Where in the world is Ophelia?
Every time I look at the storm track, it's different. Who the heck knows where this one is headed...
Every time I look at the storm track, it's different. Who the heck knows where this one is headed...
Just to be fair, minutes after my rant on the defects of Outlook, my Mac Mini locked up, hard. Victoria was playing SimCity 4, and then bam - screen blanked, the box disappeared from the list of attached devices at the router, and hitting the power button failed to get its attention. I had to pull the plug. Now, maybe it's a bad sign that in the registration list, OS X 10.4.2 wasn't listed (it stopped at 10.3.x). Still, a crash that hard is inexcusable - and something that I've seen pretty darn rarely on Windows XP (last time I got something that required the same level of restart was when I hand hacked the registry). Bah
Update: - looks like Aspyr is aware of the problems - there are downloadable patches available.
If you go to the BottomFeeder download page, and then scroll down to the dev links, you'll have access to the latest build - pushed up just minutes ago. There's already an update available - it ties history to the tabs (as in Firefox). To get that, add 'dev' to the end of the update path in settings and then restart.
The 4.0 release is pretty close now - Rich has been good about finding inconsistencies and issues, and I've been fixing them as they come up. The doc is also progressing - the release should be soon.
Panopticon expresses what's been in the back of my mind about BattleStar Galactica lately:
Since we’re just biding our time ‘til Serenity comes out in theaters, Andrea and I have continued to watch Battlestar Galactica even though we still think it’s only so-so. (Something that I’m sure YAG is going to bug me about when I get to the PDC.) Some episodes are pretty decent, but I still find myself annoyed by many of the characters (never a good sign) and bored in long stretches of some of the episodes. The core problem, to my mind, is that the writers are not particularly good at parcelling out the ongoing mystery very effectively. The X-Files did a superb job of this, in my mind, until about the sixth season when it became clear that Chris Carter was making up the mythology as he went along and had no clear idea where it was all going. I’m beginning to suspect this about BG as well — do the writers really know what the Cylon’s plans are, or are they throwing elements in as they go along? (Contrast this also with Harry Potter, where J.K. Rowling seems to have a very strong idea of how the whole story is going to play out. Much better.)
Well - the basic outlines of the Cylon ethos are out there, and it's clear to me that the series is being inspired by the current world situation - just as the original was. In the old series, the Cylons were stand-ins for the Soviets. Now, we have a religious conflict, where the Cylons are completely intolerant of any beliefs other than their own (shades of Stargate SG-1 and the Ori, which has also picked up this meme).
The question is, where do they want to go from here? In the old series, the humans were smarter and more agile than the Cylons. That's clearly not the case here - the Cylons seem to be faster, smarter, and far better organized. They also have more resources and larger numbers. Given all that, how the heck do Adama and company manage to survive? It's not at all clear to me.
Back to the Cylons - I suspect, like Panopticon, that the "plan" is like Chris Carter's plan - it's "out there", but pretty ill defined. I could be wrong - this could be like "Babylon 5", with a well defined path and endgame. That might work especially well for a series like this, since - if they ever found Earth - you pretty much have an endgame on your hands (or, at the very least, a very different series).
So my wife finally got all of her mail transferred from Outlook Express on the old machine, to Outlook on the new machine. Now, she's just trying to see if there's any way to make the UI not suck eggs. At the top of the Window (this is Outlook 2003), there's this large brown bar labelled "Inbox", and - for reasons that defy our understanding - a button kind of area that has something to do with drag/drop sorting of the columns (never mind that you can do this by clicking on a column header already, which is simpler).
There seems to be no way to get rid of that large area of wasted space at the top of the Outlook Window, and the toolbars (which you can dismiss) are just so much visual clutter. If I had any doubts about staying with Eudora, this vicarious experience with Outlook has removed them.
So why is this atrocity so widely used? Is an integrated calendar worth it? Whatever team in Redmond is responsible for the UI of this thing should hang their heads in shame. I'd relate my wife's comments on this, but I try to avoid that kind of language on this blog...
