management
March 14, 2007 6:34:50.846
James Governor explains the nature of reality to Viacom:
What would happen if Google just said
“OK, Viacom: henceforth your media will disappear on Google. Searches on Viacom or any of its media properties will turn up nothing.”
Would that be illegal or something? I wouldnt have thought so. Could someone sue Google for not being included in its search engine? I can’t see what grounds they would have. And would Viacom fold if Google did take this approach? In a heartbeat I should imagine. That’s the problem for Viacom - it needs Google more than Google needs Viacom.
Boy, I wish I'd thought of that - it does show that Google actually has the deck clearing cards on hand if they want to play them. I'd bet good money that this hasn't really occurred to Viacom - after all, they are the "big, important media company". The world has shifted beneath their feet, and they aren't bright enough to realize it.
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education
March 14, 2007 6:42:37.684
James McGovern asks a question about corporate education classes:
Have you ever noticed that the vast majority of educational courses targeted at corporate America are introductory? Have you asked yourself why aren't there more courses that teach advanced concepts? We all understand that advanced concepts logically depend on simpler concepts but thinking should stop there. Humans don't learn using predicate logic, so advanced concepts can be taught even to children, so as long as the person teaching them has some level of competency.
Back in the old days, when I was a VW instructor for ParcPlace, we faced exactly this quandary. Customers would ask us about advanced material, since our public offerings were mostly introductory. There was a reason for that, and it was based on the actual behavior of corporate customers.
When we gave an advanced course, companies would send people to it who weren't prepared. Happened every time I was involved in an advanced course, even when sales and services management made a point of telling the customer that the material assumed a certain level of pre-existing knowledge. We would show up, and find that half (sometimes more) of the class was completely unready for the material - and that made the entire thing unfair to both the prepared students and the unprepared ones - neither group really got the instruction they needed.
I suspect that we weren't unique in this regard - ask around the professional training ranks, and I'd guess that they would all say the same thing.
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screencast
March 14, 2007 8:27:08.391
On today's Smalltalk Daily, we add a resizing splitter to the master/detail UI we've been working with.
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smalltalk
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smalltalk
March 14, 2007 13:50:40.728
Andres will be heading to Argentina in May, and he and Suzanne Fortman (our Program Director for Cincom Smalltalk) will be meeting with various groups. Interested? Let us know.
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smalltalk
March 14, 2007 14:46:09.557
We've got the most current training schedule for Cincom Germany posted here.
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training, education
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weather
March 14, 2007 15:04:17.047
After a mild December, it got pretty darn cold around here in the latter half of January, and all of February. The icy patch on my lawn (where the snow piles up from shoveling) finally disappeared today, during the 70+ degree temperatures. Further proof: my daughter took a couple of photos of the early flowers:


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humor
March 14, 2007 15:17:38.984
File this one under "someone has to do the work with Buffy off the air":
Serbian vampire hunters have acted to prevent the very remote possibility that former dictator Slobodan Milosevic might stage a come-back - by driving a three-foot stake through his heart.
According to Ananova, the politically-motivated Van Helsings, led by Miroslav Milosevic (no relation), gave themselves up to cops after attacking the deceased despot in his grave in the eastern town of Pozarevac. Milosevic popped his clogs back in 2006, while on trial in a UN war crimes tribunal for various unsavoury activities connected with the disintegration of the former Yugoslavia.
No word yet as to whether the body turned to dust or burst into flames when the stake hit.
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news
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gadgets
March 14, 2007 15:34:26.529
Here's a minor iPod annoyance - every so often, when my daughter has left iTunes up, and I attach my iPod while I have iTunes up, the iPod decides that it should try to attach to the other instance of iTunes. This is annoying, because I have to get my daughter to come in, have her log in, eject the iPod, and quit her instance of iTunes (otherwise, it's just "rinse/repeat" time). Shouldn't the iPod know which library it belongs to, and attach to that one? It's smart enough to tell me it isn't synched with the other library, so why can't it look at other running instances?
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food
March 15, 2007 6:50:55.280
You don't want to create any crumbs when you eat the $1000 pizza.
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news
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screencast
March 15, 2007 9:44:11.592
On today's Smalltalk Daily, we learn how to dynamically "zoom" a part of a UI. Carrying on from the example we've used this week, we take the detail form in PersonListUI, and zoom it over the listbox that controls the detail display.
