Thursday 18 November 2010

After a month living with a GNOME, I don't feel any taller

In an experiment to see what it would be like to take a full plunge into Windows-free-living on the desktop, I put myself on double secret probation to see if I could live without my Windows trinkets for 30 days, and 60 if I could stretch it. (At home though - at work would be a whole new challenge)

So in through the window comes the penguin...

The highlights so far are:

  • Ubuntu 10.10 installer (for the desktop) is a very neat bit of kit. While I haven't actually tried it - I think it stands an excellent chance of passing the "even my mother could install it" test. I wouldn't dare let her try a Windows install.
  • The baked in sync features of Chrome make it easy peasy to keep all your browsers at work and home in step. With the added benefit that I can expose all my personal details to Google to harvest for fun and profit (ho hum).
  • A VirtualBox install of Ubuntu Desktop is hands down, the fastest, snappiest desktop VM I've  used. Windows XP was usable, Windows 7 was better, but it's waaaaaay faster than that.
So far, so good...

Saturday 25 September 2010

"p" is for "please don't sue me"

Duck! Duck!


...minutes pass...


Cat! Cat! (giggles)


...a little while later...


Bee! (squeals)

I thought I had picked up all the kids picture books lying around the floor. I double checked - yup - no picture books. Yet our daughter was making all the fun noises that usually following a reading of picture books.

A little further investigation reveals she has got hold of a Linux magazine I bought on a whim.

Turns out this is a Duck...

a fair mistake - any bird is classified as "duck" at the moment.

This is a Cat...

getting a little harder to see the association now.

And this is a Bee...


Turns out these mags are great for kids (and cheaper than most picture books). I was thinking of trying a Mac magazine next. So she can go for the traditional "a is for apple" - but I'm worried of copyright or trademark infringement.

Wednesday 10 February 2010

A belated link-blog lament

A few weeks ago, Arjan Zuidhof officially shutdown operations on his great .NET (and development in general) link-blog. It was not a huge surprise; it was alluded to it back in August. He's now concentrating solely on productivity, gtd and lifehacking. While these are also great topics (and still hold a personal interest for me), I will miss the great development content and ideas the posts inspired.

From the back row: "Gee, that's sad. Blogs come and go, get over it man!"

True enough, but... I couldn't help make a loose connection between this and a fairly hot topic raised on DNR - Is software development too complex? back in November. It spawned a huge series of follow ups and comments (both for and against). But it's hard to argue that the number of CLI languages, data access choices, logging frameworks, etc, etc (ad infinitum) are reducing. When you start a new project, which one to do you choose? Which one is "right"? Which one will still be a good choice in 2 years? In 2 minutes?

Q: There's a huge amount of choice out there, and it's constantly increasing! What are we to do?
A: (That guy from the back row is still here) "Get over it man!"

This is a great time for .NET development. The platform is mature, popular and stable. The huge variety of technologies available within that platform are a sign of this. Sure you will pick technological dead-ends, or the next-shiny-thing will seem so much better. But perhaps this helps focus the effort on design - being able to back out of dead-ends, or support switching to the next-shiny-thing.

I just hope the (seemingly) overwhelming choice is not driving talented people (like Arjan) away from the .NET platform. I honestly don't think so - but for a brief moment the connection was made in my addled mind.

Maybe a fitting salute to Arjan's contributions is to select some of the gems (there's plenty more):




Dammit! - Now I've started a link-blog!