AVG Free Edition 2013.0.2793 (32-bit)

AVG Anti-Virus Free Edition is trusted antivirus and antispyware protection for Windows available to download for free. In addition, the new included LinkScanner® Active Surf-Shield checks web pages for threats at the only time that matters - when yo...
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uTorrent 3.2.2 Build 28500

µTorrent is a small and incredibly popular BitTorrent client.
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IrfanView 4.35

IrfanView is a very fast, small, compact and innovative Freeware (for non-commercial use) graphic viewer for Windows.
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Avant Browser 2012 Build 188

Avant Browser is a standalone application designed to expand features provided by Internet Explorer. It adds a bunch of features and functionalities to IE and its user-friendly interface brings a new level of clarity and efficiency to your browsing e...
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Notepad++ 6.2.1

Notepad++ is a free source code editor and Notepad replacement that supports several languages. Running in the MS Windows environment, its use is governed by GPL Licence.
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FileZilla 3.6.0

FileZilla Client is a fast and reliable cross-platform FTP, FTPS and SFTP client with lots of useful features and an intuitive graphical user interface.
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Google Chrome 25.0.1323.1 Dev

Google Chrome is a browser that combines a minimal design with sophisticated technology to make the web faster, safer, and easier.
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The Dos and Don’ts for Google’s New Disavow Links Tool

For the first time in what might be ever, Google has followed Bing's lead and announced a tool to disavow links. We asked (or demanded), and they listened! Cleverly named the Disavow Links tool, Google Webmaster Tools' latest feature gives power back to webmasters and takes it away from spammers. Here are our tips for [...]
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/conversationmarketing/MRJI/~3/9J5MZ49zeLE/google-disavow-links-tool-best-practices.htm



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Holiday Internet Marketing: Bring Joy to Your Q4

Once again we're in make-or-break Q4—the time of year businesses worldwide prep (and hope) for a flood of holiday business. The time of year that can determine the difference between a going concern and concern whether you can keep going. Be it crafting a quality, attention-grabbing email campaign or optimizing a mobile marketing strategy, this [...]
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/conversationmarketing/MRJI/~3/bXeh74-B7SE/holiday-online-marketing-promotion-strategies.htm



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7 Tips for Killer Online Customer Reviews

Chances are you're not the only retailer in your industry. And your business is being judged alongside other online businesses by potential customers and search engines. Getting great customer reviews on Google+ Local, Yelp and other review services can give your company a huge advantage. Why are online customer reviews so important? 70% of consumers [...]
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/conversationmarketing/MRJI/~3/oyqcX4dFO5M/seven-tips-for-killer-online-customer-reviews.htm



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Google Analytics Tips for Small Businesses

You're a small business and you've got a decent website—but you're not sure how it's doing. What you need is Google Analytics (GA), but you're not sure what to make of all the reporting options. Don't worry, we can help. What's Important in Google Analytics? For a small business, the most complex reports aren't going [...]
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/conversationmarketing/MRJI/~3/DrUo2mvOuVw/google-analytics-tips-for-small-businesses.htm



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SMB SEO Tips – Webinar video

Here's the video from Josh Patrice's excellent SEO for small business webinar last week. Enjoy:
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/conversationmarketing/MRJI/~3/9ejt4KOR1XQ/smb-seo-tips-video.htm



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Balancing SEO and Branding to Avoid Being Covered in Mud

Adding copy to your website can become a tug-o-war between the Branding and SEO teams. One side is representing the voice and tone of the brand. At the other end of the rope, the SEO team is focused on increasing keyword rankings. This can lead to everyone walking away covered in mud. Avoid that unclean [...]
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/conversationmarketing/MRJI/~3/aES6wSeOhY4/balancing-seo-and-branding.htm



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How to write universe-conquering proposals

AKA: 'Because I said so' doesn't work This is a really long post. But before you TL;DR it, give it a quick skim. The first half is hand-waving stuff about answering 'Why?' The second half is specific tips on doing proposals that build imputed value. Writing a great proposal is hard. The question you're trying [...]
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/conversationmarketing/MRJI/~3/fZ4_0NjQ6Z4/great-proposals.htm



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The social candidacy: The elections Facebook influenced

Or, if you're a Republican: "What the hell just happened?!" The election was supposed to be close. Regardless of your party affiliation, you heard that for months: Maybe an electoral tie. Certainly with one candidate winning the electoral college and the other the popular vote. We wouldn't know for days after November 6th… Oops. The [...]
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/conversationmarketing/MRJI/~3/N_kVMiCxgcw/the-social-candidacy.htm



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7 Cringe-Worthy SEO Phrases You Never Want to Hear in a Marketing Meeting

We've all been there. You're in the marketing meeting and someone brings up SEO. I don't know how they're bringing it up, but they've done it one way or another. Maybe they used some of the phrases below. If they did, you need to know why you wish you hadn't heard what they've just said. [...]
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/conversationmarketing/MRJI/~3/l2Ep_5CrvvI/cringe-worthy-seo-phrases.htm



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Editing for Creativity: How to Enhance the Writer’s Voice

In a world of endless content, innovative copywriting is a great way to catch and keep the attention of the customer. While a creative approach will often draw a bigger audience than simply following best practices, it can be tempting for an editor to change the writer's style to fit an assumption about what sells. [...]
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/conversationmarketing/MRJI/~3/XrGXMXbPl_w/how-to-be-a-good-editor.htm



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Computer Crime, Then and Now

