Smalltalk gets noticed
Something Awful has a brief Squeak tutorial up, which has been split off from a discussion of Seaside.
Something Awful has a brief Squeak tutorial up, which has been split off from a discussion of Seaside.
So here I am, new USB drive in hand, plugging it in to Windows.... and no drive gets mapped. I wonder - is the cable bad? Try a different cable (same adaptor used by the camera, the drive and the audio recorder). Nope - same thing. Ok - lets try plugging it into the Mac. Pop - up it comes, working just fine. Hmm.
Back to Windows, into Device Manager. Here's where I delve into properties, see that it's not mapped to a drive. Hit the "populate" button there, and it lists drive H:, which happens to be an existing network share. Ok.... maybe I should move the network share to a different letter???
Sure enough, the new drive really, really wants to be drive H:. Why, I have no idea. It's things like this that make me read stuff like this, (yes, Sam has retracted that) and just laugh, long and loud. Yeah - Windows is just perfect.
Technorati Tags: stupidity
Wal-Mart has entered the online video fray:
In a press release, Wal-Mart said the service is now available to its customers in all Wal-Mart stores nationwide.
With the purchase of the "Superman Returns" physical DVD, Wal-Mart said customers can also choose from three video download format options -- $1.97 for portable devices, $2.97 for PCs/laptops, and $3.97 for both portable players and PC/laptops.
So much for fair use - you see those tiered prices? That's the DRM tax.
We'll be trying an experiment in Frankfurt - we are going to try recording the presentations, and packaging them up as podcasts (they'll go into the normal podcast feed, so they'll show up on iTunes, etc). There's going to be a delay between recording and posting - even minimal audio editing takes time :)
Technorati Tags: podcasting, user conference, cincom smalltalk, smalltalk
The 2006 worldwide Cincom Smalltalk Users Conference is next week - here's a last bit of information, including tips on getting to the show:
The conference will start as scheduled on Tuesday, December 5th, at 10:00, with the registration.
For your convenience, here (PDF) are detailed instructions on how to get to the conference venue, the Moevenpick Hotel in Frankfurt. Most of you will be arriving by plane and then take either a cab or public transportation to the hotel. If you arrive by car, please note there are only a few free-of-charge parking lots in front of the hotel - otherwise, you’ll have to use the hotel parking garage which costs 10 Euros/day for attendees of the conference.
Important Information:
Tuesday-Thursday, Dec 5th-7th: Conference
Please see conference program, an HTML version of the complete and final agenda, including speakers’ biographies and abstracts.
Speakers:
We will be providing a video projector to display your presentation on the screen as well as a microphone. Should you require any additional technical equipment, please let us know asap, at the latest by November 30th.
The presentation files will be made available (possibly as PDFs) to all attendees in a restricted area at www.cincomsmalltalk.com for the first 6-8 weeks after the conference. Afterwards, we will grant open access to all web visitors.
We will be audio recording the conference, including your speech. The podcasting will be offered on www.cincomsmalltalk.com with open access. Should you want to opt out of this, please let us know prior to the start of the conference.
Please note that the Moevenpick Hotel is a non-smoking hotel. It provides free-of-charge WLAN access in the lobby and the hotel rooms.
See you there!
Technorati Tags: users conference, cst, cincom smalltalk, smalltalk
This qualifies as a question that's almost too obvious to answer:
I have been traveling quite a bit lately and have had to rely on public Internet access. Much to my dismay I have found that most hotels and airports still do not offer free Internet access. Why isn't airport and hotel Internet access a standard free feature?
Umm - maybe because people are willing to pay for it? And seriously - since those of us passing through airports and hotels have no real way to protest the charges, what changes do you expect? Ever noticed the (huge) hospitality tax charged by hotels? The egregious charges for net access will disappear about the same time that does.
Looks like there'll be no end of excitement on the mound in NY next year:
On the day the Yankees officially welcomed soon-to-be 38-year-old Mike Mussina back into their Kate Moss-thin rotation with a two-year, $23 million deal, Brian Cashman said he believes Randy Johnson and Carl Pavano can be counted on to fill in behind Chien-Ming Wang and Mussina.
