Archive: Coding category
It's been a while. :) So, I ended up buying a Mac Mini, and last week I upgraded the RAM to 2 gigs so I'm sitting pretty well right now. (With the original 512 megs the Mini had at first, things were dog slow, especially when I tried ...
I'm not doing so hot at updating this blog regularly, am I. :) School's keeping me busy (seems like I say that a lot) but I'll try to figure out a focus, something that'll get me writing. (And be interesting to read.)
In the meantime, I think I want ...
After a month of OpenLaszlo, I've had enough. Coding in XML just isn't my style, I'm afraid. (And yes, I know you do half the coding in JavaScript, but that doesn't change anything.) I don't think that means XML-based programming languages are inferior or anything like ...
I've been tinkering around a bit with OpenLaszlo, since here at work I'm about to start writing an RIA for doing online extraction of genealogical records, and it would be really nice not to have to re-invent the wheel. :) The advantages of OpenLaszlo are ...
Some thoughts that have been going through my mind lately...
In writing software, it seems like there are two distinct creative philosophies: planned vs. organic. With the first, you blueprint the whole project out in advance, thinking through everything as much as possible, sketching out the program with broad strokes ...
At work last week my boss was about to purchase a piece of software for a substantial sum. When he told me about it, I almost laughed at the ludicrous price. "They said it took about $6,000 worth of labor," he said. Completely outrageous. So I ...
Jeff Croft writes about personal content management:
[A CMS] ought to make your content more useful simply by virtue of the content being in the system. But more often than not, it doesn’t. Most of time, you actually make your data (read: content) as dumb as possible by ...
It's been a while since I wrote about programming. Almost a month, in fact. ~sigh~
So, the BYUFHLC is on hold for now due to time constraints at work. (I have to get all the new extraction software done by a month from now when we present it at ...
I've been porting the BYUFHLC to PHP, and it's coming along pretty well in spite of a number of mini-setbacks. The only tricky part was figuring out how to parse the HTML from the screenscrape. At first I was going to use Troy Wolf's class_http, but it ...
Last week on Top of the Mountains I mentioned my FHLC/UVRFHC mashup (which I'm now calling BYUFHLC). It's written in Ruby on Rails and is 75% done (I just have to add support for the non-place searches, like surname and such). Here at the Center for Family ...