, where they can provide information on products you actually care about at the time you're looking for them. That's why good IT systems still matter - used properly, they can move beyond traditional marketing and it's tremendous waste of time and money.
Technorati Tags:
statistics, baseball, marketing
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screencast
August 8, 2006 19:36:00.877
There's been a lot of buzz lately about the dangers of Javascript hacking in feeds; witness this post in the RSS Public mailing list:
If it is of any help to the community, I have created several test
feeds to do some experimenting.
http://rsstest.markwoodman.com/
Trying these out, I have already managed to render my web-based reader
account completely unusuable. (Sigh) The risk is very real.
BottomFeeder is utterly immune from this kind of thing. I've got a short screencast below demonstrating that.
Technorati Tags:
rss, atom, BottomFeeder, Javascript, security
Enclosures:
[http://www.cincomsmalltalk.com/casts/rss_safety_bf.wmv ( Size: 6550208 )]
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smalltalk
August 9, 2006 8:19:43.455
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itNews
August 9, 2006 13:05:44.970
From Mary Jo Foley:
Microsoft is turning up the Genuine Advantage heat in the coming months on a couple of fronts. The company is planning to require Genuine Advantage validation of certain "premium" components that are integrated into Windows Vista. It also is planning to target PC makers and systems builders with its anti-piracy message and policies, as opposed to just consumers. Expect Microsoft to talk more specifics on these initiatives some time this fall.
Sounds to me like some of those 10,000 new hires are marketing types who learned their tactics from the RIAA: treat the customer like a criminal. Yeah, there's a plan.
Technorati Tags:
marketing, management, stupidity
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web
August 9, 2006 13:16:26.519
Dave Winer on Wikipedia:
In the web before Wikipedia, every point of view had a chance, but Wikipedia tends toward centralization, toward one or two views prevailing, those that are represented by people who are willing to maintain a presence on Wikipedia. This what I'm not comfortable with.
Well, that's pretty much community behavior in a nutshell. Pick any community, web-based or otherwise. There are always a small number of people who do a disproportionate amount of the work. I read a book about the creation of the OED awhile back, "The Professor and the Madman: A Tale of Murder, Insanity, and the Making of The Oxford English Dictionary". A huge number of volunteer submissions came from one man - a lunatic being held in an asylum after a murder.
The point isn't that W.C. Minor was a madman - it's that he was one of a handful of volunteers who made a contribution above and beyond anyone else. We see that at Digg, where the top 100 users file 56% of the front page stories. We see it in Wikis, where a small number of people end up doing all the maintenance. It shouldn't be a shock.
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behavior
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cst
August 9, 2006 13:53:10.071
Boris Popov notes that Michel Bany has posted an updated VW version of Seaside to the public repository. Follow the link for features - there's a lot of stuff, including better Scriptaculous integration.
Technorati Tags:
smalltalk, seaside
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media
August 9, 2006 14:12:11.694
Nick Carr thinks that CD's with the newspaper might work, and dismisses the tech community's snark:
The tech-forward crowd finds the idea of distributing CD-ROMs silly. Snarks Techdirt: "A bunch of newspapers have decided that if one bit of old media (newspapers) isn't enough, why not two? That's right, they're going to start shipping CDs with the morning newspaper, sort of like computer magazines from a decade or so ago ... If this content is so valuable, and is going to be viewed on a computer anyway, why not just put it online?" The skepticism is warranted, but it's also worth remembering that most people aren't tech-forward. There can be big rewards for using "old media" as a bridge to "new media," as NetFlix discovered when it used the drab old U.S. Mail as a bridge between its online DVD rental site and the homes of customers - at a time when a lot of Web 1.0 entrepreneurs were losing their shirts (or their investors' shirts) by trying to deliver video over the Net.
Well, NetFlix is a bad example. For one thing, most broadband connections aren't fast enough to support downloading (except for p2p) movies in a reasonable timeframe. Second, the MPAA has worked very hard to make sure that the downloadable model can't work well: can you download bits, burn a DVD, and watch it on your normal DVD player? Probably not, and trying to remove the copy protection violates the DMCA.