Johnson has reached his expiration date. I think Pavano passed his the first time he threw a pitch. Looks like it'll be another year of cringing at the starting staff, followed by horror when the bullpen is summoned...
I thought Scoble's counting of HD's in the home sounded high...
I see a day when every home will have 10 or more hard drives. Heck, in mine I’m already up to 10. Two in my MacPro. Three external. One in my PVR that’s coming on December 12th (yes, we’re finally hooking the HDTV up to a satellite dish). One in my Voodoo machine. One in my Sony Vaio. One in my Xbox. One in my Thinkpad.
But then I counted the ones here. There are 13, plus a few USB flash devices. I think he might be betting low...
It's tales like this one, from Mark Cuban, that breed distrust of the media. I don't trust the reporting from overseas any more than I trust the local stuff - if they can't accurately report an email thread, what can they accurately report?
It's not as if Cuban is the only one noticing this - Dave Winer has opined on this, and instances of fauxtography have been widespread in war reporting over the last few years. It's not new, either - remember the exploding gas tank incident staged by NBC for Dateline?
The trouble is, reporters play at being objective observers, but they aren't. They are as susceptible to bias as the rest of us, and are just as willing to cling to a worldview (even if the facts don't fit) as anyone else. Look at that BusinessWeek story (first link) Cuban got savaged by - in the reporter's mind, Cuban is a loose cannon, willing to say just about anything. Never mind what he actually said; the story just writes itself.
Technorati Tags: news
Today's Smalltalk Daily continues with Opentalk - we create a client class and a server class, and send some messages across.
Technorati Tags: smalltalk, opentalk, distrib programming
The sad thing is, reading this story doesn't immediately raise the BS filter - the MPAA and RIAA have done and said enough outrageous things (i.e., the assertion that every mp3 player is owned by a thief), that this seems possible:
Los Angeles , CA - The MPAA is lobbying congress to push through a new bill that would make unauthorized home theaters illegal. The group feels that all theaters should be sanctioned, whether they be commercial settings or at home.
MPAA head Dan Glickman says this needs to be regulated before things start getting too far out of control, "We didn't act early enough with the online sharing of our copyrighted content. This time we're not making the same mistake. We have a right to know what's showing in a theater."
I can actually imagine the MPAA asserting that, too. It's getting harder to satirize these people - I almost pity "The Onion"...
Leander Kahney doesn't have kind words for the Rhapsody music service, but I think his raspberry is somewhat misdirected; the real problem is in the OS:
To cut a long story short, every step has been a pain, from downloading new firmware for the player to updating the Windows' underlying DRM software. And that was just to get it working.
Once up and running, the first batch of tunes I downloaded generated nearly 10,000 errors. I couldn't believe my eyes. I wish I'd taken a screenshot.
Since then, the software has been dog slow and unpredictable. It's constantly downloading tunes that I'm unable to sync to the device.
The problem likely isn't specifically with Rhapsody - rather, it's with the excitement of DLL Hell on Windows. A few weeks ago, I wanted to do a COM Connect demo for Smalltalk Daily. I couldn't get VW or ObjectStudio to talk to iTunes via COM. At first, I thought it was a problem on the Smalltalk side (COM on VW does not have a good reputation). I got suspicious when the same problem arose in ObjectStudio. I started swearing when I had an engineer show me code that worked fine for him.
Uninstall, reinstall (of iTunes and XPlay), with many reboots in between. Everything worked fine after that. Which is where we get to the uniqueness of every Windows install
Ever pay close attention to installer messages? Periodically, they tell you (or warn you) that some DLL somewhere is being overwritten. Some of those DLL's are shared by multiple apps. That's what happened with iTunes here; I'd guess that some set of DLL's on Kahney's machine weren't quite correct, but the Rhapsody installer assumed they were. It's as I said in the title - every Windows installation is unique, and each has its own problems.
Technorati Tags: Microsoft
Even if it doesn't go anywahere, I'm encouraged to see this kind of experimentation happening around Smalltalk:
Hello Smalltalkers, i've been experimenting a Smalltalk VM made in Python these days. Yes, it works fine but it's extremely slow of course. It's just an experiment; i will publish the code soon tough.
