Last week we had the early taste of spring, with cherry blossoms blooming. Warm weather was asserting itself but clearly winter won't leave, at least not without a fight. Right now, it we have sunny skies in the east, and cracking thunder, and torrential rain and hail. The rain gutters are over flowed, rain water shooting off of the roof. The dog is freaked out.
They fight. And fight. And fight. And fight. And fight.
Minutes later: it stops. All is quiet. The dog is sleeping, again.
It's a lot like life.
( Feb 28 2006, 08:08:09 AM PST ) PermalinkI don't know these folks, but having read the Dear Elena postings, I know them well enough. I'm hugging my little ones a little extra.
( Feb 26 2006, 05:35:13 PM PST ) PermalinkThis evening, the kids were off having fun with their friends at a birthday party, so we watched Nobody Knows. I thought I'd seize an opportunity to try a quick hReview:
A moving, disturbing and excellent film (Japanese, english subtitles)
Based on a true story in Japan, this makes the New Years Home Alone Case look like a blip of a parental lapse. A young mother leaves her four kids alone for months on end in a small urban apartment. The eldest son, Akira, in an intense portrayal by adolescent Yƻya Yagira, grows up real fast to look after his younger siblings. Despite a deliberate pace, the predicament that the kids were in, the sweetness of young Yuki (Momoko Shimizu) and the gritty inner-city ambience of Japan keep you rivetted to the story.
★★★★★
I've been meaning to take it for a spin for a while, this hReview was built with hReview Creator and then fiddled with a bit. I think I'll have muck with my stylesheets to give hReviews any kind of a reasonable display.
hreview japanese cinema microformats movies japan
( Feb 26 2006, 12:11:35 AM PST ) PermalinkToday, Technorati launched a feature that enables you to identify and collect a few of your favorite things. You can select items as you browse search results, tags and so forth or you can identify them en masse by uploading an OPML file. I started mine by grabbing sixteen blogs that variously talk about the San Francisco Giants (it's almost the Good time of year, baseball time), here they are. As the baseball season gets underway, I expect I'll be refining this a bit. When opening day comes, I hope to have a truly browsable, searchable Giants blog portal of my very own. Hum baby!
Go to Technorati Favorites to start your own collection and put one of these on your blog:
technorati favorites baseball San Francisco Giants
( Feb 21 2006, 09:02:46 PM PST ) PermalinkThere's been recent much-ado about Krugle that I just don't get. The website isn't even open, yet folks are salivating as if they've never heard of such a thing as a code search engine. Not that I'm invested in anyway in Koders, Codase or Codefetch but they're providing a credible story already for that kind of specialized search. I'll be happy to try Krugle when they open their doors but the level of excitement in the posts about them seems really odd. Wired has some screenshots in their article about it. Let's see the web site live and then get all frothy about it, please! This just smells like more web 2.0 over-hype; people: control yourselves!
What I'd really find useful is code search built into proprietary projects. After reading Using Lucene to Search Java Source Code, I'm imagining building a Lucene full text index of a project at build time, as a maven plug-in or an ant task. The current tools out there to make source code and docs browsable would benefit so much from making them searchable; there's already a Jetty plugin, run your build, start your webserver and search the code base whenever you want to find a particular method call (or something. That would be cool!
krugle web 2.0 hype lucene koders codase codefetch ant maven
( Feb 20 2006, 03:27:44 PM PST ) PermalinkFor once in a great while we have a political todo with a real smoking gun and it has been some of the most entertaining political hoopla the blogosphere has ever seen. It's like we're under an attack of laugh bombs from the QLGF (doncha know about the Quail Liberation Guerilla Front?). I posted about the I got shot by Dick Cheney page but the conversation fodder keeps on a-coming:
I've been following this Technorati search for the blogosphere's yucks and the posts from About.com's Political Humor feed for most everything else:
And of course, there are the products:
cheney humor quail letterman technorati zazzle cafepress political humor
( Feb 19 2006, 08:25:33 AM PST ) Permalink
The man is on a veritable rampage. It seems as though everybody is getting "mistaken" for quails, republican donors and other kinds of terrorists and paying for it big time. Here's the news on me:
Beware, Dick might be after you next. Check it out at WHAT SUCKER GOT SHOT BY THE VEEP? Fill in the form to get a keepsake of your very own.