The problem with his example is that it doesn't line up. Let's consider CD's with a newspaper though. Say I want to read content from the NY Times. Why wouldn't I just visit their website? The audience that won't visit the website is the same one that won't stick a CD in their computer - probably because they don't have one. The tech snark is correct here: this idea is DOA.
Technorati Tags:
movies, DRM
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blog
August 9, 2006 14:19:03.631
Kevin Burton takes a deeper look at the Technorati numbers, and comes up with some interesting stats on the number of active blogs (as opposed to the raw number of existing blogs - including splogs). He comes down to two interesting conclusions:
- There are something like 1.6M - 6.4M active blogs (active meaning at least a post every other day)
- The number of posts is growing lineraly (not exponentially, as the raw number of blogs is)
Read the whole thing. Good stuff.
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games
August 9, 2006 16:36:35.723
It's not your father's GenCon anymore:
In an open letter posted to the BoardgameGeek web site, the chief executive of the Gen Con exhibition said that he will encourage those companies to look at Gen Con as a forum to show their wares.
Huh. I used to go the GenCon, back when it was nearly all D&D type stuff.
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general
August 9, 2006 21:34:41.840
I guess if I had been paying more attention, I would have noticed the problem with the exhaust system. The trouble is, it was getting a little noisier as time went by - with the replacement, it's a lot quieter. Now that the engine and catalytic converter have been replaced (the engine went last year), maybe it will be fine for awhile :)
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travel
August 10, 2006 9:45:20.940
Doc Searls reports on new security rules at the airport:
Something bad happened (they won't tell us), and now the TSA won't let you carry any liquids, gels, pastes or fluids of any kind (pens?) through security checkpoints. Gotta check your medicines, sunblock, water bottels, whatever. This directive went down this morning (it's 4:30am here at Logan in Boston) and has caused a huge backup at the ticket counters and the security checkpoints. I'm sure it's just as bad everywhere, though I haven't looked at any of the news sources yet. (I think I'm at the leading edge of the news, sort of, right here.)
My wife was telling me about it this morning; she watches the morning news as she gets ready for work. She said something about electronics requiring check in; Doc said that seemed to be UK only. I guess I'll find out tomorrow - I'm heading to Florida. If there's any requirement to check laptops, there's going to be chaos - for one thing, they don't survive bag tossing very well. For another thing, they are way too easy to steal out of luggage.
Now all I need is a hurricane to make my travel plans really perk up :/
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security
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sports
August 10, 2006 10:12:33.163
With the international news being too exciting for my taste, I needed some good stuff. I watched the Yankees squeak out the end of their game against the White Sox last night, after Johnson carried a no hit bid into the 7th. The win is good news, but so is the loss by the Red Sox - that puts them 4 games back in the loss column - which is starting to matter at this point in the season.
I'll take my good news where I can get it.

Technorati Tags:
baseball, yankees, redsox
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development
August 10, 2006 11:12:53.599
They were the end of the line for C-style, static languages. Even Microsoft and Sun realize that now:
With highly expressive syntax that is easy to read, write, and maintain, dynamic programming languages like Python and Ruby are extremely conducive to rapid development. Microsoft and Sun Microsystems have observed growing interest in dynamic programming, and plan to integrate more extensive support for dynamic language features in their respective managed language platforms.
Funny how it took them so long to recognize productivity when they see it.
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BottomFeeder
August 10, 2006 12:00:04.006
The engineers have updated the email capabilities in VW (this will be part of the winter release of VW), and that means that VW based apps will be able to send emails through services (like GMail) that use TLS. I'm going to take a look at including that in BottomFeeder before the winter, which will likely make building a development image a bit harder. I'm heading out on vacation tomorrow, so I'll be getting to this later in the month.
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stupidity
August 10, 2006 19:58:50.308
Sometimes you don't need to look hard for the stupidity - it just comes right at you. Witness this thing of beauty that made the front page of Slashdot. In pointing to another Colbert prank (instead of Wikipedia, he hit on a public "name the bridge" contest), this slipped out:
However, last night Stephen Colbert (of Comedy Central's "Colbert Report") suggested that viewers vote to name the bridge after him. Remembering the effect that a Colbert segment had had on Wikipedia, I visited the voting page (in Hungarian when it works) soon after that and it was completely non-responsive. This morning (8:00 Thursday Pacific time) it is showing a "Horrible exception" and a Jetspeed/tomcat stack trace. " I believe Colbert's straight-talking sensibilities have earned him far more than just a bridge in whatever continent Hungaria is in.
