IBM developerWorks: Automation for the people: Continuous Integration anti-patterns
IBM developerWorks: Automation for the people: Continuous Integration anti-patterns, Part 2
And in case you need it: JavaWorld: Introducing continuous integration
IBM developerWorks: Automation for the people: Continuous Integration anti-patterns
IBM developerWorks: Automation for the people: Continuous Integration anti-patterns, Part 2
And in case you need it: JavaWorld: Introducing continuous integration
There are far too many who like to paint the future of quality filtered media as either entirely driven by ‘the wisdom of the crowds’ or entirely by ‘the experts and the elite’.
Both these extremist views are wrong as hybrids that combine the best of both have already proven successful and will continue to do so over the long haul, no matter the fashion of the moment.
Newsweek.com: Is User-Generated Content Out? | Newsweek Technology (Stupid)
I hate the term “MSM” (Mainstream Media) that we bloggers use to describe older media and news organizations, but sometimes you need to acquiesce.
Lots of folks thought that members of traditional media couldn’t ‘do blogging’ for various reasons. They were wrong. Take a look around and you will find some of the best blogs are being produced in places once thought unlikely.
Wired Magazine’s Wired Blogs have some of the most interesting technology/geek focused blogs you could subscribe to.
For politics there are those hosted at The Atlantic.
And, at least in Philly, local newspapers have fully embraced them at Philly.com (The Inquirer and Daily News), philadelphia weekly, and Philadelphia City Paper.
Shoot, even local TV News shows have gotten in the act at NBC 10 and Fox 29.
It was a bit of a quandary Saturday. It was to be Emma’s birthday party, but last week she was suffering with a double ear infection (painful!!!!). Hoping against hope that she would be better in time for the party, and tricked by a great Friday evening, we were forced to call folks Saturday morning and cancel. Instead, we just had close family come by, that we both could continue to concentrate on her illness.
The irony was that Sunday, while Richelle went out to run some errands, Emma started to come out of it all the way and by the evening was herself again!
Today is Emma’s real birthday. Happy birthday Emma!
If you know anyone who would like to be involved in Philly Future from a technology, business, or management capacity – let me know at phillyfuture at phillyfuture.org.
Here is some background for the open call.
2006 going into 2007 things were looking good. Shoot, they were looking fantastic.
Emma was almost a year old, and my family, while facing some struggles, overall was healthy. I can’t remember feeling more attuned to what my purpose was in life or ever happier and that hasn’t changed.
Work was turning a corner. Coming up were huge projects I was going to be a part of, including the development and launch of the new Comcast.net (which was a huge success).
Philly Future was moving along and growing gangbusters. During 2006 major goals were to find reliable hosting, find a source of funding that could benefit the online regional community, and register as a LLC to protect the service. The Philly Ad Network launched, we found ourselves a great hosting company and the Philly Future LLC was registered.
The volunteer team was under a lot of pressure as my time was being split further and further, but the hope was to grow it into 2007 and to open Philly Future into different forms of community driven management.
My band had broken up early 2006, but we had all remained friends, and to me that was the most important thing.
Online I had taken part in various web projects and discussions that centered on subject matter I cared about, including the norgs conversation. It’s an ongoing concern of mine that we seem less informed as a society. How can that be with the growing Web and our ever growing media/news scape?
Mind-blowingly, some folks had even started to seek me out for opinion in matters related to web development, online journalism and social media/software. I was added as a name on a few different projects having to with blogging and journalism.
Sure there were some bumps in the road, and some challenges to look ahead to (college!), but overall, my only complaint about anything was simply that I didn’t have enough time for all that I loved. That balancing priorities was difficult.
What a great problem to have.
That problem – finding ways to balance time among what’s important – took on new dimensions in 2007.
The back injury did a number on me and continues to do so. I think I’ve done well at keeping the downward pull I feel from the leg pain from affecting my work or home, but much has fell by the wayside.
Mom started going into and out of ICU all year long, culminating in her passing due to cancer.
The Comcast.net launch required every spare minute I had when I wasn’t in rehab or at mom’s side.
And just trying to be a good Dad and Husband among these pressures was a struggle.
I’m a roll-with-the-punches kind of guy. So I tried to do what I’ve always done, play the cards I was dealt as best I could. Somethings suffered:
My online writings have been fewer and farther between, as have times where I’ve shared my opinion on topics close to my heart.
