Archive for December, 2009

It’s always interesting to see the design / default setting considerations made in software.

One that has always stuck out to me is I can’t figure out for the life of me why most IDE’s don’t enable line numbers by default. No matter what we write, sooner or later we have to refer to the line number.

Luckily for Adobe’s ColdFusion Builder,

One of the neat discoveries about ColdBox is the ColdBox plugin for Adobe ColdFusion Builder.

Here’s the problem… I couldn’t get the ColdBox Platform Extension installed in ColdFusion Builder with the existing instructions in the link above. I suspect the older version of the ColdFusion Builder allowed you to do it from more than one location.

Once you’re past why someone would develop a new program in ColdFusion, you find a rich community of developers, examples, libraries and frameworks.

I’ve been playing around with the ColdBox Framework for ColdFusion for a few months.

What lead me to ColdBox was a period of discovering and playing around with the discoveries I made with ColdFusion 9 and it’s killer Hibernate ORM integration.

I could no longer program, ever again until ColdFusion 9 came out.. it made for a slower fall on new projects. I decided to dust off the old exploration cap and started looking at what was new and developing in the ColdFusion world.

Came across a very interesting slide show called “No one cares about your stupid little startup” from the folks over at xobni.com regarding their launch experience. With a title like that, how could I resist?

I received this funny comic and it got me thinking…..

I have often wondered how a relationship between specialist (Web, designer, programmer, etc.,) can sometimes turn into the customer believing they understand everything better than the specialist, and how to do it.

This is when phrases like:

“Couldn’t you just..”

“All you have to do..”

“It should be pretty simple..”

“Can’t we make it really simple on the screen? Why would that be more work to do it all behind the scenes?”

become more, and more common.

Problem? I don’t know.

Anyone who doesn’t purchase extended warranty from Apple for their Macs needs to read this.

I put a lot of time on my 15″ Macbook Pro. An average of 8-10 hours a day. Every day. The last 3 years since I switched back to Mac (since we all started on Apples in elementary school) have been incredible. No longer have I been tied up dealing with Windows to do the smallest things like connect a new camera to get a photo to fight with drivers. For the most part Mac just works, gets out of the way and let’s you focus on the task at hand.

Then, there was the day the music died. November 16th, 2009, for me, to be exact. I remember it, like it was yesterday. I am working at the office, no problems. Arrive at a clients, and the screen won’t turn on. Try to reboot, no luck. Everything seems to be turning on, except the screen. Strange.


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