Four years ago today was one of the darkest days I can remember - and today brings it back visually, as the sky outside my window is the same gorgeous, clear blue that we had that day. I'll remember 9/11 as long as I live - and the bravery of firemen like these will always come to mind:

The LA Smalltalk User's Group is meeting tomorrow evening:
Speaker Simon Michael: Beginner's perspective on Smalltalk, 9/12/2005, 7:00 pm Los Angeles
Smalltalk User Group Meeting Monday, September 12, 2005
You'll sometimes go to an IT group and ask about support for Firefox, Safari (etc, etc) - and get the response that "we're a Microsoft shop". Typically infuriating, but you probably never thought of it as being dangerous - until now:
What is surprising, however, is the fact that the Federal Emergency Management Agency's (FEMA) online registration site for disaster help is Internet Explorer-only. While anyone can browse the site, users of non-IE browsers will find this message waiting for them when they attempt to register.
In order to use this site, you must have JavaScript Enabled and Internet Explorer version 6. Download it from Microsoft or call 1-800-621-FEMA (3362) to register.
With all of FEMA's other problems at the moment, I doubt that this one is high on the radar. On the other hand, would you want to be the IT manager who had to explain "we couldn't take donations from that large group there, because they insisted on using Macs" ?
Likewise, in a business situation, do you want to be the IT manager who has to explain the lost prospects - who were lost because your site turned them away with a message like the one above? I know I wouldn't.
Hat tip Jonathan Schwartz.
Blaine has some cool news on the next user group meeting in his neck of the woods:
Hello everyone, This month we will be doing a two fisted meeting! First up, we will show the brilliant Avi Bryant Seaside demo from the Vancouver Lisp Meeting. Then, Sam Tesla has been kind enough to show us Ruby and Ruby On Rails. So, it's going to be a meeting not to be missed! Here's all of the details:
When: September 13, 2005, 7pm - 9pm
Where: Offices of Northern Natural Gas
1111 S 103rd Street
Omaha Nebraska 68154Office is at 103rd & Pacific. Guests can park in the Northern visitors parking area back of building, or across the street at the mall. Enter in front door, we'll greet you at the door at 7:00pm. If you arrive a bit later, just tell the guard at the reception desk you're here for the Smalltalk user meeting in the 1st floor training room. -- Blaine Buxton, Mad Scientist In Training "You're as beautiful as your thoughts"-EW&F
Sounds like fun!
Suzanne took some pictures while we were visiting Cargill last week - they have a great team there, and they've been a valued Cincom customer for 20 years now - so here are some shots of them and their facility. I should mention that the complex we visited (corporate center) is absolutely gorgeous. Suzanne said her first thought on seeing it was "I could live here" - until she remembered that it was Minnesota, and that meant snow in truckloads :) Anyway - here's the cake we presented at the meeting:

Next, here's a shot of us and some of the LYNX team at Cargill:

Next, a shot of geese wandering the grounds. These geese had no fear of people or cars - they seem to have it made :)

And finally, a picture of a building that would have been nice to meet in. This was a residence for someone back in the 20's, and it's gorgeous. It's now part of the complex - apparently, they have retreats and such there:

I appreciate all the folks at Cargill taking the time to meet with us - they're a great bunch!
I thought it might be a good idea to show you what's coming in BottomFeeder 4.0 - here's a screenshot of the app with tabs open - you can click through for a bigger view:
The smaller image is probably hard to see, but there are three tabs there, all with different content. I'm down to squashing UI layout issues and tab inconsistencies now - as soon as that's done, and doc's ready, it'll be a go. In the meantime, all this is available via the dev update stream for BottomFeeder.
I managed to survive being surrounded by a sea of girl scouts and moms this afternoon - maybe it was the lunch break :) Actually, it was a fun day, and Victoria had a great time - which is really all that matters.
