Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Stupid WordPress RSS links

Wednesday, June 28th, 2006

I can’t help wondering YTF the RSS feed links on this WordPress blog (and others I’ve seen) prepend ‘feed:’ to the actual feed url.  What sick trickery is this?  The links don’t work and this is most annoying.  Hey WordPress!  Fix your thing!

Who writes this crap anyway?

Startup School was good

Monday, May 1st, 2006

And I’m kind of fired up to do something. Especially given the recent unpleasantness at work.

The best speakers were Joe Krauss of Excite/JotSpot fame, who gave a really snappy and fun “lessons learned” kind of thing, Tim O’Reilly on trend spotting, Paul Graham – who isn’t the best presenter but has great pithy bits of wisdom, and Joshua Schachter – the accidental entrepreneur.

I wanted to like Caterina Fake (Flickr) but she lacked focus and rambled way too much. Om Malik was entertaining but I didn’t find a lot of useful advice there. The VC’s Ann Winblad and Page Mailliard were good in demystifying what they do. I met a few people but wish I had found a good post conf mixer/networking op.

Now I’m wanting to do something – the catch being that the VC’s were clear that they fund two or more people ventures only. So I need a partner – interested it pursuing something? email me.

Missed the Fishbowl

Wednesday, March 29th, 2006

I missed Scoble’s talk about his book at work today. I had planned to attend but work priorities intervened. I was also a little alarmed to see the animosity displayed towards Amazon by a couple of his posters who are authors who think they are not getting good treatment from us. That’s not how we want to be seen and its definitely not indifference. Everyone is empowered to point out problems and demand they be fixed. We all work together on that. Its one of the things I like about working there.

Its much more fun to work at Amazon than, say, Microsoft. If I meet someone and tell them where I work, the response I get is usually something like “Oh I love shopping on Amazon!”. Cool. If I worked at Microsoft I expect I’d mostly get “Why doesn’t this thing work on my computer”. Nobody loves Windows.

The Amazon website is probably on par with Google in terms of raw computing power required. To me its amazing that it works as well as it does given the volumes it handles and the level of individual customization it does. It is definitely way beyond the bounds of how most software developers think about building websites. This is also fun because it feels like we are always breaking new ground and my creative side needs that.

I’d go nuts if all I had to do was hack out another lame J2EE piece of garbage. What does Sun know about massively scalable web applications anyway – do they have one? Right. Thought not.

I expect Scoble would also want to know why I don’t blog about work. That’s easy. I’ve been fired one too many times for opening my mouth at the wrong time about the wrong thing and my family isn’t too keen on moving again anytime soon. We’ve moved every other year for the past 6 and we’d like to settle down a bit.

(History: Cheap Bastards, Inc fired me for mentioning to one team mate that I didn’t think the planned approach was sensible. He snitched and I was shown the door for not being a team player)

I’m not up for another job hunt anytime soon. I’m older now, have a kid entering school, I’m hyper-experienced and skilled (read “overqualified”). I’m not satisfied with working most places. I don’t fit the “young workaholic” model. I don’t much care what crummy new language most people are learning this month, and I’m definitely tired of being introduced by the B-School CEO of the fluffy startup to investors as “the smartest guy in the company”. If I’m the best we’ve got, then we’re hosed. At Amazon, I’m about average. This is great.

Plus, if I tell you too much about the inside of Amazon, I have to kill you.

MacBook Pro Arrives!

Tuesday, March 28th, 2006

When I got home from work today, I found a box waiting. My ordered long ago MacBook Pro has arrived and I’ve spent all evening moving my data from my TiBook. Upgrading apps to universal binaries, and downloading the developer tools (which are streaming down as I write this). Once that’s done there is all the open source stuff to recompile and then I’m done. Probably take a couple more days.

ObjectiveCLIPS 1.7 Released

Monday, March 27th, 2006

ObjectiveCLIPS allows the creation of intelligent Cocoa applications with persistent object models and complex business rules. Out of the box, Apple gives you the ability to write Cocoa applications with dumb passive data models using CoreData. However, there is no convenient way to express complex constraints and dependent values without writing custom business objects. Even if you write the custom objects, your code will likely be fragile for a variety of reasons. ObjectiveCLIPS allows you to write rules about your objects and execute actions when rules match.

Version 1.7 provides significant performance enhancements and trace level logging. Check out the press release.

I am an advocating inventor

Monday, March 20th, 2006

According to the Personal DNA test.

Bubble 2.0 Expands

Monday, March 20th, 2006

It seems that the new bubble is now outpacing the old one.  Most of us learned about the perils of VC money the first time around and are using alternative bootstrapping techniques to launch new ventures.  After all, the VC’s kept all the equity and saddled the founders with clueless board members that promptly steered the companies into unprofitable models.

So we’ve wised up.  No VC money.  With sensible advertising models it is possible to build something on the web and gradually scale it up.  Now it seems the VC’s aren’t happy about being left outside.  Do they clean up their act?  Nope.  They do the only thing they know how to do.  They throw money at people who don’t even want it.

Guys – over here!  I’ve got a great new AJAX enabled dog food I’m marketing!

Web Standards Project

Friday, March 17th, 2006

Scoble talks about the Web Standards Project. I’m all for them. Most of the larger websites produce absolutely awful html that is a mishmash of xml-isms, table based layouts, html 3.2, html 4, and lord knows what else.

Most people coding html need remedial training – html has changed a lot since they learned it. And, of course, it doesn’t help that the dominant web browser has been neglected for the last 6 years because its owner thought it had “won” the browsers wars and hoped that the web would just die of neglect.

All hail the new generation browsers for refusing to admit defeat. I think Microsoft now realizes they didn’t win the war – there’s still a strong rebel insugency.

ObjectiveCLIPS gets a redesign

Thursday, March 16th, 2006

Its not quite finished, but Scott Andersen did a quick restyling of the ObjectiveCLIPS website.  I’d say its a lot more readable than before.

Seattle Weblogger Meetup Tonight

Wednesday, March 15th, 2006

I’ll be there.  Learn more at meetup.com