web

Rating the meme trackers

October 17, 2006 7:43:34.466

Robert Scoble ranks the meme trackers - Techmeme, TailRank, and Digg. I almost never visit their home pages (I track mainly via RSS), so this is an interesting comparison.

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tv

Heroes: Good TV

October 17, 2006 7:50:10.613

ArcterJournal likes Heroes:

Wow, I gotta say that each week Heroes keeps getting better. It's one of those shows I wish I never heard about until after the season is over so I can watch them all one after another without the pain of having to wait 7 days to see what happens next. I don't often rave about TV shows, so when I do you know it's good.

I like it too - the "wake up" scene with the cheerleader this week was pretty darn creepy. I have to admit, I had a chuckle at the end, when Hiro visits from the future with a message. I couldn't stop myself from inserting "in the future, I stopped being a nerd" :)

It is a cool show though - worth a place on your DVR.

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screencast

Smalltalk Daily: 10/17/06

October 17, 2006 8:39:34.063

In today's Smalltalk Daily, I take a brief look at the Menu building tool in VisualWorks.

Update: Fixed the link

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events

Smalltalk in NYC

October 17, 2006 9:04:50.618

The Smalltalk User Group meeting planned for the 18th (tomorrow) has been postponed until the 25th. Charles explains:

Due to the upcoming heavy rains on Wednesday, the fact that a lot of our members drive including our presenter which is coming from deep Jersey, the fact that the 18th also happens to be one of our regular's birthday which he will be spending with his immediate family, we shall be postponing our presentaton till next Wednesday the 25th which will be in direct conflict with OOPSLA

We apologize for any inconveniences

the management
NYC Smalltalk

(Re) mark your calendars!

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PR

Calling BS on PR badness

October 17, 2006 9:11:17.831

PR. Differently calls BS on Edelman's behavior (including the apology):

You're going to tell me Steve couldn't have just walked into Richard's office and been like, "Richard, this isn't cool - We're creating some bad Ju-ju, and we're gonna get busted." Would Richard have listened? Maybe. But Steve commented ""I am sorry I could not speak about this sooner. I had no personal role in this project. There is a process in place that I had to let proceed through its course. This is why it took some time."
You're EDELMAN'S BLOG EXPERT. YOU HAD NO ROLE IN THIS PROJECT?  And Columbus sat below, writing out star charts for his next trip to Asia. He had no personal role in actually FINDING America.

Can't say I disagree with him.

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media

The interview process

October 17, 2006 14:27:26.577

Dave Winer gets this dead on:

I practice this myself. There are some things I'm expert at. And some experiences I have that are newsworthy even though I'm not an expert. When I went to the DNC in 2004, I wasn't an expert at the political process, but I brought a digital camera, a MP3 recorder, and my laptop, so I took pictures, did podcasts, and blogged. Put enough normal people in a room covering an event, and you've got coverage. And in my recent experience with MacBooks, a few reporters offered to do phone interviews, which I declined. I said I had written it all up on the blog, all of it is on the record, for attribution, and having a pretty good idea how the interview process works, and the results it produces, the only rational thing for me to do these days is to decline the interview. I predict that more and more people will do that, unless the pros get their act together.

When we went on vacation last summer, I had someone from a local paper do a "man in the street" interview with my wife and I about the security regime at the airport (this was right after the whole "no liquids" thing). We spoke to the woman for 30 seconds, and she was taking notes. When I got back, I saw the item in a local paper - she invented quotes.

That's just shoddy. Digital recorders are cheap, and it would have been very easy for this reporter to get what we actually said down - but that would have been too hard, apparently. The pros in media aren't as professional as they think they are - and the level of respect they get (see: any survey on public attitudes about reporters) reflects that reality. They keep not getting that, and it's going to cause increasing pain for them over time.

Update: Dave added more here. Also good stuff.

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PR

(Un)Paid Content

October 17, 2006 17:34:56.737

Spotted in PR. Differently

What does it tell you about Sirius' gamble on Howard Stern when they have to offer it for free for two days to get more people interested?

What it tells me is that there are now tons of free choices available across all possible media outlets. It tells me that in the unlimited channel space that is the internet, that you have to be pretty darn good to get a decent sized paid audience. Personally, I've never liked Stern - his schtick has always been about "he said what on radio??", or "he did what on tv??", or, when he was married - "he did what, and his wife doesn't care??"

Well, he's now divorced, and he's on a channel where "outrageous" behavior is common. Why should I pay to hear Stern, if I can get someone like Ze Frank for free? His stuff isn't to my taste, but I suspect that there's a fair bit of cross-over in those audience bases. The difference? Ze Frank is free, Stern is behind a pay wall. Sort of like Times Select, really.

Stern was a phenomenon so long as his behavior was outside the norm, and he was the only one beating that particular drum. Those things are no longer true.

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news

May be just the thing for conferences, too

October 17, 2006 17:45:28.427

Via Instapundit.com:

The truth is, all candidates use it -- or suffer the consequences. When Wesley Clark entered the 2004 presidential race, he caught a cold, lost his voice, and was unable to campaign for several days. Some people speculated that the pace of a national campaign had knocked the former NATO comander off the campaign trail. I knew it was because he hadn't learned about hand sanitizer. National candidates shake hundreds, if not thousands, of hands every day. They will get sick unless they wash their hands early and often.

Consider the average trade show/conference - you meet tons of people, you shake their hands - and then you blame the post show cold on the airplane. I'm thinking it might not be the airplane air. This isn't something I've given much thought to, and I don't come down with serious colds all that often. If you do, you might want to consider the advice above.