Ive already documented my brief, youthful dalliance with the illegal side of computing as it existed in the late 1980s. But was it crime? Was I truly a criminal? I dont think so. To be perfectly blunt, I wasnt talented enough to be any kind of threat. Im still not. There are two classic books describing hackers active in the 1980s who did have incredible talent. Talents that made them dangerous enough to be considered criminal threats. The Cuckoos Egg: Tracking a Spy Through the Maze of Computer Espionage Ghost in the Wires: My Adventures as the Worlds Most Wanted Hacker Cuckoo is arguably the first case of hacking that was a clearly malicious crime circa 1986, and certainly the first known case of computer hacking as international espionage. I read this when it was originally published in 1989, and its still a gripping investigative story. Cliff Stoll is a visionary writer who saw how trust in computers and the emerging Internet could be vulnerable to real, actual, honest-to-God criminals. Im not sure Kevin Mitnick did anything all that illegal, but theres no denying that he was the worlds first high profile computer criminal. By 1994 he made the FBIs 10 Most Wanted list, and there were front page New York Times articles about his pursuit. If there was ever a moment that computer crime and "hacking" entered the public consciousness as an ongoing concern, this was it. The whole story is told in minute detail by Kevin himself in Ghost in the Wires. There was a sanitized version of Kevins story presented in Wizzywig comix but this is the original directly from the source, and its well worth reading. I could barely put it down. Kevin has been fully reformed for many years now; he wrote several books documenting his techniques and now consults with companies to help improve their computer security. These two books cover the genesis of all computer crime as we know it. Of course its a much bigger problem now than it was in 1985, if for no other reason than there are far more computers far more interconnected with each other today than anyone could have possibly imagined in those early days. But whats really surprising is how little has changed in the techniques of computer crime since 1985. The best primer of modern – and by that I mean year 2000 and later – computer crime is Kingpin: How One Hacker Took Over the Billion-Dollar Cybercrime Underground. Modern computer crime is more like the classic sort of crime youve seen in black and white movies: its mostly about stealing large sums of money. But instead of busting it out of bank vaults Bonnie and Clyde style, its now done electronically, mostly through ATM and credit card exploits. Written by Kevin Poulson, another famous reformed hacker, Kingpin is also a compelling read. Ive read it twice now. The passage I found most revealing is this one, written after the protagonists release from prison in 2002: One of Max's former clients in Silicon Valley tried to help by giving Max a $5,000 contract to perform a penetration test on the company's network. The company liked Max and didn't really care if he produced a report, but the hacker took the gig seriously. He bashed at the company's firewalls for months, expecting one of the easy victories to which he'd grown accustomed as a white hat. But he was in for a surprise. The state of corporate security had improved while he was in the joint. He couldn't make a dent in the network of his only client. His 100 percent success record was cracking. Max pushed harder, only becoming more frustrated over his powerlessness. Finally, he tried something new. Instead of looking for vulnerabilities in the company's hardened servers, he targeted some of the employees individually. These "client side" attacks are what most people experience of hackers—a spam e-mail arrives in your in-box, with a link to what purports to be an electronic greeting card or a funny picture. The download is actually an executable program, and if you ignore the warning message All true; no hacker today would bother with frontal assaults. The chance of success is miniscule. Instead, they target the soft, creamy underbelly of all companies: the users inside. Max, the hacker described in Kingpin, bragged "Ive been confident of my 100 percent [success] rate ever since." This is the new face of hacking. Or is it? One of the most striking things about Ghost In The Wires is not how skilled a computer hacker Kevin Mitnick is (although he is undeniably great), but how devastatingly effective he is at tricking people into revealing critical information in casual conversations. Over and over again, in hundreds of subtle and clever ways. Whether its 1985 or 2005, the amount of military-grade security you have on your computer systems matters not at all when someone using those computers clicks on the dancing bunny. Social engineering is the most reliable and evergreen hacking technique ever devised. It will outlive us all. For a 2012 era example, consider the story of Mat Honan. It is not unique. At 4:50 PM, someone got into my iCloud account, reset the password and sent