Khaos

Quiet Times

I don’t seem to have had much time lately to write in this blog. We use blogs in work to record details of every task we complete. I posted 7 entries today – just over 2,200 words. Writing in work is much easier because I know what I’m supposed to be writing about. I really not sure what to write about here.

I’ve been very busy lately and there are lots of things that I haven’t got round to doing. I would really like to organise a Belfast.pm meeting. It seems that all the spare time I have for doing Perl related things has been going into the organisation of YAPC::Europe. I would like to get to sleep earlier. I should really be asleep now but I find it hard to get to sleep when Marty is away. I need to finish putting the Christmas decorations away. I’ve just noticed that the Christmas tree lights are lying in a corner of the living room. I only got round to putting the Christmas tree out last weekend. I really need to tidy up my living room. Tony pointed out yesterday that it’s quite difficult to get across the room to put a disc in the DVD player for fear of falling over something. I could continue with the list of things that I need to do but I’ll only scare myself.

Where does all my time go? It seems that working full-time and studying part-time has taken over my life.

Blog Design

A while back I made the decision to change the design of my blog. The design I had was adequate when I first started blogging but I went off it the first time I saw Dan’s blog. Using a standard MT template was really useful to me at the start, as I am not a designer, but I decided to use a designer to create the current look. My new blog design has been live now for the past few months. I really liked it when I first saw it and I still really like it today. Thanks Stephen!.

Ice Hockey

Homer: Lisa, if the Bible has taught us nothing else — and it hasn’t — it’s that girls should stick to girls’ sports, such as hot-oil wrestling, foxy boxing, and such-and-such.

Marge: I think women should be able to play any sport men play, but hockey is so violent and dangerous — look at Milhouse’s teeth.[opens her hand]

Bart: Mom, will you stop showing us those?

– The Simpsons, Lisa on Ice

I went to see the Giants play in Belfast on Friday night. This was the first time I had ever seen an ice hockey match. Belfast has only acquired a team in the last few years and the only sport I watch on TV is Formula 1 (which is Tony’s fault). Marc had metioned to me that these could be quite violent but I must admit that I didn’t expect the players to stop playing and start fighting in the middle of the game. Nor was I expecting one of the players to smash up his hockey stick when he got sent off for trying to smash up one of the other players. And to add to my disbelief when two of the players started to fight the crowd stood up and cheered and the referees stood back and watched. All in all it was a strange experience.

Etech: Secrets of the Alpha Geeks

Ideas rot if you don’t do something with them. I used to think it would be dumb to give my ideas away, that I should hoard them up for that great article or startup I would do. Then they just rotted. Now I just blog on them or otherwise tell people. Sometimes they come to naught all the same, but generally somebody tends to find the idea useful in one way or another.

Edd Dumbill

Danny O’Brien decided to interview a load of geeks to see if he could find out what their secrets are. His survey included Cory Doctorow, Simon Cozens, Eric S. Raymond , Nat Torkington and Jamie Zawinski. Not surprisingly he found that these people had quite a few things in common. It seems that they still use the command line, they organise their lives in a todo.txt file, they will try lots of new things but don’t really trust them and they backup like crazy.

It amuses me that a todo.txt file is used to organise the life of the alpha geek and I can see why they could be embarrassed to let others know that they use these. It seems to be a really low tech solution to the organisation problem. I make lots of todo lists but I don’t have one big global one that I keep everything in. I also prefer to write my lists as this seems to help me to commit things to memory. Typing doesn’t do this in the same way for me. I have worked as an audio typist and learnt to type without really having to put a lot of thought into what I was typing. Of course geeks need to find somewhere to put the important information in their lives as they usually aren’t very good at remembering things like birthdays and anniversaries and a text file is fast and easy to use.

Danny mentioned that blogging software was also being used as an organising application. He found the concept of a private blog fascinating as blogs are usually written for other people to read. He mentioned that people are starting to use blogging software and RSS feeds instead of email and mailing lists. I really like blogs. They are a wonderful way to keep important notes. We have been using them in work for the past year or so as a way of storing information on various projects. We even have a project blog that the system writes to automatically when changes are made to our software.

Danny also talked about trust and software. You can’t trust software unless you’ve written it yourself and then you still can’t trust it but you are much more forgiving. I will never understand why geeks feel the need to write everything themselves.

I still don’t know from all this what it means to be an alpha geek. I am surrounded by people who can’t remember dates or where they are supposed to be, who use the command line for everything, have strange scripts in ~bin and who love writing things from scratch!

Etech: Google - Indexing the World

I was looking forward to the Google talk but must admit that I wasn’t really impressed. It wasn’t that Nelson Minar isn’t a good speaker it’s just that he didn’t say anything about Google that I didn’t already know or couldn’t have found out by doing a quick search on Google…

Etech Opening Keynote

The future is here. It’s just not evenly distributed yet.

– William Gibson

Tim O’Reilly gave the opening keynote to the conference. I was really surprised that there was almost nothing new than this. I had forgotten how long it takes for an emerging technology to become an accepted technology and and get into the mainstream. This doesn’t mean that the talk wasn’t interesting – it was – I was just expecting it to be different.

Etech: Annotate the World

Marc Smith’s opening keynote on Wednesday morning was excellent. I’m really excited by the visualisation tools that he showed for mapping the Usenet community. It’s not that I’m interested in Usenet but by the possibility of finding a way to visually represent the various groups and communities that I’m involved with. We get so used to looking at tabular table that we forget the power of visualisation. There is a paper on TreeMaps that I really must read later on.

I had lunch with some people who seemed to be quite surprised that I enjoyed the talk. I may be actively involved in the Perl community but I really like to find out about new technology – even if Microsoft wrote it.