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music

Not like Peanut Butter and Chocolate

October 17, 2006 19:43:08.202

The studio lawsuits against user video sites have begun:

Universal Music has launched the established media industry’s first legal action against rapidly growing user-generated websites by filing copyright suits against start-ups Grouper.com and Bolt.com.

In separate lawsuits, Universal alleged that Grouper and Bolt had built up traffic by encouraging users to share music videos from its artists without their permission.

Apparently, putting lawyers and music industry executives together doesn't give you anything like a peanut butter cup; more like a crap sandwich, I should think.

Let me think - when music videos are put up this way, who exactly is getting hurt? I thought the whole point of such videos was to promote the music (and thus CD or digital sales). Leaving no marketing opportunity unquashed, Universal has pulled out the stupid stick.

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music

In other music news...

October 17, 2006 19:58:07.654

allofmp3.com to the RIAA: Go pound sand:

"They [the music studios] are concerned with making money for themselves not the artists. In our opinion, we and the artists are better off dealing directly with each other. In fact we believe it is the future of the music industry," they said.

Anything that torques off the RIAA is just fine in my book.

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smalltalk

SUnit Screencasting

October 17, 2006 21:02:20.694

Travis has posted a screencast comparing SUnit and SUnitToo. meanwhile, Michael has posted a bunch of new ones - check the entire category.

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itNews

A datacenter box?

October 17, 2006 23:10:42.047

When I saw this reported on various blogs earlier today, I thought: "huh??"

But then I read Chris Petrilli's thoughts on the subject, and it started to make sense. It's kind of a cool idea, and - even if it doesn't sell much - I think it works as good PR.

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web

Seaside for Web Toolkit

October 18, 2006 7:41:44.127

Michel Bany, the Cincomer who has ported Seaside from Squeak to VW, gives some tips on loading it:

Bundles SeasideForWebToolkit and SeasideForSwazoo are containers for a script that loads the actual Seaside bundles choosing bundles with similar version numbers.

The Seaside bundles can also be loaded manually in the following sequence :

  1. Seaside-VW
  2. Seaside
  3. Seaside-WebToolkit or Seaside-Swazoo

In this case you may load whatever versions you want, for instance :

  1. Seaside-VW 2.6b1.103
  2. Seaside 2.6b1.103
  3. Seaside-Swazoo 2.6b1.84

There may be some issues with the Seaside servlet at present; that's being looked at.

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itNews

QA with Outsourced Manufacturing

October 18, 2006 8:06:35.954

Here's one of the problems with outsourcing your manufacturing widely - you really need to be careful about quality checks. Otherwise, you get things like the iPod virus fiasco:

The company said that a small number of video iPods made after Sept. 12 included the RavMonE virus. It said it has seen fewer than 25 reports of the problem, which it said does not affect other models of the media player, nor does it affect Macs.

From a PR perspective, Apple did the right thing by taking responsibility (and even managed to get a shot in at MS in the process):

"As you might imagine, we are upset at Windows for not being more hardy against such viruses, and even more upset with ourselves for not catching it," Apple said on its site.

THis doesn't mean that you should run a vertical stack like Henry Ford did back in the 1920's - but it does mean that you need to "trust, but verify" rather than just "trust".

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screencast

Smalltalk Daily: 10/18/06

October 18, 2006 8:20:53.697

In today's Smalltalk Daily, we look at the process of writing external files.

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blog

Update to the Pages

October 18, 2006 8:27:45.478

I just made a small change to the behavior here on the site. You'll notice the enormous lists of category and syndication lists have been shrunken down to pull menus. Michael suggested that to me last night (to be fair, Vassili has mentioned it more than once too). In any case, it's done now - the sidebars should be easier to navigate.

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analysts

Is the air leaking from Web 2.0?

October 18, 2006 10:07:08.582

Steve Rubel notes that advertising dollars seem to be getting lower. I say "seem to be", because it's based on an analyst report (Blackfriars Communications), and I know nothing about them. Anyway, here's what Steve notes:

Actual dollars spent on advertising this year was sharply lower than the original estimates. This according to an analysis by Blackfriars Communications. Worse, the same story is true online.
Researchers had predicted that 10% of overall advertising spending this year would go online. Meanwhile, it ended up at 7% of budgets. Plus, the entire pie shrunk as well.

That could be air leaking out of the web 2.0 bubble. We'll probably know within a few months, one way or the other. One thing's for sure - a lot of startups are very, very dependent on ad revenue. Could Yahoo's difficulties there be an early warning sign?

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java

*Cough* Dynamic *Cough*

October 18, 2006 11:07:22.997

There's Dynamic as done in Java, and then there's the real thing, as I do it in my blog server all the time (just this morning, in fact). Code that didn't exist when I first wrote the server? No problem. Replacing methods as the server runs? No problem. Creating new code and just loading it? How do you think the recent addition of iTunes tag support (necessary before I could get the podcasts listed in iTunes and other podcast directories) loaded? I wrote the code, tested it, and had the server load the results. Suddenly the RSS generator was dropping new meta information out.

Here's an old post on how I do the same thing in a client. On the server, the steps are as follows:

  • Create new code in my test environment
  • Once it works, export the diffs between the old version and the new one (i.e. a Smalltalk file-in for patches to existing code, or a new parcel for completely new stuff)
  • On the server, create a small script to load the changes
  • Hit the script, have the changes load. On the fly, as the server runs

That's it. No need to write code in some custom fashion to deal with things that didn't exist before - the Smalltalk system just accepts that they're there, and deals with it. This is yet another example of the mental cruft you have to deal with in a language like Java. In Smalltalk, that cruft just doesn't exist.

