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 Friday, May 16, 2008
Blogs I'm currently reading

Recently, a former student asked me,

I was in a .NET web services training class that you gave probably 4 or so years ago on-site at a [company name] office in [city], north of Atlanta.  At that time I asked you for a list of the technical blogs that you read, and I am curious which blogs you are reading now.  I am now with a small company where I have to be a jack of all trades, in the last year I have worked in C++ and Perl backend type projects and web frontend projects with Java, C#, and RoR, so I find your perspective interesting since you also work with various technologies and aren't a zealot for a specific one.

Any way, please either respond by email or in your blog, because I think that others may be interested in the list also.

As one might expect, my blog list is a bit eclectic, but I suppose that's part of the charm of somebody looking to study Java, .NET, C++, Smalltalk, Ruby, Parrot, LLVM, and other languages and environments. So, without further ado, I've pasted in the contents of my OPML file for cut&paste and easy import.

Having said that, though, I would strongly suggest not just blindly importing the whole set of feeds into your nearest RSS reader, but take a moment and go visit each one before you add it. It takes longer, granted, but the time spent is a worthy investment--you don't want to have to declare "blog bankruptcy".

Editor's note: We pause here as readers look at each other and go... "WTF?!?"

"Blog bankruptcy" is a condition similar to "email bankruptcy", when otherwise perfectly high-functioning people give up on trying to catch up to the flood of messages in their email client's Inbox and delete the whole mess (usually with some kind of public apology explaining why and asking those who've emailed them in the past to resend something if it was really important), effectively trying to "start over" with their email in much the same way that Chapter Seven or Chapter Eleven allows companies to "start over" with their creditors, or declaring bankruptcy allows private citizens to do the same with theirs. "Blog bankruptcy" is a similar kind of condition: your RSS reader becomes so full of stuff that you can't keep up, and you can't even remember which blogs were the interesting ones, so you nuke the whole thing and get away from the blog-reading thing for a while.

This happened to me, in fact: a few years ago, when I became the editor-in-chief of TheServerSide.NET, I asked a few folks for their OPML lists, so that I could quickly and easily build a list of blogs that would "tune me in" to the software industry around me, and many of them quite agreeably complied. I took my RSS reader (Newsgator, at the time) and dutifully imported all of them, and ended up with a collection of blogs that was easily into the hundreds of feeds long. And, over time, I found myself reading fewer and fewer blogs, mostly because the whole set was so... intimidating. I mean, I would pick at the list of blogs and their entries in the same way that I picked at vegetables on my plate as a child--half-heartedly, with no real enthusiasm, as if this was something my parents were forcing me to do. That just ruined the experience of blog-reading for me, and eventually (after I left TSS.NET for other pastures), I nuked the whole thing--even going so far as to uninstall my copy of Newsgator--and gave up.

Naturally, I missed it, and slowly over time began to rebuild the list, this time, taking each feed one at a time, carefully weighing what value the feed was to me and selecting only those that I thought had a high signal-to-noise ratio. (This is partly why I don't include much "personal" info in this blog--I found myself routinely stripping away those blogs that had more personal content and less technical content, and I figured if I didn't want to read it, others probably felt the same way.) Over the last year or two, I've rebuilt the list to the point where I probably need to prune a bit and close a few of them back down, but for now, I'm happy with the list I've got.

And speaking of which....

