This is partly because enterprise software rarely gets critiqued the way even a US$30 piece of shareware will. It doesn’t benefit from the rigor of a wide and varied base of users, many of whom will freely offer merciless feedback, goading and demanding it to be better with each new release. Shielded away from the bright scrutiny of the consumer marketplace and beholden only to a relatively small coterie of information technology managers who are concerned primarily with stability, security and the continual justification of their jobs and staffs, enterprise software answers to few actual users. Given that hothouse environment, it’s only natural that the result is often very strange.
Having had to deal with more enterprise software at work lately - I’ve definitely had the moment where I thought - at least when you pay this much for a sports car it looks good :)
60 grams of fat for breakfast! - CNN.com
The Center for Science in the Public Interest, a Washington-based advocate for nutrition and health, has called the Hardee’s line of Thickburgers “food porn.”
MAKE: Blog: Maker Faire photos
On Saturday, I went up to Austin for the first Maker Faire in Texas. I wasn’t really sure what to expect. I mean I’d been to some small maker events at other Oreilly conferences and although they had some interesting stuff - it didn’t seem like it was something that would take more than an hour to experience.
It turns out I was wrong. The event was spread over a huge area. It took me a while just to walk to everything. In the beginning I approached the whole thing like an exhibit floor at a convention. That was totally the wrong way to think about it. Although there were people selling stuff, most of the stuff was being demoed by the person responsible for its creation.
That ended up being the secret of the magic of the event. A number of times I fell into a 30 minute conversation about the creation before me. It turns out when you spend some time with someone who is passionate enough to create something and then show it off at the mother of all science faires you get access to a tremendous amount of information.
For example, I did a deep dive into the process of converting a normal car to an electric car with a guy who is setting up a business to do it in Austin. I might have been able to learn some of the stuff on the Internet - but it was so much straight forward having this one on one conversation with an expert on the subject. My take aways:
- It is about $10,000 to convert a car
- Manual transmissions work better after conversion
- The motor lasts forever - but things still go wrong
- Battery maintenance sounds like a Huge P-I-T-A
- It is a project best done by someone who already likes to work on cars
I even spent 20 minutes learning about Modern RC Naval Battles from the North Texas Battle Group. It was crazy how much work and design they put into the vessels only to have them shot at by other participants.
There ended up being a lot of that kind of thing at Maker Faire. People made things. In a lot of cases, they were making things to make other things (Hello CNC village).
I also walked away with a renewed interest in homebrew electronics (My Arduino should arrive next week).
So my advice, if a Maker Faire comes to a place near you - go see it - but make sure you spend times with the makers themselves - what they have created is cool but getting an all access pass to the people themselves is even cooler!
Tom Seefurth’s Mamma Mia Pizza Beer
Be terrified - though if I find a 6 pack I’m totally buying it - it can’t be any worse that Miller’s Chill (And I drank one of those).
Imagine that your task for the day is to localize a piece of software….
Read on for a quick bootcamp on why it is so painful to localize an application. I’m not officially pumped to actually localize some of the Rails apps I’ve been building for work - by pumped I mean terrified…