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smalltalk
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sts2007
March 15, 2007 9:48:54.797
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web
March 15, 2007 10:33:08.644
I agree with part of what Doc says about the net neutrality debate:
First, the Net is a vast set of connections on which countless services can be deployed. Telephony and television are just two. Because telephone and cable companies offer Internet connections as a secondary "service" on top of their primary businesses, we tend to think of the Net in the same terms. This is a mistake. The Internet will in the long run become a base-level utility, and we will come to regard telephony and television as two among many categories of data supported by that utility.
That much is probably true - people are starting to view a net connection the same way they view telephones: an essential service. However, there's a problem with the next bit:
Second, the end-to-end nature of the Net puts everybody on it in a position to both produce and consume. It is not just about consumption. It is at least as much about production. In the U.S., telephone and cable companies have deployed Net services in asymmetrical and crippled forms from the beginning. While this crippling is easily rationalized (typical usage is asymmetrical, and turning off outbound mail and web service ports discourages spamming), it also serves to discourage countless small and home businesses. Worse, "business-grade service" (symmetrical with no port blockages) is so expensive in most cases that it is essentially prohibited.
Potentially, anyone can be a producer. In practice, very, very few people actually are. Look at the stats on monster sites like Digg - while anyone can vote a story up, there's a fairly small population of regular users who are, for all intents and purposes, editors. The same dynamic holds with every forum, electronic or otherwise. In any community, the number of people involved drops dramatically as you go from "people who pay some level of attention to it" to "active participants".
While it's true that we don't have a lot of competition in the ISP space, we also don't have a lot of demand for upstream connectivity. Most people just download stuff, and that dynamic simply isn't going to change. The blogosphere has given megaphones to a lot of people who didn't have them before, but those people are the ones who would have found some way to be involved anyway. If we had actual demand for symmetric services, I do think you would see it. We simply don't, and I don't really expect that to change much.
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news, net neutrality
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cst
March 15, 2007 15:44:53.261
Sam Shuster has posted an update on Pollock - which we are now calling "Widgetry".
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smalltalk
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smalltalk
March 15, 2007 17:58:29.733
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management
March 16, 2007 6:42:26.731
Twitter is the current "big thing" amongst the tech cogniscenti - "everyone" has an account and is busily telling everyone what they're doing right now. Conspicuously missing from all this: an actual business plan to generates money:
Twitter was launched a year ago by Obvious Corp., a San Francisco start-up formerly known as Odeo Inc. that also runs a podcasting service. Twitter now hosts more than 30,000 posts a day and has more than 50,000 users, according to Twitter founder Jack Dorsey. The service is appealing because of its simplicity, said the 30-year old, who formerly worked as a software engineer at a courier-dispatch service. "You find a lot of connection in just the simplest, most mundane updates from your friends," he said. Twitter doesn't charge users for the service, though he said it may charge for additional features in the future.
You have to love that last bit - it's an admission that right now they are simply spending money in the hopes that revenue will arrive someday, from somewhere. I doubt that advertising will be the answer; if you get updates on your phone, you'll never see them. Mind you, someone is making money on this - cell phone companies:
After joining Dodgeball [a similar service], Minneapolis Web developer Jenni Ripley, 33, upgraded her text-messaging plan with her wireless carrier when she exceeded her previous monthly quota of 1,000 messages.
I used to ask where the revenue model for YouTube was (turns out it was "get bought") - and I may yet be right - if Viacom wins their suit, you can expect the floodgates of litigation to open. That (a lawsuit) won't happen to Twitter, but I expect that the "search for revenue" will continue. On the other hand, if that text message usage is common, maybe Verizon or AT&T will pick them up.
Meanwhile, Obvious Corp's other service, Odeo, continues to be broken - which is apparently ok, since the entire company is busy sending Twitter messages to itself all day.
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web2.0, business
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screencast
March 16, 2007 8:41:30.568
On today's Smalltalk Daily, we look at toggling the state of a menu item (i.e., adding a check to indicate a binary state). Staying with this week's example, we keep the menu state in synch with the "zoom" state of our master/detail form.
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smalltalk
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PR
March 16, 2007 13:02:54.344
I think Bill Gates would have done better to simply laugh off the Mac/PC ad question - instead, he got all snippy. Looks to me like Gates' previously solid marketing/PR skills are fading...
