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Support Your Neighborhood Developer
(by Duncan, @ 10:17 AM)
In his Support Your Neighborhood Developer piece Brian Carnel eloquently expresses what is my POV too. He rounds off with:
"Winer's silence is a bit puzzling from someone who relentlessly champions small developers. Microsoft buys a couple companies with "great developer communities" and that's news, but someone releases an amazing piece of software built on top of Winer's platform and it's a non-event. What's that about."
Maybe there's a hint in this snippet from Scripting News?
"On the other hand, I totally agree that we have no obligation to point at anything."
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RE: Hey Userland has developers
(by Duncan Smeed, @ 10:53 AM)
Most of the Conversanteers have picked up on the fact that Conversant
has largely been ignored by the very person they would have expected
to pay it some attention. We've had our say but IMO there's little
to be gained in wringing our hands any further. Whilst it would have
been nice to have had a link from a high-traffic site like Scripting
News, Conversant can make its own way in the world.
Unless one of the BigPubs picks up on the anomalous behaviour of the
developer that shall remain nameless, I believe the best course of
action for the Conversanteers is just to use every opportunity to
sing its praises. It'd be rather too negative and lame to hang a
publicity campaign on a "it is worthy but it's being ignored" ticket.
I can think of someone else - who shall remain nameless - that
regularly uses such a tactic and I wouldn't want to emulate that
person.
So, no more whining and whinging from me. Time to move on and boost
Conversant positively and proactively.
PS There's some deliberate WebBlagging in this post. Can you spot it!? ;-)
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Washtech.com | Open-Source Fight Flares At Pentagon
(by Duncan, @ 2:46 PM)
via HtP - Washtech.com | Open-Source Fight Flares At Pentagon - Microsoft Lobbies Hard Against Free Software
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David Davies is becoming Conversant
(by Duncan, @ 3:03 PM)
David Davies is becoming Conversant ;-)
"Started using a new piece of software today. For the time being I'll be running Conversant alongside Radio on my home iMac. I'll post pertinent observations here but so far both systems seem to happily coexist."
Welcome aboard David. Looking forward to hearing how you get on. One response I have is that if you dedicate Radio as a server and forgo Radio's own unique, CPU sapping, functionality - i.e. Macrobyte has sorted out what to do shut off all of Radio's 'features' - then you do end up with *exactly* the same performance in Radio and Frontier.
You will find Macrobyte and the rest of the Conversant community to be more than willing to help.
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RE: Hey Userland has developers
(by Duncan, @ 3:41 PM)
David C-T managed to catch a Dave Winer: Pressure to Point posting:
Well, it was here: http://scriptingnews.userland.com/pressureToPoint and it was on the Scripting News home page, but it's been deleted from both locations (no problem - Dave W.'s editorial policy has always been clear that he can do this - it may resurface - who knows?
But as he points out it was deleted soon after. David C-T did quote from the original piece and that's still in his article along with his comments - which I wholly endorse.
In fact, none of the observations about the lack of linking started untl the day after the launch of Conversant. Normally, DW likes to be one of the first to link to things - especially it it's related to his products. I don't think the observations can be construed as pressurisation and, as David, points out, were generally expressions of bemusement rather than coercion.
Curious for sure.
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Extreme Computing 2002
(by Duncan, @ 9:46 PM)
Extreme Computing 2002
NTK and Mute magazine present a gigantic village fete for the 21st century, an off-the-radar cyber jumble-sale, an all-day celebration of do-it-yourself technological unusualness.
From home-made robots to retro video games, from japanese junk food to community wireless networking - if it's outside the mainstream, you can come along and check it out and most likely buy a piece of it to take home.
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Discover Daisy Joy
(by Duncan, @ 10:03 PM)
There's a programme on Channel 4 that's just finished - Daisy Daisy :
Motivational speaking is a huge industry in the States. Daisy Donovan has just four days to learn from the best speakers around and come up with a inspirational seminar of her own. Can she cut it as the new guru in town?
It was just a scam and they even went to the trouble of setting up the Discover Daisy Joy website. What was fascinating was how gullible the public were.
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Dragon Data Archive
(by Duncan, @ 10:36 PM)
Eagle-eyed Richard - who maintains the [Dragon Data Archive] - noticed the Dragon 64 and the prototype Dragon Alpha that have pride of place on one of my office shelves. He's just sent me an e-mail detailing some of the new additions to the Dragon Data Archive. We'll hopefully get together soon to document all the other Dragon stuff that's scattered around the office.
