magpiebrain

Sam Newman's site, a Consultant at ThoughtWorks

Posts from the ‘Uncategorized’ category

Now that I’ve “moved my sites(magpiebrain – New host, new blog, new screwups)”:http://www.magpiebrain.com/blog/2006/04/17/new-host-new-blog-new-screwups/ over to TextDrive, I need to find a new domain registrar to complete the relocation. My old ISP was an OpenSRS reseller, and I don’t want to keep paying my old monthly fee to them simply to manage my domains.

The two I’ve heard some good things about are “Joker”:http://joker.com and “RegisterFly”:http://www.registerfly.com/, but there are so many out there that a bit more feedback would be nice. It’ll need to handle a few .com’s and at least one .co.uk domain – I definitely need automatic updates and periodic reminder. A reliable web control panel is a must, but I’d rather not pay the earth for managing a few domains.

Since I signed up to TextDrive I’ve been planning this move. Finally, after several weekends of intense inactivity punctuated with the occasional burst of activity, the blog should be moved. Pretty much all the links should be working, but email me if anything is mis-behaving.

TextDrive

I’ve had no real complaints with my old host, “Gradwell”:http://www.gradwell.com/. Sure, the web control panel needed some interface work, and they weren’t as up to date with new software, but they were solid enough and the support was prompt. The recent TextDrive lifetime hosting offer was enough to tempt me. Given that I was already a “Strongspace”:http://www.strongspace.com/ user the $500 deal ended up paying for itself in a year. Add in great support (both via the forums or via email), up to date software packages and the fact that they donate 50% of their profits to supporting a selection of open source software development and I was sold. Needless to say I’ve not been disappointed since my move.

Wither MovableType – and TextPattern

Yes, after using MovableType for many years I’ve also switched blogging software. My original choice was “TextPattern”:http://www.textpattern.com/ which I use to run another site. I like TextPattern a lot – it’s interface, easy install, ease of customisation. One thing I don’t like is the problematic handling of clean URLs. I needed to remap easily URLs from the old blog to the new using mod_rewrite, and it was very hard with Textpattern. In the end WordPress made the process much simpler. TextPattern does have a steep learning curve – but if the way it decides to handle URLs works for you and like the extreme customisation possible then it might be the one for you.

Enter WordPress

In desperation after many weekends of TextPattern tweaking I tried installing WordPress. As the documentation suggests it really does only take five minutes to install. I’ve bee greatly impressed. The admin interface is clean, there are a wealth of plugins available (and can be easily managed), and the theme handling is very handy for a compulsive tweaker like myself.

Hemingway

The design is a slightly modified “Hemingway” theme. The original really is a very nice piece of work. Over the coming weeks I plan to continue to tweak it, but I’ll be keeping the changes small and incremental – there have been enough changes recently!

p(update). _Update_ I’ve fixed a problem with the montly archive links from the old site not working. Images in articles seem screwed up right now though – but I can’t fix that while behind a corporate firewall Images should now be fixed too.

Why is it, that the BBC provides RSS feeds for virtually all of it’s news content except when it comes to travel alerts for Lond Underground? What exactly do they think we use RSS for, and why do they think an email service you have to register for is superior to RSS for distributing news? There is “the information(BBC Public Transport travel alerts)”:http://www.bbc.co.uk/london/travel/public_transport/tube_feature.shtml in all it’s glory, and not a subscribe link in sight.

I think it’s time to see if “Backstage(BBC’s Backstage project)”:http://backstage.bbc.co.uk/ can help out…

Two magpies have decided to nest in the tree outside our flat. I assume this is not coincidence.

All highly subjective, but it’s my blog and I don’t care what you damn hippies think.

h3. Java and C#

They’re established, with big crowds. with lots of internationally well known teams. Java, feeling more European, is Football – C#, Basketball..

h3. Smalltalk

A language beloved by it’s fans which “turns on itself”:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2004-05_NHL_lockout and ultimately ruins much of its promise, resulting in droves of potential fans deserting it. Smalltalk is Ice Hockey – or perhaps baseball
Continue reading…

Colleague Ivan Moore is offering to “consult in his spare(Ivan Moore – Show Me The Money)”:http://ivan.truemesh.com/archives/000575.html time to help raise money for the state school his children attend. Ivan is great, so if you need to Agile/XP advise/coaching he’s well worth the money.

If you haven’t met Ivan, a good summary came courtesy of another colleague:

Ivan has two states – anxious and asleep. If he’s awake, he’s anxious

By Simon at diner the other night, attempting to explain how pairing forces you to write better code:

Well, if you had to walk around in your underwear all the time, you’d go to the gym, wouldn’t you?