the confirmation message about the reset to the trash. My password was a 7 digit alphanumeric that I didn't use elsewhere. When I set it up, years and years ago, that seemed pretty secure at the time. But it's not. Especially given that I've been using it for, well, years and years. My guess is they used brute force to get the password and then reset it to do the damage to my devices. I heard about this on Twitter when the story was originally developing, and my initial reaction was skepticism that anyone had bothered to brute force anything at all, since brute forcing is for dummies. Guess what it turned out to be. Go ahead, guess! Did you by any chance guess social engineering … of the account recovery process? Bingo. After coming across my [Twitter] account, the hackers did some background research. My Twitter account linked to my personal website, where they found my Gmail address. Guessing that this was also the e-mail address I used for Twitter, Phobia went to Google's account recovery page. He didn't even have to actually attempt a recovery. This was just a recon mission. Because I didn't have Google's two-factor authentication turned on, when Phobia entered my Gmail address, he could view the alternate e-mail I had set up for account recovery. Google partially obscures that information, starring out many characters, but there were enough characters available, m••••n@me.com. Jackpot. Since he already had the e-mail, all he needed was my billing address and the last four digits of my credit card number to have Apple's tech support issue him the keys to my account. So how did he get this vital information? He began with the easy one. He got the billing address by doing a whois search on my personal web domain. If someone doesn't have a domain, you can also look up his or her information on Spokeo, WhitePages, and PeopleSmart. Getting a credit card number is tricker, but it also relies on taking advantage of a company's back-end systems. … First you call Amazon and tell them you are the account holder, and want to add a credit card number to the account. All you need is the name on the account, an associated e-mail address, and the billing address. Amazon then allows you to input a new credit card. (Wired used a bogus credit card number from a website that generates fake card numbers that conform with the industry's published self-check algorithm.) Then you hang up. Next you call back, and tell Amazon that you've lost access to your account. Upon providing a name, billing address, and the new credit card number you gave the company on the prior call, Amazon will allow you to add a new e-mail address to the account. From here, you go to the Amazon website, and send a password reset to the new e-mail account. This allows you to see all the credit cards on file for the account — not the complete numbers, just the last four digits. But, as we know, Apple only needs those last four digits. Phobia, the hacker Mat Honan documents, was a minor who did this for laughs. One of his friends is a 15 year old hacker who goes by the name of Cosmo; hes the one who discovered the Amazon credit card technique described above. And what are teenage hackers up to these days? Xbox gamers know each other by their gamertags. And among young gamers it's a lot cooler to have a simple gamertag like "Fred" than, say, "Fred1988Ohio." Before Microsoft beefed up its security, getting a password-reset form on Windows Live (and thus hijacking a gamer tag) required only the name on the account and the last four digits and expiration date of the credit card on file. Derek discovered that the person who owned the "Cosmo" gamer tag also had a Netflix account. And that's how he became Cosmo. "I called Netflix and it was so easy," he chuckles. "They said, 'What's your name?' and I said, 'Todd [Redacted],' gave them his e-mail, and they said, 'Alright your password is 12345,' and I was signed in. I saw the last four digits of his credit card. That's when I filled out the Windows Live password-reset form, which just required the first name and last name of the credit card holder, the last four digits, and the expiration date." This method still works. When Wired called Netflix, all we had to provide was the name and e-mail address on the account, and we were given the same password reset. The techniques are eerily similar. The only difference between Cosmo and Kevin Mitnick is that they were born in different decades. Computer crime is a whole new world now, but the techniques used today are almost identical to those used in the 1980s. If you want to engage in computer crime, dont waste your time developing ninja level hacking skills, because computers are not the weak point. People are. [advertisement] How are you showing off your awesome? Create a Stack Overflow Careers profile and show off all of your hard work from Stack Overflow, Github, and virtually every other coding site. Who knows, you might even get recruited for a great new position!
http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/2012/09/computer-crime-then-and-now.html