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Enter SSH Passphrases at Login and Store them in your MacOS X KeyChain
(by Duncan, @ 11:04 PM)
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RE: BlogBlagger or WebBlagger: The Duncan's Jotter suggestions for a blogger who won't link
(by Duncan, @ 11:14 AM)
The Doc Searls Weblog : And the winner is: bloghole
A number of folks are now starting to remark in private correspondence that they are "not a bloghole," or "don't want to be a bloghole" for not linking to something.
I still reckon my suggestions are better but then I would wouldn't I?
I did send an e-mail to Doc with the BlogBlagger and WebBlagger suggestions but they didn't get a mention in his Blogjam roll B-}
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McCusker May 2002 | zombie dance: scheduler is broken
(by Duncan, @ 11:40 AM)
Dave McCusker asked:
"If you know another explanation for this story, please tell me about it.
Today my newest coworker told me about a very amusing test he ran.
For a particular new server, he was able to get N requests per second.
Then he ran the same test while compiling C++ source code in a build.
This machine had two processors, so a C++ compilation tied up one.
Guess how many requests the server handled during the compilation?
More requests, not less. 25% more than when using two processors."
And later...
McCusker May 2002 | zombie dance: scheduler is broken
Both Wes Felter and Martin "Coderman" Peck answered my questions.
They're both great and interesting answers, but I'll start with Wes's...
Interesting stuff. My students might like to know that Wes refers to Hennessy and Patterson in his answer ;-)
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EducationGuardian.co.uk | Higher special reports | Survival of the fattest as class divide widens
(by Duncan, @ 3:40 PM)
EducationGuardian.co.uk | Higher special reports | Survival of the fattest as class divide widens
"Under the old binary line system there were many outstanding polytechnic departments and many academics at the cutting edge of their disciplines. It seems that what Margaret Hodge has in mind is something different. Her plans would strip the academic excellence out of the modern universities and turn them into vocational degree factories. And it's not just the modern universities that will be affected. A lot of the 'old' universities will find themselves below the binary cut-off, too."
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EducationGuardian.co.uk | Higher special reports | Masters of debt
(by Duncan, @ 3:43 PM)
EducationGuardian.co.uk | Higher special reports | Masters of debt
All the vice chancellors interviewed in this week's Guardian series on the future of higher education expressed forebodings. It was summed up by one who worried that universities would be sucked into a downward spiral where few could be recruited because of the poor conditions and salaries. He was wrong in just one respect. This is not some grim spectre beyond the horizon; it is already happening.
Fifty of England's universities are in debt. In the US, spending per student has doubled since the 1970s; in the UK it has halved.
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EducationGuardian.co.uk | Higher special reports | Universities in £1bn debt crisis
(by Duncan, @ 3:50 PM)
EducationGuardian.co.uk | Higher special reports | Universities in £1bn debt crisis
UK universities are at least £1bn a year short of the money needed to keep buildings and equipment in working order, according to an audit commissioned by the government.
...
"For years now, ministers and vice-chancellors have been trading off the goodwill of staff members to teach larger classes, to reduce the numbers of tutorials, to reduce the contact time and to cut back on their own research time. They can't do it any more."
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Hey Userland has developers
(by Duncan, @ 4:35 PM)
I'm not the only one person is bemused by the fact that the launch of Conversant has so far gone 'unnoticed' on Scripting News. Steve comments:
Platform vendor ignores powerful new software by small independent developer:
Our favorite platform vendor has managed to completely ignore the release of an incredibly powerful server product for their platform, one which will drive sales of their platform, and will go far to show the power and flexibility of the platform...
Let's see how long it is before Conversant gets the mention it so thoroughly deserves from the person it deserves the mention most from?
Conversant rocks! And there are plenty of others that think so too ;-)
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Guilt-ridden
(by Duncan, @ 9:37 PM)
I feel guilty! Whilst I was de-junking my office, Seth and a group of alpha/beta testers were readying the phenomenal Conversant and it's excellent installer for release. They've obviosuly been working their socks off and have achieved a great deal. All I achieved was a tidy office. Well, that's not quite true - dejunking the office has helped dejunk me! Of course, I've got lots of chores and tasks still to do but somehow having an uncluttered space is reinvigorating. Also, one of the techniques to overcome procrastination is to buckle down and do the jobs you dislike most first and then reward yourself with a task you really enjoy. In my case, one task I'll use as a reward will be exploring Conversant. It the thought of that reward doesn't make me into an anitcrastinator I don't know what will.
Radio Userland is another 'reward' system that I've been neglecting recently. I was very enthusiastic about RU early on. Still am. Just not as a weblogging tool now. I'm too attached to Conversant and Duncan's Jotter to replace them. Also, RU's propensity to slug my iBook's CPU and drain battery power was a downside. However, RU is still a major part of my web toolkit as I now use it in preference to my old version of Frontier when generating static web pages from BBEdit'ed files. Which reminds me of another reward that I'll be dusting off over the summer and that is to update my guest database version of the BBSite Suite to be more RU tool-like.
