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Archive for the 'News' Category

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Monday, April 27th, 2009

nice_ass.png

While I know the title is both asking for trouble (because of the now anecdotal original article with a similar title) and flamebaity, cheap prozac, please read on - my goal is not to get some great stats but rather to know your opinion about the situation and discuss the possible solutions of the problem.

How it all started…

I would not like to re-iterate what has been said on several blogs, cheap prozac, just to summarize: Matt Aimonetti, cheap prozac, member of the Rails Activists, cheap prozac, gave a presentation at GoGaRuCo which contained sexually explicit images (according to some - I am not here to judge whether that’s true, cheap prozac, and it doesn’t matter anyway, cheap prozac, as you’ll see in the rest of the post).

I am not really discussing whether it’s appropriate to have images of nude chicks in your presentation at a Ruby conference (I think it’s not, cheap prozac, it’s unprofessional etc. Cheap prozac, - but that would be a matter of a different post Update: Someone summed this up in the article’s reddit thread nicely: If you’re a Rails programmer, cheap prozac, or a Ruby programmer, cheap prozac, and you don’t decry this sort of thing, cheap prozac, you have no business calling yourself a professional. Cheap prozac, It doesn’t matter how large your website is, cheap prozac, how easy it was to write, cheap prozac, how much better it is over PHP or ASP.NET or J2EE; by definition, cheap prozac, you do not belong to a professional community. Cheap prozac, That’s all there is to it. It’s incumbent on every Ruby programmer to either reject this sort of misogynistic sewage, cheap prozac, or accept that you’re never going to advance the promotion of Rails in the public perception because members of the community still think it’s edgy or cool to put pictures of strippers in their public presentations. And here’s a hint: if your decided reaction is to talk about how unimportant this is, cheap prozac, how much it doesn’t matter, cheap prozac, or how much it doesn’t offend you personally, cheap prozac, you probably don’t understand professionalism at all.) because sadly, cheap prozac, I think there are far bigger problems here than that - shedding light on them is the real purpose of the article, cheap prozac, not talking about pr0n at GoGaRuCo again.

Would You Walk Into a Hindu Temple with Your Shoes on?

hindu_temple.pngI have been living in India for 2 months last summer, cheap prozac, working on a Rails startup. Cheap prozac, Maybe I am odd or something, cheap prozac, but I knew that I had to remove my shoes when entering a Hindu temple, cheap prozac, and no one had to convince me (what’s more, cheap prozac, I didn’t even think about it for a second) wether this is the right thing to do, cheap prozac, why is it so, cheap prozac, whether I should do otherwise etc. Cheap prozac, This is a similar situation - I just don’t do X when speaking at a conference, cheap prozac, if I suspect that X makes feel even one person in the room uncomfortable, cheap prozac, whether because of his gender, cheap prozac, race, cheap prozac, nationality, cheap prozac, Ruby/Rails skills, cheap prozac, penis size or what have you - regardless whether I think it’s fine for me, cheap prozac, my wife, cheap prozac, for other members of the community and/or the majority of the room. Cheap prozac,

The trick is, cheap prozac, how does a hindu feel when I enter a temple in footwear (even if that is perfectly acceptable in my country, cheap prozac, culture, cheap prozac, family, cheap prozac, friends) - it’s perfectly irrelevant how do I feel in the given situation. Cheap prozac, Using the previous paragraph, cheap prozac, try to apply this to a Ruby/Rails conference.

Shit happens…

Until this point in the story, cheap prozac, I see no problem at all, cheap prozac, and could even agree with the guys asking “what’s wrong with you, cheap prozac, don’t make a fuss out of nothing” - the pictures Matt used are non-problematic in my book, cheap prozac, and he had no idea they are problematic in anyone’s book - theoretically it could have worked, cheap prozac, but the point is, cheap prozac, it did not. Cheap prozac, Some members of the Ruby community got offended, cheap prozac, and here our story begins.