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The Last PC Laptop

Ive been chasing the perfect PC laptop for over a decade now. Though Ive tolerated lugging around five to seven pound machines because I had to, laptops were always about portability first and most of all to me. I quickly gravitated to so-called ultraportable laptops as soon as they became available. The first one was the 2003 Dell Inspiron 300M. It was the first laptop I found that delivered a decent 3-ish pound package without too many compromises. How I loved this little thing. But there was a downside to that 2003-era ultraportability – the default battery in the system provided about 2 hours of runtime. Switching to the larger battery extended that to a much more respectable 5.5 hours, but it also added a pound to the system and protruded from the rear a bit. Ive pursued the same dream of reasonable power with extreme portability ever since, with varying degrees of success. The PC industry isnt exactly known for its design leadership, and it can be downright schizophrenic at times. So if you were a fan of laptops that were actually thin and light and portable, its been rough going for a long time. 2007s Dell XPS M1330 was a brief bright spot, but honestly, its only in the last few months Ive found an ultraportable that lived up to my expectations, one that I feel confident in recommending. That laptop is the Asus Zenbook Prime UX31A. Having lived with this laptop for about two months now, I can safely say it is without question the best PC laptop Ive ever owned. Consider the Tech Report review and the Engadget review, both rave. Heres what you need to know: Retina-esque 1920x1080 resolution in an amazingly high quality 13.3" IPS display Intels latest 17 watt Ivy Bridge processor with (finally!) decent integrated graphics 128 GB SSD with fast 6Gbps interface Just under 3 pounds Decent 6 hour runtime Classy brushed metal case and cover All of this for about $1,050 at the time of writing. If youre suffering through a sub-par TN display on your current laptop, the awesome IPS display is almost worth an upgrade on its own. After switching to bargain Korean IPS displays on the desktop, Im desperately hoping my poor eyeballs never have to endure another awful TN LCD display for the rest of my life. This is a machine that pleasantly surprised me at every turn. The keyboard is solid feeling with a dimmable backlight, and the achilles heel of all PC laptops, the trackpad, is about as good as it ever gets on PCs. Which is to say still not great. Even the power adapter is classy, although highly derivative of Apple. While this is substantially closer to the ideal ultraportable hardware Ive had in my brain since 2003, it still exhibits some of the same problems I experienced with that Inspiron 300M almost 10 years ago: An operating system pre-loaded with useless craplets and pointless bloatware, all in the name of hypothetical value add by the vendor and/or marketing subsidies. Several branding stickers I had to peel off the machine after I opened the box. (Note that the press photos for a machine never include these ugly stickers. Go figure.) A trackpad that works kinda-sorta OK, but never quite inspires enough confidence that I can stop carrying an external mouse around in my laptop bag with me. The first thing I did when I got the laptop was wipe it and install the Windows 8 preview, and soon after updated it to the final Windows 8 release. Despite all the grousing about the tablet-centric nature of Windows 8 – some of which is warranted, but can easily be ignored entirely – I am an unabashed fan of the operating system. It is a big improvement over Windows 7 in my day to day use. The more I use Windows 8 the more I believe its the biggest step forward in Windows since Windows 95. So what Ive put together here is probably the best, most platonic ideal form of Wintel laptop hardware you can buy in mid-2012. (In the interests of full disclosure, I actually own two of these. One for my wife and one for me. Because I am an inveterate hotrodder, I had to have more memory and a larger, faster SSD. So I bought the UX32VD model which has a discrete Nvidia 620M GPU and, most importantly, can be upgraded internally. So I dropped in a Samsung 830 512 GB SSD and 8 GB DIMM. This led to a slightly oddball final configuration of 10 GB RAM and an internal embedded 32 GB SSD plus the 512 GB SSD. It hurts battery life by at least an hour, too. You should also know that the teeny-tiny Torx screws on the back of this laptop are not to be trifled with. Bring your jewelers loupe. In case it wasnt already abundantly clear, let me spell it out for you: going this route is not recommended unless you are as crazy as I am. The base model is really nice! Trust me!) If pressed, I might admit the combination of ASUS Zenbook Prime hardware and modern Windows 8 amenities lives up to the whole Intel "Ultrabook" marketing schtick. But Im not sure thats enough any more. Every time I leave the house – heck, every time I leave the room – I have to decide what kind of computer Im going to take with me, if any. Besides the ultraportable laptops, I now own an iPhone 5, several retina iPads, and a Nexus 7. Im sure there are many more of these devices on the way. In the calculus of deciding what kind of computing device I want with me, even the most awesome ultraportable laptop I can find is no longer enough. Consider: Want 10 hours of real world battery life? Even when doing actual work that would ramp the CPU up? Many tablets and phones can achieve that magical 10 hour battery life figure, but it will be a long, long time before you reliably get that out of any ultraportable laptop. Personally, I blame x86. Want to start doing stuff immediately? Even Windows 8, which has radically improved wake times, is laughably slow to start up compared to tablets and phones which are practically instant-on by design. Want the smallest most portable device you can get away with? Its unlikely that will be a laptop, even an ultraportable, because of the implied keyboard and connectivity ports, plus the big screen and hinge. There is no form factor more compact than the touchscreen tablet. And youve got to take your phone along in any case, because thats how your family and loved ones will contact you, right? Have you seen the iPhone 5 benchmarks? Its faster than most tablets! Want to be always connected to the Internet? Sure you do; how else can you get to Stack Overflow and Stack Exchange for all of lifes essential questions? Then you probably need some kind of cellular support, for 3G or 4G or LTE or whatever the telephone companies are calling high speed Internet access these days. That is quite rare on traditional laptops, but obviously common on phones and much easier to find on tablets. Want easy access? Just try opening a laptop on a crowded subway train or bus. Or with, say, 3 toddlers running around your house. I dare you. But phones and 7" tablets offer easy one handed operation; you can whip them out and fill whatever time you have available, whereas cracking open a laptop feels like a sizable commitment in time and space to doing something. My laptop is increasingly a device I only take when I know Ill need to do a lot of typing, and/or Ill need a lot of screen space to work. But even a phone could do that if it had decent support for bluetooth keyboards and external displays, couldnt it? And even a few programmers, the audience who would most need all the power and flexibility of laptops, are switching to tablets. Ive waited 12 years for the PC industry to get its collective act together and, if nothing else, successfully copy Apples laptop hardware designs. Now that they (mostly) have, I wonder: is it too late? Has the PC industry irrevocably shifted underneath them while they were so busy pumping out endless refinements to generic x86 boxes? I love this new laptop, and in many ways it is the perfect ultraportable hardware I dreamed of having in 2003. But every time I power it up and use it, I feel a little sad. I cant shake the feeling that this might end up being the last PC laptop I ever own. [advertisement] Stack Overflow Careers matches the best developers (you!) with the best employers. You can search our job listings or create a profile and even let employers find you.
http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/2012/09/the-last-pc-laptop.html



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Somebody is to Blame for This