You have to love that last sentence. Geography, anyone?
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Colbert
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music
August 10, 2006 20:12:41.214
Mary Jo Foley reports that more Zune rumors are floating: the first units will start at the $299 price point (from This week in Consumer Electronics):
Retailers who have been briefed by Microsoft told TWICE the player will offer Wi-Fi capability, but will require that the portable be connected to a PC for the actual purchase of songs. Retailers, who claimed Microsoft remained “fuzzy” on the Zune’s wireless capability, said only that Zune will allow users to bookmark songs that may be shared via Wi-Fi, but that users cannot purchase songs on the go from the Microsoft Zune Web site.
If that's what they are doing, boy do I have criticism. WiFi access, but no buying direct from the device? The whole point would be to not have the blasted thing tethered to a PC. Someone visit Redmond with a tree - I think it's going to take more than a cluestick.
Technorati Tags:
Microsoft, mp3, iPod
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media
August 10, 2006 21:52:27.237
Nick Carr piles on Wikipedia again, after noting the high (in search engine results) responses for various searches:
When critics point out the flaws in Wikipedia, its defenders are quick to respond, "It's only an encyclopedia; you don't use an encyclopedia as your only source." And that used to be true. In fact, after high school few people used encyclopedias at all, at least not regularly. But now, I'm not so sure. I'd wager that a heck of a lot of people searching the web do in fact use Wikipedia as their first and sole source, or at least their major source. (Just because you think people should consult a lot of different information sources doesn't mean that they're actually going to.) As Winer suggests, Wikipedia's dominance over search results may be subtly shifting the nature of the web as an information source, moving it from heterogeneity toward homogeneity. He's right: It is an important, and slippery, subject.
Well, what's his alternative? Something else used to be the #1 response for this search, and now it's Wikipedia. I'd bet that the previous #1 was quietly there for a long time, too - did Nick Carr (or anyone else) notice or care?
Something is always going to be the #1 search. Based on some research I saw awhile back, anything off the first page of the results is effectively invisible, and anything past the first 2 results is nearly so. Which means that for any given topic, the first two results are - for an awful lot of people - "definitive".
What I'd like to know is this: Carr spends an awful lot of his time wringing his hands about the horrors of Wikipedia. What's his solution? In an ideal world, what would he like to see instead? And in that ideal world, how would his solution be better?
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web
August 11, 2006 10:03:42.935
It looks like the advertising model for the web has some of the same baked in delusions as the advertising model for TV has: everyone assumes that the numbers mean something so that they can go forward:
Web sites that rely on advertising -- including some the most poplar, such as Google, Yahoo, MySpace and YouTube -- get paid based on the amount of traffic to their site and the number click-throughs on their ads. Without accurate data, advertisers have no idea how much they should be paying.
The only reason the system isn't breaking down, and advertisers aren't pulling out, is because they have no choice but to play. They are taking informed guesses, based on the shoddy statistics available. And Google et al. are using every strategy they can find to deal with this problem.
The introduction of DVRs started to punch holes in the TV nodel - once it became clear that people were skipping ads, the shared delusion got harder to maintain. It's still there; money has not (yet) dropped in TV-land.
In reality, it's questionable whether people ever paid much attention (even more so once the remote came along). Last night I flipped between "Band of Brothers" on the History Channel and the Yankee game on ESPN, changing channels at ad breaks. The same thing happens on the web. Take Salon, which allows you free access if you "watch" an ad. I use Firefox, which has tabs. I hit the ad, then flip to some other page. I go back after I finish, hitting the "enter Salon" link. The advertiser sure isn't getting much from me, even though the ad was delivered.
I suspect that a lot of web ads are "viewed" this way. Which only makes the accuracy of data problem worse. I count as a viewer of the Salon ads (and sometimes, by mistake, as a click through - although I simply close the window/tab in that case). In the grand scheme of things, I don't really see a strategy that deals with this.