My guitar playing has gotten rusty. Emma loves it (she grabs my hand and takes me to our office where my guitar typically sits and tells me ‘getar getar’ :)). But I just don’t play enough anymore. Richelle installed a wall mount for my acoustic in the living room so that I can play whenever the spirit strikes or Emma asks, instead of going to our office, and playing there.
Philly Future is alive. So is the local ad network that is built across some of the regional community’s most popular local blogs. When I look at what the community has done with both these past twelve months, I’m blown away and heartened. And this has been with minimal involvement from myself.
Still, with the decreasing time I’ve had available, things here have not progressed as far as they could and worst – there’s been drift. The volunteer team has shrunk (normal life changes – and I have not been active in leading it). I haven’t spent time promoting the service or being an exemplary user (this is particularly bad). And I’ve pretty much allowed myself to disappear from the local blogging community.
The potential is still here – to build a resource that has positive impact, connecting voices, ideas, people, within our geographical community who online might miss one another, that is grassroots, that is owned by the community. But it remains partially fulfilled.
Most painful has been lost time for friends, both close and not so close.
And honestly, I don’t know how Richelle did it – put up with me and my trials and tribulations.
It is difficult writing this. A few years back, I had wrote something similar following the passing of my 3 month old nephew. I shut Philly Future down feeling that I couldn’t do the service justice and support my family which had just experienced a horrific tragedy.
Back then Philly Future was primarily a group blog. When it was re-launched I did so with a different vision. And I have heard from more than a few the effectiveness of it. I believe in it. People *have* connected where otherwise they might not have. I think that’s important. I can’t help it.
So this time things are a bit different.
There are no tragedies to speak of. Just life’s twists and turns (in my spine’s case… more twists…), that need to be dealt with head on. If I consider my position, I have to consider how blessed I am to be where I am at, with the family and friends I have, with the work I have. If this had happened a few years ago, I might have been a person burdened without health insurance, living in a squat, not only dealing with back pain, but dealing with the cold and a broken heart.
For 2008 I’ve determined that I need to put a time limit on the conservative care I am receiving to determine its effectiveness, and to be honest with myself over surgery. If I take the surgery option, I probably will disappear further from my online activities for a time. I need to focus on my health, and whatever time remains must be for family, friends, and work.
I wish I could do more. I know many who can balance time on a needle and do so much with it. I admire these people. But whenever I attempt to follow in their footsteps inevitably I mess things up. So I need to stick to priorities.
What that means for Philly Future is that I need to secure its future as fast as possible. It needs new management, and a new volunteer team to lead it. I still intend to have a role in it, PF is part of me after all, but for the service to reach its potential, it needs far more than what I can provide it.
If you know anyone who would like to be involved in Philly Future from a technology, business, or management capacity – let me know at phillyfuture at phillyfuture.org.
Thanks to friends and supporters, here’s to 2008!
Karl
This year has been one of great highs and lows. Some years everything seems to happen at once.
Christmas was something special – absolutely the greatest of my life.
Emma’s only 22 months. Not old enough to be encumbered by the complexes about Christmas we surely will lay on her head in coming years, and just old enough to recognize wonder and the specialness of the day.
It was terrific.
I hope you had a merry one and may God bless you all.
I’m one of those guys who really appreciates folks who shoot from the hip and share what they feel, especially in the face of lots of heat. That’s one of the reasons why I follow many of the writers I do on the Web, including Michael Arrington and his blog CrunchNotes.
But his latest post just won’t go away. It’s been sitting as his latest now for over a week and the longer it sits there, without correction, the further it spreads mis-information.
What is that mis-information? Well it’s one thing to dislike Shelley Powers and to back it up with facts, and even feelings.
It’s another thing to spread a falsehood, which is what the post in question does. Shelley Powers, unequivocally, will criticize anyone, regardless of sex or station. She really puts her self on the line by speaking truth to power day in and day out.
Questioning dogma is a lonely place to be sometimes.
How this happened is a mystery really.
There was an argument that erupted over the use of an image in an online video, produced by a band.
You can read about the controversy at Wired.
There was some interesting discussion about copyright, much that resembling that which followed other similar controversies in the past.
Conversation that is again springing up about Fox helping itself to someone’s Flickr pictures.
I simply feel that without a lawsuit, contrary to the opinions of folks I respect – because of lack of clarity – no one knows who was in the right and who was in the wrong.
During arguments like this, where facts are few and opinions are many, where clarity is hard to find, I tend to absorb all view points, to weigh my own opinion. This was a great opportunity for that.
That is, until it ran off the rails at at Mathew Ingrams’s blog. Normally a place, like Shelley’s, for some of the best discussion about social media and the Web.
