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Aaron had two talks turned down; both, from their abstracts alone, sound fascinating; from his fuller explanations, they sound like they had the potential to be fantastic. Still reeling from some ideas. Disappointed there’s not space for this in the world
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“Utility Belt is a grab-bag of tricks, tools, techniques, trifles, and toys for IRB, including convenience methods, language patches, and useful extensions.” Looks most handy, too; some stuff is OSX-only.
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“Fluid gives any webapp a home on your Mac OS X desktop complete with Dock icon, standard menu bar, and logical separation from your other web browsing activity.” A nice way to build site-specific browsers; shame it’s Leopard-only…
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“Anxiety is a super-lightweight To-do list application for Mac OS X Leopard that synchronizes with iCal and Mail.” Leopard only, notably. It also has a good Office Space joke in its screengrabs.
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“CommandShift3 is like Hot or Not. Except, instead of clicking on hot babes, you click on hot websites.”
Dopplr: Huge Success
11 December 2007
Just a brief post here to unashamedly promote the work of some friends. As the title hints, Dopplr – the little startup that could – is now out of beta and releasing on time. It’s a great site – a product that exists not to make you travel more, or travel less, but to make that travel more pleasurable, by fostering coincidensity.
Now, I don’t travel a great amount, so I put “smaller” trips than most people in. Somebody once laughed that I put trips to visit my parents in. But that’s where other useful functionality of Dopplr comes in handy: it lets my trusted friends know when I’m not around. Sometimes, I’m telling you I’m away, not that I’ll be there.
And it’s super-handy if you don’t travel much, but you have foreign friends – it’s already engineered several “oh, you’re passing through London?” meet-ups for me, that otherwise I’d never have had.
So, Dopplr: if you’ve not been playing with it in the beta, take a look. It’s wonderfully put together, with lots of tiny touches that make all the difference. And if you’re not sure that it’s quite for you… think again; it might come in handy. The only thing you need to get your head around: it’s not about your friendsters. It’s about your friends. Proper, real-life friends. You need the people you know on it – but once they are, it makes the business of global friendship so much easier…
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“…our designer Sara Soskolne discovered this marvelous set of Movable Type in Chocolate, created by Sandra Kübler and Christine Voshage.” Oh my. That’s beautiful.
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“I’ve tried hard to use [sequencers] but it’s blocks in different colours and I’m only used to just seeing the waves. I don’t need to listen much to the drums because I know they look nice, like a fishbone, rigged up to be kind of skitty, sharp.”
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“Will they build RAW converters for prehistoric digital cameras?” That’s not the only biggie Fraser asks in this thoughtful piece – most of our RAW workflows are awfully reliant on proprietary technology. What happens when it’s all obsolete?
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Photographs from Pirsig’s 1968 motorcycle roadtrip, which was the inspiration for “Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance”.
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Mike Krahulik finally puts up a transcription of an interview with his grandfather about his time in the Navy during the Second World War. it’s interesting, notably when Krahulik asks him how he feels about WWII videogames. Also, it’s just a great story.
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“Seeed is a place to discuss the business of web applications.” Interesting forum implementation, too.
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“I’ll show you an example of an integration test I wrote with Test::Unit a while back and then converted to use Story Runner earlier today.” RSpec’s Story Runner looks quite interesting.
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“Drawing on inspiration from Plotr and PlotKit, software developer Ole Laursen wanted to bring the same plotting functionality to jQuery. So he built his own jQuery plugin and called it Flot.” That looks rather nifty.
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Looks useful – a plugin to generate email updates about things within your domain model.
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“I [decided] to write a list of the top Ruby on Rails plugins that I have found useful.” A decent-enough selection, with a few I hadn’t seen before.