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Imported from MozDawg without title

*What a piece of crap this blogger interface is … ^X cut text, just now (in this case, a nicely formatted unordered list of links c/w comments), but nothing got stored on the clipboard. Thanks loads, but I really knew where the DEL key was, and I did not need this! The service is definitely worth FREE! [shiet! Really, though, who needs this?!]*
* Holy Shiet!! I just re-enterred the data manually, but it disappeared when I resized this frame! I don’t want to crap on blogger.com, or on LiveJournal (which has been bediveled for days, and right now will not allow updates), but Geeezus, when are we ever going to get anything working??! Damned M$ mentality is a plague.*


If you’re into free information, and/or annotation services, Andamooka is a must peek. I haven’t stepped through much of it yet (more to come) but it has brought a couple of interesting things to me immediately: KDE 2.0 Development (Table of Contents) is not exactly chopped liver *ooh … time for lunch!*, and I look forward to How to Think Like a Computer Scientist: (ToC of the HTML version) , though this seems very focussed on Python and kinda uninspired on the “thinking like a Computer Scientist” bit. (I loved the way Jon Udell [in e-mail] answered my “who but a programmer would have seen into this *ESP trick*” with “a magician!” huh huh).

Tacked onto the GreenTea page was a nice plug for The Five Easy Ways to Help Promote Free Books. Also of note is the fact that their Python book is hosted by the good folks at the Open Book Project. Support everyday heroes!!

*Ok … what’s next, problems posting to my server? [sigh] … fine fine fine, bring it on, let’s get on with it.*
! Struck by lightning … I knew this last comment would cause me grief: something on this page is calling bloglog.com (for no good reason I can see) … and it isn’t responding (though it responds when addressed directly) … what a Geezus kludge the web is becoming. I guess the early days were just a come-on, in order to scoop the cream while the scooping was good. !
* Cute … now something is calling blogblog.com, whoever the hell that is.*


Imported from MozDawg without title

Though I’m not positive why John Udell uses the term he chooses in “The disruptive Web” (why disruptive? I found that distracting) the phenomenon he describes is pithy, seminal, timely, makes great coffee, etc etc etc. As he puts in in his blog:

“If you’re creating a Web service that you hope will have a disruptive impact, the lessons are clear. Support HTTP GET-style URLs. Design them carefully, matching de facto standards where they exist. Keep the URLs short, so people can easily understand, modify, and trade them. Establish a blog reputation. Use the blog network to promote the service and enable users of the service to self-organize. It all adds up to a recipe for recombinant growth.”

Long/short, combining areacode lookup with bookmarklets and blogs with online library services and book discussion pages turned out to be a natural! (It’s a great article, BTW … thanks Jon and InfoWorld.)

Somewhat related: another tid-bit that I sense will spawn something virally web-service-like is the GeoURL project that I’ve described in my LiveJournal … MeatSpace is here to stay! (Coincidentally, JohnU shows up in GeoURL’s “within 500 miles of this webpage” listing!)


Imported from MozDawg without title

*sigh* Got template back to working (almost) but blew my counters away in the process. *sigh*

Apple announces “Safari” … a snub to Moz-ites?

” In kicking off the Macworld Expo keynote, Apple CEO Steve Jobs unveiled a new Macintosh web browser named Safari. Jobs said the browser was “based on standards”, “works with any Web site”, has much-improved performance over IE. . . .

The discussion at KDE New runs the gamut:

  • Too bad that these efforts were not coordinated from the beginning, because right now, the changes in safari-khtml look very massive (and impressive!), so basically this is a fork.”
  • ” I don’t think the importance of this can be underestimated. … [W]ith the recent success of Mozilla and now millions of Mac heads about to switch to a non-IE browser, the balance will shift back to standards-based web design.”
  • “> Congratulations to the great KDE developers, who beat Mozilla.
    It hasn’t exactly “beaten” Mozilla, as khtml still has a long ways in the CSS department and other technologies (XHTML) to go to be on the level of Gecko.”