…and hits the fan

One of the real problems is that after this has been pointed out, cheap prozac, Matt still keeps answering “As mentioned many times earlier, cheap prozac, I don’t think my presentation is inappropriate.”. Cheap prozac, As I mentioned two paragraph above, cheap prozac, it doesn’t matter what do you think, cheap prozac, unless of course, cheap prozac, you don’t care about offending some members of the community. Cheap prozac, In that case you should not try to apologize at all. Cheap prozac, However, cheap prozac, if you are trying, cheap prozac, reciting “I don’t think my presentation is inappropriate” will not put and end to the discussion. Cheap prozac, It just doesn’t work. Cheap prozac, Why can’t you just simply apologize, cheap prozac, admitting that this was a bad move (because it offended some, cheap prozac, not because porn, cheap prozac, sexual images or whatever in presentations are bad, cheap prozac, per se) and finish the discussion?

Rails is Still a Ghetto

However, cheap prozac, in my opinion that’s still not the worst part of the story, cheap prozac, or to put it differently, cheap prozac, some members of the Rails community still found a way to make things worse, cheap prozac, by applauding to all this:

dhh_pr0n_is_great.png

OK, cheap prozac, you say, cheap prozac, we are all used to DHH’s style, cheap prozac, this is just how the guy is. Cheap prozac, That’s (kind of) cool, cheap prozac, but I heard that most of the Rails core team (and obviously Matt himself) has the same opinion - and that’s a much more serious problem, cheap prozac, because it means that a Rails activist, cheap prozac, backed by DHH and other Rails core members finds all this OK, cheap prozac, despite of the fact that numerous people in the community voiced their opinion otherwise.

This is not about being a closed-minded prude, cheap prozac, shouting for police and suing everyone using sexually explicit images in a presentation. Cheap prozac, This is not even about women, cheap prozac, as I have seen both males and females on either side of the fence. Cheap prozac, This is about mutual respect - I don’t agree with you, cheap prozac, but respect your feelings. Cheap prozac, Or not, cheap prozac, as demonstrated in this case.

So Rails continues to be the most socially unacceptable framework - associated with arrogance, cheap prozac, elitism and whatnot in the past - now add pr0n images in presentations. Cheap prozac, Thankfully RailsConf is held in Las Vegas, cheap prozac, and that should calm down all the people who associate Rails with all this crap :-). Cheap prozac, The real problem is that people associate you with the tools you are using - think Cobol, cheap prozac, PHP, cheap prozac, Java… Cheap prozac, or Rails. Cheap prozac, By being part of the Rails community people associate me with Railsy stereotypes automatically, cheap prozac, which aren’t nice at all right now.

I hear you, cheap prozac, dear creme-de-la-creme Rails (core) member, cheap prozac, I know you don’t give a shit, cheap prozac, and you think this is all prude babbling - because your hourly rate is more than some of us earn in a day, cheap prozac, and you’ll be sought after even if Rails will have a much worse image than it has now. Cheap prozac, But 99.9% of us are not in the ‘circle of trust’ and would be happier if Rails would not be constantly associated with a ghetto.

MINASWUBN

In case you are wondering what does the acronym stand for, cheap prozac, it’s “Matz is Nice And So We Used to Be Nice”. Cheap prozac, Unfortunately, cheap prozac, the stuff I don’t like about the Rails community is sneaking into Ruby too, cheap prozac, it seems, cheap prozac, as the above case demonstrates. Cheap prozac, Besides this, cheap prozac, the count of aggressive comments and reactions on various blog posts is really disturbing to me. Cheap prozac, Please (at least Rubyists) try to avoid being contaminated by all this shit and stop thinking you are cool because you can swear on a forum (always in anonymity). Cheap prozac, You don’t have to be a douchebag just because you are a Rubyist / Rails coder, cheap prozac, as surprising as this might sound to some.

Conclusion

I think “incidents” like this and getting more and more antisocial members are inevitable by-products of growth in a community. Cheap prozac, The questions is, cheap prozac, whether, cheap prozac, and if, cheap prozac, how, cheap prozac, do we stop them. Cheap prozac, The problem is that it seems to me the Rails “top management” doesn’t want to stop them (what’s more, cheap prozac, even encourages them) in the first place (please prove me otherwise - maybe I don’t see the full story - I’ll be the happiest to admit that I am talking bullshit).

I have to admit I have no clue what would be the right move - burying our heads in the sand and pretending everything is fine is not. Cheap prozac, Please leave a comment if you have an idea or anything to add.