Rogers Cadenhead said that Shelley is due an apology – I agree.
Jeneane Sessum looked at this as a bigger, cultural issue with the blogosphere:
…the larger LARGER problem for the blogosphere and twitterspehere is that a culture is developing — thanks in part to time-saving, fragment-tossing platforms like twitter, that by design silence dissenting voices — we have all become easy targets for extinction, the casualties of casual dismissal.
THAT’s what bothered me about this situation, about what Mike said to Shelley, about what Mike and others said about Lane without asking Lane anything, and STILL DOES bother me.
The “you’re just” mantra is getting way out of hand.
It is cultish and thought canceling.
The irony is that my attraction to ‘shoot from the hip’ opinions is part of the problem.
When I look around me, it seems more and more that context or historical background doesn’t matter – all that matters is the headline, the blurb, and the attention driving influence of the one sharing it.
Increasingly it seems our culture encourages ‘winning it all costs’ behavior – no matter the right and wrong.
And I guess, at Christmas time especially, these things make me sad.
It’s hard to write about looking forward to something like Christmas with joy when you know fellow friends and travelers are dealing with sorrow.
Shelley Powers last week summarized some of the tragedies that took place in the online community recently. Of particular note to me was the passing of Anita Rowland, who had been fighting cancer since 2003. Her husband put up a memorial post on his blog.
Jeneane Sessum: For Anita
GarretVreeland One of our own, Anita Rowland, has passed away
Bill Humphries: Anita Rowland
Frank Paynter: Last Dance: Anita Rowland, Rest in Peace
Frank Paynter’s interview with Anita Rowland in 2002: Settled in Seattle… the Anita Rowland Interview
Anita’s family is in my thoughts and prayers.
This will be a Christmas that will best be described as bittersweet for me. Such tremendous ups and downs.
With so much churn in my life, I know I am blessed to look at Emma and be filled with hope.
She is a true blue toddler now. She can communicate very clear what she wants, what she loves, and what she doesn’t care for all that much. That means that Christmas day will be something to behold.
Her Momom will be with her. Laughing, joking, and singing all the way.
As Anita will be with her loved ones.
Geekadelphia, a project by local blogger extraordinaire Eric Smith launched yesterday. It’s bound to be a regional favorite in no time.
TechRepublic.com: Sci-fi rant: When did Star Trek jump the shark?:
…there was the Borg Queen, and that ruined everything.
The Borg were originally defined as genderless, faceless, nameless, all-consuming man-machine hybrids with which you could not negotiate, could not overpower, and only by sheer luck and creative individuality could you ever hope to defeat-temporarily. That is until First Contact, for which the producers needed a conventional villain for the “dumb audience,” so we get Alice Krige gothed up in H.R. Giger fetish gear going all creepy-vampy on Data and retconning Locutus of Borg from a terrifying perversion of our beloved Captain Picard into a spurned cyborg concubine that Miss Borgy needed to acquire some V’ger-esque spark of humanity.
The Borg Queen single-handedly diminished the Borg from a personification of everyone’s secret fear of the dehumanizing power of technology and conformity run amok into two-bit techno-zombie henchmen of everyone’s un-fondly remembered codependent ex-girlfriend. (It’s worth noting that in First Contact, the Borg assimilate you vampire-bite style, rather than through the slow, tortuous process seen in “The Best of Both Worlds.” These are B-movie monsters now, not powerfully terrifying metaphors for identity-stripping monoculture.)
TechRepublic.com: When did Star Wars jump the shark?:
…Phantom Menace came along and, with all due disrespect to Jar Jar Binks, gave us the single worst Star Wars moment in a rapidly expanding history of awful Star Wars moments: Midi-chlorians.
Jedi, you see, aren’t made, they’re born. They’re of the blood, nobility, maybe even a master race. If your midi-chlorian count isn’t high enough, don’t even bother to apply. Anakin Skywalker was basically the equivalent of a can’t-miss basketball prospect from the mean streets of Tatooine who got a Jedi Academy scholarship despite being a punk. Yeah, that’s going to resonate with all the athletically addled dorks who used to idolize the franchise.
Yoda wasn’t awesome because he was a zen-master adept who spent centuries honing his communion with The Force, but because his little frog-pig body was jam-packed with psionic parasites. That single slap in the face to Star Wars fans was the first of many attempts by Lucas to expand and explain the mechanics of his franchise, and in the process he knocked out the foundations of what was once the coolest character concept in all of sci-fi. Thanks, George.
Fun, worthy of argument 🙂