I'll be over here, being productive. You Java guys can read the multi-page post on how to do the same thing in your world :)

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PR

Defining PayPerPost

October 18, 2006 15:19:51.160

Doc Searls sums up what needs to be said about PayPerPost:

Yesterday I said PayPerPost makes you an ass****. Your job is to serve s***. You reduce yourself from a human being to an orifice for excreting messages. That may have seemed extreme or unkind; but hey, what's the difference between that and showing up on a bull**** detector?

What more needs to be added?

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java

Speaking of convoluted...

October 18, 2006 15:32:31.663

In other pretzel twisting, see how much of an unnatural act you have to commit to get something vaguely like "duck typing" in Java.

As I said earlier today, I'll be over here, being productive. You Java guys knock yourselves out.

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examples

About the code generation post...

October 18, 2006 16:41:58.375

I commented on a "Java dynamic code" post earlier, and got a few comments - so I pushed up a screencast showing how to generate new code (methods and classes) at runtime in Smalltalk. It's way, way simpler than the Java example, and I show that in the screencast. Watch it here; enjoy.

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screencast

Smalltalk Daily: 10/19/06

October 19, 2006 7:43:42.184

In today's Smalltalk Daily, I take a look at writing binary files.

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browsers

IE Backpedal for the site

October 19, 2006 8:43:07.184

I just got bitten by a browser incompatibility I didn't know about - IE doesn't do "onclick" handlers in menus. Since I just changed over to that, it's kind of a problem. So, I now detect the browser agent and feed IE 6 the older (long) lists. Sorry about the break.

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events

Vista Smalltalk in Ottawa

October 19, 2006 8:44:26.747

David Buck announces a Vista Smalltalk presentation in Ottawa, November 1st. I wish I could justify a trip up to see that!

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itNews

On Net Neutrality

October 19, 2006 9:13:45.317

The best argument against "net neutrality" legislation was something Jerry Pournelle said on last week's TWiT podcast. To summarize (this is not an exact quote), he asked whether we should trust the Congress to write a law (any law, on either side of this) that would not have some fairly horrid unintended consequences. Never mind the intended consequences.

I know I don't. I'd rather have no new law in this area at all.

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browsers

IE 7 vs. Firefox

October 19, 2006 10:51:16.179

Scoble is giving IE 7 a whirl:

But IE7 does have some challenges ahead of it. Some sites in it render very slow. Most notably for me, Google Reader. I’m also using the new Firefox 2 and Firefox is a LOT faster. IE7 is frustratingly slow on Google Reader. It seems to hang whenever new stuff is being downloaded in the background via AJAX. To be fair, Google is probably pushing the browser in all sorts of ways, even the MSN team decided to back off on its use of AJAX due to speed problems, though (Live.com used to have an infinite scroll capability, which I really loved but they got rid of it after speed complaints came in).

I can't speak to this directly; I haven't grabbed IE 7 yet. What worries me about IE 7 has to do with the internal websites here at Cincom. When I tried one of the betas, it simply didn't work with our main intranet site. It may well be fine now, but I'm a bit leery.

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development

Language Footprint

October 19, 2006 11:02:26.322

I found this post on "languages that suck" interesting. There's a small issue with the metric used to find Smalltalk though. I'm not going to argue that Smalltalk is "mainstream", but it does have a bigger footprint than this site would suggest. How so?

Well, one of the metrics is the availability of code files online:

As in the first study, all data were collected from search results retrieved via Google's Code Search. For each target language, three pieces of information were initially gathered:

Total Files

An approximation of the language's footprint in Google's database (and thus its popularity). Determined by one of the following queries: lang:<language-name>, lang:"<language-name>", or file:.*\.ext where ext is the file extension of that language's source code files.

Here's the problem - Smalltalkers don't tend to share source code that way - especially in the two dialects that get a lot of attention online: Squeak and Cincom Smalltalk. For Squeak, there's a lot of stuff shared via SqueakMap, and for CST, there's the Public Store. Neither is going to show up in this kind of search. As well, Smalltalk source files don't have a standard file extension across dialects (or even a completely interchangeable source format).

Something to keep in mind.

Update: You can look at some package detail for the Public Store here (475 packages listed) and for SqueakMap here (669).

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music

A Blinding attack of the Obvious

October 19, 2006 16:46:36.677

Is sanity starting to pop up inside the music industry? The WSJ seems to imply that it might be:

But now there's a growing recognition among some record executives and performers that the people who are downloading illegally are frequently huge music fans and that marketing to them may be more desirable in the long run than suing or otherwise harassing them.

Whoa, that might be too much thinking all at once for these clowns. Still, it's progress - they seem to realize that their bozo tactics aren't working, and the people downloading are fans. Many of whom would grab music legally, given the right incentives (i.e., if the market actually responded to the public feedback). So this, while it's condescending, is at least moving in the right direction:

Hence the alliance between Jay-Z and Coke. By inserting promotional material into the decoy files, and then planting those files prominently on file-sharing sites, record labels and other marketers can turn what is now an antipiracy tool into an advertising medium. "The concept here is making the peer-to-peer networks work for us," says Jay-Z's attorney, Michael Guido. "While peer-to-peer users are stealing the intellectual property, they are also the active music audience," and "this technology allows us to market back to them."

That Google ad thing might be inspiring them. I'd call this a fluke, but Disney recently showed signs of intelligence as well:

"We understand now that piracy is a business model," says Sweeney during the Keynote address at Mipcom. "It exists to serve a need in the market for consumers who want TV content on demand. Pirates compete the same way we do - through quality, price and availability. We we don’t like the model but we realize it’s competitive enough to make it a major competitor going forward."