The Jobs Report came in a little late this week - Thanksgiving does things like that to the schedules. In any event, here it is, from James Savidge: enjoy.
Technorati Tags: jobs, smalltalk, smalltalk jobs
Enclosures:
[http://www.cincomsmalltalk.com/audio/smalltalk_jobs-11-27-06.mp3 ( Size: 1427037 )]
It became obvious to me this afternoon that I'm well into my 40's - a mild pain I'd had in the neighborhood of my hip, left side, stopped me in my tracks while I was out jogging this afternoon. Murphy's law being fully in force, it happened at the furthest point away from my house on my route. Trying to jog became excruciating - the pounding just creates incredible pain. I'm also walking with a distinct limp.
I'm hoping it's just a muscle injury, but I think I'll go have my doctor take a look. The last thing I need is some kind of degenerative problem with my hip.
Technorati Tags: health
Andres Valloud will be speaking at the NY Smalltalk User's Group this Wednesday:
Give me more classes is what Andres Valloud says. He will shows us how more classes can in some cases equate to better Smalltalk performance.
Andres will be providing us with an encore presentation of his recent OOPSLA presentation.
The next meeting will be Wednesday November 29th, 2006. It will be the last for this year since we will be taking a break for the holidays.
Follow the link for more info and directions.
MS continues to get horrible reviews of the Zune; take this one, from the Sun-Times:
The setup process stands among the very worst experiences I've ever had with digital music players. The installer app failed, and an hour into the ordeal, I found myself asking my office goldfish, "Has it really come to this? Am I really about to manually create and install a .dll file?"
...
"These devices are just repositories for stolen music, and they all know it," said Doug Morris, CEO of Universal Music Group. "So it's time to get paid for it."
Well, Morris is just a big, clueless idiot, of course. Do you honestly want morons like him to have power over your music player?
Then go ahead and buy a Zune. You'll find that the Zune Planet orbits the music industry's Bizarro World, where users aren't allowed to do anything that isn't in the industry's direct interests.
That sound you hear is MS allowing the RIAA to dig in their fingernails, holding on to the corpse of their old business model.
If this isn't evidence that size breeds complexity, I don't know what is. In an explanation of how builds of Windows happen, Moishe Lettvin talks about how long it takes code to migrate from a typical development team at MS up to the central repository (or back down):
In Windows, this model [ed: one master repository used by all] breaks down simply because there are far too many developers to access one central repository -- among other problems, the infrastructure just won't support it. So Windows has a tree of repositories: developers check in to the nodes, and periodically the changes in the nodes are integrated up one level in the hierarchy. At a different periodicity, changes are integrated down the tree from the root to the nodes. In Windows, the node I was working on was 4 levels removed from the root. The periodicity of integration decayed exponentially and unpredictably as you approached the root so it ended up that it took between 1 and 3 months for my code to get to the root node, and some multiple of that for it to reach the other nodes. It should be noted too that the only common ancestor that my team, the shell team, and the kernel team shared was the root.
This explains a lot of the more frustrating bugs in Windows - an awful lot of the code is built based on not completely recent versions of the codebase. Heck, it sounds like no one really works on the "real" codebase - everyone has their own mirror, and all the mirrors reflect reality a little differently. It's kind of amazing that it works at all, actually.
Patrick Logan advises you to isolate the enterprisey systems as best as you can:
Having some large software vendor or partner inject SOAP into your data center is no reason to allow it to infect all of *your* work. Push WS-Complexity out to just those edges whose outside forces require it. Stop the enemy at the gates. Make the rest as simple as possible. Always assert your control over your own architecture or you will be a loser.
That's good advice. The WS* stack is a morass of complexity - it's starting to make the CORBA boomlet of the early 90's look simple.
Technorati Tags: development, WS*
After a Thanksgiving hiatus, we get back to work with a screencast on distributed programming with Cincom Smalltalk - I demonstrate how easy it is to get Smalltalk to Smalltalk messaging working between two images.
It's not every day that you find the California Highway Patrol on the Autobahn...
I found a couple of interesting podcasts devoted to history recently, and I've really been enjoying them. "12 Byzantine Rulers" is a fascinating look at the Eastern Roman Empire and some of their most influential rulers. I've been reading a fair bit about middle eastern history of late, and the Empire played a role in that up until 1453.