This is not a post about programming, or being a geek. In all likelihood, this is not a post you will enjoy reading. Consider yourselves warned. I dont remember how I found this Moth video of comedian Anthony Griffith. It is not a fun thing to watch, especially as a parent. Even though I knew that before I went in, I willingly chose to watch this video. Then I watched it again. And again. And again. I watched it five times, ten times. I am all for leaning into the pain, but I started to wonder if maybe I was addicted to the pain. I think my dumb programmer brain was stuck in an endless loop trying to make sense out of what happened here. But you dont make sense of a tragedy like this. You cant. There are no answers. My humor is becoming dark, and its biting, and its becoming hateful. And the talent coordinator is seeing that theres a problem, because NBC is all about nice, and everything is going to be OK. And were starting to buck horns because he wants everything light, and I want to be honest and tell life, and Im hurting, and I want everybody else to hurt. Because somebody is to blame for this! The unbearable grief demands that someone must be to blame for this unimaginably terrible thing that is happening to you, this deeply, profoundly unfair tragedy. But theres nobody. Just you and this overwhelming burden youve been given. So you keep going, because thats what youre supposed to do. Maybe you get on stage and talk about it. Thats about all you can do. So thats what Im going to do. Five weeks ago, I was selected for jury duty in a medical malpractice trial. This trial was the story of a perfectly healthy man who, in the summer of 2008, was suddenly killed by a massive blood clot that made its way to his heart, after a surgery to repair a broken leg. Like me, he would have been 41 years old today. Like me, he married his wife in the summer of 1999. Like me, he had three children; two girls and a boy. Like me, he had a promising, lucrative career in IT. I should have known I was in trouble during jury selection. When they called your name, youd come up from the juror pool – about 50 people by my estimation – and sit in the jury booth while both lawyers asked you some questions to determine if youd be a fair and impartial juror for this trial. What I hadnt noticed at the time, because she was obscured by a podium, is that the wife was sitting directly in front of the jury. I heard plenty of people get selected and make up some bogus story about how they couldnt possibly be fair and impartial to get out of this five week obligation. And they did, if they stuck to their story. But sitting there myself, in front of the wife of this dead man, I just couldnt do it. I couldnt bring myself to lie when I saw on her face that her desire not to be there was a million times more urgent than mine. Now, Im all for civic duty, but five weeks in a jury seemed like a bit more than my fair share. Even worse, I was an alternate juror, which meant all of the responsibility of showing up every day and listening, but none of the actual responsibility of contributing to the eventual verdict. I was expecting crushing boredom, and there was certainly plenty of that. On day one, during opening remarks, we were treated to multiple, giant projected photographs of the three happy children with their dead father – directly in front of the very much still alive wife. She had to leave the courtroom at one point. The first person we heard testimony from was this mans father, who was and is a practicing doctor. He was there when his son was rushed to the emergency room. He was allowed to observe as the emergency room personnel worked, so he described to the jury the medical process of treatment, his son thrashing around on the emergency room table being intubated, his heart stopping and being revived. As a doctor, he knows what this means. On day two, we heard from the brother-in-law, also a doctor, and close friend of the family. He described coming home from the hospital to explain to the children that their father was dead, that he wasnt coming home. The kids were not old enough to understand what death means, so for a year afterward, every time they drove by the hospital, they would ask to visit their dad. I did not expect to learn what death truly was in a courtroom in Martinez, California, at age 41. But I did. Death is a room full of strangers listening to your loved ones describe, in clinical detail and with tears in their eyes, your last moments. Boredom, I can deal with. This is something else entirely. As a juror, youre ordered not to discuss the trial with anyone, so that you can form a fair and impartial opinion based on the shared evidence that everyone saw in the courtroom together. So Im taking all this in and Im holding it down, like Im supposed to. But its hard. I feel like becoming a parent has opened emotional doors in me that I didnt know existed, so its getting to me. Sometime later, the wife finally testifies. She explains that on the night of the incident, her husband finally felt well enough after the surgery on his right leg to read a bedtime story to their 4 year old son. So she happily leaves father and son to have their bedtime ritual together. Later, the son comes rushing in and tells her theres something wrong with dad, and the look on his face is enough to let her know that its dire. She found him collapsed on the floor of her sons room and calls 911. A week later, I was putting our 4 year old son Henry to bed. I didnt realize it at the time, but this was the first time I had put him to bed since the trial started. Henry isnt quite old enough to have a stable sleep routine, so sometimes bedtime goes well, and sometimes it doesnt. It went well that particular night, so Im happy lying there with him in the bed waiting for his breathing to become regular so I know hes fully asleep. And then the next thing I know Im breaking down. Badly. Im desperately trying to hold it together because I dont want to scare him, and he doesnt need to know about any of this. But I cant stop thinking about what it would feel like for my wife to see pictures of me with our children if I died. I cant stop thinking about what it would feel like to watch Henry die on an emergency room table at age 38. I cant stop thinking about what it would feel like to explain to someone elses children that their father is never coming home again. Most of all, I cant stop thinking about the other 4 year old boy who will never stop blaming himself because he saw his Dad collapse on the floor of his room, and then never saw him again for the rest of his life. Somebody is to blame for this. Somebody must be to blame for this. Now I urgently want this trial to be over. Im struggling to understand the purpose of it all. Nothing we see or do in this courtroom is bringing a husband and father back from the dead. The plaintiff could be home with her children. The parade of doctors and hospital staff making their way through this courtroom could be helping patients. The jurors could be working at their jobs. My God how I would love to be doing my job rather than this, anything in the world other than this. A verdict for either party has immense cost. Nobody is in this courtroom because they want to be here. So why? I dont know these people. I dont care about these people. I mean, its in my job description as a juror: I am fair and impartial because I dont care what happens to them. But finally I realized that this trial is part of our ride. We get on the ride because we know there will be thrills and chills. Nobody gets on a rollercoaster that goes in a straight line. Thats what you sign up for when you get on the ride with the rest of us: there will be highs, and there will be lows. And those lows – whether they are, God forbid, your own, or someone elses – are what make the highs so sweet. The ride is what it is because the pain of those valleys teaches us. Sharing this tragic, horrible, private thing that happened to these poor people is how we cope. Watching this play out in public, among your peers, among other fellow human beings, is what it takes to for all of us to survive and move on. Were here in this courtroom together because we need to be here. Its part of the ride. Ive heard and seen things in that courtroom I think I will remember for the rest of my life. Its been difficult to deal with, though I am sure it is the tiniest reflected fraction of what you and your family went through. I am so, so sorry this happened to you. But I want to thank you for sharing it with me, because I now know that I am to blame. Were all to blame. Thats what makes us human. [advertisement] Hiring developers? Post your open positions with Stack Overflow Careers and reach over 20MM awesome devs already on Stack Overflow. Create your satisfaction-guaranteed job listing today!
http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/2012/09/somebody-is-to-blame-for-this.html