Umm, yeah. The Buzz Out Loud crew has been pointing out for eons that most people would prefer to stay legal - if only the industry didn't try to shove crapware (DRM) down their throats. Tapes didn't kill CD sales, and DAT wouldn't have either. Downloads won't kill the for profit music sector, unless the studios keep being morons.

The RIAA has taken a quarter step in that direction:

This week the MPAA's CTO Brad Hunt had his own realization: "I understand that if we frustrate the consumer, they will simply pirate the content." He then goes on to explore how the MPAA is pushing for some degree of DRM interoperability

DRM is the problem, which is why I call it a quarter step. They seem to be aware that there's a problem; that's better. Next, they need to recognize that DRM is a bug, not a solution.

Now, before I start sounding all sunshiney on this, there is bad news: The IFPI (think international version of the RIAA) is suing anything that moves:

THE music industry has launched a new wave of 8000 lawsuits against alleged file-sharers around the world.
The International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI), which represents the world's music companies, said the new cases were brought in 17 countries, including the first ones ever in Brazil, Mexico and Poland.

I guess there has to be a conservation of cluelessness.

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windows

Stay with XP

October 19, 2006 16:55:22.615

Wendy Seltzer explains in detail why you would be absolutely nuts to upgrade to Vista. head on over there for details, but I love the lede:

Reading the Windows Vista license is a bit like preparing for breakfast with Lewis Carroll's Red Queen: You should be ready to believe at least six impossible things about what users want from software.

I agree with her - those terms are utterly absurd. I shouldn't have to register my software, and MS shouldn't care if I install new components in my PC. With this, they've now reached the same levels of titanic stupidity that IBM attained in the late 80's.

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smalltalk

There was (and is) a 32 bit Smalltalk/V

October 19, 2006 17:51:40.544

Peter Fisk needs a small correction hee:

A company which did survive the transition was Digitalk which did an absolutely brilliant job of porting Smalltalk/V to Windows. After writing Windows applications in C, the experience of using Digitalk Smalltalk (1.0 and 2.0) was a total liberation. Forget about the mixed-mode pointers; make a window? - no problem! And I wasn’t the only one to feel that way. By the end of 1994, there was a thriving community of Digitalk developers.

Of course, it didn’t last - Digitalk never brought out a 32-bit version.
Unfortunately, Digitalk never enjoyed the same success with their 32-bit offerings.

In fact, not only did they bring out a 32 bit version, they brought out a Windows/95 logo certified edition - Visual Smalltalk (and the enterprise edition, VSE). Digitalk then merged with ParcPlace, and things got all wonky (no need to go into that here). Point is, not only did Digitalk come out with a 32 bit edition - they got out early, and got it logo certified.

Update: Peter corrected his post.

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general

The Yellow Pages

October 19, 2006 21:20:03.215

Scoble notes that many people don't use the Yellow Pages anymore:

Geoff reports he doesn’t. I don’t even know where mine are. I’d hate to work there, although there’s still money left in that old model cause there’s still lots of people who don’t look to their computers for everything.
Most of those people, though, are older than me. That means that business model has 20 years left in it, if that.

It really depends on what you're looking for. Need an electrician to come out and look at something? You can waste time in Google trying to narrow the search, or you can open the big yellow book to "E", and find what you need in seconds. For an awful lot of local businesses - electricians, plumbers, that kind of thing - the Yellow Pages are still far more efficient.

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screencast

Smalltalk Daily: 10/20/06

October 20, 2006 9:18:24.295

In today's Smalltalk Daily, I look at a better way to serialize objects to disk: the BOSS package.

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music

AllOfMp3 Pressure Points

October 20, 2006 9:34:59.628

Looks to me like the recording industry finally figured out that the law wasn't the best attack vector for going after allofmp3.com - instead, they hit them directly in the wallet: Visa and Mastercard have announced that they will no longer process payments there.

That's going to affect their behavior a lot more than arcane negotiations at the trade talk level ever would have.

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general

McNealy had a point about privacy

October 20, 2006 10:13:28.612

Awhile back, Scott McNealy said "Privacy is dead, deal with it". That got a lot of play at the time, but fell into bit bucket over time.

Today, Bruce Schneier explains just how far reaching that assumption is:

Everyday conversation used to be ephemeral. Whether face-to-face or by phone, we could be reasonably sure that what we said disappeared as soon as we said it. Of course, organized crime bosses worried about phone taps and room bugs, but that was the exception. Privacy was the default assumption.

This has changed. We now type our casual conversations. We chat in e-mail, with instant messages on our computer and SMS messages on our cellphones, and in comments on social networking Web sites like Friendster, LiveJournal and News Corp.'s (nyse: NWS - news - people ) MySpace. These conversations--with friends, lovers, colleagues, fellow employees--are not ephemeral; they leave their own electronic trails.

We know this intellectually, but we haven’t truly internalized it. We type on, engrossed in conversation, forgetting that we’re being recorded.

This goes well beyond any legal worries over government monitoring. That sounds like I'm back burnering that issue, and - for the purposes of a larger point, I am. Let me start with an example.

I communicate with other Cincomers (and a variety of other people) via an IRC channel. I'm on that channel most of the time, and the traffic is all being logged - both by my IRC client, and probably by every other IRC client. Ten years from now, someone who I've had a falling out with could dredge up some extended bout of silliness we engage in from time to time, take it out of context, and embarrass me greatly. Heck, it might go beyond embarrassment - if it was stupid enough "bathroom humor", it might do actual damage.

