Okay, this place is pretty obviously dead (at least for the time being and the near future). I’m packing up and heading over to start a slightly less-structured endeavor over on my new tumblelog feel free to stop by. I’ll be there, posting sporadically.
As usual I’m slacking on keeping anything on here up to date. So I figured I’d toss a quick post up to throw out there that I spent last week in Woburn, MA, for training on a CMS product that seems to have a lot of promise, but is fairly clunky to work with. I guess that’s the price you pay for a system that’s that flexible.
In other news last Thursday something in the server room at work caught fire. Everyone at work is fine, but they’re still in the process of rebuilding our server environments and getting the network reconfigured. It sure keeps things interesting though.
Once upon a time I used to be a big fan of Homesite. That was back when Macrodobia had pretty much first acquired it, and I started getting into the text-editor scene and away from WYSIWYG editors (sometime in 2000). As time has moved on I’ve moved away from Homesite and have wandered through a few different tools, still trying to find one that really seems like it suits my needs. I like syntax highlighting and not a whole lot else, typically. I’ve done Dreamweaver in code view for a while, BBEdit when I used to have my Mac (G3 WallStreet Powerbook) way back in the day. More recently I’ve started poking around in some of the open-source editors. I admit to keeping my love of jEdit, it’s a simple little app that’s good for quick fixes and has some nice features (I still love the FTP plugin that lets you use an FTP server just like it was part of your normal file system), but it’s started feeling a little minimal for some of the wider projects that I’ve been having tossed at me over time. So when I saw the EasyEclipse project’s stuff I snagged a copy of the LAMP version and made a go of it, which went well (especially once I got Subclipse in there too) but still seemed a little bogged down with a bunch of features I was never going to use (support for ANT, the assumption that you were using XAMPP and not your own Apache service, making most everything run across their “Projects” system so editing a single text file wasn’t as obvious as I would have liked, etc.).
When Alex showed me a write-up of Aptana (because he knows I’m a compulsive experimenter in these kinds of things) I initially balked at it for just being Eclipse with a different icon. But this morning I actually installed it and have been giving it a shot and it seems to be a little more like the “doesn’t include all the Eclipse stuff you’ll never use” editor that sort of fits my needs so far. My only real complaint has been that I had to hack around a bit to get some of the EasyEclipse language support plugins installed. (They only like to install into a directory with an eclipse.exe file in it, but with aptana there is no eclipse.exe, there’s just aptana.exe. so I made a copy and renamed it to eclipse.exe and that worked peachy.)
While this year’s SXSW is still fresh in your mind clear a space on your calendar for SXSW 2007. Here are the dates for next year’s conferences and festivals:
Music: Wednesday, March 14 - Sunday, March 18, 2007
Film: Friday, March 9 - Saturday, March 17, 2007
Interactive: Friday, March 9 - Tuesday, March 13, 2007
Registrations and hotel reservations will be accepted beginning about August 2006. Join our email listservs and watch this space for the exact dates.
This time I expect everyone to be in attendance. (ahem, ahem, ahem.)
Okay, woes makes it sound like things are all exploding and dying or something. Really it’s just annoying stuff that we’re hitting around the office. In particular: We have a project in subversion, but the client also makes changes to their site directly on their own server. So our SVN and their FTP don’t necessarilly match up. So someone here went onto the dev server (where a copy from SVN is checked out to) and deleted a couple directories to clear them out of the way, then downloaded new copies of those directories onto the dev server. So it has the same file structure, but it doesn’t have the .svn folders in there so SVN throws a fit if you try to update or add your changes. If anyone’s familiar with a situation like this I’d love to hear about it.
I’d like to think most of the code is fairly self-explanatory. It done in PHP (and the proxy.php file currently uses CURL because fopen() for remote URLs is disabled on my host), all the JS is done in jQuery. It’s still under the CC By Attribution/Non-Commercial/Share-Alike license, so do with it what you will as long as you stick with those guidelines.
(The activity.gif file was generated using AJAXload.info’s system, so if you want to swap it to something else that’s a good start.)
On Monday May 15th, I went up to Portland, Oregon to work on a freelance project. On Wednesday, I was getting ready for bed when all of a sudden I had intense pain in my left side and I collapsed to the floor. I thought it was a cramp so I lay on the floor for awhile hoping the pain would go away. When it became clear the pain wasn’t going away, I woke up my friend Mitch (who I was staying with) and told him something was wrong.
I’ve been chided on a couple fronts lately about needing to update here, so I had been mulling about some “typical me” type posts about such thrilling topics as “I’m trying to move from jEdit to (Easy)Eclipse” and “here’s more lame tiny videos for BoringButShort.com” but instead I’ve been blindsided in finding out that a (throughly brilliant videographer and) online acquaintance has been diagnosed with ALS.
My name is Patrick. Sometime during the fall of 2004, I noticed an involuntary shaking in my legs. For a long time the exact cause eluded definition.
On May 24th, 2005, however, I was officially diagnosed with Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (also known as ALS or Lou Gehrig’s disease), a terminal disease that results in the progressive degeneration of the nerves and muscles responsible for voluntary movement. It is a fatal and incurable disease. I was 30 years old.
Alex just upgraded Ekwipment on CSS Beauty to the latest set of code I have. The public side of things seems to all be going well (he said making the changes to his pages was super easy). But (as usual) the process of seeing the admin with a large quantity of actual data in it (he’s got nearly 200 jobs in the database) shows some serious holes in the user interaction in that area.
Seems some folks who put together a list of “favorite vlogs” for wired decided that a site titled “Boring But Short” wasn’t enough of a warning.
Boring But Short boringbutshort.com
The “boring” part is right, but at 10 seconds, these clips are 9.5 seconds too long. They should change the URL to boringbutnotshortenough.com.
It’s been an interesting couple of weeks that I’ve been barely posting in, so I figured it was time to catch things up again.
On March 31st I gave my notice at my previous job. About a week after one of the other 2 web designers had left, and the day after they told one of the best haXX0rs I’ve known they were letting him go. So I gave my notice and let the 12th be my last day as a little birthday present to myself and got to leave that job on my 30th birthday, then meet my dad, step-mother, grandfather and Andrea for a nice dinner. Took a couple days off to hack around with a bit of stuff (added some new stuff to Ekwipment, but it’s still not done yet), then Andrea got a room for us in Atlantic City so we went up there and blew a bunch of money and had a great time (pics on flickr). So today was my first day on a new gig, good team, good environment. Shows great promise.
How big is your development team? Anything special you’d like to say about them?
All development is done by me with the exception of some custom PHP apps that were built by my good friend Michael Raichelson.
Though apparently I’m just not good enough to warrant an actual link.