I'm heading off to chaperone a girl scout event - the Central Maryland cookie kickoff at the Howard County fairgrounds. What that means is that I'll be surrounded by a sea of girls aged 5-12 for the next few hours. If I survive that, I'll be back in the afternoon :)
It's the end of another week, and time for another glance at the logs. It looks like the time is ripe for BottomFeeder 4.0 to be released - there were over 1500 downloads per day last week. That's kind of amazing. Here are the details:
| Platform | BottomFeeder Downloads |
| Windows | 8490 |
| Mac 8/9 | 494 |
| HPUX | 437 |
| Linux x86 | 410 |
| Sources | 311 |
| Mac X | 299 |
| Update | 100 |
| CE ARM | 96 |
| Windows98/ME | 34 |
| Solaris | 23 |
| Linux Sparc | 17 |
| AIX | 14 |
| SGI | 10 |
| ADUX | 5 |
| Linux PPC | 5 |
| Source Script | 3 |
| CE x86 | 1 |
That's a big wow - I had no idea that so many downloads were happening. The daily access numbers for the blog have been up, but those download numbers are way up. I better get that next release out. Here are the numbers for the html blog accesses:
| Tool | Percentage of Accesses |
| Mozilla | 50.1% |
| Internet Explorer | 32% |
| MSN Bot | 7.3% |
| Other | 4.6% |
| Google Bot | 4% |
| Opera | 1% |
| BottomFeeder | 1% |
Seems MS got their bot settled down - it's still high, but not absurdly so. Mozilla's gone back over 50% as well. Opera's appeared on the list too - something I haven't seen much of. last, the accesses to the RSS feeds:
| Tool | Percentage of Accesses |
| Mozilla | 22% |
| BottomFeeder | 16% |
| Net News Wire | 12.3% |
| Other | 11% |
| Safari RSS | 5.4% |
| BlogSearch | 4.1% |
| Planet Smalltalk | 3.9% |
| NewsGator | 3.2% |
| BlogLines | 3.1% |
| Internet Explorer | 3% |
| SharpReader | 2.6% |
| Feed Demon | 2.3% |
| Magpie | 2.2% |
| RSS Bandit | 1.5% |
| Feed Reader | 1.4% |
| Feed Tagger | 1% |
| JetBrains | 1% |
| Liferea | 1% |
| Google Bot | 1% |
| News Fire | 1% |
| RSSReader | 1% |
That's still a pretty diverse range of readers - although - again - it's noteworthy how well represented the Mac is in that list.
There's some unintentional irony in the slide deck that Sam Ruby posted from his FOSSSL talk. The slides are interesting - it's clear to me that dynamic languages are finally getting noticed by the mainstream. The irony? The fact that, just as one part of IBM (where Sam works) is noticing that dynamic languages are the wave of the future, the part that actually had one on hand is dropping it.
Well, this is interesting - according to Technorati, this blog is number 62 on the list for information about marketing. I hadn't really thought of this blog in those terms, but I guess I bring the topic up often enough.
Now, before I get all puffed up, I need to remind myself of something important about search engine results: very few people even scroll down on the first page, much less bother going to the second (or later) page of results.
This slashdot story does indicate an overly broad sense of security in the Mac community, but it's not time to panic.
"The IT security manager of the University of Otago, New Zealand, has been educating his OS X users in security best-practices. According to Mark Borrie, many Mac users believe they were immune to security problems -- a trap many Mac fans seem to have fallen into. He said around 40 percent of the computers at the uni are Macs. "On the security side of things I reckon the Mac community has yet to wake up to security. They think they are immune and typically have this idea that they can do whatever they want on their Macintosh and run what they like," said Borrie. "If I can get our Mac users up to speed and say 'you are not immune' -- so when [the malware] hits, hopefully we will be pretty safe," he said. "We want to be ready for the first big Macintosh virus -- because it will come. Some day, somebody will say 'I am going to create a headline and write a virus for Mac'," said Borrie."
Well, say someone wrote a Mac virus. It's going to try and spread like Windows viruses do. Now, when a Windows virus hits, and tries to infect another system, the odds of hitting a Windows system are pretty good (simply given the large market penetration). Look at Macs, by comparison. Say my Mac gets infected, and immediately tries to infect the other machines on my LAN.