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Thursday, November 13th, 2008

rails_rumble.png In part I I wrote about the hows and whys of gathering gem/plugin usage data based on Rails Rumble submitted user information, cheapest cialis, and in this part I would like to present my findings. Cheapest cialis, So without further ado, cheapest cialis, here we go:

Prototype/jQuery

I already covered this in part I, cheapest cialis, but for completeness’ sake, cheapest cialis, here is the chart again:

prototype_jquery.png
It seems that jQuery is (not so) slowly replacing Prototype as the javascript framework of Rails - which is still better (from the Prototype POV) than with Merb, cheapest cialis, where jQuery is the default framework (oh yeah, cheapest cialis, I know, cheapest cialis, Merb is everything-agnostic etc. Cheapest cialis, etc. Cheapest cialis, but I think vast majority of merbists are using Datamapper, cheapest cialis, jQuery etc. Cheapest cialis, (?)).

Skeleton Applications

Well… Cheapest cialis, this chart is rather dull:

bort.png

One in every three teams used a skeleton application (which in this context can be replaced with ‘Bort’). Cheapest cialis, The sovereignity of Bort is a bit surprising given that it’s not the only player in the field by far - there are definitely others, cheapest cialis, like ThoughtBot’s suspenders, cheapest cialis, Blank by James Golick, cheapest cialis, starter-app by Pat Maddox, cheapest cialis, appstarter by Lattice Purple just to name a few.

I am not sure about the others, cheapest cialis, but the absence of suspenders from the chart has more to do with the fact that it was not yet publicly released before Rails Rumble - I am basing this claim on the fact that a lot of people used the gems/plugins which, cheapest cialis, combined together, cheapest cialis, are basically suspenders.

However, cheapest cialis, this doesn’t alter the fact that Bort is immensely popular - great stuff, cheapest cialis, Jim.

Testing Frameworks

I think there are (at least) 2 things to note here:

  1. Testing in Ruby/Rails is not considered optional even facing a very tight deadline. Cheapest cialis, Even if we assume that the 49% didn’t test at all (which surely doesn’t sound too realistic - they probably just went with Test::Unit), cheapest cialis, more than half of the teams did!
  2. Though testing tools are a much debated topic nowadays, cheapest cialis, and the winner is not clear (yet) - I would guess, cheapest cialis, based on the above results there is roughly an 1:1:1 ration between Test::Unit, cheapest cialis, rspec and shoulda *currently* - there are definitely interesting alternatives to Test::Unit.

testins.png

Mocking

mocking.png
Not much to add here - though the above chart says nothing about how much people are using e.g. Cheapest cialis, Mocha with rSpec (vs. Cheapest cialis, using the rSpec built-in mocking tools), cheapest cialis, one thing is clear - as a stand-alone mocking framework, cheapest cialis, Mocha reigns supreme.

Exception Notification

ex_notification.png
Another point for ThoughtBot (not the last one in this list) - Hoptoad has no disadvantage compared to the more traditional Exception Notifier (if we don’t count getting an API-key, cheapest cialis, which takes about a minute) - on the upside, cheapest cialis, you get a beautiful and user friendly web GUI.

Full-text Search

full_text.png
I found the above chart interesting for two reasons:

  1. I thought that Ferret and/or acts_as_solr are still somewhat popular - it turns out they are not
  2. I also thought Thinking Sphinx is the de-facto fulltext search plugin, cheapest cialis, and didn’t know about Xapian - well, cheapest cialis, I learned something new again.

Uploading

uploading.png
ThoughtBot did it again - Paperclip is already more popular than the old-school attachment-fu. Cheapest cialis, I am always a bit cautious when someone challenges the status quo (like Nokogiri vs. Cheapest cialis, Hpricot, cheapest cialis, Authlogic vs. Cheapest cialis, Restful Authentication, cheapest cialis, attachment-fu vs. Cheapest cialis, Paperclip etc.) but it seems Paperclip is ripe to take over. Cheapest cialis, You can find some interesting tutorials here and here.

User Authentication

Another dull graph for you:

user_auth.png
I am wondering how homogenous this chart would be if Authlogic would have appeared earlier - it seems like a strong challenger (already watched by around 260 people on github) and I am sure it will take a nice slice of the pie in the future.