Another good one is Dan Carlin's "Hard Core History" - he's got some fascinating topics there. This is one of the best things about the web - those of us with niche interests can usually find other people who share them.
There's been a new rise of email spam - heavily slanted toward "pump and dump" penny stock schemes. The funny part about this here at Cincom was that the rise coincided with a request by some of us that IT allow more mail through the spam filters, due to fears that some good mail was being lost. I guess we picked the wrong time to ask - eweek notes that the rise in such spam has been astounding:
Internet security researchers and law enforcement authorities have traced the operation to a well-organized hacking gang controlling a 70,000-strong peer-to-peer botnet seeded with the SpamThru Trojan.
...
According to data from Barracuda Networks, an enterprise security appliance vendor in Mountain View, Calif., there has been a 67 percent increase in overall spam volume and a 500 percent increase in image spam since Aug. 2006.
Some of the folks in our group have been grumbling about the specific spam filtering that IT is using - it looks like that just doesn't matter much - there's just a huge wave crashing down on mail servers everywhere right now.
Scoble is right about this - most people don't have a visceral hatred of MS:
Ryan Stewart notices something that I notice too. Outside of the tech world there isn’t the hatred of Microsoft that exists on some blogs. Normal people don’t care that Vista was two years late. They aren’t like Chris Pirillo and won’t notice that some of the UI isn’t consistent.
They’ll just see the photos on their friend’s Xbox and say “I want that.”
On the other hand, an awful lot of them are like my wife's cousin and my father in law. My father in law is no dummy - he built his own machine. However, every time my brother in law visits, there's a good multi-hour session of "get the spy-ware (etc) off the machine" in store. When I took my daughter to visit her cousin last year, that's what I did with their computer.
It's not like I'm the only one with that experience, either - get a few technically oriented people together, and ask them about their friend's computers - unless they own Macs, you get a universal piss and moan session.
There's worse to come with Vista, too. Let's even posit that it is more secure, and does eliminate most of the last decade's worst bug hunts (a big assumption, I'll admit). Let's say instead that you want to do something simple, like pop a DVD (legally owned) into your computer's drive and watch it on your existing monitor.
Whoops - is that DRM that's telling you you're a thief, and you can't watch your own stuff? Yeah, that'll go over really well with the non-tech crowd. PVP-OPM is going to torque off anyone and everyone who comes into contact with it. Treating your customers like crooks - welcome to the happy MS future, where the dreams of the RIAA and MPAA have become reality.
Here's Part Two of this week's podcast. I haven't got the jobs report yet - if I get it, I'll post that separately. Enjoy.
Technorati Tags: smalltalk, cincom smalltalk
Enclosures:
[http://www.cincomsmalltalk.com/audio/industry_misinterpretations_PartTwo_11-25-06.mp3 ( Size: 10242451 )]
Jon Udell notes that we have access to tons of data on the web - but interestingly enough, it's not easily accessible for automated reuse:
If you search the Web for “fortune500.xml, you’ll find an ordered list of the Fortune 500 companies. It’s just what you’d want if you were writing a custom portfolio application. But it didn’t exist until last week when Doug Purdy, a Microsoft program manager, created it while writing his own personal portfolio application. Because he also blogged the list, you can use it, too.
Jon points out that data is mostly presented for passive viewing, not for further analysis. For instance - what if you looked at the typical Fortune 500 list (HTML Table), and wanted to slice and dice the data in a way that the authors didn't? Hello, massive data entry task. It doesn't have to be that way, and there are even tools around that show what should be more easily possible:
For an example of what things could and should be like, check out episode 10 of The Screening Room. At the six-minute mark in that screencast about Dabble DB, a Web database, Smallthought Systems?Avi Bryant -- who is analyzing a set of data about investments -- wants to look at investments by U.S. state as a function of population. The current data set includes states but not their populations. To add population data, Avi visits a Web site that lists states and populations, activates a JavaScript bookmarklet, and imports two columns from the HTML table on that Web page.
That's the kind of analysis that would be more easily possible if data were made available in machine friendly formats as well as in people friendly ones. The Semantic web hasn't arrived yet...
