Friday, June 8, 2007
AppleScript talk at HOPL-III
I'll be at HOPL tomorrow morning. The first talk is about AppleScript.
William R. Cook: AppleScript
There are some interesting details about the relationship between AppleScript and Frontier that I didn't know before. According to Cook, at one time Apple considered purchasing Frontier from UserLand rather than create its own language, but the deal fell through. Also, OSA was created because Dave Winer convinced Apple that having only one language would be bad for the Mac.
Tuesday, June 5, 2007
I'm willing to fail
On March 19th, I had an epiphany reading a quote by the late John W. Backus.
It has led to a change in my attitude and how I see my future. In early April, I wrote an essay (which I haven't pointed to until now) to clean the slate, at least in my mind.
I was ready to get started, but I struggled to find my first project. I have been toying around with a new templating system, but I think that's going to be a long-term project, so I'm putting it on the back-burner for a while. I needed something I could sink my teeth into right away, and now I've found it.
I am working on a rule engine in Ruby to use with Ruby on Rails. I want to popularize rule-based development on the platform that is popularizing declarative web development.
Now that I'm excited about it and am working on it, I've decided to finally officially launch the web site I set up in April, Willing to Fail. You can read about my project on that site. Please check it out right now! To be honest, there's little if anything there, but I'd love your feedback.
Funny story: I didn't realize what the acronym for the site was until I created the site for it in Frontier. But now I love it, it's perfect. Every time I say it to myself there's an exclamation point and it reminds me what's important.
If you see my ideas and say "WTF?" I'll say I'm willing to fail, so let me know what you think and eventually I'll create something for you that works. :-)
Note: I haven't tested the new site on IE, and don't plan to. If you're using IE and the site doesn't work, please just use something else that works properly.
Sunday, June 3, 2007
The Canadian dollar ain't what it used to be
Seattle Times Newspaper: Canada dollar getting closer to ours
One month later I started a new job. I was paid in US dollars but lived in Canada. The dollar was around 62 cents when I started. Based on the difference in the dollar, that Feb 2002 salary would currently bring home around $29K a year less than it did then. That's over $2400 less, each month. We felt that erosion every time a paycheque was deposited in our Canadian bank account, and it hurt.
I expect far fewer Canadians are looking to move to the US now as a result.
The article suggests the Canadian dollar could match the US dollar by the end of the year. I've read that elsewhere, too. When my parents were my age a few years younger than I am now, the Canadian dollar was higher than the US dollar, but that hasn't been the case since I was about 20 months old!