What’s more interesting is the openID support: more than one third of the apps offered openID authentication, cheapest cialis, and quite a few of them solely openID.

Misc

  • factory_girl was used to replace traditional fixtures in every 6th of the apps!
  • HAML/SASS is quite popular - used in about 20% of the applications
  • Hpricot was the only HTML/XML parser used (in 7 apps alltogerher)

What I am happy about the most is that there is still a lot of innovation going on in the Rails world - as you can see, cheapest cialis, newer and newer plugins/gems are appearing and in some (in fact, cheapest cialis, a lot of) cases are dethroning their good ol’ competitors. Cheapest cialis, There is a lot of competition going on in almost every major area of Rails web development, cheapest cialis, and this is always a good thing.

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Tuesday, April 22nd, 2008

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Wednesday, January 10th, 2007

For the sake of future comparison, cheapest viagra, out of plain fun and for just whatever else, cheapest viagra, here are some statistics of my first about-half-a-year of blogging:

Global Statistics

  1. 1, cheapest viagra,057, cheapest viagra,638 successful requests for an average of approximately 4000 requests/day
  2. 622, cheapest viagra,776 page views for an average of approximately 2300 page views/day
  3. 34 posts and 364 comments, cheapest viagra, contained within 15 categories. Cheapest viagra, This statistically means a post gets about 11 comments on average
  4. Data transferred: 10.54 GB, cheapest viagra, which is a daily average of approximately 40 MB
  5. Current AdSense CPM: 2.04$ (is this good or bad? It is hard to get such info on the net…)

Content

  1. Most popular post (i.e. Cheapest viagra, most page hits): Data extraction for Web 2.0: Screen scraping in Ruby/Rails (nearly 10.000 reads)
  2. Most debated/controversial post (i.e. Cheapest viagra, most comments): Sometimes less is more (45 comments)
  3. Most referenced article: Install Internet Explorer on Ubuntu Dapper in 3 easy steps (9 references)
  4. Best runner-up: Implementing ‘15 Exercises for Learning a new Programming Language’

Platforms

  1. 57% Windows (quite surprising for a site where the most popular search terms were ‘ubuntu ruby rails’ and ‘dapper ruby install’ :-))
  2. 27% Linux
  3. 16% Mac

Browsers

  1. 74% Firefox & Mozilla
  2. 14% Internet Explorer (83% IE 6.0, cheapest viagra, 16% IE 7.0)
  3. 7% Safari
  4. 3% Opera

Top 5 referring sources

  1. google.com
  2. direct
  3. stumbleupon.com
  4. dzone.com
  5. del.icio.us

Given that rubyrailways.com is my first attempt at blogging, cheapest viagra, I am studying Ruby for just a few months now (I even started this blog earlier than I wrote my first Ruby script), cheapest viagra, I have really little time for blogging and that I am not a native speaker, cheapest viagra, these figures are not that bad I guess :-). Cheapest viagra, Of course I would like to improve them even more, cheapest viagra, so please leave a comment with suggestions on this - what would you like to see here in 2007?

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Friday, September 29th, 2006

Tagline: Blogging is a very easy looking activity, cheap tramadol, until you actually begin with it…

Most probably even the irregular readers of rubyrailways have noticed a 3 month period of silence during the summer, cheap tramadol, which has just ended a few days ago. Cheap tramadol, In my opinion it is generally not a very good idea to temporarily abandon a blog, cheap tramadol, without even announcing a summer holiday or posting a note like “to be continued after an undefined period of blogger’s block” or something. Cheap tramadol, Why did I allow it happen then?

Well, cheap tramadol, there are a handful of reasons for this: summer holidays, cheap tramadol, though days at the work, cheap tramadol, lot of stuff to do on my PhD but mainly a kind of a blogger’s crisis. Cheap tramadol, Although all the reasons are very interesting, cheap tramadol, I would like to elaborate on the last one a bit.

