Morning Coffee 140
- I only posted one Morning Coffee post last week. It wasn’t a lack of
content, it was a lack of drive on my part. I had 20-30 items
flagged in my news reader, but for some reason I couldn’t work up
the interest in posting them. So some of these are a bit old.
- I’m at the Language.NET Symposium this week, so look for lots of
language blogging. I’ve already chatted with Tomáš
Petříček and John
Lam. If someone kicks Ted Neward’s
ass
because he hates
Perl,
I’ll try and liveblog it.
- Speaking of Ted Neward, he
discusses
the question “Can Dynamic Languages Scale?” without devolving into a
flame-fest. I agree 100% with his point about the difference between
performance scaling and complexity scaling. Personally, I tend to
err on the side of better complexity scaling, since buying hardware
is easier than hiring developers.
- Nick Malik
responds
to me calling his shared global integration vision
flawed.
He points to NGOSS/eTOM as an example of a shared iterative model
that works. I know squat about that shared model, so I’ll refrain
from commenting until I do a little homework on the telco industry.
- Speaking of shared interop models, Microsoft is joining
DataPortability.org.
Dare
Obasanjo
and Marc
Canter
are skeptical that so far this effort is all hype and no substance.
Reminds me a bit of AttentionTrust.org. But if DataPortability.org
can get off the ground, maybe there’s hope for Nick’s vision (or
vis-versa).
- Don Syme lists what’s
new
in the latest F# release. As I said, this release is pretty light
on features. Hopefully, I’ll get some details
- Tomas Restrepo
shows
how to change your home folder in PowerShell. I need to do this.
Posted by devhawk.net on January 28, 2008. Filed under Development and Morning Coffee. Tagged Dynamic Languages, F#, Lanugages, PowerShell & Web 2.0.
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