In response to my lovely wife’s recent blog post about her frustrations with Joss Whedon and most recently the finale of Angel:
I present my top five “Thank You Joss Whedon” – Best Moments of Angel
In response to my lovely wife’s recent blog post about her frustrations with Joss Whedon and most recently the finale of Angel:
I present my top five “Thank You Joss Whedon” – Best Moments of Angel
→ Leave a CommentCategories: TV/Film · WhedonVerse
I am only a recent convert to Twitter, and when I say ‘covert’ I mean ‘I think it’s neat, a little weird, but has some interesting possibilities. Mostly I became interseted in it because it is one of the larger deployments of a Ruby on Rails web app out there; definitely the most high-profile, especially in regards to its reliability (i.e. the frequent downtimes and crashes) and Rails’ ability to scale to the huge demands being made on the Twitter service.
Most of this debate has degenerated down to the level of ‘Rails can’t scale…nuh-uh…ya-huh…nu-huh’. Myself, I firmly believe that Rails can indeed scale quite nicely, thank you, and it is a few high-profile cases (e.g. Twitter) and opinions based solely on experience running Rails apps on a VPS that have perpetuated this myth (and Phusion’s Passenger, or ModRails, may well do much to alleviate these opinions).
So, it was with interest that I read John Gruber’s entry on Daring Fireball pointing to an interview with two of the Twitter guys. They were answering questions posed on the TechCrunch blog about Twitter’s infrstructure, server setup, etc. Also, apparently the Twitter guys must have done many rather unseemly things to the pets of the TechCrunch bloggers, or so it would seem based on the amount of pure bile being spewed at them in the form of questions regarding the ‘damage’ they have perpetrated onto the Twitter community. To their credit, the Twitter guys answered all of the questions with aplomb and dignity. Good for you, guys!
TechCrunch’s response to the answers provided by the Twitter team stated that Twitter continues to be “annoyingly and constructively responsive to criticism”.
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So, there I was, sitting on the iTunes U panel at the CCCU Tech Conference, explaining the process of how a school can be chosen by Apple to be highlighted on the main iTunes U Music store home page.
Someone in the audience pipes up, “Gordon is on there…”
“That’s news to me,” I said, turning around to see the image projected on the screen behind me. Sure enough, there we were under the ‘Commencement 2008′ section.
Thank you, Rick Warren!
UPDATE: Apple made some changes to the default configuration of the iTunes U store main page yesterday, and we are now no longer highlighted
→ Leave a CommentCategories: CET · Gordon · iTunes U
Getting faculty to change is like moving a cemetary…you don’t get any help from the residents.
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Tagged: CCCU, CET, Gordon
I am currently attending the CCCU Joint Conference on Technology and Finance, being held in Vancouver, British Columbia.
We took a break from our regular sessions and speaking only in acronyms (CMS, ERP, SIS, CFO) and spent the afternoon on Grouse Mountain overlooking Vancouver. We saw some grizzlies, were entertained by honest-to-goodness lumberjacks, and had a great meal in the restaurant with a view of the Vancouver skyline.
Click on the picture to see more shots (taken with an iPhone, no less)
Tomorrow it is back to adding ‘2.0′ to the end of the names of things and thinking it’s clever.
→ Leave a CommentCategories: CET · Gordon
That’s ALL sales, mind…not just online sales. Just under five years to do it, too. That’s impressive.
via Daring Fireball
→ Leave a CommentCategories: Mac
There’s just too much in this book for one movie, even at 3 hours
Check out Professor John Granger’s take on where the split should be. I heartily concur.
→ Leave a CommentCategories: Harry Potter · TV/Film
So, the Acid3 Test is out and all of the major browsers (Safari, Firefox, Opera and IE) are scoring EPIC FAILS in the 30s.
But the latest build of WebKit scores a 90!!

WOOT!!
Read more on the Webkit blog
Hopefully they will bake these latest bug fixes into a new release of Safari sooner rather than later.
The latest build of Webkit rocks an almost perfect 100!! Read more info at TUAW here
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I have been a Backpack user for a while, along with Basecamp and Highrise. While Backpack was my first 37Signals web app, I quickly graduated to the feature-rich and seemingly more useful Basecamp and Highrise, and left my Backpack pages languishing in ignominy. Granted, I mostly use Basecamp and Highrise at work and for other professional endeavors, for which they both are perfectly suited. I didn’t seem to have much of a need for the ‘personal’ nature of Backpack.
Recently the guys over at 37Signals have given backpack a slew of upgrades and new features so I have decided to dive back into Backpack and give it another go.
→ Leave a CommentCategories: Web Apps · philosophy
While reading through a blog post about a certain software development company and their influence on those around them, I noticed one the comments referred to the devotees of said company as ‘lemmings’. OK, as a card-carrying member of this particular lemming club, I can handle the scrutiny. But someone was definitely offended, as can be seen further down in the comments:

Say what you will about me (call me a lemming), but the poor little rodents have been maligned for far too long!! Viva La Lemming-volution!!
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