So, now I've dedicated my copy of Radio to Conversant for the duration of the beta/evaluation period. Fortunately, this hasn't affected the static web page generation functionality I rely on for my work website.
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The case for Conversant
(by Duncan, @ 9:38 PM)
Today a Manila user e-mailed me to ask about Conversant. I haven't asked permission to post the questions but here are just my answers. You can probably deduce the questions from these ;-)
Q. ?
A. Where do I start!? Bearing in mind that I'm only skimming the surface of Conversant's capabilities in Duncan's Jotter, here are some of my opinions.
Q. ?
A. The similarity is basically skin-deep. The underlying foundations - Frontier or Radio - are similar too.
One of the best summaries can be found at http://brian.carnell.com/articles/2002/05/000025.html
Conversant was actually started before Manila. It's an entirely different architecture 'under the hood'. It is very elegant, powerful, and flexible.
Seth, and the rest of the people at Macrobyte have been actively developing Conversant. I get the impression that Manila hasn't moved on much in the past couple of years. This lack of development rankles especially for those forking out $899pa for the honour of supporting it.
Since I no longer use Manila I can't comment on its buginess. What I can say is that my Conversant-hosted site at Macrobyte seems to be pretty bug-free. When bugs are reported to the FC-Support forum, Seth et al, are very responsive and invariably fix any problems quickly. Since Conversant has been around for three years most of the bugs have been wrung out of it by now.
Q. ?
A. The main features of Conversant are covered on its site. The highlights as far as I am concerned include:
- Robust web-based interface for posting/admin
- Excellent e-mail interface that handles threading of submissions, subscriptions, etc.
- NNTP interface if you need it
- XML-RPC interface with the Blogger API as a subset
- CSS and template driven presentation
- Excellent membership options/handling
- Powerful, well thought out, plug-in architecture
- Support for https
- Integrated search engine/indexer
- Excellent API with lots of conditional macros, etc.
- Now available to third-party developers/hosters
- Works on top of Radio (the extra $40 in the pricing below)
- Lower cost of entry/ownership $499 + $40 for commercial use, $249 + $40 for academic use
- $99 + $40 for personal/development use
- Focus - MacroByte is committed to Conversant. All their efforts are poured into it.
- A really good content/group management architecture
I can't think of anything that Manila provides that isn't in Conversant. The reverse is certainly not true.
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RE: Hey Userland has developers
(by Duncan, @ 9:50 PM)
Well, at least the launch of Conversant merited a mention on Frontier News. But who reads that regularly!? At least we now know that it's on Userland's radar. But still Dave hasn't mentioned it on Scripting News.
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The Amazing Pneumatic Cannon
(by Duncan, @ 9:57 PM)
Sean McMain's Amazing Pneumatic Cannon
Recently, I made a trip to our local hardware store to pick up the parts for something I'd read about on the Internet: a cannon, made of PVC pipe and a sprinkler valve, that could launch objects hundreds of feet using nothing more than compressed air. Figuring the amount of fun one could potentially have with such a thing far exceeded the paltry $25 required for the parts, I decided to give it a try...
Cool!
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Serious Instructional Technology (SiT): WCC Blackboard Server Outage
(by Duncan, @ 11:10 PM)
David [ SiT] reports a WCC Blackboard Server Outage
That would be the yummy smell of toast arising from our Blackboard server The new worm completely killed it (and perhaps, my attempts at fixing it). We have a backup, but it will take some time to get going.
This is going to be a nasty one I know for a fact that tons of BB systems are unsecured in the same way ours was.
It's the "SQLsnake" Microsoft Worm that's causing David grief.
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RE: De-junking my office
(by Duncan, @ 9:33 AM)
After about three days of bursty activity I've just about finished de-junking my office. This picture shows the final result. I am sure that any students that may have visited me in my office recently won't recognise it in it's new, tidier, state.
Some may think that this was a displacement activity but the Procratinator's Handbook reckons that you need to declutter your life as part of the strategy to overcome procrastination. It's certainly the case that I no longer despair at the untidiness of my office and that I have a renewed energy when working there. I just hope I can keep it uncluttered.
I created a wee album of photos that document the progress I made during the dejunking. No doubt, I'll use these images as an incentive to keep things tidy from now on! Fingers crossed.
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The Register: Transmeta blades power landmark supercomputer breakthrough
(by Duncan, @ 9:46 AM)
The Register: Transmeta blades power landmark supercomputer breakthrough
Los Alamos Labs in New Mexico has built a modest 240-node Beowulf cluster from RLX's Crusoe-powered blades, which is humble indeed compared to the vast ASCI showpieces. But according to the system's designer, Wu-chun Feng, it marks an inflection point for the microprocessor industry. And to prove the point VAX godfather Gordon Bell, and Linus Torvalds were present at the birth.