Oops - three Windows boxes, two ReplayTVs, and a Linux box. It's going to find similarly slim pickings (probably slimmer) as it looks outside my LAN. It's not that any given Mac couldn't get infected by malware - it could. It's that the liklihood of an outbreak are very slim.
Why not Smalltalk? Follow the link and find out why this guy picked Smalltalk, and stay tuned for his experiences with it over the next little while.
Bernard Notarianni points to a Smalltalk party in France, being organized by Serge Stinkwich. There's a lot of lead time - it's December 3rd of this year. Make your plans to attend now!
I'm down to a few things for BottomFeeder 4.0. Rich has a number of good suggestions for the tabs, and I intend to follow those up. That will impact his ability to get the updated documentation done, so we'll have some lag there as well. Things are moving well though - I expect to have this all wrapped up within 2 weeks. Fingers crossed :)
Here's what's coming up in the new release:
That's the major stuff - a whole raft of bugs were fixed, and the blog posting tool saw some fixes as well. All in all, this should be a great release.
It's been a quiet couple of days on the blog, as I've been at a customer site (Cargill). We had a good day and a half of meetings, and I wish I could say more about what they are doing with Smalltalk - it's very cool stuff. Suffice to say, a lot of the foodstuffs you get daily went through the supply chain with the help of Cincom Smalltalk .
Anyway, I'll be back in the saddle again tomorrow, and expect to be back at my normal blogging pace.
Lesscode looks at Sam Ruby's FOSSSL keynote slides, and titles the post: "Reinventing Smalltalk, one decade at a time". Heh.
Scoble is hyping the upcoming PDC, telling us that something really big is coming. Color me skeptical - the last really big thing I recall MS talking about was list extensions to RSS (yawn). I'll believe it when I see it.
I'm in Minneapolis, MN today and part of tomorrow, visiting Cargill - a large customer of the Cincom Smalltalk group. They've spent the last decade+ building a large suite of applications they call LYNX - to summarize a lot, it's a system that deals with the grain origination business, through the supply chain from the farmer to the end purchaser. I can't go into a lot of details - like Cincom, Cargill is privately held, and they have a lot of proprietary value locked up in this system. They've evaluated it against various COTS systems over the years, and have always made the determination that LYNX served their needs better.
We got a lot of background on the business and application architecture from them. The application work started around 1992, when they decided to get rid of the various legacy stovepipe systems they had. Later on, Y2K compliance came into play. Just from a Smalltalk perspective, they have an interesting architecture - they have a multi-tier system with VSE clients and VW servers. The VSE clients use CORBA to communicate with VW.
That actually gets into something that not a lot of people know about - there's a VSE CORBA client (not suitable for running servers - it's incomplete) that shipped way back in the day. Cargill has been cheerfully using that code for years. They also wrote their own VSE/VW code compatibility layer - the entirety of their domain model is portable between VSE and VW. The GUI stuff, obviously, is not portable - and they are very interested in Pollock development and our roadmap.
Like I said above, I can't go into many details on the applications themselves - but I can say that Cargill is very happy with Cincom Smalltalk, and is looking to hook the LYNX system up to other systems that are being developed and deployed throughout Cargill. They are getting ready to kick off a fairly large effort soon, and that's what this meeting was all about. The last time they scheduled a large effort (back in 2000/2001), we came in and had extensive conversations with them. Those conversations bore fruit in the work they deployed out in 2003, which saved them a ton of money and streamlined their operations.
It's always fun to talk to a customer doing cool things with the product!
Dave has been having laptop troubles with standby/hibernation. It seems to be a prickly area. I always put mine into standby (and let it lapse down to hibernate, and it seems to work fine. The Thinkpad has been marvelous that way. The old Dell, on the other hand - I had to completely disable hibernation, because it never came out of it well. Likewise, some of my co-workers report the same problems with their Thinkpads. There's been progress by the vendors in this area, but it still seems way more fussy than it ought to be.
Meanwhile, I had a strange issue - I thought my battery wasn't charging. It ran down to 5%, and plugging in was doing nothing. Fortunately, the old "slide it out, slide it back in" trick worked - it wasn't connecting fully, I guess. Laptops are still fussy beasts...
