How Digg Works

September 20th, 2008

People are excited about the web for different reasons.  Some people are excited by the social interaction, some simply for e-commerce, others are drawn in by exciting design, and then there are those of us who are in to the technology which brings it all together.  I admit it, I am a geek, and I am very interested in the latter.  Well, lucky for me that digg.com has started a technology category on their blog where Joe Stump and other’s give you a behind the scenes look at the technology behind digg.com.

This is not just your run of the mill LAMP installation. A distributed computing dream, I would love to have this type of hardware to play with. Or better yet, google’s hardware to play with.

q&a with 37signals

September 17th, 2008

I was fortunate enough to catch a tweet about the live.37signals.com webcast, and I after catching the last 30 minutes and was impressed.  These guys have solid web dev & business philosophy (but we all knew that), and they hand out some great advice.  Inspiring for designers, developers, programmers & entrepreneurs.  You can catch previous episodes at: http://www.justin.tv/signals37/archive

About a month ago a friend of mine named Peter Childs wrote an insightful blog post called Learning to Code, in which Peter describes what it is like to jump into a developer’s shoes. Peter has plenty of experience working with software developers, but this is the first time that he has coded a website all by himself. He is not limited by ideas or expectations, in fact he has plenty of both. So for Peter, a simple word press & theme just wont do. He envisions web 2.0 with all the fixins & media. He has been adapting and coding his ideas for a few months, and Peter has found out that with code, the devil is in the details.

My favorite part of his post is the end where Peter states,

“Oh! And to all those programmers that I antagonized by asking “how hard can it be” when some business pressure meant a 90 degree turn in code – I apologize. I now know software happens at the level of details not concepts.”

I have worked on a few projects with Peter, and he should rest assured that he is not the only one to have suggested a 90 degree turn in code. Also, Peter should know that his revelation will offer coders insight on how our non-coding coworkers view software development. I now know to simply remind my requirement suppliers that the details are not as flexible as the concepts.

However; The point of Peter’s post is a little broader than the coder/business dynamic. Peter has shared some new found respect, and I feel that I have had an experience in which I can do the same. For the past few days I have been dedicated full time on web app QA and managing our bug system. It has been a race to the finish line, and the other developers are working very hard to deliver top quality which I must somehow measure. I realize how challenging it is to be the QA gatekeeper for a team of developers. Every feature and change requires me to race to complete a number of feature and regression tests. [And don't forget about cross browser testing.] This task takes great patience, attention span and a tedious amount of concentration. Furthermore, it doesn’t take very long to realize that programmers will loose their appreciation. It starts off warm and fuzzy as you save their behinds, but after sending a bug back for the fourth time the programmers no longer feel like sharing the love.

So, in the spirit of Peter’s post… To all those QA tester’s to whom I have passed incomplete features or have forced to regression test immediately before a deadline - I apologize. I now know that the assurance of quality stems from meticulous attention to detail and a rigourous amount of searching, testing, and reporting. You have saved my butt on more than one occasion, and the nature of software QA means that only you and I will every know about the bugs we killed immediately before release.

Just upgraded my blog from SubText to Wordpress 2.5. So far I am impressed. Good thing because I will be working with Wordpress at 76design and it would not be cool if I hated it already.

Status Update :: 76design

May 19th, 2008

Most of you know that my work at deleted theory is collection of side projects which feed my need to build web apps, explore technologies, and to help out my friends.

A few weeks ago I jumped at the opportunity to work full time with a company I really admire called 76design. Located a few short blocks away from my apartment in downtown Ottawa, 76design is talented design & web development agency with a nose for clean designs and a passion for social web applications. With their sister company Thornley Fallis, a full-service communications and public relations agency, a symbiotic relationship has formed where teams from both companies integrate on a variety of projects.

I am only a couple of weeks in but I can already see great potential, and already there are exciting projects coming down the pipe. Looks like I am going to have to hit the ground running, but I always welcome fun and exciting challenges.

Now if you will excuse me, I have some new programming languages to learn.

It is time for some spring cleaning, and switching hosting providers gave me a chance for a fresh start. No more lingering databases, websites or DNS entries… I get a chance to upgrade all the third party services to the latest version, re-configure my backups and making sure everything is working neatly and properly. Should be good for another few months at least.