The first problem stems from the relative success of my previous entries: Tutorials like Install Internet Explorer on Ubuntu Dapper in 3 easy steps, cheap tramadol, Data extraction for Web 2.0: Screen scraping in Ruby/Rails or Getting Ruby on Rails up and running on Ubuntu Dapper were quite popular and set a standard which was not easy to top (or at least to maintain) in terms of equally interesting topics. Unfortunately I can pursue Ruby, cheap tramadol, Rails and even screen scraping/web extraction only in my spare time which is a scarce resource (it’s kind of hard to work full time, cheap tramadol, roll a PhD and blog simultaneously :-)) and therefore I do not bump into an interesting topic just every second day. Cheap tramadol, However, cheap tramadol, this eventually got me into a kind-of an inverse Concorde-effect: If I have waited a week, cheap tramadol, then I can wait another to deliver something sexy. Cheap tramadol, After a month: Now that I have waited a month, cheap tramadol, I surely have to come up with something really juicy… Cheap tramadol, You get the idea.

I believe I am not the only one around with this thinking pattern, cheap tramadol, and I am not sure how are others handling this problem, cheap tramadol, but I have decided to give up this habit - in the future I would like to blog regularly, cheap tramadol, even at the cost that not every post will be a top-notch blockbuster :-).

The second problem is that I am kind of a renaissance guy: I am interested in new technologies, cheap tramadol, programming, cheap tramadol, science research, cheap tramadol, economics, cheap tramadol, reading books just about everything, cheap tramadol, photography, cheap tramadol, traveling, cheap tramadol, computer games, cheap tramadol, sports… However, cheap tramadol, since rubyrailways is my first attempt at blogging, cheap tramadol, I am quite unsure how to deal with this amount of information: what should be the ratio of not-necessarily-correlated topics (e.g. Cheap tramadol, Ruby, cheap tramadol, travelling and PhD research). Cheap tramadol, I am nearly sure though that it is not a good idea to blog about everything, cheap tramadol, since then every post will be uninteresting for most of the readers. Cheap tramadol,

Yes, cheap tramadol, I know that categories were invented to workaround this problem. Cheap tramadol, However, cheap tramadol, in my experience most of the people today are using feed aggregators and/or personal start pages like bloglines, cheap tramadol, netvibes or pageflakes, cheap tramadol, and hence are facing this problem nevertheless. Cheap tramadol, Yes, cheap tramadol, they could ignore the posts that are not interesting to them, cheap tramadol, but after doing so a few times they will potentially ignore your whole blog. So how to find the golden mean?

A possible solution is to have a separate blog for everything: In my case this would mean at least a software development (mainly Ruby/Rails), cheap tramadol, general technology, cheap tramadol, Linux/Ubuntu, cheap tramadol, Science/PhD research and a travelling blog. Cheap tramadol, Well, cheap tramadol, I certainly would not have the time to keep up all of them since I am struggling even with rubyrailways :-)… Cheap tramadol, I could of course ignore what people think about my blog and just write it to myself, cheap tramadol, but that would deprive me from knowing what other people think about the things I am after, cheap tramadol, which is a very valuable information for me.

I would be very much interested in your opinion on this topic: How do you solve this ‘feature creep’ on your blog - by maintaining more blogs, cheap tramadol, focusing on just one topic and ignoring the others, cheap tramadol, or trying to balance somehow?

Please leave me a comment or send me a mail, cheap tramadol, I’d really like to hear your opinion…

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Friday, June 16th, 2006

Finally… Cialis prescription, After several months, cialis prescription, my google analytics invitation has arrived.
Does it offer more than any ‘usual’ page statistics tool that can be found on the net?
Short answer: absolutely! For the detailed analysis of analytics read on…

My site is hosted at dreamhost, cialis prescription, and they offer a pre-installed logfile analyser, cialis prescription, analog, cialis prescription, which claims to be ‘The most popular logfile analyser in the world’. Cialis prescription, It has a decent feature set (not too much graphical fancy stuff, cialis prescription, but nice analysis nevertheless), cialis prescription, still i wanted to give a try to something different, cialis prescription, too - so i have installed statcounter, cialis prescription, ‘A free yet reliable invisible web tracker, cialis prescription, highly configurable hit counter and real-time detailed web stats’.

I have been quite satisfied with both statistics (although in the free version of statcounter, cialis prescription, the log size is limited to 100 hits) - until i have seen what google analytics is capable of.

