Archive | September, 2004

29 September 2004 ~ 0 Comments

Frontier 10.0.a1

Dave Winer has finally released Frontier as open source software, under the GPL no less! There was a time (late ‘90s) when I was a hardcore Frontier user; at the time there seemed to be no better tool for managing large and complicated websites for the price (it was free as in beer). Eventually I moved on to different kinds of projects that Frontier couldn’t manage as well, so I abandoned the platform. I still have quite a few sites stored as fatpages that I’m tempted to dig out of old CDs to try out on the new version.

Making it open source means that Frontier will probably mutate to take on a wider variety of tasks than Dave ever imagined. Here’s to a long and prosperous life for this great piece of software!

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26 September 2004 ~ 0 Comments

Blogging in English and Spanish

José Luis Orihuela has published a list of native Spanish speakers who write blogs in English. (I’m happy to see jarango.com on the list.) José Luis proposes to use these sites as the basis for an aggregator, to help increase the cross-pollination of memes between the English and Spanish blogospheres.

jarango.com is published in English and Spanish, although not simultaneously or symmetrically. I decided early on that it would be too time consuming to translate every post into both languages and that articles that would be appropriate for one audience may not be relevant for the other. The content forked early on, and these days I rarely post in both languages.

Most of my writing (for this site, at least) happens in English first. I was educated primarily in English, and I’ve lived in English-speaking countries a third of my life. Most of my reading is in English, and I feel much more comfortable reading and writing in English than I do in Spanish. In addition, my Spanish vocabulary is not large enough for my writing to be precise or elegant. (I believe Spanish is a richer language—but your vocabulary must be very well developed for this richness to come through in your writing.)

There are things I prefer about English as a language. I love English’s flexibility; neologisms are easily created and rapidly accepted. (For example, I won’t be able to translate to Spanish the word “memes”, much less a new meme like “podcasting”.) Most of the technologies and methodologies I need to describe as part of my professional life were created and named by English speakers; I still suffer every time I have to explain the concept of usabilidad to my Spanish-speaking customers. Most importantly, writing in English makes my ideas available to a much wider audience.

So is this a “hispano” blog in English, as José Luis suggests? My everyday experience is certainly that of a hispano. I was raised in a hispano culture, and live and work in a hispanic society. Most of my daily interactions with other folks—both on and offline—happen in Spanish. I am proud of my heritage, and relish the experience of living where I do. However, I don’t believe that the most of the writing I do in this site conveys a particularly hispanic point of view. (As a matter of fact, I’m not even sure I know what this means.) I prefer to think of this site as presenting universally applicable themes. In English. And Spanish.

Some thoughts on writing a blog in English and Spanish, prompted by José Luis Orihuela’s idea of building an aggregator to help cross-pollinate memes between the English and Spanish blogospheres.

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21 September 2004 ~ 0 Comments

Carpooling for Asilomar?

Are you heading to the Future of Information Architecture Retreat in Asilomar early next month? If so, are you driving from San Francisco on Friday? If so, would you mind if I tagged along in your car? (Obviously, I’ll chip in for gas and pretzels.) Please contact me if you’re willing to share a ride.

Update: No longer needed. Thanks to Anders Ramsay for kindly agreeing to let me ride with him.

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21 September 2004 ~ 0 Comments

Tinderbox 2.3

It’s a happy day when a new version of one of my most oft-used apps is released. Tinderbox 2.3 is out, and it feels much speedier than the previous incarnation. Fonts also look nicer, and there are some new features in way maps are rendered. (Mark Bernstein—Tinderbox’s author—has posted a blog entry on some of the new map features.)

Tinderbox is an essential tool for anyone who needs to organize large collections of disparate items. It allows you to organize information visually, and to create logical links between pieces of information. For people who are primarily visual thinkers, such as myself, it’s indispensible.

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15 September 2004 ~ 2 Comments

Upgrade to Movable Type 3.1

I’ve been posting less frequently lately, but now my posts tend to be longer and more thought out. Because of the changing nature of my writing on this site, I’ve been thinking about enabling comments and trackbacks. However, I’ve been worried about spam (I admin another MT-based blog, and spam comments can be a nuisance.)

So tonight I upgraded the site to MT 3.1 and its improved TypeKey registration system. I’ll start enabling comments on select posts from now on. (BTW, there may be broken things along the way—please let me know if you find anything horribly out of place.)

Update: I’m having problems getting TypeKey to work, so I’ve opened comments to unregistered users for the time being. I’m getting an error that says “The site you’re trying to comment on has not signed up for this feature. Please inform the site owner.” I don’t really have time to play with this right now; it’ll have to stay as is for the time being.

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