Monthly Archives: April 2005
Rojo out of beta
Get the details and discussion at Om Malik’s on Broadband.
AppFuse can help you get a project up and running quickly
I’ve been experimenting with AppFuse and it looks like it can save considerable time getting a J2EE based project off the ground. There are some reasonable concerns over tools like this that bootstrap development projects, but from what I’ve seen with AppFuse, which uses what are generally agreed upon best practices throughout, these concerns are mitigated.
More at java.net.
Inside Yahoo News: Aggregator brings RSS to the masses
Mark Glaser at OJR gives us a peek behind the curtain at Yahoo! News. Great read.
Movable Type 3.16 released
SixApart: Movable Type 3.16 is released. Looks like a ton of bug fixes. I’ll upgrade before I decide to migrate.
Question: is there any toolset out there that imports my content *and* lets me keep my URL structure and permalinks?
“The apathy of moderates leads to the agenda of the extreme”
Home schooling has traditionally been given to kids whose parents are on the extreme fringes of society, hippes on the left and bible bashers on the right.
Because of the growth in religious extremism, there has been a similar growth in home schooling, meaning that some schools have had their budgets cut as they lose pupils and per pupil funding.
To woo pupils back, a school in Oregon is changing its curriculum to include creationism in science classes and biblical texts in English literature classes, leading to a crappy science and boring, one-dimensional art education for everyone.
So for those that do point out that the US is by and large moderate, here is a concrete example of how the passion of a mindless minority over the apathy of the majority leads to an undemocratic situation where the minority view is enforced rather than tolerated.
I normally don’t quote entire posts, but here it was just about impossible since this was so perfectly well said.
“Billion dollar acquisitions don’t work”
Adobe is buying Macromedia. What do I think?
I’ll let Roland Tanglao and Dan Gillmor speak for me (check his discussion thread) here.
What if you’re a ‘South Park Democrat’?
The whole South Park Conservative thing doesn’t ring true for me except for a small subset of Conservatives, and certainly not those folks in Washington.
blonde sagacity, featured blog at Philly Future, has mentioned that she is a ‘South Park Conservative’. I believe her. She’s gotten hate mail from other ‘conservatives’ and ‘liberals’ alike. Her writting is challenging and open to dialog.
I’m a ‘South Park Democrat’.
So you ‘South Park Conservatives’ out there – can we be friends?
Can we call ourselves ‘South Park Citizens’ and dump the conservative/liberal division and talk?
Guest Blogger: John Edwards at Talking Points Memo
Info overload functions as roadblock to better memory
In the The Pueblo Chieftain Online: “The problem is a loss of focus. People aren’t paying attention, aren’t taking the time to do one thing at a time and make the whole experience a permanent memory. “We are on overload right now,” she says. WWhen things happen to us, when you look back at the time a person is engaging in an event, they’re not 100 percent focused on the event – in today’s world, especially.””
I’m guilty of this.