   1: <?xml version="1.0"?>
   2: <opml version="1.0">
   3:  <head>
   4:   <title>OPML exported from Outlook</title>
   5:   <dateCreated>Thu, 15 May 2008 20:55:19 -0700</dateCreated>
   6:   <dateModified>Thu, 15 May 2008 20:55:19 -0700</dateModified>
   7:  </head>
   8:  <body>
   9:   <outline text="If broken it is, fix it you should" type="rss"
  10:   xmlUrl="http://blogs.msdn.com/tess/rss.xml"/>
  11:   <outline text="Artima Developer Buzz" type="rss"
  12:   xmlUrl="http://www.artima.com/news/feeds/news.rss"/>
  13:   <outline text="Artima Weblogs" type="rss"
  14:   xmlUrl="http://www.artima.com/weblogs/feeds/weblogs.rss"/>
  15:   <outline text="Artima Chapters Library" type="rss"
  16:   xmlUrl="http://www.artima.com/chapters/feeds/chapters.rss"/>
  17:   <outline text="Neal Gafter's blog" type="rss"
  18:   xmlUrl="http://gafter.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default"/>
  19:   <outline text="Room 101" type="rss"
  20:   xmlUrl="http://gbracha.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default"/>
  21:   <outline text="Kelly O'Hair's Blog" type="rss"
  22:   xmlUrl="http://weblogs.java.net/blog/kellyohair/index.rdf"/>
  23:   <outline text="John Rose @ Sun" type="rss"
  24:   xmlUrl="http://blogs.sun.com/jrose/feed/entries/atom"/>
  25:   <outline text="The Daily WTF" type="rss"
  26:   xmlUrl="http://syndication.thedailywtf.com/TheDailyWtf"/>
  27:   <outline text="Brad Wilson" type="rss"
  28:   xmlUrl="http://feeds.feedburner.com/BradWilson"/>
  29:   <outline text="Mike Stall's .NET Debugging Blog" type="rss"
  30:   xmlUrl="http://blogs.msdn.com/jmstall/rss.xml"/>
  31:   <outline text="Stevey's Blog Rants" type="rss"
  32:   xmlUrl="http://steve-yegge.blogspot.com/atom.xml"/>
  33:   <outline text="Brendan's Roadmap Updates" type="rss"
  34:   xmlUrl="http://weblogs.mozillazine.org/roadmap/index.rdf"/>
  35:   <outline text="pl patterns" type="rss"
  36:   xmlUrl="http://plpatterns.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default"/>
  37:   <outline text="Joel Pobar's weblog" type="rss"
  38:   xmlUrl="http://feeds.feedburner.com/callvirt"/>
  39:   <outline text="Let&amp;#39;s Kill Dave!" type="rss"
  40:   xmlUrl="http://letskilldave.com/rss.aspx"/>
  41:   <outline text="Why does everything suck?" type="rss"
  42:   xmlUrl="http://whydoeseverythingsuck.com/feeds/posts/default"/>
  43:   <outline text="cdiggins.com" type="rss" xmlUrl="http://cdiggins.com/feed"/>
  44:   <outline text="LukeH's WebLog" type="rss"
  45:   xmlUrl="http://blogs.msdn.com/lukeh/rss.xml"/>
  46:   <outline text="Jomo Fisher -- Sharp Things" type="rss"
  47:   xmlUrl="http://blogs.msdn.com/jomo_fisher/rss.xml"/>
  48:   <outline text="Chance Coble" type="rss"
  49:   xmlUrl="http://leibnizdream.wordpress.com/feed/"/>
  50:   <outline text="Don Syme's WebLog on F# and Other Research Projects" type="rss"
  51:   xmlUrl="http://blogs.msdn.com/dsyme/rss.xml"/>
  52:   <outline text="David Broman's CLR Profiling API Blog" type="rss"
  53:   xmlUrl="http://blogs.msdn.com/davbr/rss.xml"/>
  54:   <outline text="JScript Blog" type="rss"
  55:   xmlUrl="http://blogs.msdn.com/jscript/rss.xml"/>
  56:   <outline text="Yet Another Language Geek" type="rss"
  57:   xmlUrl="http://blogs.msdn.com/wesdyer/rss.xml"/>
  58:   <outline text=".NET Languages Weblog" type="rss"
  59:   xmlUrl="http://www.dotnetlanguages.net/DNL/Rss.aspx"/>
  60:   <outline text="DevHawk" type="rss"
  61:   xmlUrl="http://feeds.feedburner.com/Devhawk"/>
  62:   <outline text="The Cobra Programming Language" type="rss"
  63:   xmlUrl="http://cobralang.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default"/>
  64:   <outline text="Code Miscellany" type="rss"
  65:   xmlUrl="http://codemiscellany.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default"/>
  66:   <outline text="Fred, Let it go!" type="rss"
  67:   xmlUrl="http://freddy33.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default"/>
  68:   <outline text="Codedependent" type="rss"
  69:   xmlUrl="http://graphics-geek.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default"/>
  70:   <outline text="Presentation Zen" type="rss"
  71:   xmlUrl="http://www.presentationzen.com/presentationzen/index.rdf"/>
  72:   <outline text="The Extreme Presentation(tm) Method" type="rss"
  73:   xmlUrl="http://extremepresentation.typepad.com/blog/index.rdf"/>
  74:   <outline text="ZapThink" type="rss"
  75:   xmlUrl="http://feeds.feedburner.com/zapthink"/>
  76:   <outline text="Chris Smith's completely unique view" type="rss"
  77:   xmlUrl="http://feeds.feedburner.com/ChrisSmithsCompletelyUniqueView"/>
  78:   <outline text="Code Commit" type="rss"
  79:   xmlUrl="http://feeds.codecommit.com/codecommit"/>
  80:   <outline
  81:   text="Comments on Ola Bini: Programming Language Synchronicity: A New Hope: Polyglotism"
  82:   type="rss"
  83:   xmlUrl="http://ola-bini.blogspot.com/feeds/5778383724683099288/comments/default"/>
  84:  </body>
  85: </opml>