One wag, who shall remain nameless [jwz!!] does a number on the language used by the developers:

“Translated through a de-weaselizer, this says:

“Even though some of us used to work on Mozilla, we have to admit that the Mozilla code is a gigantic, bloated mess, not to mention slow, and with an internal API so flamboyantly baroque that frankly we can’t even comprehend where to begin. Also did we mention big and slow and incomprehensible?”

A choice of browsers … hunh … Given that I’ve never and will never use IE, that’s truly novel concept for me! So, it comes to this, then: shall I use Mozilla 1.2.1? or Phoenix 0.5? …. ummmm, I think the latest Phoenix nightly is the order of the day.


Imported from MozDawg without title

Scott Amberl‘s online writings, The Agile Edge at SDS, and on UML

A good example of a documents set is this bugzilla directory at linux-dsi, the Linux Documentation project. (Or, again at CS Knoxville, another project doc_set, again an open a directory. There’s an !INDEX here.)
!– and my blogger just threw a 513 … again, template blown away?!!


“Procrastination. Hard work often pays off after time, but laziness always pays off now.

Delusions. There is no greater joy than soaring high on the waves of your dreams, except maybe the joy of watching a dreamer who has nowhere to land but in the ocean of reality.

Consulting. If you’re not part of the solution, there’s good money to be made in prolonging the problem.”


Imported from MozDawg without title

*Aspirin, anyone??*

New Year’s Day shouts (not too loud, please) out to:

  • David I., who knows SMART from dumb, and “rise from “dawn“. *grin*
  • When all you’ve got is a railgun, everything looks like a train.

  • (with aulde lang syne) to David Sable, who workshopped me into tech_doc think
  • “A system must have an aim. Without an aim, there is no system. … A system must be managed. … The secret is cooperation between components toward the aim of the organization.”
    –W. Edwards Deming, The New Economics
    quoted by Howard Smith and Peter Fingar
    in Business Process Management: The Third Wave)

  • jwz, who knows navel gazing when he suffers its consequences
  • That’s what makes you special, Jamie.

  • to Ward and all the change junkies at Portland Pattern Wiki (or, if you’d rather: PortlandPatternRepository)
  • “Stacking a thousand doghouses one atop the other to build a skyscraper is a great proposition for doghouse vendors, but not for future occupants. Skyscrapers need an architecture of their own- their own paradigm”
    Howard Smith and Peter Fingar
    in Business Process Management: The Third Wave

  • Lars Marius Garshol, all the other ontopians out there, and all the netizens, CMC types, and IT nerds who are beetling away at W3C, OASIS IETF, and FSF.
  • Pieter Hintjens (who knows that a beer cap is a pressure release valve when you’re a white boy broken down on the side of a desert road) and the kidz at Imatix (a beautiful site redesign; but where’d our motto go to?!), for having brought us … for my money (Open Source rulez!), the slickest server yet!
    • Pieter! How about doing a Libero blog?! *grin*
  • Douglas Adams, who teaches me gentle compassion for in-duh-viduals

  • Well, as gentle as possible.

  • Jay Fenello and other folk who are pulling together to keep the net and the world free, as in free
  • the many good spirits and souls at NewCivNet; thanks so much, Flemming.
  • and lastly, for all the good lads and lasses past and present connected with Mozilla, a golden oldie:
  • just reload to get the loop started again


    “…that as we enjoy great advantages from the inventions of others, we should be glad of an opportunity to serve others by an invention of ours, and this we should do freely and generously…”
    — Benjamin Franklin

    “To be radical, empiricism must neither admit into its constructions any element that is not directly experienced, nor exclude from them any element that is.”
    — William James

    And, dedicated to the Redmond^Borg:

    ?Always tell only the truth, and all the truth, and do so promptly ? right now.?
    — Buckminster Fuller

… more to come.


