Now for something completely different
Thursday, May 29, 2008

I'm in San Francisco for the Google I/O conference/geekgasm. It's too awesome for words. I'd almost forgotten how much I love this city and the West Coast in general. Gorgeous. Careful Maine, you just might loose me!

The Wednesday morning keynote was an introduction by Google Engineering VP Vic Gundotra to the cloud availability, pervasive connectivity, and ease of deployment strategies Google is trying to realize with products like Google App Engine and Android.

I followed this up with a couple of sessions, one by Python creator Guido van Rossum and another by Google Fellow Jeff Dean. At the end of a fascinating trip under Google's hood, Dean announced that the after party should not be missed. Oh yeah, he also let slip that Flight of the Conchords would be playing. The room collectively w00t!!11!-ed its pants.


Jeff was right. The party was something to behold. The main room where the keynote speech was held that morning had been transformed into a Google playland. Foosball, pool, Wiis everywhere. And the food. Two words: Chocolate fountain. I'll say this, Google can throw a party. I've never seen so many developers in one place not bitching about work; and that's saying something.

Throughout the conference we've returned again and again to several core philosophies Google holds near and dear, but there were some blind-spots I wasn't expecting. Google is trying hard to be a good friend to developers and to humanity in general, but it's just too huge and too powerful; there's still an undercurrent of trepidation amongst many of the older and wiser attendees. And there's definitely more going on behind the scenes.

With any environment where there is a finely delineated inside and outside, there's going to be suspicion. And suspicion kills.

Unfortunately there's nothing for it. Google can't be what it is without holding some cards close to its chest, and we can't survive as users and developers without remaining vigilantly critical of its motives and methods.

More to follow once I've had a chance to digest and ponder.

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Balls
Friday, May 16, 2008

Big brass ones.

Yesterday, while speaking at the Israeli Knesset in commemoration of the 60th anniversary of the Jewish state, President Bush criticized those in the American government who would speak to our international adversaries as “appeasers,” a reference to the fatally flawed Munich negotiations of British statesman Neville Chamberlain in 1938. The reaction was instantaneous in Washington, and throughout the entire American mediascape – to include the Blogosphere – and it was almost universally accepted that Bush was indirectly poking Democratic Presidential contender, Barack Obama.

While Godwining the 2008 presidential race is ballsy enough, Bush took the Heisman of arrogant dumb-assery a day later when he traveled to meet with America’s staunchest friend and ally in the Middle East, Saudi Arabia. There he begged the king to increase oil production to ease the strain on the U.S. economy as we enter the annual, Summer-time months of peak consumption. The king, like any good friend and ally, served President Bush a nice steaming hot cup of STFU, and then negotiated U.S. aid and cooperation in Saudi Arabia’s fledgling nuclear program.

Appeaser? It takes one to know one.

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Vote Early, Vote Often
Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Fellow Strimling supporters out there in the first district should head over to PolitickerME, and vote in their latest web poll.

We're less than a month from the June 10th Democratic Primary here in Maine and the race heating up with campaign signs sprouting faster than the crocuses. It's time to start reading-up on these candidates if you haven't already.

For those interested in watching web style democracy in action, click off a vote for Ethan Strimling in the PolitickerME poll. Go ahead. You know you want to.

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Windows 7
Monday, May 12, 2008

Is Vista ME part 2? Is Windows 7 the real deal? Well, let's not get crazy.



The video certainly shows off a few nifty features, and many more are hinted at. A split view Explorer window, FTP locations, disk usage analyzer, and a revamped task manager are a few of the shiny, and useful updates.

It's a shame the soulless machine that is Microsoft will deliver this to market as a whole new OS, instead of as the necessary Vista functionality upgrade it actually is.

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Barack Obama for President Tom Allen for U.S. Senate

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