Rob Fahrni spots a really cool combination:
HPANA: "Additionally, a special edition 'Harry Potter iPod' will be made available featuring the Hogwarts school crest, designed by the author." - I never thought I'd purchase an iPod because they're just too darned expensive for what they provide, now I may have to change my mind.
James Governor links to a great post on the need for simplicity:
Adrian then hits on a great point:
Why does Sainsbury have an "elaborate system" where surely a simple system would suffice?
I love that. The argument (or recieved wisdom) that elaborate means better is nonsense.
In IT we hear it about things like PHP all the time. Oh no - what you really want is a more scalable system (in enterprise software that invariably means a more elaborate one). Sometimes however there is an argument for lesscode, less software.
Elaboration tend to mask and degare responsibility because you can blame the system if something goes wrong. [We'll see a lot of that in the next couple of months].
Exactly. This goes straight to the point I made yesterday as well - do you want the complex (and supposedly scalable) system a long time from now, or the simple one that works right away? Too many IT people always gravitate toward the former, regardless of what the use case is.
This pretty much defines what I mean by "limited power" when I discuss Java and C# - I'm fairly surprised by this:
Unlike Java, C# contains the goto statement which can be used to jump directly from a point in the code to a label. Although much derided, gotos can be used in certain situations to reduce code duplication while enhancing readability. A secondary usage of the goto statement is the ability to mimic resumeable exceptions like those in Smalltalk, as long as the exception thrown does not cross method boundaries.
Back to the future, complete with goto statements. Amazing...
This post documents one way to generate an RSS feed - by iteratively building up an XML document, using the basic XML framework in VisualWorks. That's pretty much where I started 3 years ago, when I first started creating a feed for this blog. I pretty much left that code alone, since it works, and I felt no compelling reason to revisit it.
Later on, I wanted to create local (i.e., file urls) RSS feeds scraped from websites that don't support syndication. This time around, I looked into using a SAX driver. The basic class I created is RSSSaxWriter:
Smalltalk.RSSSax defineClass: #RSS_SAXWriter
superclass: #{XML.SAXWriter}
indexedType: #none
private: false
instanceVariableNames: ''
classInstanceVariableNames: ''
imports: ''
category: 'StoreRSS'
I created specific subclasses for the various RSS versions I wanted to support (although in practice I really only use RSS 2.0). The easiest way to see how I use this is to look at a script I wrote to scrape a cartoon I read.
| contentBlock out writer rest str content | contentBlock := [:builder :chunk | | lnk | lnk := 'http://www.comics.com', chunk. builder link: lnk. builder title: 'Monty: ', Core.Date today printString. builder description: '<img src="', lnk, '">'. builder pubDate: Core.Timestamp now]. out := 'monty.xml' asFilename writeStream. [writer := RSS20_SAXWriter new output: out. writer prolog. writer startRSS. writer startChannel. writer title: 'Monty'. writer link: 'http://www.comics.com/comics/monty/index.html'. writer description: 'Monty'. writer pubDate: Core.Timestamp now. writer startItem. writer title: 'Monty: ', Core.Date today printString. content := 'http://www.comics.com/comics/monty/index.html' asURI valueStream contents. str := content readStream. str throughAll: '<IMG SRC="/comics/monty'. str upToAll: '<IMG SRC="/comics/monty'. str throughAll: 'IMG SRC="'. rest := str upToAll: '"'. contentBlock value: writer value: rest. writer endItem. writer endChannel. writer endRSS] ensure: [out close].
Fairly simple to follow - and a whole lot easier than building up an XML doc from scratch. Ignoring the scraping bits, you just tell the writer what the values are for various tags, making sure to start/end various sections (like 'channel'). To get an idea what's behind some parts of that, let's look at a couple of the SAX driver methods. Here's the #startRSS method:
. startRSS self startElement: 'rss' attributes: (Array with: (XML.Attribute name: 'version' value: self version)). self cr.
All that is, is a convenience method around the general #startElement:attributes method (there's a simpler #startElement: for cases where you don't have any attributes to worry about):
startElement: localName attributes: someAttributes self startElement: '' localName: '' qName: localName attributes: someAttributes.