Democracy is based upon the conviction that there are extraordinary possibilities in ordinary people.
— Harry Emerson Fosdick

“Bad ideas flourish because they are in the interest of powerful groups.”
— Paul Krugman

‘nite, kidz.



BufferDump DEC2002




Moved all of the below from original site as one big slab of really ugly HTML (I’d never write gack like this by hand)
Yaaaa I know blink sux … it’s just for the day … 1JAN03

Topic Map links collected by Lars Marius Garshol

Friday, December 13, 2002:

Dang!! … blogger.com lost its templates at some time, so all of this site’s customization is now *pffffft* history. Well, dang!!


*Thud!!* … according to Martin Fowler’s essay on technical documents, that’s the sound of doom … and I agree, totally.
If I want to find out Bluebeard’s age at the time of his execution, I /don’t/ want to haul an encyclopedia off the shelf, and there’s no reason I should have to. But “communication” is too often measured by the gross presence of /wey too much/ … and I don’t think things are better just because the pages are virtual rather than pulp and ink.
You know, we’re very very good at doing what we do, when we know what we’re doing. And when we’re not doing well, I suspect it’s because we don’t know what we’re on about.

Something I picked up just today:

“Stacking a thousand doghouses one atop the other to build a skyscraper is a great proposition for doghouse vendors, but not for future occupants. Skyscrapers need an architecture of their own – their own paradigm”
Howard Smith and Peter Fingar; Business Process Management: The Third Wave

Bernard // 18:54


Sunday, November 17, 2002:

Bernard // 21:05


Friday, November 15, 2002


Indymedia . Test . BenTrem

I’m trying to find evidence of e-mail address spoofing in this:

Content-Type: application/octet-stream;
name=SHOWME3.HTM
Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64
Content-ID:

PGh0bWw+PCEtLSB2ZXJzaW9uIDkuMTUuOCAtLT4NCjxmcmFtZXNldCByb3dzPSIqLDAiIGZy
YW1lc3BhY2luZz0wIGZyYW1lYm9yZGVyPTA+DQogIDxmcmFtZSBzcmM9InNtMy5odG0iIG1h
cmdpbmhlaWdodD0wIG1hcmdpbndpZHRoPTAgc2Nyb2xsaW5nPW5vIG5vcmVzaXplIG5hbWU9
InNob3dtZSI+DQogIDxmcmFtZSBzcmM9ImhpZGRlbi5odG0iIG1hcmdpbmhlaWdodD0wIG1h
cmdpbndpZHRoPTAgc2Nyb2xsaW5nPW5vIG5vcmVzaXplPg0KPC9mcmFtZXNldD4NCjwvaHRt
bD4NCj==
posted by Bernard Tremblay 11:48 PM


Saturday, November 09, 2002


Some links:

posted by Bernard Tremblay 12:00 PM


Wednesday, July 17, 2002:

Here are search results: google NGs for ”documentation”. Know what? I’m tempted to say that the stuff this turned up is a lot more interesting than the stuff that was being chatted about years ago … but I’m not actually certain that’s true. Actually, I think it’s basically the same. Get it? Get it?!! Point: year after year we’ve been re-inventing the wheel, and with good reason: the f’n wheel ain’t round, or it’s round and mooshy, or round and too hard, or it falls off and breaks when it turns … Geeeeeesh, we’re still not producing good docs systematically? Seems like a case of passive-aggression to me. (It’s really simpler than that … old fashion corruption: “Get the damned thing shipped out Friday, and the devil take the hind-most.”)
Bernard // 08:01


Saturday, July 13, 2002:

Martin Fowler on tech_docs: The Almighty Thud. (I cud’n’uh sed it better myself)

Bernard // 19:29


Thursday, July 04, 2002:

Various Doc Docs & Resources
*
netscape.public.mozilla.documentation

  • Tracking bugs:
  • Moz Release FAQ
  • W3C Validator for HTML 4.01 Strict
  • Gecko Documentation Map
  • Open Directory – Computers: Software: Internet: Clients: WWW: Browsers: Mozilla
  • Mozilla Documentation Status [old]



    Bernard // 19:12


    Wednesday, July 03, 2002:

    (New Start on Docs)

    * At zope.org:

    * At BYTE, Jon Udell’s Document Engineering, Character Encoding Issues, and Document Namespace Issues. Udell’s archive: Tangled in Threads

    * At M$ *Gack Ptui!*: Reinventing the Online Help in XML

    * How NonProgrammers Use Documentation at advogato

    * Free Software and Free Manuals from FSF



    Bernard // 21:04


    Wednesday, March 13, 2002:

    * Not only does MicroGold seem to have an awesome IDE for UML, but their site also hosts a really impressive set of tutorials on UML with C and Java

    Bernard // 09:22


  • Another tree? A branch? No … it's a bird!

    Subject: Another tree? A branch? No … it’s a bird!
    From: “Bernard D. Tremblay (Ben)” 
    Date: Tue, 13 Nov 2007 00:43:25 -0700
    To: DLL

    Only a lark, but not really.

    “Cat” is nowhere to be seen. (He’s 16, so likely not messin’ with Miss Puss … more likely tryin’ to back off some young’in.) So I’m up for at least another 1/2 hour. (It’s getting cold … he deserves better than a night outside.)

    So, top of mind:

    ====

    Late 70s, I’m driving my taxi. My as in I own it, lock stock and permit. And I don’t have to drive, since I’ve got something like 5 figures in my savings account.

    I pick up a fare out in the industrial zone and head for downtown … many many miles, since Edmonton is a sprawling prairie city.
    We talk about this and that … pretty quickly get onto systems and hardware and layout and what we would now call human factors. What turns the topic to other things is this: something I say leaves him gob-smacked and he announces that he’s in town with IBM overseeing a new project at the refinery and would I like a job.

    Haaaaaaaaaaaaa! SigInt in the forces, SAC/Norad with telco, installing with Motorola, computerizing MCR at CBC … I need more hi-tech like I need another hole in the head.
    And IBM?
    And for an oil company?!
    Haaaaaaaaaaaaaa!
    But I was polite. I mean not rude. I mean neither patronizing nor condescending.
    We talked about airlines or something.
    *shrug*

    ====

    Late 90s I’m happy as a clam: contracting gave me a grub-stake and I’m studing cog-psych, criminology, and poli-sci as a mature student.
    Talking to a prof about his concentration (teenage depression) I swing the convo to his web-site and suggest (using Socratic method) “Are depressed folk interested enough to use the site?” (Sometimes, yes.) “And folk who’s interest is more academic are also interested in the site?” (Hopefully, yes.) “Sooo couldn’t the site be designed so that those who are depressed perhaps go one way and those whose interest is more academic would go another way? To generate data?” (*long pause* Not certain, but sounds plausible.)
    I designed him a new site … just more modular, was all … so we could start from a known base.
    He never took it another inch. Barely even replied to my queries. Dead in the water. Go figure.

    ====

    This one I think I told you: talking with ethologist Dr. Fentress (arguably world’s expert on wolf behaviour) about, of all things, relation of parts to whole … taxonomy … I bring it to earth with whatchamacallit inter-rater distinctions. Using foxes, what one observer might call a scoop another might call a tamp. And that would screw up the data.
    How to generate operational definition of “scoop” VS “tamp”? Sure, show video to train … but … that’s no fun!
    😉

    I suggested we use pure numerical measurements to generate animation file for VRML model … /this/ cluster of motion typifies “scoop” while that one there typifies “tamp”. *long pause*
    Not only did I get space in his lab, I got a laptop for myself (my choosing) and 2 PCs in the lab (again, my purchase decision) and a monthly honorarium.