Technorati Tags: semantic web
Andres Valloud has posted a video of his presentation to the NYSTUG in September. It's pretty big, and password controlled. Head on over to Andres' blog to get the download info.
I don't often agree with The Register, but this column by Bill Thompson makes an awful lot of sense. In discussing "web 2.0" and asynchronous xmlhttp, people elide the difficulties of distributed development:
Ajax is touted as the answer for developers who want to offer users a richer client experience without having to go the trouble of writing a real application, but if the long term goal is to turn the network from a series of tubes connecting clients and servers into a distributed computing environment then we cannot rely on Javascript and XML since they do not offer the stability, scalability or effective resource discovery that we need.
I first ran across this issue back in 1995, when PPD introduced VisualWave. Wave was a cool product - you used the normal GUI builder to paint an interface, and then the system would "automagically" html-ify it for you. Marketing touted this as "instant web access" for our customers who wanted to push their apps out to the net.
Well, not so fast. Most applications written for the desktop had a number of baked in limitations - all too common were things like:
And so on. getting a UI on the web was (relatively) simple; getting the application to actually function there wasn't. The intervening decade hasn't really changed that much. Whenever you deal with network resources, you have to be ready to deal with failure gracefully - and I get the distinct impression that most developers tossing around the "web 2.0 mojo" aren't thinking about that. It's going to come back to bite them.
Well, that didn't take long. Gizmodo has step by step instructions for defeating the DRM used by the Zune for wireless sharing of music - use the image hole:
First, you need to enable hard drive mode using the instructions we posted before. Then, rename whatever files -- MP3s, movies, programs -- to have the extension ".jpg" in order to fool the Zune into thinking its an image. This hack works because Zune doesn't apply DRM to images!
Then you just rename them back on the host PC and synch them back to the Zune. I should start an over/under pool for how short an interval it will be before a "critical" update comes out to "fix" this.
It's that time again - another week in the can. First up: BottomFeeder downloads for the week, which went at a rate of 157 per day:
| Platform | BottomFeeder Downloads |
| Windows | 337 |
| Update | 206 |
| Linux x86 | 159 |
| Mac X | 119 |
| CE ARM | 68 |
| Mac 8/9 | 58 |
| Linux Sparc | 37 |
| HPUX | 29 |
| Solaris | 28 |
| AIX | 20 |
| Sources | 12 |
| Windows98/ME | 10 |
| SGI | 8 |
| Linux PPC | 8 |
| ADUX | 4 |
| CE x86 | 2 |
I'm starting to see a decent download rate from download.com, so it's not as easy to summarize - all I get from there in terms of stats is a raw (over time) total. On to the HTML page accesses:
| Tool | Percentage of Accesses |
| Internet Explorer | 43.1% |
| Mozilla | 39.4% |
| Other | 7.1% |
| Planet Smalltalk | 4.4% |
| MSN Bot | 4.4% |
| Opera | 1.6% |
That looks like last week's distribution. Last up: Syndication tool access:
| Tool | Percentage of Accesses |
| BottomFeeder | 19.2% |
| Mozilla | 19.2% |
| Other | 6.1% |
| Net News Wire | 8.1% |
| Safari RSS | 7.2% |
| Google Feed Fetcher | 6.9% |
| Internet Explorer | 5.6% |
| BlogLines | 5.4% |
| NewsGator | 2.6% |
| RSS Bandit | 2% |
| Planet Smalltalk | 2% |
| Akregator | 1.5% |
| MSN Bot | 1.3% |
| Liferea | 1.3% |
| Vienna | 1.3% |
| Strategic Board Bot | 1.2% |
| SharpReader | 1.1% |
| Java | 1% |
| News Fire | 1% |
| RSS 2 Email | 1% |
| Python | 1% |
| JetBrains | 1% |
| BlogSearch | 1% |
| Jakarta | 1% |
| Opera | 1% |
Tool diversity doesn't seem to be dropping much here - but there is a big drop off after BlogLines.
The title seems to describe the state of podcast support that the Zune player has - have a look at this, and make sure to read the comments.
