Morning Coffee 143
- I’ve been sick for three days, hence the lack of posting around
here.
- As a Redskins fan, it’s hard to root for any other NFC East team. On
the other hand, it sure was easy to root against the Patriots.
Congrats to the Giants on their Super Bowl victory. Favorite
headline: 18 and uh-oh!
- Sounds like there’s cause for
optimism
regarding the writer’s strike. But is it already too late? Will the
9% drop in viewers ever
come back? Personally, I think the studios have hastened their own
irrelevance.
- With last night’s
win,
the Caps are one game above .500. In and of itself, that’s nothing
to be proud of – Coach Boudreau remarked when we reached .500 that
the Caps had “officially reached mediocrity”. However, the Caps are
the only team in the SE conference that’s above .500. If hockey
used baseball standings, Carolina, Atlanta and Florida would each be
1/2 game back of the Caps. It’s going to be a fight to the finish.
- In fairly big managed Ruby news, Wayne
Kelly has
decided
to contribute to the IronRuby effort,
effectively walking away from the
Ruby.NET which
helped get off the ground. One the one hand, obviously this is great
for IronRuby. On the other hand, I liked the idea of multiple
managed implementations of Ruby, so here’s hoping Ruby.NET doesn’t
fade away.
- Speaking of the DLR, I know I mentioned Martin Maly’s
blog in my Lang.NET
Morning Coffee
Post,
but I didn’t actually get to read his posts on targeting the DLR
until I unexpectedly had several days off sick. If you are at all
interested in writing your own language for the .NET platform: Go.
Read. Now. You should
also check out Tomas Restrepo’s blog, he has also started writing
about targeting the
DLR.
- Larry O’Brien’s blog is currently offline, but he
commented
that he doubted my
ToyScript
F# parser would be more than 600 lines of code. Currently, the
parser is clocking in at 287 lines of code plus about 50 more for
the AST. It’s not done yet – see earlier statement about being sick
– but I’m fixing bugs not writing additional code at this point. To
be completely accurate, that’s 287 lines of FParsec
code. It’s taken me a little bit
to learn FParsec, but so far I’m pretty happy with it.
- Scott Hanselman points
to
the new MS
Deploy
project, a tool for managing content and configuration on web
servers. I’ve never understood why this wasn’t a standard part of
IIS. It seems every hosting company I’ve used has rolled their own
web-based management tool like
DotNetPanel.
- Oh yeah, Vista SP1 and Windows Server 2008 shipped
Monday.
Congrats!
- I fired up Inside
Xbox the other
day, and there was a page about the new Disney Channel show
“Phineas and
Ferb“. Of
course, with two kids under five, anything new on the Disney Channel
is notable in my house. What made this blog-worthy is the fact that
it’s directed and written by Dan
Povenmire, who I knew from my USC
days. I used to go see his band Keep Left and groan loudly at the
bad puns in their song “PSA”. Dan, if you found this searching for
yourself online: Awesome work, my kids love the show!
Posted by devhawk.net on February 6, 2008. Filed under Sports. Tagged DLR, Entertainment, F#, Parsing Expression Grammar, Ruby, Washington Capitals & Xbox 360.
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1 Comment
Erik Johnson · February 7, 2008