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marketing, news
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weather
March 16, 2007 15:40:11.454
Looks like I spoke too soon about winter leaving - two days ago I was puttering in the garden in shorts, and yesterday I was out jogging in mid-70 degree warmth. Today?

I live in Columbia, which is smack in the middle of the ice zone. Bah.
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smalltalk
March 16, 2007 18:31:36.228
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cst
March 16, 2007 18:39:39.026
Here's a question you haven't heard me ask before: What don't you need in Cincom Smalltalk? I'm not talking about things we haven't built that you think we shouldn't; I mean things we currently have in the product that you think we should drop. Any thoughts on that?
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smalltalk
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linux
March 16, 2007 19:28:51.249
Wow - you have to actually see this to believe it:
Are you saying that this linux can run on a computer without windows underneath it, at all ? As in, without a boot disk, without any drivers, and without any services ?
That sounds preposterous to me.
If it were true (and I doubt it), then companies would be selling computers without a windows. This clearly is not happening, so there must be some error in your calculations. I hope you realise that windows is more than just Office ? Its a whole system that runs the computer from start to finish, and that is a very difficult thing to acheive. A lot of people dont realise this.
Believe it or not, there's more. Hat tip Doc Searls.
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windows
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weather
March 17, 2007 11:32:45.846
As if to make sure we remember when the calendar changes over, winter took a (hopefully final) shot at us last night - these shots don't show a lot snow, but what's there is pretty solid ice. And, my driveway has a nice non-melting northern exposure :)


Bah
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logs
March 17, 2007 13:12:35.864
Well, either downloads cratered last week, or there's a logging
problem -
BottomFeeder downloads look like an average of 16 per day, which
is about 10x less than normal. The sorry details:
It helps when you actually download all the correct log files, instead of just the data for a few hours :) As it happens,
BottomFeeder averaged 217 downloads per day. Whew :)
| Platform | BottomFeeder Downloads |
| Windows | 474 |
| Update | 195 |
| Linux x86 | 126 |
| CE ARM | 120 |
| Mac X | 115 |
| Mac 8/9 | 85 |
| Solaris | 70 |
| Linux PPC | 63 |
| HPUX | 59 |
| Sources | 52 |
| Linux Sparc | 50 |
| AIX | 37 |
| Windows98/ME | 32 |
| SGI | 26 |
| ADUX | 15 |
| CE x86 | 3 |
On top of that is the 25-26 downloads a day I'm getting from the
CNet based downloads.
Anyway, let's see about the rest of the data, starting with the
HTML accesses:
|
Tool
|
Percentage of Accesses
|
| Mozilla |
47.5% |
| Internet Explorer |
40.9% |
| MSN Bot |
6.4% |
| Other |
1.9% |
| Opera |
2% |
| Noxtrum bot |
1.3% |
Traffic for the HTML pages looks normal, except that Planet
Smalltalk seems to have stopped being a bad bot
|
Tool
|
Percentage of Accesses
|
| Internet Explorer |
21.9% |
| Mozilla |
19.6% |
| BottomFeeder |
15.2% |
| Other |
5.9% |
| BlogLines |
7.2% |
| Net News Wire |
5.7% |
| Google Feed Fetcher |
4.6% |
| Safari RSS |
4% |
| Vienna |
3.3% |
| NewsGator |
1.9% |
| Akregator |
1.6% |
| Python |
1.1% |
| News Fire |
1% |
| MSN Bot |
1% |
| RSS Bandit |
1% |
| SharpReader |
1% |
| Jakarta |
1% |
| JetBrains |
1% |
| Liferea |
1% |
| Opera |
1% |
Wow - I guess IE7 is having an impact - my subscription numbers
rose last week, and IE rose with them.
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security
March 17, 2007 14:00:25.183
Phishing has taken the next step up (or down, depending on how you want to look at it) the food chain: fake blogs as a source for malware:
Fortinet gives examples of the sites, including one for a supposed fan of the Honda CR450 motor car, which attempts to infect visitors with the Wonka Trojan. In another, the fake blog redirects visitors to a store front purporting to be Pharmacy Express, a phishing site that has turned up in many spam emails distributed by the Stration worm.
"These are not legitimate blogs that were compromised. They appear to be deliberately set up to promote phishing, which is against our terms of service. We are investigating, and blogs found to include malicious code or promote phishing will be deleted," Google said in a statement to CNET.