IM is another communication channel I use, along with email. Email is persistent, and IM logs can be saved. There's no telling what someone could do with an out of context message (or, an in context one made under a presumption of privacy). As Bruce says above, we operate as if we're engaged in an "over the fence" chat, only these are all logged, and could come back to haunt us.

I'm grateful that I didn't have blogs, email, IM, and IRC chats to leave a paper trail on me when I was in college - today's students do though, and their transient acts of silliness - acts that would have dropped into the ether 20 years ago - could easily come back to haunt them in 2 or 3 decades. I fully expect politicians to get chased by decades old logs in the coming years, and for political battles at corporations to work the same way.

Unlike Bruce, I don't really think legislation will help much. I chat with people in other countries on the Smalltalk IRC channel all the time. US law won't mean anything to them. Likewise, overseas emails and IMs won't be affected by whatever privacy regime Schneier idealizes. Ultimately, I think we are going to have to internalize the new reality of a logged world. I'd recommend a book - James Halperin's "The Truth Machine". part of the world built in that book is a constant logging (video, audio, etc) of everything - mostly by people themselves.

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smalltalk

Call to Smalltalk User Groups

October 20, 2006 10:45:38.545

I have an an idea for Smalltalk user groups - if you can record your meetings (hopefully with compelling speakers), I'll be happy to post the recordings in my podcast feed. Just send me an audio file (compressed in a zip or gzip would be best). I'd advise sending any such things to my gmail address, as the Cincom email filter might well eat the attachment.

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management

What's the pay model?

October 20, 2006 15:38:39.163

Scoble lays out the issues with making money for online video solely through advertising:

Here’s the trouble. Most people I know are getting advertising revenues of between $10 and $40 CPM. That means that for every 1,000 people who visit a Web site, an advertiser is paying somewhere around $10 usually (often less, and in some cases, far less — Jeremy Wright told me he was only getting about $.50 CPM when he runs Google’s ad bar).
Now, that sounds great, particularly if you can get a big audience and when you write a blog that has minimum creation costs (yeah, some posts take hours, but others can be done in minutes and you don’t need anything but a computer to do this). That low cost of production is why Jason Calacanis was able to create $25 million in value by lashing together 100 bloggers. But, let’s look deeper at video.
First, the videos I’m putting up are around 200MB a piece. The bandwidth distributors I know are charging $.14 or more PER GIGABYTE to distribute those videos. So, that comes to $28, or more for 1,000 downloads (if my math is right).

That's going to be a problem, I think. It's just going to be very hard to get arbitrary video segments paid for - sponsorship works, but does have strings (implicit or otherwise). For those of us using podcasts and screencasts strictly for promotional purposes, this isn't really an issue - it's just part of the overall marketing budget. For others, it's currently a challenge.

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media

Going Local

October 20, 2006 20:40:28.873

Jeff Jarvis spots a nascent trend in the newspaper business:

Virtually every major paper is making the shift to local coverage, often as it cuts deeper into editorial operations. Only recently, the Dallas Morning News announced it was closing its national bureaus while cutting 20 percent of its newsroom staff. It was becoming a local paper again after several decades of rising stature for its national and international coverage. More than 100 people were let go.
Similar, if less dramatic, changes are taking place at such papers as The Washington Post, New Jersey’s Bergen Record and Herald News, and the Richmond Times Dispatch. And joining them all is Gannett, the largest newspaper chain and publisher of USA Today.
“We’re going to get hyper-local,” says Tara Connell, a Gannett spokesperson.

I'm not sure what that means for USA Today, but it makes a lot of sense for other papers. I can get national and international news from a bunch of sources, and my local paper is not the first place I'd look for that stuff. On the other hand, who else is going to cover the local crime beat, or the meetings of the local county council? The national networks won't do that stuff, nor will the newswires. The local papers could do that, and they could easily do it better than anyone else.

It doesn't even have to cost that much - local reporters won't command (or even need - you might well get by with a bunch of stringers interested in specific local areas) nearly the salary requirements of a "big" reporter. It's back to the future time for local media, and not a minute too soon, IMHO.

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copyright

The RIAA continues to torque people off

October 20, 2006 22:55:04.517

Whenever the bright boys at the RIAA wonder why the public hates them, they might look at stories like this one: a firmware update to the Zen Vision:M product disabled the FM radio capability, due to "copyright issues". Yeah - recording songs off the radio, complete with the station lead-in and out is really a threat to music sales. There's a reason people don't have any respect for these clowns; they don't deserve any respect.

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logs

Weekly Log Analisys: 10/21/06

October 21, 2006 1:59:13.290

It's time for the weekly look at the logs. BottomFeeder downloads were at 182/day last week; the details:

PlatformBottomFeeder Downloads
Windows549
Update230
Linux x86153
Mac X121
CE ARM73
Mac 8/948
Solaris29
HPUX20
Windows98/ME14
Sources11
Linux Sparc10
AIX10
SGI4
ADUX3
Linux PPC1

Next, the HTML traffic. Total site traffic was up again, which is always good:

ToolPercentage of Accesses
Internet Explorer46.2%
Mozilla40.2%
Planet Smalltalk4.9%
Other4.6%
MSN Bot2%
Megite1.1%
Opera1%

IE 7 use must be up - or my audience demographics are changing. Last, the RSS distribution:

ToolPercentage of Accesses
BottomFeeder21%
Mozilla19.9%
Other11.2%
Net News Wire8.2%
Safari RSS6.4%
Internet Explorer6%
Google Feed Fetcher5.6%
BlogLines4%
NewsGator3.3%
Planet Smalltalk1.9%
RSS Bandit1.7%
Akregator1.6%
MSN Bot1.1%
News Fire1.1%
JetBrains1.1%
Liferea1%
Opera1%
SharpReader1%
RSS 2 Email1%
Python1%
Feed Reader1%
Jakarta1%

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analysts

A cynic's cynic

October 21, 2006 12:54:14.728

Nick Carr is truly a curmudgeon - in a post about Google, he wraps up with this:

Those Japanese commodes are nice, but it's important to remember that they're merely transitional devices. We'll know that Google has truly fulfilled its vision when the Googleplex no longer needs toilets at all.