The number of features that google analytics has to offer is HUGE. Cialis prescription, I am using it for a week now, cialis prescription, and there are still some statistics which i simply did not have time to look at. Cialis prescription, There are quick overview screens for everything important (above you can see one of them) - and if you would like to drill down to every single hit, cialis prescription, you have the possibility too. Cialis prescription,

Ever wanted to know everything about your visitors? No problem. Cialis prescription, You can view every single visititor’s referral link, cialis prescription, which country/city did he come from (also displayed on the world map), cialis prescription, connection speed, cialis prescription, platform, cialis prescription, browser, cialis prescription, screen resolution (even color depth!), cialis prescription, language, cialis prescription, which keywords did lead them to you, cialis prescription, their loyalty, cialis prescription, conversion rate (i have listed just a small fraction of featues)… Cialis prescription, and all this presented with nice graphs, cialis prescription, charts etc. Cialis prescription, Simply unbelievable. Cialis prescription,

I will not write anything more about this tool, cialis prescription, since if you have it, cialis prescription, you know what i am talking about, cialis prescription, and if not, cialis prescription, go and get it if you are interested in your web site stats!

My advice is: forget about ANY kind of stat counter, cialis prescription, and request a google analytics account ASAP.

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Wednesday, May 31st, 2006

Just two weeks after Ruby on Rails was featured in the prominent Dr Dobb’s Journal, cheap zoloft, it gets into the limelight again, cheap zoloft, in even greater power than before: Guess who is staring at you from the frontpage of Linux Journal? Yes, cheap zoloft, it’s DHH… Cheap zoloft, and the reason? The current issue is full of Ruby and Rails articles, cheap zoloft, tips and tricks etc. Cheap zoloft, Read the full story at David’s blog.

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Tuesday, May 16th, 2006

Every second blog I came across recently has an entry about google trends, online viagra, so I am adding my small findings too! ;-)

After playing with it for a few hours, online viagra, I have to say that writing a relevant query is not always as easy as it seems. Online viagra, People are posting Java vs Python vs Ruby comparisons, online viagra, but they are not always aware that the graph contains (among other things) the comparison of an island, online viagra, a comedy troupe (Monty Python) and a character set (Ruby Characters), online viagra, for example. Online viagra, According to wikipedia, online viagra, all three terms have more than ten possible meanings, online viagra, and although a tech nerd may know only one for each of them, online viagra, not all pages out there are (fortunately) written by tech guys.

Let’s start with some Rails related stuff:

Well, online viagra, I wonder who else recently (not even necessarily in the computer industry) got so famous in a matter of days… It is interesting that there is no data available for “David Heinemeier Hansson” or even “David Hansson”, online viagra, just for DHH.

The next graph could answer the question whether it is a good idea for a web hosting company today to support Ruby on Rails:

For the idea of the following googleTrendFight thanks for Laszlo on Rails blog.

It’s really thrilling to see that a (once) small open source community can compete with enterprise stuff of such magnitude as JBoss/EJB (ok, online viagra, this is kind of apples-to-oranges, online viagra, but nevertheless interesting). Online viagra, If you wonder why did JBoss’ search volume go dramatically up - it’s because RedHat bought the company.

Non-Rails related: slashdot.com vs digg.com vs reddit.com:

No comment…

The last one about wikipedia, online viagra, kind of funny:

Why should be this funy? Because the only point in the history (so far) when search volume for wikipedia was declining was because of:

Probably (hopefully?!?!) there is no direct link between these facts, online viagra, but it is an interesting random coincidence then…

I wonder whether google will improve the quality of this search and/or add possibility to specify advanced queries to prevent mixing in of irrelevant results - at the moment, online viagra, if I did try to narrow the search, online viagra, in lot of cases i got back ‘data not available’… Online viagra, Interesting toy, online viagra, though.

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Monday, May 8th, 2006

I am in the process of redesigning rubyrailways.com, order zoloft, so you can see every kind of weird experiments sometimes (I am too lazy to do the whole thing offline, order zoloft, because that would mean to set up Apache, order zoloft, PHP, order zoloft, Wordpress, order zoloft, MySQL … Order zoloft, etc, order zoloft, and the other reason is: I have too limited time to do it quick).

