DaedTech

Stories about Software

By

Announcement: New Post Categories

In the wee hours of the morning this morning/last night, I did an overhaul of post categories on the blog. When I started out, I didn’t really see the purpose of categories versus tags, so I just made everything a category and had the tag cloud display categories. That was a workable solution at the time, but ultimately not scalable as anyone who saw the giant category list can attest. Over the course of time, I came to realize this but allowed myself to be a boiled frog until last night I said “screw it” and hopped out of the pot. I downloaded a helpful wordpress plugin so that I didn’t have to mess with the database directly and changed all of my existing categories to tags.

From there, I created a handful of more general categories that I feel reflect the broader categories of my posting. Some of them are obvious (.NET and Java) and others are named for running series of posts that I do (abstractions, design patterns, etc). I went rather tediously back through all of my posts and assigned them categories that seemed a good fit, though I must admit I didn’t spend a ton of time on the oldest posts. I also am generally trying to minimize the number of categories assigned to posts – one is ideal and some may occasionally be in two, but that’s really about it, I think. We’ll see. This new classification system is rather evolutionary, so I’ll adapt it as I make new posts and use it from here forward. If you have any issues with a post’s categorization, please feel free to comment in that post or to shoot me an email (erik at my domain).

Also, I should note that there is no loss of information. The previous categories are now all tags, so if you wanted to see all “WPF” posts for instance, you can go to https://daedtech.com/tag/wpf instead of https://daedtech.com/category/wpf. I’m hoping that in general this makes the site a little more readable and organized.

By

Feed Paper: Help Yourself To My Intellectual Property

The Pledge

When it comes to US intellectual property law, specifically patents as they pertain to software, I have a very scorched Earth philosophy. Don’t tweak it. Don’t reform it. Don’t debate over it. Don’t worry about it. Just delete it. Yes, to me, it’s like a nasty, tangled mass of bad code where it’s easier to get rid of it and address what breaks than it is to try to salvage it in its current form. I understand the need for patents on things such as medicines that have prohibitive startup investment cost, but when it comes to things like “gravity” effects on your cell phone, it’s just not worth having a system where established powerhouses can bury the little guy or blast away at each other and drive up costs, benefiting no one but lawyers. But, this post is not intended to spark a debate about ownership of ideas and intellectual property.

Instead, I’m putting my money where my mouth is. I’m going to give away what I think could be a pretty cool and viable idea. Why? Well, because I’m not exactly made of time, and I’d rather trade the small chance that I’d ever parlay this into a winning business idea for the slightly greater chance that someone might take it and run with it (or point me to it if it already exists). In other words, I want this thing enough that I just want someone to do it. Maybe one day I’d get around to it, but if you want to do it first, faster, and better, please be my guest.

The Turn

Every day in my feed reader, an entry from Alvin Ashcraft called “Dew Drop” appears. Here is one such entry. It’s a link collection that he dutifully fills out every day, organizing by category. In the linked entry, he has “Top Links” at, well, the top, followed by Web Development, XAML, etc, ending up eventually with a set of other link collections and a book. You know what this reminds me of? A newspaper. I mean, the “Top Links” is pretty obviously “Front Page”, and then you’ve got your .NET equivalent of Business, Metro, Sports, Politics, etc.

Morning Dew is a nice collection of links, as are some of the others also linked in there (I personally look at Jason Haley’s and the Morning Brew a lot). And, if those weren’t enough, I have my own collection of links. Pictured here, in alphabetical order, are the ones that fit on my screen:

As you can see, my screen just barely fits A through C. So, I have an alphabetized list of feeds that have some parenthetical number of unread articles, and some of those articles have links to even more articles, some of which I may already have in my reader, and others that I don’t. In some of these places, some of these things are summarized, and in others, I may just have to go go with the title or the author. I think we can do better, so I propose “FeedPapyr”. Feedpaper.com was taken, so I bought the domain feedpapyr.us (see what I did there?) for 6 bucks.

