Will you blog for software?

Richard Rodger is making a sweet offer on his blog. Download his software (it does CSV amd XML file mangling), blog about it and get a free license.

He says,

You can write whatever you like. Tear us to shreds or sing our praises. It’s all good. We just want links :)

Go on, you know you want to…

My new carving set



I got a present of this last year, but between much tooing and froing it only arrived today. This is a handmade carving set made by a craftsman called Rory Connor. He is based in Ballylickey, West Cork and he makes the most amazing handcrafted knives.

This is his standard carving set, but I upgraded to Damascene Steel (think samurai sword steel). The handles are made out of snakewood. my standard knife sharpness test is to hold the blade horizontal and drag it laterally over the back of my thumbnail to see if it can lift a small amount of nail material. Well that just won’t work with this knife, it just digs in, its is definitely the sharpest knife I have ever owned.

More photos in the flickr photoset.

Chupa Chups – Don't get me started


IMG_0717.JPG

Originally uploaded by Joe Drumgoole.

Innocent enough looking. Until you try to unwrap them, it often requires heavy work with a knife.

Some day I’m going to line up all the CEOs who use infernal packaging, and the last one to successfully open their product will be subjected a public flogging.

In case you wondering I’m talking to you blister pack sons of bitches!

Watch this new paradigm for Desktop Interaction

Here is a cool paradigm for desktop interaction. The use of physics to model desktop interaction is right up the street of a local company based here in Dublin, Havoc Havok.

You can watch the video here. I tried posting it inline, but WordPress’s utterly shite editor keeps scrambling the HTML.

Cease and desist – del.icio.us link spam

For all you good people out there (you know who you are) who use this hack to create a daily posting of your del.icio.us links, stop it, please stop it!

If I want to see your del.icio.us links I’ll subscribe to your del.icio.us RSS feed or add you to my network.

Google Notebook

I’ve been playing with Google Notebook for the past few days as an adjunct to my del.icio.us links. All in all I like it, especially the Firefox extension that allows you to add notes to the current page without occluding it (unlike the del.icio.us extension). There are some gripes though. Firstly the search doesn’t seem to work, it can’t find a note with the string “VAT” in it despite me having a note defining my VAT number. Secondly, it appends notes to the end of the list rather than putting them at the top, blog style. This means you end up doing a lot of scrolling (especially as the search doesn’t work).

All in all I think I’ll stick with it a bit longer. The drag and drop on the notes page itself is sexalicious!

The Rise and Fall of CORBA

Michi Henning writes about The Rise and Fall of CORBA on the ACM Queue website. In the article he describes the history and development of the CORBA standard and details why it has been relegated to a infrastructure backwater. They key reason for CORBA’s failure that resonates with me is the following statement,

The OMG does not require a reference implementation for a specification to be adopted. This practice opens the door to castle-in-the-air specifications. On several occasions the OMG has published standards that turned out to be partly or wholly unimplementable because of serious technical flaws. In other cases, specifications that could be implemented were pragmatically unusable because they imposed unacceptable runtime overhead. Naturally, repeated incidents of this sort are embarassing and do little to boost customer confidence. A requirement for a reference implementation would have forced submitters to implement their proposals and would have avoided many such incidents.

.ie domains – Why would you bother?

I recently gave a dig out to somebody by registering a .ie domain for them. Total time from initial application to finally getting the domain up and running (e.g. getting the IEDR to update the nameservers) was 40 days!! Even I can’t believe it when I count it up.

Even if I generously lop of ten days to allow for some delays on my part in responding, this really is atrocious, and we pay a premium price of €95.59 for this service.

They farcically recommend you use a reseller, but when I tried to register initially via hostireland, I got bounced straight back to the IEDR, who required me to fax (yes fax, not email) in a justification.

My advice, stick to godaddy.com and register any kind of domain you want for $9.95, in seconds.