Morning Coffee 93
- The Washington Capitals
unveil their new jersey
tonight, though they have a picture on their web site. I’ve got
mixed feelings, though I’m trying to reserve judgement until I see
it “in action”. I like that they’re back to the traditional Caps
colors. But the Caps have jersey change fatigue. They only had the
screaming eagle jersey for twelve years, and they swapped out the
blue jersey for the black one (that started life as a third jersey)
somewhere along the line.
- Lawrence Lessig hangs
up his IP spurs
to go after the deep corruption of the political process. He points
out that after a decade focusing on IP, he’s learned all he is going
to about these issues so he decided (among other reasons) that it
was time to start fresh learning about something new. I keep telling
my kids that “always keep learning” is one of the secrets to life.
This move by Lessig is the embodiment of that principle. Good for
him. (via John Lam)
- My old team keep chugging along. They’ve recently added “special
coverage” sections on Agile
Development
and Enterprise
Architecture.
- Miguel de Icaza
details the
three week “hackathon” (his words, not mine) they went thru to get a
working version of Silverlight on
Mono – aka
Moonlight – in time for
ReMix 07 in Paris. It’s an impressive engineering achievement, to
say the least. Also, it’s nice to see the folks from Microsoft
France invite Miguel to come be a part of their keynote. (via Larry
O’Brien)
- Rob Bazinet points
outVisualSVN
in response to my question about SVN clients other than Tortoise.
Like AnkhSVN, VisualSVN snaps into
Visual Studio. However, where AnkhSVN is a native SVN
implementation, VisualSVN depends on Tortoise. Scott Bellware
wrote
“VisualSVN takes a novel approach to bringing SVN into the Visual
Studio IDE… it brings Tortoise into the IDE!”. So it still sounds
like Tortoise is the SVN client everyone cares about.
- Scott Berkun
details
a variety of immature development and management methodologies,
including Development By Denial (DBD), Cover Your Ass Engineering
(CYAE) and my personal favorite Asshole Driven development (ADD).
Scott Hanselman
suggests
looking around and making sure you’re not said asshole. I tend to be
somewhat…how should I say it?…strong willed about the direction
projects I work on should take. My current project is about driving
a paradigm shift to service orientation, and I don’t think you can’t
drive that kind of change without being somewhat strong willed. It’s
a thin line between strong willed and asshole and hopefully I come
down on the right side of that line more often than not.
Posted by devhawk.net on June 22, 2007. Filed under Development and Morning Coffee. Tagged Open Source & Washington Capitals.
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