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Most Popular Posts

  • Enterprise Apache Tomcat 7 Clustering - Designing an Efficient, Reliable and Productive Application Server Cluster
  • Open Source Virtual Whiteboards and Dimdim Review
  • An Enterprise Apache Tomcat Clustering Guide
  • Supporting CentOS In The Cloud With Windows Azure
  • VLC License Change: A lesson in perseverance
  • An In-Depth Look at Tomcat’s Clustering Mechanisms
  • Apache HTTP Server: New Features for Version 2.4
  • Why Closed Source is Better Than Open Source
  • Access Serial Ports through Ruby
  • JBoss AS7 Clustering Using mod_cluster and http 2.4 (Part 1)

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What can you carry on when traveling?

Posted by Aaron Mandelbaum on Thu, Aug 31, 2006
  
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A list of exactly what you can and cannot carry on: TSA: Permitted and Prohibited Items.  You'll be glad to know that cattle prods are not allowed onboard.

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Poor Pluto

Posted by Aaron Mandelbaum on Fri, Aug 25, 2006
  
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As of this week Pluto is just a dwarf and our solar system, according to the astronomical union, only has eight planets. I know many people are upset about the decision, but really it was the right decision. Anything else would have just been confusing and would have continued the controversy. Personally I think the union made the right decision and I'm sure it was a difficult one given the emotions flying around about the topic. Sean
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Fixed Stacks Are Not Enough for the Enterprise

Posted by Aaron Mandelbaum on Tue, Aug 22, 2006
  
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The big guys are increasingly getting into the open source game with preconfigured stacks and supporting services. Unisys, which recently threw its hat into the ring, is a perfect example. Matt Asay blogged about this and echoed the case made by Forrester that these fixed stacks are a good way to give their enterprise customers the stability and safety they want, even if the price of those benefits is reduced choice and flexibility.

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The inherent [high] quality of open source

Posted by Aaron Mandelbaum on Fri, Aug 11, 2006
  
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I was listening to a presentation the other day about open source and the advantages and was surprised to not hear the thing I consider one of the most important. The presenter seemed to me much more financially oriented as he centered around the cost savings in using open source. He also listed a number of other advantages, ones we have frequently heard. What he didn't list as an advantage was the inherent high quality in open source. Imagine for a minute that you are a developer and are going to contribute some code to an open source project. The entire time you are developing that code you know that anyone in the world could end up looking at it and you know for sure that there will be a lot of eyes on your work. Any person in that situation is going to develop the absolutely best code s/he can. Then, if anything is wrong with that code, the developer is much more motivated to fix it ASAP as it is their reputation on the line. I have worked at many different software companies, both developing software and managing groups of developers and I've worked in IT doing similar work. In every one of those cases the checked in code was nowhere near the quality that open source projects maintain constantly. Even with peer reviews and agile methodologies, you still don't have the care to produce the perfect snippet that you would when working on open source. This is one of the big reasons open source projects tend to be so much better than commercial products (of course there are exceptions and this doesn't really count the bottom of the open source pool where it is just one guy submitting code to SourceForge). And this, to me, is one of the biggest advantages of open source - the high quality of the projects we get just because of the model.
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Is the dress code at startups changing?

Posted by Aaron Mandelbaum on Wed, Aug 09, 2006
  
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I've been at startups for my entire career and at the executive level for most of it. One of the nice things in the startup world is that the dress code has always been fairly slack.

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Women (or lack thereof) in Computer Science, a problem or not?

Posted by Aaron Mandelbaum on Sun, Aug 06, 2006
  
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Kathy Sierra's post I am not a "woman blogger" really got me thinking about women in computer science.  Kathy's point is that she's a blogger and she's a woman but she's not a woman blogger as if that's something different than a man blogger.

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Most Popular Posts

  • Enterprise Apache Tomcat 7 Clustering - Designing an Efficient, Reliable and Productive Application Server Cluster
  • Open Source Virtual Whiteboards and Dimdim Review
  • An Enterprise Apache Tomcat Clustering Guide
  • Supporting CentOS In The Cloud With Windows Azure
  • VLC License Change: A lesson in perseverance
  • An In-Depth Look at Tomcat’s Clustering Mechanisms
  • Apache HTTP Server: New Features for Version 2.4
  • Why Closed Source is Better Than Open Source
  • Access Serial Ports through Ruby
  • JBoss AS7 Clustering Using mod_cluster and http 2.4 (Part 1)

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