The rest looks a lot like that - to see the implementation, load package RSSScriptRunner from the Public Store - it has all the code for this. The upshot is, you can use a SAX driver to easily create an XML document, and creating a new SAX driver isn't hard - you simply start with the framework class SAXWriter and customize.
Amazing - apparently, just about the only team that the Devil Rays can beat is the Yankees. This is what happens when your management thinks that a staff of pitchers my age is a good idea. Bah.
Spotted in a ruby on rails delicious tag set:
when you get to technologies that survive much more (or purely) due to its technical merits than promotion efforts, such as Python, Ruby or Smalltalk, you start to realize that the people that compose the communities around those platforms have something
There's actual passion behind these languages. As opposed to Java and C#, where there's bland conformity...
Here's an all too typical story in SD Times - writer Jennifer deJong lets a Forrester analyst say something utterly absurd:
“In the early days of agile, only heretics used tools,” said Liz Barnett, a Forrester analyst who follows agile development. But that is no longer true.
Umm - XP, which is where the entire agile movement comes from, was developed by Kent Beck and the C3 team. Hmm - what were they using on that project? Smalltalk (VisualWorks, specifically). Last time I looked, VisualWorks is a tool filled environment.
How frelling hard would it be for a journalist or analyst to do some minimal research? Is typing into the Google box too hard for these people?
I hope that Sci Fi does better with this series than they and Fox did with Sliders, which started with such promise. I love alternate history books (like the ones Turtledove writes). Here's the blurb:
SCI FI Channel announced that it is developing What If, a "speculative future" series that poses intriguing scenarios of alternate realities. The program, from NBC Universal Television Studio in association with New Line Television, asks, "What if a moment in time could change the world forever?"
I understand what Stallman is after with his comments here. I dislike the way DRM and software patents are going as well - and have said so here numerous times. However, what's the likely result of changing the GPL to penalize patented software and DRM? Expect a lot more firms to develop strong allergies to the GPL
I blogged about this Javacast the other day, and I finally got around to listening to it today. Tune into it at minute 1:22. The guys describe a small web app that they built using a "lite" Java stack - Spring and Hibernate instead of the full J2EE stack. Time to build - 4 months. Ok, they decided, on a whim, to try Ruby on Rails. Time to build?
4 Days
That's a pretty amazing productivity jump, and they were pretty shocked. They went on to state that dynamic languages just have it all over Java in this sphere, mentioning Ruby, Lisp, Python, and Smalltalk (stating that Ruby has momentum).
Then there's an interesting riff starting at minute 1:26, where they go into Continuation based web development, and they point out how much simpler things like Seaside are - they went so far as to say that they figure that in 3-5 years, we'll all be doing development like this. They mentioned Seaside and Squeak specifically (note - Seaside works in VW as well). They point out that you can't get there in Java, because you can't do Continuations. Instead, there are frameworks that build huge state machines (complexity alert!).
So, if you want the power and productivity now, you can grab VW or Squeak and start using Seaside. Or you can get the all too typical pale reflection in Java...
There are more influences out of Smalltalk than most people realize - take the Eclipse Foundation, for instance - 1/3rd of the fulltime staff came out of Smalltalk.
Hat tip James Governor
Of course, those of you want the real deal instead of the pale reflection can download it :)
We sure don't need this: that system of disturbed weather off the Florida coast has turned into Tropical Depression 16. Follow the link to see where it's headed. We need this like we need a hole in the head...
Over the last few weeks, I've noticed that Eudora was getting very sluggish, and would often tie itself up for minutes at a time. Seems I was keeping too much mail around for it to handle in any kind of reasonable way. I subscribe to a bunch of mailing lists, and get the all too typical spam load - so I receive well north of 300 emails per day. I hadn't deleted any mail since 2003, and Eudora was having trouble with folders that had tens of thousands of messages. So... I whacked all the older ones (after saving copies), and Eudora was back to its formerly snappy self.
Anyone know if Thunderbird is able to hold large amounts of mail without this issue?