Technorati Tags:
advertising, tv
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travel
August 11, 2006 12:46:37.072
After all the news reporting yesterday, I was ready for a nasty bit of waiting in line today - so I arrived here (BWI) about 3 hours early - I normally don't arrive more than an hour ahead of time. I should have done that today. The line to check bags was long, but no longer than normal for summer vacation travel season. The inside security line was just about non-existant, and while there were tons of signs telling me that I couldn't have liquids (what a colossal waste of time that is), there didn't seem to be any extra checks for it.
So anyway, here I am, cooling my heels with almost two hours of dead time in front of me. At least there's WiFi.
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analysts
August 11, 2006 16:41:50.671
The lack of travel woes continues. Our flight from BWI departed on time. At least at BWI, the lines for checking bags were normal, and the security lines were short and quick - of course, I was leaving mid-day, so I missed the normal crush in the early AM and early PM.
There were signs everywhere mentioning the "no liquids" rules, but there weren't any checks that I saw either - other than the X-Rays at security, no one looked in any of my bags or asked me any question. The only annoyance was the return of "take your shoes off" time.
Technorati Tags:
security, airport
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travel
August 12, 2006 1:35:44.530
We stopped at Wal-Mart after arriving here in Orlando - the new rules at the airport made it simpler to just buy a few things (like toothpaste) here. We also chewed up some time at the Alamo counter - they wanted to charge me $8 a day to add my wife as a driver. We both have the same insurance carrier, so that seemed kind of stupid to me - I haggled with them (to no avail) - and finally just took the car. That left us nowhere onsite to eat dinner, so off to Denny's it was. One healthy (yeah, right :) ) meal later, and we are back in the room.
At least we got here :)
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logs
August 12, 2006 2:26:03.543
Live from DisneyWorld, my weekly logs post - something I figured
I could do while my wife settled in with unpacking. First up:
BottomFeeder downloads, which proceeded at a rate of 193 per day -
up from last week. The details:
|
Platform
|
BottomFeeder Downloads
|
| Windows |
564 |
| Update |
203 |
| Linux x86 |
124 |
| Mac X |
98 |
| CE ARM |
80 |
| Mac 8/9 |
64 |
| Solaris |
45 |
| HPUX |
43 |
| Windows98/ME |
43 |
| CE x86 |
30 |
| Sources |
26 |
| Linux Sparc |
11 |
| AIX |
9 |
| Linux PPC |
8 |
| SGI |
2 |
Those numbers look pretty good to me. On to the HTML pages:
| Tool | Percentage of Accesses |
| Mozilla | 45.8% |
| Internet Explorer | 38.6% |
| Planet Smalltalk | 5.8% |
| Opera | 2.8% |
| Other | 3.7% |
| MSN Bot | 2% |
| Megite | 1.3% |
Those IE numbers are getting very close to the Mozilla ones. Looks to me like IE7 is making headway. Finally, the RSS numbers:
| Tool | Percentage of Accesses |
| BottomFeeder | 21.9% |
| Mozilla | 17.8% |
| Other | 14.2% |
| Net News Wire | 7% |
| BlogLines | 6.7% |
| Safari RSS | 5.9% |
| Internet Explorer | 5.2% |
| Google Feed Fetcher | 4% |
| NewsGator | 3.8% |
| SharpReader | 1.9% |
| Planet Smalltalk | 1.7% |
| BlogSearch | 1.6% |
| RSS Bandit | 1.3% |
| Liferea | 1% |
| Opera | 1% |
| RSS 2 Email | 1% |
| JetBrains | 1% |
| Java | 1% |
| Lilina | 1% |
| Jakarta | 1% |
Still a lot of variety there. I'm off to the theme parks tomorrow.