An interesting wee article. Not least because of the links to background material. Another reason is for some of the great quotes - for instance: "The continued tracking of Moore's law will result in the microprocessor of 2010 having over one billion transistors and dissipating over one kilowatt of thermal energy; this is considerably more energy per square centimeter than even a nuclear reactor."
See also http://duncan.smeed.org/942
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The Chronicle: 5/24/2002: Mixing and Matching Distance-Education Software
(by Duncan, @ 10:02 AM)
via SiT - The Chronicle: 5/24/2002: Mixing and Matching Distance-Education Software
Until recently, moving data among software made by different proprietary companies has often been an arduous process that involved the risk of not being able to use old content in the new system. And the proprietary nature of the software made by many companies made swapping content or capabilities among systems difficult.
As usual David C-T digs up another great link. The timing couldn't have been better as Strathclyde University is going through an evaluation of MLEs process at the moment. I arranged a meeting of interested staff in my department to discuss the recent consultant's report about MLEs. One of our conclusions was that supporting standards was a vital aspect of any MLE to avoid lock-in. The report cited above is very helpful in that respect.
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BlogBlagger or WebBlagger: The Duncan's Jotter suggestions for a blogger who won't link
(by Duncan, @ 12:23 PM)
The Doc asks:
"What do you call a blogger who won't link? We need a name for that."
My suggestions: BlogBlagger or WebBlagger
There are currently no Google hits for BlogBlagger or WebBlagger!
Rationale: 'Blag' is UK slang for theft and/or borrowing something with no intention of paying it back. A BlogBlagger - or even just a Blagger - is someone who steals/borrows content/ideas from other bloggers without paying (linking) them back.
Here are a couple of examples of 'Blag/Blagger' from the slang dictionaries:
From A dictionary of slang - "B" - Slang and colloquialisms of the UK.
blag:
Verb. To lie or use clever talk with profit as an objective.
Noun. 1. A con, a 'scam'.
2. A violent robbery or raid.
From The Online Dictionary of Playground Slang [warning: adult language]: Blagger : used to describe someone who is a bit of a 'pickey'. they never have their own fags,crisps and will constantly harrass someone to give them theirs instead. A bit like a sponger. can also be used to describe an action ie can I blag a fag off you.
This article is permanently linked to http://duncan.smeed.org/blogblagger and http://duncan.smeed.org/webblagger so if you wish to blink me then please use one of those. Thanks.
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Google and Dilbert Doodle
(by Duncan, @ 1:43 PM)
ROTFLMAO at today's Google and Dilbert Doodle. Brilliant. Sheer genius.
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O'Reilly Network: Tim O'Reilly's WWDC Keynote Manuscript
(by Duncan, @ 3:37 PM)
Just a wee teaser from page 2 of Tim O'Reilly's WWDC Keynote Manuscript
There have been an amazing number of iBooks at recent O'Reilly conferences. The adoption by key OSS communities and leaders is also striking. For example: most of the Perl core team is now on OS X; James Gosling, Duncan Davidson, and a lot of other key Java developers; P2P developers; many of the key developers in bioinformatics (a very important new field involving the application of computer power to gene research and related areas). All are heavily into OS X.
And of course, it's not just hackers, but users who are taking up OS X in droves. Mac OS X: The Missing Manual is our fastest-selling new book since The Whole Internet User's Guide in 1992-1993, when the commercial Internet started to take off.
Why?... [read on]
I recently bought my copy of Mac OS X: The Missing Manual so I was particularly interested to hear that it's O'Reilly's fastest selling book.
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[ANN] Conversant 1.0b1
(by Duncan, @ 3:57 PM)
[ANN] Conversant 1.0b1
After three years in development, Macrobyte Resources is pleased to announce the release of Conversant 1.0b1.
Excellent! Just heading over to http://conversant.macrobyte.net/ now to check it out...
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RE: [ANN] Conversant 1.0b1
(by Duncan, @ 4:28 PM)
Utterly brilliant. 15 minutes from (slow modem) download to having my first Conversant site up. The installation was a breeze!!
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Frontier Learning : Home Page
(by Duncan, @ 7:38 PM)
David Davies' Frontier Learning : Home Page
The Frontier Learning web site is a forum for educators, educational technologists and the just plain interested to meet and discuss e-learning. A specific theme of this web site is the use of UserLand's tools, Frontier, Manila and Radio in an educational setting.
Hopefully, Conversant would be a contender too.
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