Splogs as a source of spam links are nothing new, but this takes things to a new level - especially given the ease of creating search feeds that bring these things directly to IE, Firefox, Safari, or Opera.
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spam, malware
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rss
March 17, 2007 14:05:21.451
Yesterday, there was a complaint in the VWNC mailing list about the sudden surges in items from the public store feed - whenever someone pushes a project out, there's often a number of versions of the same package/bundle that hit the feed all at once. Holger Kleinsorgen, the original author, fixed that problem with an update - now, multiple new versions of the same item will be listed in one RSS item. That should cut down on the artificial flood.
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smalltalk
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events
March 17, 2007 15:03:47.012
 |
I'll be speaking at SPA 2007 - on Sunday, March 25th I'll be giving a six hour "Intro to Smalltalk" tutorial. We'll be using VW non-commercial (version 7.4.1), and doing a pretty immersive piece of learning. After that, I can relax and just attend the show - it's always been a fun conference in the past, so I'm looking forward to it. |
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smalltalk, speaking
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smalltalk
March 17, 2007 17:11:39.511
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Silt
March 18, 2007 10:27:45.902
I just went through the static resources this server uses, and made sure that all of them are being served by Apache rather than the Smalltalk server. The Smalltalk server now handles only the dynamic loads; all the static resources (images, mostly) are handled by Apache. This falls under "best tool for the job", and is something I probably should have done a long time ago :)
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books
March 18, 2007 11:42:49.760
 |
I've just finished Ernst Jünger's "Storm of Steel" - he was a highly decorated German veteran of the first world war. Most of the books I've read about that (or any other) war have been strategic or tactical overviews; this is a personal look at how an average soldier's days were spent at the front. It's very explicit in terms of the horror - the author describes the effects of machine guns and high explosives in complete detail. |
The book is neither anti-war nor pro-war; it's more matter of fact than that. None of us who live today can really imagine what life was like for the trench soldiers of that war, but this book gets you as close to understanding as is possible. If casual discussion of carnage bothers you, don't read this book - but I came away from it with a better idea of what my grandfather went through with the AEF.
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development
March 18, 2007 11:46:35.792
Martin Fowler explains how things are different when server volume reaches epic scale:
A couple of years ago I was talking to a couple of friends of mine who were doing some work at eBay. It's always interesting to hear about the techniques people use on high volume sites, but perhaps one of the most interesting tidbits was that eBay does not use database transactions.
It's a fascinating look at how common conventions have to be re-examined when traffic reaches certain extremely high levels.
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copyright
March 18, 2007 16:21:28.354
The Grokster case is coming back to haunt us all with the Viacom suit against YouTube. In Grokster, the court held that "inducement" to violate copyright landed you in hot water - which cracked the door open wide enough for Viacom to bring suit - even though YouTube seems to fall into the Safe Harbor provisions of the DMCA. Lessig explains:
The Grokster case thus sent a clear message to lawyers everywhere: You get two bites at the copyright policy-making apple, one in Congress and one in the courts. But in Congress, you need hundreds of votes. In the courts, you need just five.
Viacom has now accepted this invitation from the Supreme Court. The core of its case centers on the “safe harbor” provision of the 1998 Digital Millennium Copyright Act. The provision, a compromise among a wide range of interests, was intended to protect copyright owners while making it possible for Internet businesses to avoid crippling copyright liability. As applied to YouTube, the provision immunizes the company from liability for material posted by its users, so long as it takes steps to remove infringing material soon after it is notified by the copyright owner.
While this mess is being litigated, no one can be sure what is and isn't allowable under safe harbor. I'm afraid that the chaos Lessig predicts (read the rest of his column) is going to come about.
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law
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podcasting
March 18, 2007 17:42:41.869
In the midst of a long anti-Scoble ramble, Neopolean makes the same kind of point about online video that I've been making for a long while now:
Nobody consulted me - and nobody should have - but if they had, I would have said to do audio, or even just images with text. A typical news site, but with the Scoble brand. Whatever I may be feeling about him this morning, I'm not going to deny that his name is worth something in this industry.
My guess is that Scoble and co wanted to "get in" on the growing popularity of niche video news sites. The difference is that, when you take a look at what some of the other more successful sites are doing, Scoble's videos are too long (in terms of the bandwidth it takes to serve them up). If you don't have gobs of dough in the bank, then every minute is important. By not editing out the boring bits, the videos are going up as-is, gigantic and all.
