Monkinetic Weblog

XVI Edition, September 2025

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One Step Closer To The Edge

I'm only one or two steps from being able to realize a dream I've had for the last 5 or 6 years. I've been developing web applications since 1996, and like all geeks I've longed for a server of my own. ;-)


"We don&squo;t need no video card!"

As seen on


Yay Blosxom!

I've started using Blosxom for a small local-to-my-desktop internal work-related blog. It's not a fancy blogtool, but it's not a fancy blog. I write up in BBEdit what i want to say, and save it to my blosxom directory. "Too easy drill sargeant!" Go Rael!


My good buddy Nate got his LEGO motion-tracking robot working! The best quote: "the most important thing I've learned is that the physical world is still not perfect. Bummer."


Radio Community Server

Congrats to Dave and Userland on releasing Radio Community Server 1.0. In my alternate universe, I'm going to replicate RCS in Python. Next millenium.


TiBook + Coffee == Disaster

I was lucky. Jodi works at Mac retailer and Apple Specialist Re-Mac. So Charles the tech was kind enough to spend 4 hours completely disassembling, cleaning, and reassembling my beloved TiBook. Pictures coming.


Oh, the Humanity!

I came into work today, checked my app's status, and found 3600+ deaths in the app monitor. I checked the logs files and found over 8000 (empty) log files. D'oh! I've got my work cut out for me today. :-(


Catching up

So... lots going on lately, haven't blogged a bit if it. What's interesting? Userland and others have been building a new weblog API (xml-rpc and soap), and Userland released a new driver-based architecture for Radio Userland. Sounds interesting, but I don't have RU, and my organization is too invested in First Class to look at other information distribution solutions.


EU to key US voting districts: "Tax THIS!"

The Guardian reports on a possible EU reaction to the steel tariff Bush imposed. They're likely to impose tariffs only on states and districts that are key to the Republicans this next election.


No Title Redux

I posted yesterday a response to some comments by Doc Searls at SXSW. Jim responded, which prompted me to respond again. I think my response was one of my better explanations of my political leanings, so I've formalized it here. Seth also had some comments worth checking out.


Whose responsibility is it?

Andrew Grove responds to Hollywood:

"Is it the responsibility of the world at large to protect an industry whose business model is facing a strategic challenge?" [...] "Or is it up to the entertainment industry to adapt to a new technical reality and a new set of consumers who want to take advantage of it?"


Email in India

via /. - Cory Doctorow at SXSW:

There's an amazing story about the day someone sent the first hotmail message with 'Get your free email account at hotmail.com' at the bottom to India. The traffic statistics the next morning, they quintupled overnight, on the strength of one email.


Politics, Blogs, and Fear

More from Cam at SXSW:

1:52 PM: Doc asks the audience how many have political opinions that are left of center. Most of the audience raises their hands. He then asks how many people are afraid to talk about it on their weblogs.


RDFAuthor

Via Dan Brickley's RDFWeb (dev page), I found a link to this most-amazing tool for creating RDF files. RDFAuthor is a Mac OS X application that loads RDF vocabularies and lets you graphically create instances of those schema. I used it to create my new FOAF-enabled about page.


Can webloggers route around the negative?

From SXSW, Cam reports:

1:38 PM: The weblogger community will route around hate speech and bigotry online. I wonder if that's true. We've seen the Google effect when webloggers start linking to something. Someone spouts some bile - can the weblog community resist linking it? That's my idea of routing around it. If we link it, it is soon rising in Google's ranks, the internet equivalent of a PR victory. So yes, maybe we can route around it, but I'm not certain.


AOL to finally switch to Mozilla-based browser?

NewForge is reporting that AOL is going to switch users from IE (or their own woefully behind browser) to a browser based on Gecko, the core browser engine in Mozilla. (Mozilla being the open source browser project quasi-funded by AOL/Netscape). From the article on the switch:

"With Gecko, we have control over the client software and don't have to worry about Microsoft screwing up our streaming [audio and video]," says one AOL sysadmin And later: A browser shift by AOL is going to leave an awful lot of companies that assume their Web sites only need to work with Explorer scrambling to rewrite their code so that they don't lose AOL's 30 million-plus subscribers...


Tinderbox

Tinderbox is a Mac OS (Classic only for now) application that lets you manage information in a multiview graphical way; including an outline view and a very cool-looking map view. Tinderbox is also a sort of content-management system and can be used to generate HTML, XML, and syndication files (RSS feeds), as well as consume RSS feeds. As soon as the Mac OS X version comes out I'm gonna seriously check this out.


redmonk pgp Public Key

For those that need it.

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Cluebringer

Jargon file, under clue-by-four:

...your editor once heard a hacker say "I smite you with the great sword Cluebringer!"


Macrobyte Releases ASE

Macrobyte has released one of the core components to Conversant (which runs redmonk.net), the Attribute Search Engine. If you're a Frontier developer, check this out. Seth has been a Frontier developer since like, the stone ages, and is Smart3.

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