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The PC is Over

MG Siegler writes: The PC is over. It will linger, but increasingly as a relic. I now dread using my computer. I want to use a tablet most of the time. And increasingly, I can. I want to use a smartphone all the rest of the time. And I do. The value in the desktop web is increasingly an illusion. Given the rate at which these mobile devices are improving, a plunge is rapidly approaching. Don't build an app based on your website. Build the app that acts as if websites never existed in the first place. Build the app for the person who has never used a desktop computer. Because they're coming. Soon. Realize that MG Siegler is a journalist, and a TechCrunch air-quotes journalist at that, so hes well versed in hyperbole. You might say hes a billion times better at hyperbole than the average blogger. In his own way, he is a creator, I suppose: he creates hype. But hes not entirely wrong here. Ive noticed the same pattern in my own computing habits. As I wrote in The Last PC Laptop, its becoming more and more difficult to justify any situation where a traditional laptop is your best choice – even a modern, svelte, fancypants laptop. Desktops, on the other hand, are perfectly justifiable. That is, if you want three monitors, eight blazingly fast CPU cores, 64 GB of memory, and fire-breathing multi-GPU configurations. If you need absurd, obscene amounts of power, a desktop computer is the way to go. And its probably cheaper than you think, because desktops are all built from the same interchangeable pool of parts. Its also a lot more fun than laptops, because willingness to tinker combined with lust for ostentatious power is the essence of hot rodding. And it is freakin awesome. But even as an inveterate PC hot-rodder, Ive noticed that in the last few years Ive started to lose interest in the upgrade treadmill of ever faster CPUs with more cores, more sophisticated GPUs, more bandwidth, more gigabytes of RAM. Other than solid state drives, which gave us a badly needed order of magnitude improvement in disk speeds, when was the last time you felt you needed to upgrade a powerful desktop or laptop computer? If I dropped a SSD in it, do you honestly think you could tell the difference in real world non-gaming desktop usage between a high end 2009 personal computer and one from today? Because Im not sure I could. Imagine the despair of a hot-rodder who regularly sees the streets awash in boring Chrysler K-Cars and Plymouth minivans with more ponies under the hood than a sweet custom rig he built just two years ago. I think were way past the point of satisfying the computing performance needs of the typical user. Id say we hit that around the time dual CPU cores became mainstream, perhaps 2008 or so. What do you do when you have all the computing performance anyone could ever possibly need, except for the freakish one-percenters, the video editors and programmers? Once you have "enough" computing power, for whatever value of "enough" we can agree to disagree on, the future of computing is, and always has been, to make the computers smaller and cheaper. This is not some new trend that MG Siegler revealed unto the world from his journalistic fortress of solitude. Weve already seen this before in the transition from mainframes that fit in a building, to minicomputers that fit in a room, to microcomputers that fit on your desk. Now were ready for the next stage: computers that dont just fit in your lap, they fit in your hand. The name of the game is no longer to make computers more powerful, but to radically reduce their size and power consumption without compromising the performance too much. I mentioned how boring the performance scene has gotten for laptops and desktops. Its so boring that I cant be bothered to dig up representative benchmarks. Lets just assume that, outside of SSDs, there have been at best cost-of-living inflation type improvements in desktop and laptop benchmarks since 2008. Now contrast that with the hyperbolic performance improvement in the iPhone since 2008: In case the graph didnt make it clear, in the last four years of iPhone, weve seen a factor of 20 improvement in Browsermark and a factor of four improvement in GeekBench. In the smartphone world, performance is – in the worst case – almost doubling every year. Ironically enough, these results were printed in PC magazine. Id like to draw your attention to two little letters in the title of said magazine. The first one is Pee, and the second one is Cee. Thats right, PC Magazine is now in the business of printing the kind of smartphone performance benchmarks that are enough to make any hotrodder drool. What does that have to do with PCs? Well, it has everything to do with PCs, actually. I have an iPhone 5, and I can personally attest that it is crazy faster than the old iPhone 4 I upgraded from. Once you add in 4G, LTE, and 5 GHz WiFi support, its so fast that – except for the obvious size limitations of a smaller screen – I find myself not caring that much if I get the "mobile" version of websites any more. Even before the speed, I noticed the dramatically improved display. AnandTech says that if the iPhone 5 display was a desktop monitor, it would be the best one they had ever tested. Our phones are now so damn fast and capable as personal computers that Im starting to wonder why I dont just use the thing I always have in my pocket as my "laptop", plugging it into a keyboard and display as necessary. So maybe MG Siegler is right. The PC is over … at least in the form that we knew it. We no longer need giant honking laptop and desktop form factors for computers any more than we need entire rooms and floors of a building to house mainframes and minicomputers. [advertisement] Whats your next career move? Stack Overflow Careers has the best job listings from great companies, whether youre looking for opportunities at a startup or Fortune 500. You can search our job listings or create a profile and let employers find you.
http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/2012/10/the-pc-is-over.html