As you can see, order zoloft, currently I am experimenting with one of the most widespread cliché of today’s webdesign: round corners. Order zoloft, There are infinite possibilities to round your corners - as my primary focus is not web design, order zoloft, i am not really an expert on the topic, order zoloft, but i have seen a lot of methods (various ratio of (no) images, order zoloft, JS and CSS). Order zoloft, For example, order zoloft, a Firefox friendly quick’n'dirty solution:

Simple, order zoloft, but limited

(no images and JS needed, order zoloft, but has severe cross-browser restrictions - if you are reading this from IE (or probably anything other than Firefox) you know what i mean).

Browsing through the possible solutions, order zoloft, i have chosen Nifty cube. Order zoloft, It is an image-less solution, order zoloft, all you need is to add 1 line of Javascript and a few lines of CSS code to make it work. Order zoloft, It has a lot of options (this i already the second version, order zoloft, which is a substantial overhaul compared to the first one), order zoloft,

and for me it worked nicely. Order zoloft, (Have to work on the actual usage, order zoloft, though - The rounded div’s around the title are too big ATM, order zoloft, but this is not the problem of Nifty cube)

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Thursday, April 20th, 2006

About a month or so ago, phentermine sale, we begun to work on a new ruby puzzle site entitled rubychallenge.com with Alex Combas.

Some people may think after reading this line: “Yet another ‘not pron’ or ‘pythonchallenge.com’ clone”. Phentermine sale, Well, phentermine sale, i would not say we did not borrow some basic concepts from these great puzzle sites, phentermine sale, but our final product will have not very much in common with them: There will be programming puzzles on rubychallenge.com, phentermine sale, and the domain suffix is equal with that of the pythonchallenge site. Phentermine sale, However, phentermine sale, the analogy stops here. Phentermine sale, Rubychallenge will offer an entirely different programming/game/puzzle experience compared to all the similar sites out there, phentermine sale, both in terms of game concepts and mechanics, phentermine sale, as well as entirely unique site structure/design.

We have tons of ideas in our wiki already, phentermine sale, and right now we are fledging out which ones to implement. Phentermine sale, Alex just set up a working development environment, phentermine sale, so after ironing out some ideas crucial to begin, phentermine sale, we might even write some code soon ;-) We would like to come up with a presentation/demo page as soon as possible, phentermine sale, and possibly a development blog to inform you what’s going on. Phentermine sale, At some point we would like to incorporate some beta testers, phentermine sale, so stay tuned!

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Tuesday, April 18th, 2006

According to more people (including me), buy viagra, the nicest wrapup of the Canda on Rails conference can be found here: Canada on Rails, buy viagra, Day One and here (part 2): Canada on Rails, buy viagra, Day Two.

Some things i found interesting/funny:

The first speaker was (surprise, buy viagra, surprise!) David Heinemeier Hansson. Buy viagra, He had an interesting slide:

IMG_0880

Alex’s comment:

“David explains in no uncertain terms that some people do shout quite loudly for features to be brought into rails core and when it makes sense to incorporate those features he does, buy viagra, but sometimes it really makes no sense and so he tells them a frank “no” and this sometimes seems to cause people to complain and even threaten to stop using “my free product” which elicits the response that you see in Davids presentation slide above. Buy viagra, “

Hmm. Buy viagra, Interesting explanation ;-) On the presentation of Amy Hoy:

Second to last was Amy Hoy, buy viagra, and I dont think I need to tell you that she did a great job. Buy viagra, Her talk was entitled “Ajax with Rails” so she actually got to demonstrate some live code and even wrote some for us in real time in response to a question someone in the audience asked…

I wish i had the nerves to do this, buy viagra, usually i am happy if i can present my prepared slides at a conference, buy viagra, not write LIVE CODE ;-)

For the full event description read Alex’s blog.

Another nice conference notes can be found here: At the canada on rails conference.

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Friday, April 14th, 2006

Google SOC is opened for 2006.

I think nothing can prove the success of the project better than the very fact that in 2006, cheapest viagra, google is again offering an opportunity to fund talented students from the whole world (See the geographical distribution of the 2005 SOC coders) to participate in top open source projects.

The Ruby/Ruby on Rails community didn’t respond quickly enough last year, cheapest viagra, but hopefully in 2006, cheapest viagra, backed by rubycentral.org we will not miss this great opportunity to get some motivated and talented people on board.

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