I like Graham's latest essay. My readers know that I don't often think highly of Graham's essays, but this one caught my eye. Agree or disagree, it's thought provoking.
The National Hurricane Center is tracking Tropical Depression 15. It's east of Florida, and could track across the state into the gulf. Of course, it might just break up and go away too, there's no telling yet. Here's hoping it breaks up - the gulf coast doesn't need another event right now...
So my wife wanted to export her mail - the messages and account settings - from Outlook Express on machine 1 to Outlook on machine 2. You would think this would be easy - same network, all MS apps - but no, it's a two step dance of pain. Here's what we ended up doing:
Sheesh. It was fairly quick once we figured it out, but there was no good reason for us to have to take the side trip through OE on machine 2. Someone needs to find Ballmer and crew and point out the term "Usability". It's pretty damn clear to me that they haven't heard of it.
Heh - even better. We finally got it all done, and my wife actually looked at Outlook. Her reaction makes me look downright positive about that abortion of an application. The user interface is more cluttered than I remember it - like many MS apps, it seems to have gotten worse with age. So now it's off to find a mail client that isn't cluttered as all get out and can import from Outlook...
I've found a few more issues with the new tab support - changing Look and Feel caused startup problems, and you could get errors when clicking near (but not on) a tab. There were a few other things as well - an update is available in the dev level updates. bear in mind, if you don't have the latest dev updates (with tabbed browsing), this is all something you can ignore for now.
I also fixed a browser launch bug on Unix/Linux. In some shells, urls with ampersands were being taken badly - the ampersand being seen as a request to background the task rather than as part of the url. I fixed that, and the person I tested it with reported that it worked just fine.
I love seeing stuff like this:
Seaside is incredible too, I picked it up very quickly reading 3 pages of overview, playing with demos, and then on to coding. There's plenty more to learn, I'm sure, but my web app is up and running with suprisingly little code. Learning/using Java frameworks was never this easy.
The environment in VisualWorks is awesome - integrated refactoring browser, code critic, sunit testing framework - it feels like home, one I never want to leave again. Unless something more like Smalltalk than Smalltalk comes along. :)
Wilfred Springer clearly hasn't seen the refactoring tools in Smalltalk, or he wouldn't have let loose with this:
But I also remembered some conference sessions on dynamicly typed languages that I attended in the past. None of these sessions ever mentioned the fact that refactoring tools can be so much more powerful if the type is known before runtime. Renaming an operation in a large codebase would be practically impossible. Tracing the usage of a class would be equally hard.
Seems the Java guys are starting to realize that there are simpler ways to solve problems - this weeks JavaCast talks about Seaside, amongst other things. Very cool.
Dave Winer noticed something interesting about Technorati's new blog search - various tags that you would think would be associated with a given blog aren't. This is related to something Tim Bray commented on the other day - the current rankings are reflecting who has and hasn't charged in and claimed the 20 tags that Technorati lets you associate with your blog. Over time, that should sort itself out - what we are seeing right now is the equivalent of a sorting algorithm after the first few iterations.
If you've grabbed the development build or updates, and have tabs - there are some areas where you can run into problems. I'm running the dev build myself, so I'm fixing issues as I run across them. Keep in mind that the development builds are not necessarily completely baked.
Browsing around, I discovered that the city of New Orleans has a disaster plan - i.e., they had a stated plan of action for this kind of situation. One of the sadder things I'm seeing right now is a desperate attempt by partisans - of all stripes - to grab this disaster and use it as a stick with which to beat their opponents. I'd guess that mistakes were made up and down the chain here:
On that latter point - take a trivial example, backup of crucial data. We all know that hard drives fail, and that we'll face a loss of data at some point. We know this. And yet, how many of us (myself included) fail to do backups diligently, subconsciously thinking "it won't happen to me"? Now, when we do lose data, how many of us decide to point the finger at IT, since it's far easier to do that than look at ourselves?
On the first point, how many of us know a "stickler" who insists on following "the rules", no matter what the situation is? Bureaucracies are loaded with that type of personality.
There's a lot of finger pointing happening here, with the addition of partisan game playing by all and sundry.