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Todont

What do you need to do today? Other than read this blog entry, I mean. Have you ever noticed that a huge percentage of Lifehacker-like productivity porn site content is a breathless description of the details of Yet Another To-Do Application? There are dozens upon dozens of the things to choose from, on any platform you can name. At this point its getting a little ridiculous; per Lifehackers Law, youd need a to-do app just to keep track of all the freaking to-do apps. Ive tried to maintain to-do lists at various points in my life. And Ive always failed. Utterly and completely. Even turning it into a game, like the cleverly constructed Epic Win app, didnt work for me. Eventually I realized that the problem wasnt me. All my to-do lists started out as innocuous tools to assist me in my life, but slowly transformed, each and every time, into thankless, soul-draining exercises in reductionism. My to-do list was killing me. Adam Wozniak nails it: Lists give the illusion of progress. Lists give the illusion of accomplishment. Lists make you feel guilty for not achieving these things. Lists make you feel guilty for continually delaying certain items. Lists make you feel guilty for not doing things you dont want to be doing anyway. Lists make you prioritize the wrong things. Lists are inefficient. (Think of what you could be doing with all the time you spend maintaining your lists!) Lists suck the enjoyment out of activities, making most things feel like an obligation. Lists dont actually make you more organized long term. Lists can close you off to spontaneity and exploration of things you didnt plan for. (Lets face it, its impossible to really plan some things in life.) For the things in my life that actually mattered, Ive never needed any to-do list to tell me to do them. If I did, then thatd be awfully strong evidence that I have some serious life problems to face before considering the rather trivial matter of which to-do lifehack fits my personality best. As for the things that didnt matter in my life, well, those just tended to pile up endlessly in the old to-do list. And the collective psychic weight of all these minor undone tasks were caught up in my ever-growing to-do katamari ball, where they continually weighed on me, day after day. Yes, theres that everpresent giant to-do list, hanging right there over your head like a guillotine, growing sharper and heavier every day. Like a crazy hoarder I mistake the root cause of my growing mountain of incomplete work. The hoarder thinks he has a storage problem when he really has a throwing things away problem. I say I am time poor as if the problem is that poor me is given only 24 hours in a day. Its more accurate to say… what exactly? It seems crazy for a crazy person to use his own crazy reasoning to diagnose his own crazy condition. Maybe I too easily add new projects to my list, or I am too reluctant to exit from unsuccessful projects. Perhaps I am too reluctant to let a task go, to ship what Ive done. Theyre never perfect, never good enough. And I know Im not alone in making the easy claim that I am time poor. So many people claim to be time poor, when really we are poor at prioritizing, or poor at decisiveness, or dont know how to say no (…to other people, to our own ideas). If only I had a hidden store of time, or if only I had magical organisation tools, or if only I could improve my productive throughput, then, only then would I be able to get things done, to consolidate the growing backlogs and todo lists into one clear line of work, and plough through it like an arctic ice breaker carving its way through a sheet of ice. But are you using the right guillotine? Maybe itd work better if you tried this newer, shinier guillotine? Id like to offer you some advice: Theres only one, and exactly one, item anyone should ever need on their to-do list. Everything else is superfluous. You shouldnt have a to-do list in the first place. Declare to-do bankruptcy right now. Throw out your to-do list. Its hurting you. Yes, seriously. Maybe it is a little scary, but the right choices are always a little scary, so do it anyway. No, I wasnt kidding. Isnt Hall and Oates awesome? I know, rhetorical question. But still. Look, this is becoming counterproductive. Wait a second, did I just make a list? Heres my challenge. If you cant wake up every day and, using your 100% original equipment God-given organic brain, come up with the three most important things you need to do that day – then you should seriously work on fixing that. I dont mean install another app, or read more productivity blogs and books. You have to figure out whats important to you and what motivates you; ask yourself why that stuff isnt gnawing at you enough to make you get it done. Fix that. Tools will come and go, but your brain and your gut will be here with you for the rest of your life. Learn to trust them. And if you cant, do whatever it takes to train them until you can trust them. If it matters, if it really matters, youll remember to do it. And if you dont, well, maybe youll get to it one of these days. Or not. And thats cool too. [advertisement] How are you showing off your awesome? Create a Stack Overflow Careers profile and show off all of your hard work from Stack Overflow, Github, and virtually every other coding site. Who knows, you might even get recruited for a great new position!
http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/2012/10/todont.html



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Building Servers for Fun and Prof... OK, Maybe Just for Fun