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management
August 12, 2006 12:09:23.495
Jonathan Schwartz is providing one huge service to the business community at large: he's demonstrating on his blog how transparency actually works (as opposed to how the Sarb/Ox bozos think it works):
If you want evidence that navigating today's business environment requires careful thinking, consider one particularly ironic issue: posting material information about Sun on my blog, including information about our business results, runs the risk of violating something called Regulation Full Disclosure, or Reg FD. The regulation's goal is to ensure broad, non-exclusionary distribution of material information to the investing public. And somehow, my blog isn't deemed to be such a non-exclusionary distribution vehicle (but a press release, or the Wall Street Journal is). Reg FD is something we're going to be discussing with Commissioner Cox at the SEC (whose views seem to parallel ours - the more transparency the better).
I may not agree with certain aspects of Sun's business plan, but I like the way they are trying to do business. It's a whole lot more useful than the pile of manure called Sarbanes/Oxley.
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news
August 12, 2006 12:13:20.120
Doc Searls talks about his post from Logan as the new airport security regime was coming into effect. It's certainly reporting - his post sounded like a first person "man in the street" interview. We'll be seeing a lot more of that over time.
Technorati Tags:
reporting, media
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law
August 12, 2006 20:02:27.677
Being the RIAA means always - always - having negative PR events. Here's the current worst example: father dies, so the RIAA gives them 60 days to grieve before they send the lawyers in with their absurd accusations of wrongdoing. I think it's time to give them battle axes and pointed helmets - they fit the role of medievel vikings perfectly.
Technorati Tags:
RIAA, music
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rss
August 12, 2006 20:08:02.775
Rogers Cadenhead has announced the publication of version 2.0.8 of the RSS spec:
The specification has been edited to reflect http://www.rssboard.org/rss-specification as the document's permanent URL and RSS-Public as the mailing list where users should post RSS-related questions and comments. No other changes were made.
Will the great and terrible Winer have a meltdown?
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vacation
August 12, 2006 22:01:24.947
While we flew in via Atlanta yesterday, my daughter and I took a few pictures. Some of the cloud shots look pretty neat, with the towering cumulous and sun. The last two in this set are particularly interesting to me - as we flew south, we left the cloudy weather around Atlanta - and we were able to see the edge of the weather system pretty dramatically:




I really like the way those last two look.
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vacation
August 12, 2006 22:24:26.334
We got up late, and just meandered around World Showcase today. It's a nice part of Epcot - kind of like a permanent world's fair. When we passed the French Pavilion, there was a guy doing a show outside - as an assistant handed him chairs, he stacked them and climbed up. Here's a shot of him:

The guy further down is handing a chair up. Here's the guy all the way at the top - the last chair only had three legs:

Then we saw something I haven't seen before (odd, given how many times I've been to the place) - there's a drawbridge over near the Mexican pavilion, and in the mid afternoon they open it up and send in the fireworks ships. Here's a ship with the launchers they use to send some of them up at night:

It was a nice day too - cooler here than it was when I went to Ohio a couple weeks ago to teach a Smalltalk class. Go figure :)
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PR
August 13, 2006 10:45:12.081
Steve Rubel notes that Google doesn't like being verbed:
The Independent Online reports that Google has fired off a series of legal letters to the media, asking them not to use the name of the company as a verb. This despite the fact that the Oxford English Dictionary and Merriam-Webster's include the search engine as a verb - e.g. "to google."
It's too late for that - it's time to just deal with the reality - they could "google it" :)
Technorati Tags:
management
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vacation
August 13, 2006 21:25:22.255
There's a small new display at MGM - "The Making of Narnia". It's pretty neat in the room where they've got the film clips and an animatronic of the White Queen. There's a forest and the lamp post:

We had some rain today (steady - kind of unusual for Orlando at this time of year). Otherwise, it was a good day.
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blog
August 14, 2006 9:42:25.913
Based on the APIs the site claims to support, it looks like Windows Live Writer should work with Silt. I'll have to download it and see how it goes.
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cst
August 14, 2006 9:54:20.359
Michael Lucas-Smith is trying to kick off a grass roots effort to get more C libraries wrapped for use in Cincom Smalltalk - he seems to have attracted some interest. Mind you, Michael is being too modest - he's done a fair bit of that work already.