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podcast

Industry Misinterpretations Episode 6

October 21, 2006 13:37:33.305

Michael, David, and I got together this morning and had a chat about image based development - and responded to some listener email. This week's topic: Image based development and deployment. Stay tuned at the end for James Savidge's Smalltalk Jobs Report. You can grab the mp3 here - this week's chat was nearly 45 minutes.

If you have feedback, send it to smalltalkpodcasts@cincom.com. If you send an mp3 file, we'll try to play it on the air.

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Enclosures:
[http://www.cincomsmalltalk.com/audio/industry_misinterpretations_10-21-06.mp3 ( Size: 16264349 )]

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movies

Mount Blue

October 21, 2006 19:17:51.068

This is pretty cool. Follow the link to see what the actors saw, as opposed to what Sam and Frodo saw, when they first caught site of Mount Doom.

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education

Let 'em rot

October 22, 2006 11:55:04.742

Scoble points to the last Gillmore Gang - Dana Gardner and Jason Calacanis got into a pretty good fight over public/private charity. I started listening to that a week ago while jogging; I've actually looked into some of the issues they were arguing over, and was a teacher 20 years ago. I stopped listening, because every additional second I listened, I lost respect for Gardner. Why?

He was arguing that Jason Calacanis' entirely admirable efforts to rescue a few children from bad schools was an act of evil, designed to "destroy" public education. That's a really, really stupid argument, without regard to what issue you try and deploy it against. The bottom line is, any effort to help people in need is admirable, and Jason should be saluted for caring enough to try. Gardner can go suck eggs. When you let ideology (of any stripe) blind you to good acts, you've lost some of your humanity.

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news

The fear that drives the RIAA

October 22, 2006 12:12:09.649

Jeff Jarvis charts the ongoing decline of the newspaper business - it's been a bad week for the news business. In reading through the cuts and changes, I realized that I was reading a proxy for the fears of the RIAA (and eventually, the MPAA).

The news business is changing, due to a number of related events:

  • The non-stop, 24x7 news cycle that the cable news outlets can cover
  • The availability of 24x7 news online - delivered in ways that fit nearly any ideological or taste niche

Daily newspapers can't keep up with that unless they go digital - and that business is mostly ad supported (as opposed to ad and subscription supported). The music business sees that same thing coming at them - a digital juggernaught of ad-supported, no copy protection data files. The margins there are a lot lower, and (literally) thousands of the current middle men have no place in that future.

The newspapers can't fight the future with DRM and the DMCA; they have to adapt, no matter how painful and gut wrenching that adaptation is. The music business, thus far, has taken the "preserve our business model at all costs" route instead. When their fall comes, it will be all the more catastrophic for them, because they'll have been living in denial for too long.

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events

Keep up with OOPSLA

October 22, 2006 14:05:36.651

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food

Vegemite Banned???

October 22, 2006 20:48:23.529

The US government has banned Vegemite?

The bizarre crackdown was prompted because Vegemite has been deemed illegal under US food laws.

The great Aussie icon - faithfully carried around the world by travellers from downunder - contains folate, which under a technicality, America allows to be added only to breads and cereals.

Say what? What moron decided to do this?

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enterprisey

Not getting it

October 22, 2006 20:55:57.844

James McGovern should actually read what Yegge wrote, and compare it to the process heavy stuff that goes on in most enterprises. He might even learn something - but I'll keep my expectations low.

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marketing

The F Bomb: Never Cool

October 22, 2006 22:02:03.902

Scoble comments on Tim Bray's F Bomb dropping:

Personally I think it’s cool that Tim Bray thinks Sun’s new product is cool enough to use salty language about.

Actually, it's very much not cool, and I'm utterly unimpressed with Bray's handwaving about it. Here's the thing: when you use coarse language, there's no upside. That's right - none. At best, part of your audience won't care, or won't care that much. It's an absolute certainty that some of your audience (who knows how much) will be put off by it.

In marketing terms, that's a pretty large net negative. No one (or, almost no one) is going to have a positive reaction. Some people will blip past it. However, some of your readers (or listeners) will be offended - possibly enough to damage the way they look at your product, service or company.

So no, that usage wasn't cool, not by a longshot. The best we can say about it is that it might not do much damage. For those of you who think such usage is somehow more "authentic", I have two words: grow up.

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humor

Are you a "Blub" programmer?

October 22, 2006 23:37:29.039

This is funny - I especially likes this bit:

If someone drops a Smalltalk book on your desk, and you start to shiver uncontrollably, your eyes rolling back in your head as strange gutteral voices shout from your throat ‘Never! I shall never release his soul!' - you might be a Blub programmer

Heh :)

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law

Hand waving Idealism

October 23, 2006 7:45:44.674

Lessig may have his heart in the right place, but he's awfully unrealistic. I grow increasingly tired of the "but they have better broadband in (insert country here)" arguments:

I. and many, have concluded it is not. I take it, that is the view of the more than a million who have written to policy-makers arguing for network neutrality legislation. These people want policy that will finally push broadband providers to provide at least the quality and price of broadband in France. The online campaign to get Congress to do something here has been amazing, rivaling only the campaign to stop the FCC from passing rules that would permit even more concentration in media ownership.

