Rails Day 2005. Could we be any more explicit about our appreciation for and expectations of Ruby on Rails? Aside from writing about it left, right, and center; including it in our publishing plans; and packing more Rails goodness into our Open Source Convention than you can shake a stick at, that is. (Not to… Continue reading Rails Day 2005
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Strategies- Your business cards.
Strategies- Your business cards.. A great article from Rhonda Abrams on USA Today. Rhonda talks about the great and forgotten marketing tool called the business card. It's time to take a fresh look at your business card. Does it help people remember you? To be motivated to do business with you? Does it convey what… Continue reading Strategies- Your business cards.
Thank You for Beta Testing Our Products
Thank You for Beta Testing Our Products. That's what Apple should say to its paying customers about its software releases, which are known to have bugs severe enough to warrant a fast and critical update. I suspect this will be true with the new operating system, OS X Tiger (10.4). As always, the usual folks… Continue reading Thank You for Beta Testing Our Products
OpenLaszlo 3.0 released
OpenLaszlo 3.0 released. I am pleased to announce the official release of OpenLaszlo 3.0, previously known as Laszlo Presentation Server. The new name is in honor of Laszlo's commitment to its open source platform. Since the initial release, which allowed folks to download the source in a zip file, you can now find… – source… Continue reading OpenLaszlo 3.0 released
Visa/Mastercard security requirements for small vendors
Visa/Mastercard security requirements for small vendors. Phil Windley says that Visa and Mastercard are starting to crack down on small merchants, requiring them to meet some sort of minimum information security standards or lose the ability to accept Visa or Mastercard purchases online. This is clearly a good thing. He lists 12 basic requirements: Install… Continue reading Visa/Mastercard security requirements for small vendors
Ars Technica Tiger Guide
Ars Technica Tiger Guide. Ars Technicas John Siracusa has posted his writeup on Tiger. I havent had time to read all of it yet, but the first half is an amazing piece of work. Theres a ton of content in there that is entirely new to me, like the writeup on launchd, Apples new open-source… Continue reading Ars Technica Tiger Guide
Cisco buys Sipura
Cisco buys Sipura. This isnt exactly new news, but Cisco bought Sipura yesterday. Sipura makes a number of VoIP products, including the SPA-841 phone that Ive been using for the past few weeks. Theyre generally considered to have the best SIP implementation of any of the cheap vendors, and they make good, solid products for… Continue reading Cisco buys Sipura
Designing from the outside in
Designing from the outside in. I was talking with Jason Fried of web design firm 37Signals recently. He believes that contrary to the normal expectation that applications are built on top of frameworks, applications should always be designed “from the outside in.” That is, at 37signals, they try to design the usability and function of… Continue reading Designing from the outside in
Choosing a daily GTD action plan
Choosing a daily GTD action plan. high octane moron: Revolving workflow strategies I employ an informal Getting Things Done action strategy thats similar to the one Chris lays out in his post. I often have a theme for a given day, where I choose an approach thats suited to my mood, my energy level, and… Continue reading Choosing a daily GTD action plan
A Bishop and a Reverend walk into a bar
A Bishop and a Reverend walk into a bar. Last weekend I ported the Reverend bayesian classifier from Python to Ruby (thanks Jon for the original pointer to Reverend). What I didn't realise was that Lucas Carlson was, simultaneously, working a similar library… ah well, there's a good chance we'll roll my work into his… Continue reading A Bishop and a Reverend walk into a bar