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Feb 05
2010
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It's Catch Up Time AgainPosted by Jon Erickson in Miscellaneous Musings |
Get The RSS Feed For This Page Here.| Jon Erickson's Blog | |
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Description: Editor of all things Dr. Dobb's! In other words, I'm the guy that you can yell at. Please leave overipe fruit and vegetables at home. |
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Jan 21
2010
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Surveying SurveysPosted by Jon Erickson in Survey, Miscellaneous Musings |
Two notes regarding surveys. One done, one underway.
You may recall that a few months ago, I announced that, in cooperation with Forrester Research, we were launching a survey to better understand how evolving tools and technologies are affecting the software developer community. Upon my asking you for your participation, more than 1,000 of you responded. Thanks very much for taking the time.
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Jan 07
2010
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The F# Survival GuidePosted by Jon Erickson in Windows, Functional Programming |
As Michael Swaine pointed out in It's Time to Get Good at Functional Programming, it's time for you to get good at functional programming.
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Dec 16
2009
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Pattern matching is one thing computers do really well. Take a bushel of data, throw it at a computer, and be amazed by the results. That's more or less what Sebastian Bernhardsson, Luis Enrique Correa da Rocha, and Petter Minnhagen, all members of Sweden's Umea University Department of Physics, did anyway. What is particularly interesting about their data was that it was a collection of books by Thomas Hardy, D.H. Lawrence, and Herman Melville -- authors I haven't thought much about since university.
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Dec 10
2009
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Ivar Jacobson, Bertrand Meyer, and Richard Soley don't look like revolutionaries, but that's what they claim to be. Politics? Pshaw! What they want to change is something more important. They want to re-establish software engineering as a rigorous discipline that's based on a solid theory, proven principles, and best practices -- and the vehicle they've launched to make this a reality is SEMAT, short for "Software Engineering Method and Theory."
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Dec 08
2009
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It's long been my belief that the most useful developer tools come from "what I need" rather than "what if." You know the tools I'm talking about -- the ones you use everyday. The ones that may not be pretty, that aren't (yet) a product, but were devised by developers to solve specific problems day-in and day-out. Of course, the fun factor is when someone in product marketing runs across one of these tools and says, "What a cool idea. We could make a product out of that if it had a GUI."
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Nov 20
2009
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At this writing, I'm sitting in an airport. LAX to be specific. Waiting to get out of Los Angeles. But according to the airlines there appears to be some nationwide glitch that's disrupted my plans. Ever the curious and not getting the full story from CNN, I dropped a note to someone who knows about this kind of stuff. Bill Curtis is chief scientist at Cast Software and I was able to catch up
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Nov 18
2009
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News from PDCPosted by Jon Erickson in Miscellaneous Musings, Microsoft |
I'm in LA, attending PDC, which is being held at the LACC. In non-acronym English, I'm in Los Angeles, attending Microsoft's Professional Developer's Conference, which is being held at the Los Angeles Convention Center. There's a lot going on here. Let's see, last night, Kobi and the Los Angeles Lakers took on the Detroit Pistons next door at the Staples Center; and tomorrow night, its my man
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