Archive for Tech

Markdown and Code Snippets

I turned off Markdown as it was getting annoying, with the WYSIWYG editor in WP2.0 Markdown isn’t really useful anyway more. I also installed Code Snippets so I could present things a bit better in the article about Lighttpd and Daemontools.

I must say Code Snippets is very easy to install and use.

Anyway, some comments and a few articles will probably be broken without Markdown. I’ll fix them as I find them.

Next thing on the to do list is an upgrade to the theme on this site, and then add something useful like About.

Technorati Tags: , ,

Comments off

Thin Clients saving Sun money?

From Thick clients: Betting against the network?, an article from Computerworld: Sun CIO juggles tight budgets, IT integration. This comment particularly was interesting:

(Bill) Vass (of Sun) expects to spend about $300 million this year on Sun’s IT needs, a figure that represents about 2% of the company’s expected revenue this year. The average company spends between 3% and 4% of its revenue, most figures show — and most of Sun’s direct competitors spend far more.

Read the rest of this entry »

Comments off

Haystack and Piggy Bank

The Haystack Project and Piggy are two Semantic Web projects from MIT.
Haystack seems to be some sort of universal information client, working provide a client to objectise information. Piggy Bank says it provides via a Firefox extension and a Java server (Bank) a method for collecting, sharing. RDFs are generate via screen scraping.
Worth investigating at some point.

Technorati Tags: ,

Comments off

Four CMSs – short review

I had a look at four CMSs yesterday for a small brochure site. Here is a quick review:

  1. Typo3 – complex and powerful. Installation process on Debian takes a bit to figure but is straightforward once understood. A lot of documentation, but it lacks some organisation. However, there are some walkthrus for simple sites. I’d guessimate at least one-two weeks to figure out the basics and get something useful going. Each user would need their hands held.
  2. Plone – complex and powerful. Apt-get plone, although sarge is a bit behind as usual. Free book. However, doesn’t seem to be any clear “walkthrus” for build a small site. Seems like a very good platform for intranet or extranet applications. Plone vs Typo3 comparison.
  3. Drupal – simple and powerful. apt-get drupal. Documentation is messy, more like a lot of tips that something organised. Walkthu, but nothing really explaining how to get it do what I want. Seems better for a basic geek news site than for business site.
  4. MODx – simple, smart and brilliant. Drop in /var/www, chown then good install interface; upgrades look easy as well. Documentation is organised, clear and detailed in areas. No need for walkthru. Discovered via Peter Cooper. You can try it at Opensource CMS. For a simple business site MODx seems to be the best option. I figure I can convert the current html site in a day or two. Both designer and then content editors should be able to use system without much hand holding.

Technorati Tags: , , , , ,

Comments (2)

Tablet Comparison

Comments (1)

Spellbound and Firefox 1.5.0.1

Spellbound is broken in Firefox 1.5.0.1. Here is a useful article about getting it going again. Also some comments about the new version of Spellbound and Firefox 2.0.

Comments (1)

Envelope Maths

Chris Pratley talks about the 1% for art features of the new OneNote 2007.

Having trained as a mathematician I naturally reach for an envelope whenever I need to work out some quick equations or sort out some rough numbers while processing business transactions. These pieces of paper all add to the mess flying around my desktop. So the thought of being able to do this with a Tablet+Pen in OneNote is turning me further towards the Tablet.

Update: The is also a very cool looking tablet maths app from xThink. Some details on evalution version here.

Technorati Tags: , ,

Comments off

What (will be) new in Rails 1.1

Comments off

Noscript

Anyone who uses Firefox should install No Script. Anyone not using Firefox should start using it now, pretty much just for No Script. No Script makes the Internet safe again for Javascript. Quite important with the advent of Web 2.0.

Extra protection for your Firefox: NoScript allows JavaScript, Java (and other plugins) only for trusted domains of your choice (e.g. your home-banking web site). This whitelist based pre-emptive blocking approach prevents exploitation of security vulnerabilities (known and even unknown!) with no loss of functionality

Comments off

Gmail and Gtalk

I was wondering when I would get the new Gtalk interface in Gmail. The drag was getting annoying, mostly because my laptop is in service and I can’t use Gtalk on the Mac at home. Then the Gmail Skins extension pointed out after installation that Gmail provides different javascript features dependant on the GMail Language setting. I was using English (UK) for the better dictionary, but switching to English (US) now gives me all the new features.

Very cool.

Comments off