Perhaps Lessig could pull out a map. If he did, he might notice that France is roughly the size of Texas, and that we have 49 other states besides. That's a lot less territory in which to pull cables. He might consider what net neutrality laws would accomplish in practice, as opposed to his theory. In practice, a real congressional committee (with real lobbyists) would push something through, and then the various providers would start fishing for interesting ways to take advantage of it. Under the current system, with no law in that area, public pressure on particularly egregious acts can work. Under Lessig's system, every provider would answer complaints this way:

We're just following the law; direct your complaints to Congress

Yeah Larry, that's a huge improvement. Thanks so much for trying to take an admittedly bad system and screw it up even worse. Do the rest of us a favor - stop advocating for law in this area. You just might get your wish, and the rest of us will spend years regretting it.

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screencast

Smalltalk Daily: 10/23/06

October 23, 2006 8:23:31.638

Today's Smalltalk Daily covers BOSS schema migration.

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management

Whither Microsoft?

October 23, 2006 14:08:55.506

Peter Fisk identifies the crux of Microsoft's problem:

Their problem isn’t a lack of talent, it is a lack of direction - and no amount of hiring is going to fix it.

I always figured that MS would be ok, so long as Gates was having fun. Whenever that ended, and he moved on to something else - the company was going to start drifting. It looks like I wasn't wrong. This doesn't imply that MS is "doomed", or anything - but I think they are going to end up sliding through the same tunnel of malaise that IBM went through during the 80's and early 90's.

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law

Support for Cadenhead

October 23, 2006 15:19:24.125

Rogers Cadenhead is being threatened with a lawsuit by conspiracy nut Art Bell - over comments made to his blog. Rogers notes that part of the CDA protects him from having to police those comments:

Though I give readers wide latitude in the comments they post, I remove libelous comments when they're called to my attention, as I told him in our email exchange. But I'm under no legal obligation to do so, thanks to Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act

I think Rogers should be get support if he gets sued over this - no one wants to live in fear of commenters wrecking their lives.

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tv

TV Attention

October 23, 2006 15:48:42.342

Jeff Jarvis quotes a Times story on the way to concluding that the Hollywood/TV machine is "imploding":

The quick cancellation of “Smith” elucidates how television, like the movie industry, has become a business where there is little room for the modest success. Network executives might talk endlessly about how, in an era where the attention of audiences is ever more scattered, new shows need time to find themselves. But those same executives are often quick to pull the plug on an expensive production that does not immediately perform to expectations.

Not so fast, Jeff. I watched a little over half of the first episode, and I can tell you why I stopped - the "heroes" of the story are a bunch of slimeballs. In the first episode, as they rip off a museum, they kill a guard who's just doing his job. I have no ability to sympathize with that kind of plot line; none at all. I might be an outlier on that, but with that show, I really hope I was in the majority. I say good riddance to that, and I'd be happy to learn that the writers involved never work again.

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development

Object Migration via RDBMS

October 23, 2006 16:07:06.815

Arden Thomas explains how he used an RDBMS for object schema migration in a past job - and how they used Opentalk to optimize the interactions

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blog

We are back

October 23, 2006 19:33:45.893

We had a small outage this afternoon - it seems one of the images posted on Troy's blog was linked over at MySpace, and it was being served dynamically (rather than statically). That caused a few problems. Everything is back to normal now, and we are in the process of trying to prevent that particular problem from cropping up again.

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podcasting

Video Requires more attention

October 23, 2006 20:07:17.052

Phil Windley notes that video podcasting is a different animal than audio:

Brett comments that when he's at his computer watching video its far more likely to be YouTube than it is a video podcast on technology 'ala the Scobleshow. Audio podcasts compete with radio, music, or, in some cases, non-consumption (i.e. the fill time that the listener wouldn't be listening to anything else). This doesn't change with better video iPods.

For me, it's like this: I jog between 35-60 minutes at lunchtime every day. I can listen to audio then. Even if my iPod could handle video (it's an old mini), I couldn't watch it - I'm paying attention to my surroundings. When I'm back at my desk, I can have audio up while I'm working - but video requires most of my attention. So a 5 minute YouTube clip, or something of similar duration - sure, I can find time for that. A long interview? Not a chance.

Now, I know some people prefer video, but why not provide a separate audio link, and see what your download stats look like? I could be wrong, but I'd bet that the audio files will be hit harder.

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itNews

Shhhh - No Vista Comparisons

October 24, 2006 7:58:56.891

Ed Foster spots more excitement in the Vista EULA - the rules governing benchmarking, and what you can say about it:

But the bigger problem is the fact that the actual censorship restrictions for Windows Vista are, in classic sneakwrap fashion, dependent on what a particular webpage says at a particular moment. That in itself could have a chilling effect on what people can say about Vista. Consumers who don't even know what .NET Framework is will, if they want to make sure any public statements they make about Vista "comply with the conditions" of Microsoft's license, have to first decipher what that webpage means. And, of course, Microsoft could change the conditions at any time, so you'll have to check back anytime you make any more comments about Vista. Perhaps as written now it's OK for you to tell your neighbor over the back fence that Vista seems to take twice as long to boot up as MacOS XI, but what if Redmond changes the conditions at some point in the future to prohibit such activities?

The internal takeover by lawyers seems nearly complete up in Redmond. This happened at IBM, too - and they went through an awfully rough patch before they came out on the other side of that.

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screencast

Smalltalk Daily: 10/24/06

October 24, 2006 8:32:07.524

Today's Smalltalk Daily starts looking at the loadable components for VisualWorks. There's a lot of them, and we only get through a handful today.