What I envision is pretty simple. At its core, the site is just a feed reader. But, instead of having laundry lists of feeds, you create newspapers. You categorize the feeds into custom defined sections and the reader handles truncating them to fit into a newspaper-style layout. If the posts have images with them, those are rendered as well. They are not formatted in full post form, but rather somewhat like the view on the right in my google reader screenshot, but like a newspaper. And, when you click on an article, it “pops out” with a focused, higher z-index feel window as you read it, and retreats back when you’re done with it (there’s no need to preserve the whole “continued on page 22” thing with the actual paper). Users can “thumb through” the paper, starting with their “Top Links” and delving into other sections if they have time. They can add to the size of their papers over the course of time, promote and demote things, and swap in and out content creators. I feel that this format would lend itself particularly well to consumption of tablet or ultra book devices.

A user can create an arbitrary number of papers, just as in real life one might subscribe to multiple newspapers. I personally would love this. I’d definitely have at least one programming paper, but probably also one about Chicago sports, one about science/technology, etc. It could have ads just like normal papers to finance it, and offer a “subscribe to avoid the ads” model as well (but financing is a little far afield right now). It would basically be a newspaper that was auto-formatted for the reader with custom content that was specifically chosen and subscribed to by the reader on a case by case basis.

The Prestige

It’s not normally my style to go buying up domain names on a whim, but feedpapyr.us is now in my possession. If this idea is something that interests you, please get in touch with me. I’m happy to brainstorm and collaborate but if you think it’s something you’d really like to run with, I’m perfectly happy to let you have the domain name (of course, maybe you don’t like that name and would rather have your own anyway). If this is all a moot point because something like this already exists and I’m just a clueless idiot, please, please point me at it because I would love it. At the end of the day, I’d like to see this get done and I don’t have a lot of time. Sooner or later, I’m going to build myself a “feedpapyr” because I just want one. But, if someone builds one first that I can use, so much the better.

By

Announcement for RSS Subscribers: Switching Subscription Service

I am going to be switching services for RSS and content update notifications. Up until now, I’ve been using feedburner, which is a free service that has been around since I believe 2004 or so and was bought out by google in 2007. Since that acquisition, its best feature is that it is free. This is offset somewhat by pretty flaky statistics of subscriber counts and occasional burps in performance and function. However, a big drawback is that it seems as though google might kill the service. Making matters worse is the fact that google has done exactly nothing to illuminate the issue one way or the other, playing it close to the vest. “Don’t be evil, but you can be a little shady if you want.”

Other bloggers seem to be doing the same and a feedburner bug starting yesterday telling all users that we’ve lost all of our subscribers is turning the trickle of departing feedburner users into an exodus. Well one of my philosophies in life is that I like to depend as little as possible on other people and things, especially shady people and things. So, I am going to be hopping on that bandwagon and switching to FeedBlitz effective today or tomorrow (allowing enough time for this one last post to be sent out via feedburner). The good news is that this new service apparently allows readers to subscribe to posts through other media, such as receiving a tweet or a facebook/google-plus post rather than the traditional email or RSS notification. Progress and all that.

I have already created my FeedBlitz account and the migration guide from feedburner to this new service assures me that not one subscription will be interrupted… but, if your subscription is interrupted, that’s why. I intend to have a post Sunday night or Monday morning and if you don’t see something by then and want to continue reading, you may need to resubscribe through your RSS reader. Thanks for reading and for your patience!

Update: If you are subscribed directly to the Feedburner URL for the blog or for comments, please re-subscribe using the buttons on the right. These will automatically redirect you to the new, current FeedBlitz feed and you can delete your old subscription. If you are subscribed through my site directly, you need not do anything. Feel free to email/comment if you aren’t sure.

By

Behind the Scenes Feed Magic

Very quickly, I just installed a plugin to consolidate subscription through my feedburner account. Basically, my feedburner account will become aware of all subscribers now, including those who simply access daedtech.com/feed or those who use the subscription buttons on the left. As I understand it, this should have no effect on subscriptions whatsoever. Nonetheless, if it does — if anyone finds they’re having trouble with the feeds — please leave a comment and I’ll look into it.

Thanks, and thanks for reading!

By

Announcing Disqus for DaedTech

I just wanted to post a note to say that I’m switching from the default WordPress commenting system to using Disqus. So, if you’ve made comments in the past and don’t see them now, that’s because Disqus is in the process of importing all non-Disqus comments stored on my server. Hopefully comments will re-appear at some point in the next day or so.

If you have any problems with the new system, please feel free to email me or to post a comment here.

Thanks!