Categories
Indie

Working from the Coffee Shop

The Atlantic: “In many ways, however, the golden age of the coffeehouse workday is now, as any barista can attest. Over the last decade, I’ve done a fair amount of work in traditional offices, where I am least efficient, various apartments, where I tend to work longer and more productive hours, and a string of coffee shops, the places where I’ve turned out the most usable words per working minute.”

I’ve only done this a few times. Starbucks didn’t really do it for me. The one I was in didn’t have a nice comfy spot to sit. I did, however, had great success adding new features to RxCalc while sitting in Cappella Coffee House when we lived in Exeter. They had a nice squishy couch to sit on, and just enough background noise to make it the perfect setting.

Hashtag Fresno; Work. Play. Create.Speaking of perfect settings. Are you in the Fresno area? There’s a new co-working shop called The Hashtag you should visit if you’re after that coffee house feel and would like to be around other creatives.

Want to know what it looks like? Go check it out.

Categories
Development Mobile

10 Reasons to Love webOS

webOS Developer Blog: “There comes a time in a Linux-loving geek’s life when he or she needs a new challenge. Making desktop apps isn’t hacking it anymore and building yet-another-website seems passe. If you want to jump into the world of mobile, here are a few reasons why HP webOS is the platform for you.”

This platform is especially friendly to web oriented developers; HTML, CSS, etc. Guys like me, well, we’re left standing around wondering what the heck a div is and why you should use it. I guess I should learn how all this markup stuff works and just go with the flow.

Someday.

Categories
Weblogging

Blogger Redesign

Blogger in Draft: “Today, we’re thrilled to announce the public launch of our redesign! But please wait a second before you go check out your Blogger dashboard, because we’re planning a gradual rollout that will start with a limited set of users who visit our new feature testing ground, Blogger in Draft. At the start, only some of you (lucky draws!) can see the new design on Blogger in Draft. Over the course of the next few days and weeks we’ll be ramping up to support all Draft users. “

Hey, this is great news for Blogger users. Blogger is a fully baked weblogging platform and it’s very minimalistic, at least when I was using it daily, I’m not sure what the rewrite will look like?

Hopefully they keep it fully baked.

Congratulations Blogger!

Categories
MLOTW

Movie line of the week

And.... ACTION!Good morning movie liners, let’s get a move on, here’s the line, good luck!

Actor #1: Spiders… the spiders… they want me to tap-dance. And I don’t want to tap-dance!
Actor #2: You tell those spiders, Ron.
Actor #1: Yeah, tell them… I’ll tell them…

Ok, quick, what movie! Send your guesses here.

Categories
Life

You’re kidding, right?

New York Times: “WASHINGTON — The adult sons of Osama bin Laden have lashed out at President Obama in their first public reaction to their father’s death, accusing the United States of violating its basic legal principles by killing an unarmed man, shooting his family members and disposing of his body in the sea.”

“..by killing an unarmed man…” – That’s rich.

2,752 unarmed people died September 11, 2001 at the hands of your father.

Duh. One for 2,752. He got off easy.

Categories
Uncategorized

I had no idea

Dave Winer: “I found out about this when I ran the first BloggerCon at Harvard in 2003. I asked for sponsorships from some of the biggest names in the tech industry, and was told by each of them that they required a prime speaking spot as quid pro quo. I said maybe they could sponsor a meal, and speak at it, but I’d have to label them as paid speaking slots. I was told that was not acceptable. I told them to keep their money. We’d find a way to make it work without sponsors, and we did.”

Wow, I really had no idea this is how things worked at conferences. Naive? Yep, completely.

It’s no wonder Dave doesn’t dig how conferences work.

Categories
Development

Jekyll, fully baked?

Tom Preston-Werner: “On Sunday, October 19th, I sat down in my San Francisco apartment with a glass of apple cider and a clear mind. After a period of reflection, I had an idea. While I’m not specifically trained as an author of prose, I am trained as an author of code. What would happen if I approached blogging from a software development perspective? What would that look like?”

Tom is the co-founder of GitHub, so you know the guys has coding chops. Jekyll is a very cool, very minimal, publishing system. I did some reading last night and was pretty excited about his ideas, but where it goes off the rails for me is using git to store your posts. It’s so close to something I could build upon.

Watch out! It's a blog fly!I think it’s time to go create my own publishing system. Why? Because I can and I want to. No better reason than that. This is a great excuse to learn Ruby. I don’t believe I’ll need Rails, all I need is a system that can publish a file into a directory structure after generating a static HTML file from Markdown, or maybe raw HTML as the source, it doesn’t matter. Once I have that I can build a simple web UI for entering posts from any device and I’ll bolt on support for the MetaWeblog API so I can use the desktop tool I like; MarsEdit.

That’s all I really need. A couple of apps that live on the server, one that generates the weblog, and one that can receive MetaWeblog requests and run the thing that generates the weblog. That’s the 30,000 foot view, it’s only slightly more complex than that.

Will I ever get around to doing it? Probably not. This would make at least the third weblogging/publishing system I’ve dreamed up in the last 10 years of weblogging, but it’s also the easiest to implement. All three were going to be static publishing systems. That’s still something I obsess about, dynamic just doesn’t matter to me.

Well what about widgets and comments? Good question. I have an answer. I don’t care about widgets that add dynamic content. I have a very small set of requirements. Look at this weblog today. What dynamic content do I have? Yep, my last tweet is displayed, what else? Nothing! That’s the beauty of it. As for comments I could use Disqus. Problem solved.

I want to create a system anyone could install on their own servers and use. created Second Crack to fill his weblogging needs but it’s a bit too hackerish for me, unless he’s taken it to the next level recently? I don’t know, but like Marco I want something just complex enough to fill my needs. I’d also like it to be simple enough to install and use that others could enjoy it without being developer minded.

It’s nice to write it down, but I doubt I’ll ever have time to develop it.

Categories
Development Technology

He’s Independent Now

Joe Hewitt: “And so, I’m independent now, and I’m going to pour myself into understanding the needs of modern developers and designers, and creating software to fill those needs. There are so many opportunities that I can’t even predict what I will end up building, but I am pretty sure I know where I am going to start. I can’t wait.”

Good luck.

Categories
Design Development

A problem with the web

AHHHHHH!Scripting News: “I just want to read the news, not be impressed by your programming prowess, or compliance with the latest Silicon Valley fad.”

This is one of the things that bugs me most about web user interfaces. There is zero consistency. Something we all talk about on platforms is consistency; Mac OSX apps should look and feel like Mac apps, Windows apps should look and feel like Windows apps. What about the web? On the web it’s “trend of the moment” thrown together in some stylish way.

At best the web is inconsistent. At worst it’s a complete UI/UX mess.

Strange isn’t it? You work for years to make sure your desktop apps remain consistent with the platform and now it’s a no holds barred race to the bottom.

Of course most people will disagree with me because they’re doing websites and that’s fine. This is just one curmudgeon’s opinion.

Categories
Life Movies

I want this

Ahhhhhhh!Holy Kaw!: “That’s right. The red-brick Georgian beauty that housed so many of Macaulay Culkin’s shenanigans is hitting the housing market on Thursday, and will be selling for $2.4 million.”

If I had a huge pocket full of cash I’d buy this place. I know my lovely wife wouldn’t mind.

Actually, there’s another one I think I’d prefer. The home from Father of the Bride. It’s perfect.

The home used in the film is in Pasadena, California.