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web

Lies, Damn Lies, and Statistics

October 24, 2006 9:17:54.928

Ze Frank makes a good point about web ratings, and what you can validly make of them (not much). Right now, you should take any web stats you see with a huge pile of salt.

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smalltalk

EToys on the OLPC

October 24, 2006 9:49:20.316

The Squeakers have gotten EToys on the OLPC (One laptop Per Child). Very cool news; it will get Smalltalk some positive PR.

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general

Richard Dawkins, Faith Based Evangelist

October 24, 2006 11:07:08.155

I take a live and let live attitude toward religion - my beliefs can probably best be described as agnostic, tending to notional Christianity. Richard Dawkins, on the other hand, has decided that any religious belief is not only incorrect, but should be stamped out. If he wants to evangelize atheism, that's fine - more power to him. This (from Wired) is the road to you know where, paved with intentions that I'm not sure how to classify:

"How much do we regard children as being the property of their parents?" Dawkins asks. "It's one thing to say people should be free to believe whatever they like, but should they be free to impose their beliefs on their children? Is there something to be said for society stepping in? What about bringing up children to believe manifest falsehoods?"

Well, that's just great. He has his belief, which he cannot prove scientifically (he admits as much here):

"There's an infinite number of things that we can't disprove," he said. "You might say that because science can explain just about everything but not quite, it's wrong to say therefore we don't need God. It is also, I suppose, wrong to say we don't need the Flying Spaghetti Monster, unicorns, Thor, Wotan, Jupiter, or fairies at the bottom of the garden. There's an infinite number of things that some people at one time or another have believed in, and an infinite number of things that nobody has believed in. If there's not the slightest reason to believe in any of those things, why bother? The onus is on somebody who says, I want to believe in God, Flying Spaghetti Monster, fairies, or whatever it is. It is not up to us to disprove it."

Lacking an actual argument, he just goes ad homeneim. Great use of the scientific method there, dude. Based on the article, he seems to think that atheism will usher in a new age of reason, untainted by fanaticism. Here, he's pretty clear about that:

For the New Atheists, the problem is not any specific doctrine, but religion in general. Or, as Dawkins writes in The God Delusion, "As long as we accept the principle that religious faith must be respected simply because it is religious faith, it is hard to withhold respect from the faith of Osama bin Laden and the suicide bombers."

There was a movement that had that theory - perhaps Dawkins has heard of it. It worked out so well for the millions and millions of people sacrificed on that particular altar.

People like to believe in things. Remove deist belief, and that need won't go away - it will simply shift to some other kind of belief. Take a look at the far reaches of the environmental movement, for instance - if that's not secular religion, then nothing is. Dawkins has an abiding faith in the idea that "reason" can save people from fanaticism. History simply doesn't bear that out. The Soviet Communists and the German Nazis didn't kill for God - but kill they did. I fail to see how Dawkins' faith is any better than the people who walk my neighborhood handing out pamphlets. At the very least, they aren't trying to get children forcibly removed in order to teach them a "higher truth".

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development

Testing and Profiling: Your Best Friends

October 24, 2006 11:31:17.401

Larry O'Brien explains how he unit tested his way to solving a performance problem. This part of his exploration is something I've learned the hard way:

As the race condition clobbered more threads, though, the relative amount of time each remaining thread spent inside the critical section decreased! Eventually the system would degrade to one or two threads, providing the illusion that the system was “limping along.” And making me ass-u-me that the problem had to do with the database.

That last sentence is the key thing: Most of us don't guess the problem at all well. Tools - whether tests or profilers (or, more likely, both) - help us identify the real problems.

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tv

Back in the Real World...

October 24, 2006 16:50:09.360

Steve Gillmor says that TV is dead - the first paragraph is in reference to high end teleconferencing systems:

That's what this is about, tricking time, teleporting yourself across the country. We all wish Doc could actually enjoy his new house instead of rocketing off to Berkman one week a month. I could imagine the Gillmor Gang using the TelePort room from time to time. Remember that the next OS/X enables recording of iSight cons. It's on the way.

Meanwhile TV is dead. The kids still argue over carving out enough time to watch Heroes, the only consensus family show left alive.

Hmm. I think he has that very, very wrong. We have two ReplayTV devices, and a MediaCenter PC. They enable us to watch more of what we actually want to watch - the network cross programming games simply don't faze us anymore. There are plenty of great things on TV to watch, if you are so inclined. Battlestar Galactica, Dr. Who, Heroes - tons of interesting things across the history, science, and discovery channels. My wife and daughter love the medical shows, for instance.

What's dying is the traditional advertising model. Time shifting and the 30 second skip are wreaking havoc there, and the business is in flux as a result. It's not going to go away though, and the sheer spread of niche programming - both on the net and on cable - has made the space more interesting, not less.

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smalltalk

Dutch Smalltalk Blog

October 24, 2006 18:59:08.469

Soemirno Kartosoewito has started up a Smalltalk blog in Dutch, for all you Dutch speaking Smalltalkers.

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smalltalk

Seaside paying the bills

October 24, 2006 19:20:25.803

Looks like Smalltalk and Seaside are paying the bills over here:

Well, there are plenty of really neat ways to produce web applications. Most of you (like me) will work with php, mysql and probably enrich those with new AJAX features using one the available libraries like rico, SAJAX or script.aculo.us. Well, there is yet another way. Some of you may have heard about Smalltalk and/or are using it. It's a nice language and at the company I work everybody is using it or, to be more precise, we do most of our stuff in Squeak, which is build and run with Smalltalk.

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