Technorati Tags: podcasting, zune
We went long this week, and into two parts. Michael and I spoke about things Smalltalk needs to do better for about 18 minutes before Dave came on - and then Dave and I spoke for another thirty minutes or so after that. That part of the conversation will show up as part two, once I get the audio edited. Enjoy part one, which you can grab here.
Technorati Tags: smalltalk, cincom smalltalk
Enclosures:
[http://www.cincomsmalltalk.com/audio/industry_misinterpretations_PartOne_11-24-06.mp3 ( Size: 12817838 )]
We just recorded this week's podcast - david joined late, and Michael had to leave after about 35 minutes, so there's going to be a part 1 and a part 2 this week. Fortunately, it looks like everything recorded fine.
I just got two interesting looking books as an early birthday present - my brother in law gave them to me before heading home to Boston:
|
|
I've been considering buying the second book (on Tamerlane) for awhile now. I hadn't seen the first one, which covers the Abbasid dynasty - which was to the pre-eminent dynasty of the pre-Ottoman Islamic Empire. I don't really know much about Tamerlane at all - he charted a path of conquest through the Islamic world during the 14th century - about the same time as the Hundred Year's war was raging between England and France.
Technorati Tags: history
We had a small Thanksgiving this year - made up for by a big event we had on Saturday, and an anniversary party for my in-laws on Sunday. The good news: virtually no left-overs. Now it's on to the Christmas season, with all the attendant shopping and decorating. I have the users conference to get to in the middle of that, but it looks like it should be a quiet season around here.
Murphy's law is apparently in full force - there was a brief server outage just now. Of course, it happened on Thanksgiving, when I wasn't paying any attention to the server :)
Maybe this is bad reporting, maybe it's a lack of enough context in the selected quotes - I don't know. I was struck by this story out of the UK, where a woman clams that WiFi made her ill:
Ms Figes said: "The day we installed wi-fi two years ago was the day I started to feel ill. At first I could not work out what the problem was. I had no idea why I felt so sick and run-down. But I knew that when I walked through the front door it felt like walking into a cloud of poison.
"Imagine being prodded all over your body by 1,000 fingers. That is what I felt when I walked into the house... Then I started to think it might be the wi-fi, so we scrapped it - and I felt better."
So here's what came to mind first: it's not like the front door stopped the signal - I can get WiFi from my patio. Heck, I can get WiFi from all my neighbors (well, I can see their signals - they mostly use secure connections). I rather expect that many of this woman's neighbors use WiFi as well (routers are dirt cheap, and simpler than pulling CAT5).
Which takes me back to the reporting. Did the reporter check for other WiFi signals now that she's scrapped hers? Did she also remove cordless phones and mobile phones? What about those of her neighbors? Some of the readers chimed in with those questions in the comments, but not the initial reporter.
This doesn't even rise to the level of "junk science" reporting - it's anecdotal conversation at best.
Well, here's what I get for deciding on steaks instead of the traditional Thanksgiving turkey:

We just had a large (20 people) dinner party for my in-laws, with Turkey, this last weekend (and that was after a big event we had catered on Saturday). We have a small holiday gathering today, so we decided to do something different. I guess I can grill in my rain gear :)
Technorati Tags: Thanksgiving
I just finished "The Fall of Rome and the End of Civilization" last night. It's a quick read, less than 200 pages. The author attacks the current notion that Rome was "transformed" by the barbarian invasions - which seems to be some kind of politically correct fantasy of academia at the moment.
Using archeological evidence of former abundance (types of buildings, pottery that was in use, etc), Ward-Perkins shows that many areas of the empire literally fell backwards - and that the areas held by the Eastern Empire into the 6th and 7th century maintained their standard of living.
The end of the book makes a cautionary point as to why some areas on the Empire's periphery - like Britain - fell so far. Rome was an empire of specialized jobs and economics. People did not know how to create common household items (like pottery) themselves, as they could buy high quality, inexpensive goods easily. When the collapse came, the dependent population was left without skills.