Happy reading.....


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Friday, May 16, 2008 12:08:07 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)
Comments [0]  | 
 Saturday, May 10, 2008
I'm Pro-Choice... Pro Programmer Choice, that is

Not too long ago, Don wrote:

The three most “personal” choices a developer makes are language, tool, and OS.

No.

That may be true for somebody who works for a large commercial or open source vendor, whose team is building something that fits into one of those three categories and wants to see that language/tool/OS succeed.

That is not where most of us live. If you do, certainly, you are welcome to your opinion, but please accept with good grace that your agenda is not the same as my own.

Most of us in the practitioner space are using languages, tools and OSes to solve customer problems, and making the decision to use a particular language, tool or OS a personal one generally gets us into trouble--how many developers do you know that identify themselves so closely with that decision that they include it in their personal metadata?

"Hi, I'm Joe, and I'm a Java programmer."

Or, "Oh, good God, you're running Windows? What are you, some kind of Micro$oft lover or something?"

Or, "Linux? You really are a geek, aren't you? Recompiled your kernel lately (snicker, snicker)?"

Sorry, but all of those make me want to hurl. Of these kinds of statements are technical zealotry and flame wars built. When programmers embed their choice so deeply into their psyche that it becomes the tagline by which they identify themselves, it becomes an "ego" thing instead of a "tool" thing.

What's more, it involves customers and people outside the field in an argument that has nothing to do with them. Think about it for a second; the last time you hired a contractor to add a deck to your house, what's your reaction when they introduce themselves as,

"Hi, I'm Kim, and I'm a Craftsman contractor."

Or, overheard at the job site, "Oh, good God, you're using a Skil? What are you, some kind of nut or something?"

Or, as you look at the tools on their belt, "Nokita? You really are a geek, aren't you? Rebuilt your tools from scratch lately (snicker, snicker)?"

Do you, the customer, really care what kind of tools they use? Or do you care more for the quality of solution they build for you?

It's hard to imagine how the discussion can even come up, it's so ludicrous.

Try this one on, instead:

"Hi, I'm Ted, and I'm a programmer."

I use a variety of languages, tools, and OSes, and my choice of which to use are all geared around a single end goal: not to promote my own social or political agenda, but to make my customer happy.

Sometimes that means using C# on Windows. Sometimes that means using Java on Linux. Sometimes that means Ruby on Mac OS X. Sometimes that means creating a DSL. Sometimes that means using EJB, or Spring, or F#, or Scala, or FXCop, or FindBugs, or log4j, or ... ad infinitum.

Don't get me wrong, I have my opinions, just as contractors (and truck drivers, it turns out) do. And, like most professionals in their field, I'm happy to share those opinions with others in my field, and also with my customers when they ask: I think C# provides a good answer in certain contexts, and that Java provides an equally good answer, but in different contexts. I will be happy to explain my recommendation on which languages, tools and OSes to use, because unlike the contractor, the languages, tools, and OSes I use will be visible to the customer when the software goes into Production, at a variety of levels, and thus, the customer should be involved in that decision. (Sometimes the situation is really one where the customer won't see it, in which case the developer can have full confidence in whatever language/tool/OS they choose... but that's far more often the exception than the rule, and will generally only be true in cases where the developer is providing a complete customer "hands-off" hosting solution.)

I choose to be pro-choice.


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