    ====

    What I’m going on about is this: people who are actually / really / existentially engaged with “the work” relate to my mutterings.
    Folk who are engaged in churn (like the majority of A-list bloggers) really find me unpleasant in some unspecified way for some unspecified reason. (After all these years of Buddhism I’ve got a pretty good lock on just how and just why. Occam’s razor | diamond-cutter logic … two different tools for peeling back the sophistry.

    ====

    My aim is not to secure a comfortable life.
    My aim is to deploy a tool.

    ====

    In short? Dialectics, DLL … simply that.
    Information is data that makes a difference huh huh huh …
    … and if the recipient really doesn’t give a hoot (i.e. if s/he’s engaged in mere churn) then any old system will serve, whether email-list or wiki or blog or forum.

    But when it comes to “Are we going to replace the cooling system or switch the farm over to blades?”, then chances are better than even that /somebody/ there has a can tied to his tail. That person would get along real well with me. And the phalanx of sophists and sycophants who surround him? They would just as soon have me eat shit and die.

    No cynicism … I trust you here.

    Abhidharma“? Just a term for information theory from another tradition. “Buddhadharma“? A long word for “the philosophy and science of mind.

    If a person’s aim is to get click-through then that person will establish co-dependent relationships and produce churn … that’s a limitless appetite.

    I know I’m no Chomsky.
    But I’m a good technical communicator.
    I know my trade.
    I know my craft.
    I know my field.

    Oh heck, I might as well go the distance. Your sensitivity to my IP has been many times evident.

    ====

    *!Warning: Zen in action!*
    *** ***

    42

    Most people would just blink.
    Some would recall “Hitchiker’s Guide” and giggle to themselves. “The meaning of life!”
    Nope. But close.
    “42” is what the computer replied to the question.
    But “42” could have been an error code; the computer might have been communicating: “Hey, lard-ass, find the meaning of life for your own lame self … I’m just a computer.”

     

    “Momentum” … fine so far.
    “Inertia” … no problem so far.

    What’s the diff?
    Nooooooo … no such thing as “an object at rest”.
    Nothing is at rest; all objects are in motion, of course, which we grant immediately when we think it through for a moment.

    Now, that’s nice.
    But suddenly the clear distinction we started with is … somehow bewildering.

    So actually inertia is momentum in a direction other than the one we favour.
    Not quite the same!

     

    42
    Inertia | Momentum

    Matters philosophical and crudely physical seem equally ?what? … relative.
    *Yoiks! Zounds!*

    Meaning / implications / entailments seem to depend on our thinking, as subjective individuals.
    But this not the case with consequences.
    As I taught my kids: you can have a real good excuse for having forgotten your parachute when you jump, or a really lousy reason, or just a fib … but none of that changes the speed you’re moving when you reach the ground. (Even though it can change how you feel while you’re falling, which can be good news.)
     

     
     

    So … 
    so what?!

    Let’s set inertia/momentum aside. This is getting long, it’s late, and my neck is starting to cramp.

    42 … the number of fladrams in the fladram bin.

    Short version:
    Q: “How many fladrams do
    we have?”
    A: “There are 42 in the bin.”
    *long pause … existential realization sets in*
    Q: “Is that good enough?”
    A: “Enough for what?”
    *sick feeling in pit of stomache; slight vertigo*

    Point is: good answers to good questions is, well hell’s bells, that’s pretty darned good. For a start. As far as it goes. Which, alas, often ain’t very far.
    With so much relativity floating around, even with good questions … the good answers become garbage in … and you know what results from that.

    Bottom line? Those “good questions” are crap. Let the freakin’ system do the arithmetic.
    Operationalize! Get dialectical!

    Q: “Do we have enough fladrams for this week’s production run?”
    A: “No. With 42 rams in the bin and 14 fladmeisters in partial assembly, the 36 units projected will result in a shortfall of  8.”
     

    dang … I’m pret’near cross-eyed … where /is/ that danged cat?!


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