The parallels to today's world are obvious. There's a show on TV we watch called "Jericho", which posits a nuclear exchange, complete with an EMP. The show focuses on a small town, so when they get cut off from communications, they have no idea what happened, why it happened, or how widespread the attack was. The writers have covered the difficulties of such a catastrophe to some extent, but I don't think they've really hit it completely. Unlike our 19th century forbearers, we simply don't have the skills necessary to survive without the long, complex supply lines provided by the modern world. It's a chilling thought, and made me sympathize heavily with the people who had to live through the collapse of the Roman world.
Technorati Tags: apocalypse, history, Roman Empire
I've organized the Smalltalk Daily screencasts by topic - there are now landing pages for the various areas I've covered.
Technorati Tags: cincom smalltalk
Rajesh discovers how to get good information out of a SOAP error: trust the Smalltalk Debugger:
It's enough to simply raise the exception in the method that implements the web service API. ActionWebService takes care of converting this exception into a SOAP fault message.
Five lines of code in the VisualWorks workspace was all it took:
wsdlClient := WsdlClient new loadFrom: 'http://localhost:3000/hello/service.wsdl' asURI. soapRequest := SoapRequest new. soapRequest port: wsdlClient config anyPort. soapRequest smalltalkEntity: (Message selector: #Hello ). soapResponse := soapRequest value.Executing this snippet produced a Smalltalk exception; step into the debugger, inspect the transportEntity object, and see the SOAP fault message in all its glory.
Having a good debugger and a workspace is an amazing productivity boost.
Technorati Tags: SOAP, Web Services
Blaine returns to the land of square brackets:
I said good-bye to Smalltalk earlier this year for what I thought was the last time. Now, by good-bye, I mean no longer working full-time in it. Did you really think that I could ever *NOT DO* Smalltalk? Anyway, I had relegated myself to Java-land with possible probation to Javascriptville or Rubypolis. Well, I am pleased to announce that I will be returning (once again) to the land of messages and freedom. I can't wait to start. I will be working with some scary smart folks and doing outrageously cool feats of programming acrobatics. And it can only be done in Smalltalk. How lovely.
Welcome back!
Scoble seems a bit confused over the role of reporters:
But, Dave also notes that Valleywag wants to be TechCrunch . I say it can’t do that. Why? Cause TechCrunch is all about building companies and people up while Valleywag is all about tearing companies and people down.
He does state further down that both things are essential, but I'd say that any site exclusively engaged in one or the other isn't doing real reporting.
Technorati Tags: reporting
On today's Smalltalk Daily, we take another look at the merge tool. That will be it for this week, because tomorrow's Thanksgiving here in the US. Have a good weekend!
Technorati Tags: smalltalk
Nick Carr points to Google's theory about the new world of online applications that they believe is just about here:
But a very different, and much more aggressive, Eric Schmidt appears in the Economist's new "World in 2007" issue. Schmidt contributes an article titled "Don't bet against the Internet," in which he makes a striking prediction. Next year, he writes, "we’ll witness the increasing dominance of open internet standards." These standards "will sweep aside the proprietary protocols promoted by individual companies striving for technical monopoly. Today’s desktop software will be overtaken by internet-based services that enable users to choose the document formats, search tools and editing capability that best suit their needs."
The big question to me is this: should you start building to an "always on" model of network connectivity, or to a "usually on" model? Google sounds like they are assuming the former - I tend to believe the latter. What you build will vary based on that question - "full cloud" apps, or "smart clients".
To give an example I'm familiar with, BottomFeeder is a smart client. It lives on the desktop, but is usable (and useful) when there's no network. Google docs, or calendar? Without a net connection, those applications may as well not exist. As a business traveler, I'm not sure I want to fully rely on those kinds of applications yet; on a long flight to Sydney, I'm going to want to access my documents (etc). Based on what I'm reading about connectivity on planes, I don't see that hole closing anytime soon.
Even putting that aside, there are plenty of times that connectivity that should work doesn't. I've certainly been in hotels where the net connection was broken, or completely sub-optimal. If it's the night before a big meeting, I don't want to be bereft of all the productivity applications I might need. Open document formats sounds great, and I'd really like to see that spread. I have far less interest (at least right now) in a fully cloud based model.
Technorati Tags: internet, smart client
Smalltalk Solutions 2007 is approaching - next year's show is back in Toronto, with the IT360° show. It's April 30-May 2, and the call for participation is out now. That site mentions December 15 as a deadline - we are going to try to get that extended. You should still get your submissions in ASAP.