Very few people are going to sit at their PC's and watch a 45 minute video - when you see successes in online video, you see short - Ze Frank, RocketBoom - stuff that doesn't take long to consume. Long video just takes up too much time and attention to deal with - and if your answer is "just listen, don't watch", then my answer is "push it out as an audio mp3". Audio is a lot easier to consume than video, and can be consumed when it's too hard (or impossible) to read (a car, out jogging, etc).
Insisting on a video format just because you can is a nice way to increase your bandwidth costs and reduce the potential size of your audience. How that works as a business plan, I'm not sure.
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general
March 19, 2007 7:22:32.271
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screencast
March 19, 2007 8:22:13.101
On today's Smalltalk Daily, we take a look at sending mail messages from within a Cincom Smalltalk application.
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smalltalk
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marketing
March 19, 2007 8:39:56.453
Neopolean and Scoble (in the comments to this post) are having an interesting little slagfest - and I have to say, I think Neopolean has the better argument. Scoble has gotten way, way too deep into the self referential "Web 2.0" Silicon Valley culture, and I think he's having trouble seeing the outside. In particular, he's not seeing the obvious problems with long form online video. I've been interested in a number of his interviews - and haven't listened to any. Why? Because it's way too much trouble to strip the audio myself and load the results on my iPod.
Here's another thing - as much crap as I give MS, I think they'll weather the storm that's about to arrive on the scene (look at the mortgage foreclosure news and the Web 2.0 bubble - something is going to give). The various "Web 2.0" companies with marginal business plans? Not so much.
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PR
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events
March 19, 2007 8:41:48.941
Charles points to the March 28th NY STUG meeting, with Panu Viljamaa:
In this presentation Panu will talk about Unit-Testing in Smalltalk, including a new simplified "Method-Tests" -API for doing so. He will demonstrate how unit-testing can be made more productive and totally integrated with the open IDE of Smalltalk. This presentation will be a precursor, and a dress-rehearsal for a more comprehensive presentation to be given at Smalltalk Solutions 2007, Toronto.
Sounds like fun - but I'll be in the UK then :)
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smalltalk
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Silt
March 19, 2007 11:14:59.151
I added the static resources capability to the server quite awhile ago, when I migrated the Cincom Smalltalk site over to Silt. I hadn't really exposed that functionality beyond that one site though - and that changed today. If you look in the sidebar, you'll see a little "About Me" link - which I've linked to a small bio page. Any of the bloggers here can add that kind of "static" resource now, and edit it via the admin pages after logging in.
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smalltalk
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itNews
March 19, 2007 13:52:07.158
I love this:
Late last week Steve Ballmer gave an speech at Stanford in which he stated that Google is a "one trick pony" - that trick being search, of course.
Here's the thing - if I use the same level of evaluation, Microsoft is a two trick pony: Windows and Office. Sure, MS does other things, and so does Google. If you look just at revenue though, MS relies on those two things pretty heavily. Whether they are safer bets over the long term than Google's ad revenue is something else entirely.
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Windows
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web
March 19, 2007 15:58:03.373
I may be skeptical about Twitter, but it does have a lot of buzz at the moment. So - I've created a small domain model that can create objects from the XML status file that Twitter generates. If you want to try it out, load Twitter from the Public Store, and then try this:
client := HttpClient new.
contents := (client get: 'http://twitter.com/statuses/public_timeline.xml') contents.
parser := XML.XMLParser new.
parser validate: false.
xml := parser parse: contents readStream
^Twitter.Constructor from: xml.
That's all it does right now - if you inspect the result, you'll get a collection of Status objects (each with a user). Michael and I intend to build a UI for it (the goal being a small notification application). If you're interested in helping out, go ahead and load that and have a look.
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smalltalk, Twitter
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events
March 19, 2007 18:14:07.102
Lukas Renggli is giving a Seaside talk in Geneva, Switzerland on March 29: auditorium du Geneva Business Center, Petit-Lancy.