Technorati Tags:
smalltalk
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vacation
August 14, 2006 17:09:20.096
Only in DisneyWorld: on our way out of the Magic Kingdom, my daughter took this snapshot:

Looks like Mickey with a sombrero :)
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development
August 14, 2006 23:47:31.153
Cees reports that Java still sucks :) You could argue that he's trying to fit a Smalltalk metaphor into a language that doesn't work that way... except that's pretty much his point.
Technorati Tags:
java
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events
August 15, 2006 10:29:44.857
Boris tells us that there's a Smalltalk meetup this Friday in
Vancouver:
What: Informal Seaside/Squeak/VisualWorks/Smalltalk
Meet Up
When: This Friday , August 18, 2006 @ 6:00PM PST
Where: Stamp’s Landing Neighborhood Pub - 610
Stamps Landing, Vancouver, BC
Google Map
Looks like fun. I'll still be Disney-ing then :)
Technorati Tags:
smalltalk, seaside
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development
August 15, 2006 11:19:59.320
James McGovern:
Likewise, many folks feel that Smalltalk is either irrelevant or don't even understand its value proposition. It would be wonderful for James Robertson to share his thinking towards why folks should still care about the language.
I've made that post more than once :) The bottom line seems to be this: most people simply don't believe the productivity claims. Here's an example that shows what you can do when the library designers don't have asinine ideas like "final" declarations. Here's a walk through of how you can debug a Smalltalk web app - somewhat simpler than the asp/jsp model, I think.
The main thing is this: In Smalltalk, the runtime is never closed off - you can keep your application open for ongoing development. I did this with BottomFeeder; I can open a workspace and a browser right in the runtime. I can write scripts against the application easily that way. What if I want information for which there's no easy to access GUI interface? Simple: I just open the workspace and script something, as I demonstrated here.
In more "normal" situations, Smalltalk just makes your life simpler. Have a look at Cees' post: Java (and similarly, the MS languages) just get in your way. You're coding to make the compiler happy rather than to solve an actual problem. Remember what you job is: it's to solve actual problems. Why should you invest the extra hours required to make some compiler developer in California (or Washington) happy?
Now, as I said last night, a lot of people will scoff at Cees' example, saying that he was trying to code in Smalltalk while using Java. To wit:
I am the kind of programmer that thinks that “if” statements should be avoided, and if I repeat an “if” in every method in a class, my refactoring alarm starts to go off. Now, in Smalltalk, this would have a simple solution:
doSomething: key with: ...
^self withAuthentication: key do: [...].
withAuthentication: key do: aBlock
^(self authenticate: key)
ifTrue: aBlock
ifFalse: [Result newWithMessage: 'authentication failed']
A complete no-brainer with mostly similar solutions in Python, Perl and Ruby (to name some other dynamic languages).
I will spare you the code, but my first attempt was to use an anonymous inner class as a work-around for Java’s lack of closures. The result was much worse than the original code, enough to dub Java “LISB” (Lots of Irritating Stupid Braces). I got rid of the “if” statement, but at a price I was not willing to pay.
Note that he mentions that this is a no brainer using other dynamic languages (meaning: the power here is not limited to Smalltalk). It's only in the handcuff languages that you end up doing the extra code dance.
Ruby is gaining adherents because of this - and we are seeing a small, but measurable, increase in the interest in Smalltalk. People looking at Ruby are naturally inclined to have a look at Smalltalk as well. You could give it a whirl yourself - and feel free to send comments my way, either here or by email.
I'll add a small note about comments - part of my spam blocking efforts involve automatically turning comments off after a post leaves the front page. So if you see this post after that happens, you won't be able to add a comment.
Technorati Tags:
smalltalk
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blog
August 15, 2006 11:23:01.441
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blog
August 15, 2006 23:52:58.843
Ahh, standards. I downloaded Windows Live Editor, and tried to hook it up to my blog via the MetaWebLog API. Ecto works using that, w.bloggar works using that, BlogJet works using that. Live Editor tells me that it gets an invalid response from the getCategories API. The problem is almost certainly not Microsoft's editor - it's probably another error due to Dave Winer's complete inability to create a spec. I've posted on this topic before; I won't be able to address this until I go home, and can try it against my test server.
And people wonder why Atom is catching on...
Technorati Tags:
stupidity
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