( Feb 18 2006, 01:13:54 AM PST ) PermalinkYahoo! has feeds, lot's of them. And they have a lot of sports feeds: NFL, NBA, NHL ... they have NASCAR but they don't have MLB? Sure, they have NCAA baseball but that doesn't count. Full coverage of baseball requires major league news. it's time for spring training to resume and they don't have MLB. What's up with that? Sure, too much hot dogs and cracker jacks are bad for you but c'mon. Are they communists or something? I bet they don't like apple pie, either.
Update
Well, they weren't apparent from those pages I looked on. But as some kind readers have advised me, there is a feed for MLB at [XML]. Thanks!
yahoo baseball hotdogs applepie
( Feb 16 2006, 11:03:34 AM PST ) PermalinkWow, Jeffrey Veen posted to Google Blog, the GOOG is now the proud owner of Measure Map. Congrats to the Adaptive Path folks!
( Feb 14 2006, 04:29:44 PM PST ) PermalinkA common topic of discussion within Technorati is the audience that we serve. We strive to be of service to both the authors (bloggers) and non-bloggers (the blogosphere's newbie readers) alike as well as the advertisers who help pay us. Being generally focused on more geekly topics, I'm oft reminded that my interests are shared only amongst other "middle aged white guys talking about Ruby on Rails" (hey, I'm not that narrow!), but the blogosphere is deep and wide across topics, locales and other demographics.
Yep, even discounting the excess hype aspect, rails is cool. As a matter of fact, I'm pleasantly surprised with the easy read that Agile Web Development with Rails is. Buy it, it's a great book! Unfortunately, it's kind of an academic interest for me at this point. I actually want to reduce the number of programming languages that we're using at Technorati. While it's great to enable developers to contribute to and consume our service oriented architecture with the languages and frameworks that they are most productive in, there's also a battle against degeneration of standards and practices; the blade cuts both ways. Expertise sharing across different programming environments can be difficult and hiring the polylingual programmer is sufficiently challenging already (did I fail to mention that we're hiring?); simplify by constraining is one of the recurrent themes of AWDR's reference to "convention over configuration." In the case of programming language repertoire, less can be more. Anyway, since I'm the only one at Technorati (that I know of) with a rising enthusiasm for Rails, it's unlikely it'll be in use for work stuff anytime soon, bummer. Meantime, I'm just another white guy talking about ruby on rails... JAWGTAROR.
On the topic of who the bloggers are, it's an ever-unfolding story; Dave's State of The Blogosphere is one snapshot into it. Well, I'll be at O'Reilly Emerging Technology Conference's session on data oogling The Data Dump: Fun with Graphs and Charts with some more goodies. The Technorati platform has a rich set of data streams to tap, so this should be fun! See ya in San Diego!
( Feb 13 2006, 09:17:20 AM PST ) PermalinkThe past few weeks have seen such a saturation of new services, it's mind boggling. The flickr and delicious acquisitions clearly stoked a yodling frenzy (y!a think?). Ya know, it seemed like in months past there were new services every few weeks or so: digg, reddit, memeorandum, personalbee, topix, tailrank, squidoo and on and on and on. But lately, it's hourly.
Now it's megtite, 30boxes, dabble, newroo, wink, tinfinger, podserve and chuquet. Goddamit, TechCrunch has a form to submit your very own web 2.0 venture for coverage. And of course, everyone's variously buzzword compliant with tags, feeds and ajax. Bubble 1.0 was a lot of fun but the sudden thud at the end kinda smarted, didn't it?
pours a glass of two buck chuck
OK, I'm back.
I'm not diss'ing any of these services, there are a lot of really good ideas out there (nor OTOH am I endorsing any). But can they just take a few days off so we can get some work done? How about a moratorium? No more web 2.0 service launches for 48 hours, please! The funny thing is when the content is all self-referential (to the extent that the subject matter is the same or yet-another-new-service); when the services are capturing our artifacts and our artifacts are talking about them... the top story on megtite right now is coComment, on chuquet it's there along with dabble. It's what happens when you point the mic at the P.A. system.
Please, take a few days off. Go skiing or whale watching or something. Or go old school: content is king! e-commerce! woohoo!
web 2.0 moratorium yahoo flickr delicious
( Feb 05 2006, 09:44:39 PM PST ) Permalink