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smalltalk, seaside
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smalltalk
March 20, 2007 8:11:56.642
We need a better name for the project, but we've got a (very basic) UI up for our little Twitter application. After I got the basic domain done yesterday, Michael added a UI and some basic network connectivity - we can now specify an update interval, and display the public Twitter stream:

The UI leaves a lot to be desired at present; the timestamps should be lined up, and you should be able to drill down into the user specifics for each item. It's a start, though, and you can load it yourself - grab the Twitter bundle from the Public Store. Volunteers welcome - and yes, it is a Widgetry UI :)
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development
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screencast
March 20, 2007 8:53:10.179
Today's Smalltalk Daily is short - we wrap up sending email with attachments and exception handling.
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smalltalk
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smalltalk
March 20, 2007 12:48:28.832
The main thing slowing me down right now is the slooooowness of the Twitter service itself. We now have the ability (after setting timeouts way, way up) to read the public stream, and to send messages up:

After a rather long wait, this showed up in Firefox:

It's a start :)
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twitter
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sts2007
March 20, 2007 13:38:55.953
The Squeak folks have a booth at Smalltalk Solutions 2007 - Chris Cunnington reports:
I am pleased to announce that Squeak will have its own booth at the
Smalltalk Solutions show. I have just signed the booth agreement, and faxed
it back to the it360.ca show management.
I got the idea for a Squeak booth by attending the Toronto Linux Users Group
pre-show meeting in February. I figured if they could get a free booth as a
non-profit, then so ought we.
The more the merrier!
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smalltalk, squeak
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smalltalk
March 20, 2007 20:37:01.372
I've just pushed another version of the Twitter bundle up to the Public Store - it's cleaned up quite a bit from the last version - but there's still plenty to do. If you're interested, load the latest and have a look.
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Twitter
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smalltalk
March 20, 2007 22:46:45.095
Michael is asking for name suggestions for our little project - in the meantime, I've been slogging forward on the application. Oh - if you want to follow my truly exciting stream of test messages, you can go here, to my Twitter stream. Here's how it looks now that I've laid the UI out a bit better:

Still not a thing of beaty, but at least I have scrollbars now :) I also got access to the friends list working:

That's about it for now - I'll see what Michael has made of it in the morning.
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Twitter
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education
March 21, 2007 6:14:40.417
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smalltalk
March 21, 2007 11:44:38.841
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media
March 21, 2007 11:49:12.118
Doc Searls points to this article, which explains in complete detail why newspapers - both dead tree and online - are busily dying. Like the recording and video industry, newspapers simply aren't in synch with the new business models, and are desperately trying to cling to their existing ones. It won't be a pretty thing to watch as the screams die off in the distance.
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newspapers
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screencast
March 21, 2007 14:49:36.563
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tv
March 21, 2007 16:17:19.325
Sounds like the folks behind "Galactica" are planning to have an actual ending to the series:
"Like many other serial dramas, such as 'Lost' or 'The Shield,' these series have a beginning, a middle and an end," says an insider at Universal, the studio that produces "Galactica."
Hmm - so that will fuel speculation - do they end it at the point where they find Earth? Do they end it with the Cylons wiping humanity out? There are any number of interesting endings, if they are willing to go out with a bang.
Technorati Tags:
Galactica, scifi
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itNews
March 21, 2007 16:44:11.822
Nick Carr has an eye for the obvious today:
In another sign of what the future holds for Web 2.0 in business, the Forrester survey found a clear preference among CIOs for buying a full suite of Web 2.0 tools from a large, established vendor. 74% of CIOs said they'd be more interested in investing in Web 2.0 if all the tools were offered as a suite, and 71% said they'd prefer the tools to be "offered by a major incumbent vendor like Microsoft or IBM [rather than] smaller specialist firms like Socialtext, NewsGator, MindTouch, and others." Web 2.0 startups hoping to make big inroads in the enterprise market will face some big challenges, particularly as the larger vendors release their own suites of tools or incorporate them into existing products. You can bypass the CIO on a small scale, but it's difficult to bypass the CIO when it comes time for a company to standardize on a particular product and vendor.
For established companies, I'd say "well, duh". They say that for the same reason that they keep buying WebSphere and Microsoft Office. The entry point for the smaller guys isn't with the big, established firms - it's with smaller outfits who are willing to take a chance on something that's either cheaper or offers higher productivity - or both.
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smalltalk
March 21, 2007 22:25:09.000
Michael and I have been working on the Twitter client, and getting various fixes and enhancements in. We added support for Proxy servers today, and (at least on Windows), got international character display support. Here's how it looks right now:

It's a neat little project - we intend to make the message display more useful - that's one of the next tasks.
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Twitter
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