Smalltalk Solutions in conjunction withIT360° (formerly LinuxWorld & NetworkWorld Canada) is seeking conference participants. Show dates are April 30, 2007 through May 2, 2007 in Toronto at the Metro Toronto Convention Centre.
Smalltalk Solution speakers have the opportunity to reach the broader IT360° audiences. As with previous years, one presenter per accepted session will receive complimentary conference registration. Travel, hotel and all other expenses will be at the presenter’s expense and each additional presenter in a session will also be required to register for the conference in order to enter the conference area.
Via Rob Fahrni comes word of the trailer for Order of the Phoenix, (scroll down) due in theaters July 13. I'm mentally in line now :)
|
|
I just finished " The Middle Ages ", by Morris Bishop. It was written awhile ago (1968) - I really enjoyed the author's conversational style. It was enough to sadden me to realize that he's been dead since 1973 - I get the impression that he would have been a great dinner companion.
Anyway, I highly recommend the book as an overview of the period - it gives a good feel for the progression of life during the period from about 600 AD to 1400 AD in Western Europe. I certainly enjoyed the book. Next up: " The Fall of Rome ". That looks like a good one too.
Joel Spolsky goes deep on what seems like a simple subject: shutting down a Windows box. It turns out that there are way too many ways to do that:
Every time you want to leave your computer, you have to choose between nine, count them, nine options: two icons and seven menu items. The two icons, I think, are shortcuts to menu items. I'm guessing the lock icon does the same thing as the lock menu item, but I'm not sure which menu item the on/off icon corresponds to.
On many laptops, there are also four FN+Key combinations to power off, hibernate, sleep, etc. That brings us up to 13 choices, and, oh, yeah, there's an on-off button, 14, and you can close the lid, 15. A total of fifteen different ways to shut down a laptop that you're expected to choose from.
This is exactly the kind of problem I'm trying to address in Cincom Smalltalk - the plethora of choices that leads to paralysis by neophytes who just want to get something done (Listen to my last podcast for more). You may not agree with how Joel would cut down on the choices, but he's definitely on the right track.
You can find Luddism anywhere on the political dial - here's Fox News' Bill O'Reilly, demonstrating his variation on the theme:
I don’t own an iPod. I would never wear an iPod… If this is your primary focus in life - the machines… it’s going to have a staggeringly negative effect, all of this, for America… did you ever talk to these computer geeks? I mean, can you carry on a conversation with them?
Never mind that you can download his radio show in podcast form :) Apparently, technology only serves to make us into uninformed trolls. The amusing thing is, his intellectual forbearers railed against the evils of radio and television.
This is of a piece with the astonishing admission from Larry King last week - that he's never been on the internet. Fossils come in all varieties, that's for sure.
Thomas Gagne has some qualms about modifying production Smalltalk images:
Practically speaking, we could probably open a running image, save code, then parcel-out the fixed classes. That would require our production images to be configured to read-in parcels when it starts up. While technically feasibly, it is impractical. We have a distributed application with multiple Smalltalk images running concurrently and each one would have to be re-initialized.
It's simpler than that, IMHO. I modify the running blog server here all the time. I've outlined the steps before, but what the heck - let's go through it again:
That's it. Every major change I've done (including ones that have made shape changes to live objects in the server) has happened on the fly that way. I try not to restart the server, simply to avoid outages.
Technorati Tags: hot loading, live patching
On today's Smalltalk Daily, we take a look at how to resolve code forks in Cincom Smalltalk using the merge tool.
Technorati Tags: smalltalk
It's not all great reviews for the Wii - the motion sensing controllers sound like they could stand an upgrade:
The Wii Remote is the most advanced motion-sensing device in the history of gaming, but in the interests of accommodating almost unlimited variables, from the size of the TV to the player's physical proportions, the Wii tosses out much of the data that are collected. Depending on what's going on in the game, only a narrow range of your physical input is converted to on-screen action. Which is why I could hit one-handed home runs without winding up or following through.
I still think this is coming to my living room - I've seen very positive reviews of this as well. And, unlike the PS3, the price is right.