In 1998 I briefly worked for FiringSquad, a gaming website founded by Doom and Quake champion Thresh aka Dennis Fong and his brother Kyle. I can trace my long-standing interest in chairs and keyboards to some of the early, groundbreaking articles they wrote. Dennis and Kyle were great guys to work with, and wed occasionally chat on the phone about geeky hardware hotrodding stuff, like the one time they got so embroiled in PC build one-upmanship that they were actually building rack-mount PCs … for their home. So I suppose it is inevitable that Id eventually get around to writing an article about building rack-mount PCs. But not the kind that go in your home. No, thatd be as nuts as the now-discontinued Windows Home Server product. Servers belong in their native habitat, the datacenter. Which can be kind of amazing places in their own right. The above photo is from Facebooks Open Compute Project, which is about building extremely energy efficient datacenters. And that starts with minimalistic, no-frills 1U server designs, where 1U is the smallest amount of space divisible in a server rack. I doubt many companies are big enough to even consider building their own datacenter, but if Facebook is building their own custom servers out of commodity x86 parts, couldnt we do it too? In a world of inexpensive, rentable virtual machines, like Amazon EC2, Google Compute Engine, and Azure Cloud, does it really make sense to build your own server and colocate it in a datacenter? Its kind of tough to tell exactly how much an Amazon EC2 instance will cost you since it varies a lot by usage. But if I use the Amazon Web Services simple monthly calculator and select the Web Application "common customer sample", that provides a figure of $1,414 per month, or $17k/year. If you want to run a typical web app on EC2, thats what you should expect to pay. So lets use that as a baseline. The instance types included in the Web Application customer sample are 2 4 small (for the front end), and 1 2 large (for the database). Here are the current specs on the large instance: 7.5 GB memory 2 virtual cores with 2 EC2 Compute Units each 850 GB instance storage 64-bit platform I/O Performance: High You might be wondering what the heck a EC2 Compute Unit is; its Amazons way of normalizing CPU performance. By their definition, what we get in the large instance is akin to an old 2008 era dual core 2.4 GHz Xeon CPU. Yes, you can pay more and get faster instances, but switching instances from the small to the high-CPU and from the large to the high-MEM more than doubles the bill to $3,302 per month or $40k/year. Assuming you subscribe to the theory of scaling out versus scaling up, building a bunch of decent bang-for-the-buck commodity servers is what youre supposed to be doing. I avoided directly building servers when we were scaling up Stack Overflow, electing to buy pre-assembled hardware from Lenovo instead. But this time, I decided the state of hardware has advanced sufficiently since 2009 that Im comfortable cutting out the middleman in 2012 and building the servers myself, from scratch. Thats why I just built four servers exactly like this: Intel Xeon E3-1280 V2 Ivy Bridge 3.6 Ghz / 4.0 Ghz turbo quad-core ($640) SuperMicro X9SCM-F-O ($190) 32 GB DDR3-1600 ($292) SuperMicro SC111LT-330CB 1U rackmount chassis ($200) Two Samsung 830 512GB hard drives in a RAID-1 mirror ($540 × 2) (If you are using this as a shopping list, you will also need 4-pin power extensions for the case, and the SuperMicro 1u passive heatsink. The killer feature of SuperMicro motherboards that makes them all server-y in the first place is the built in hardware KVM-over-IP. Thats right, unless the server is literally unplugged, you can remote in and install an operating system, tweak the BIOS, power it on and off, and so on. It works. I use it daily.) Based on the above specs, this server has comparable memory to the High-Memory Double Extra Large Instance, comparable CPU power to the High-CPU Extra Large Instance, and comparable disk performance to the High I/O Quadruple Extra Large Instance. This is a very, very high end server by EC2 standards. It would be prohibitively expensive to run this hardware in the Amazon cloud. But how much will it cost us to build? Just $2,452. Adding 10% for taxes, shipping, etc lets call it $2,750 per server. One brand new top-of-the-line server costs about as much as two months of EC2 web application hosting. Of course, that figure doesnt include the cost in time to build and rack the server, the cost of colocating the server, and the ongoing cost of managing and maintaining the server. But I humbly submit that the one-time cost of paying for three of these servers, plus the cost of colocation, plus a bunch of extra money on top to cover provisioning and maintenance and support, will still be significantly less than $17,000 for a single year of EC2 web application hosting. Every year after the first year will be gravy, until the servers are obsolete – which even conservatively has to be at least three years. Perhaps most importantly, these servers will offer vastly better performance than you could get from EC2 to run your web application, at least not without paying astronomical amounts of money for the privilege. (If you are concerned about power consumption, dont be. I just measured the power use of the server using my trusty Kill-a-Watt device: 31 watts (0.28 amps) at idle, 87 watts (0.75 amps) under never-gonna-happen artificial 100% CPU load. The three front fans in the SuperMicro case are plugged into the motherboard and only spin up at boot and under extreme load. Its shockingly quiet in typical use for a 1U server.) I realize that to some extent were comparing apples and oranges. Either you have a perverse desire to mess around with hardware, or youre more than willing to pay exorbitant amounts of money to have someone else worry about all that stuff (and, to be fair, give you levels of flexibility, bandwidth, and availability that would be impossible to achieve even if you colocate servers at multiple facilities). $51,000 over three years is enough to pay for a lot of colocation and very high end hardware. But maybe the truly precious resource at your organization is peoples time, not money, and that $51k is barely a rounding error in your budget. Anyway, I want to make it clear that building and colocating your own servers isnt (always) crazy, it isnt scary, heck, it isnt even particularly hard. In some situations it can make sense to build and rack your own servers, provided … you want absolute top of the line server performance without paying thousands of dollars per month for the privilege you are willing to invest the time in building, racking, and configuring your servers you have the capital to invest up front you desire total control over the hardware you arent worried about the flexibility of quickly provisioning new servers to handle unanticipated load you dont need the redundancy, geographical backup, and flexibility that comes with cloud virtualization Why do I choose to build and colocate servers? Primarily to achieve maximum performance. Thats the one thing you consistently just do not get from cloud hosting solutions unless you are willing to pay a massive premium, per month, forever: raw, unbridled performance. Im happy to spend money on nice dedicated hardware because I know that hardware is cheap, and programmers are expensive. But to be totally honest with you, mostly I build servers because its fun. [advertisement] Stack Overflow Careers matches the best developers (you!) with the best employers. You can search our job listings or create a profile and even let employers find you.
http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/2012/10/building-servers-for-fun-and-prof-ok-maybe-just-for-fun.html



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Judging Websites

I was invited to judge the Rails Rumble last year, but was too busy to participate. When they extended the offer again this year, I happily accepted. The Rails Rumble is a distributed programming competition where teams of one to four people, from all over the world, have 48 hours to build an innovative web application, with Ruby on Rails or another Rack-based Ruby web framework. After the 48 hours are up, a panel of expert judges will pick the top ten winners. I received an email notifying me that judging begins today, so I cracked my knuckles, sat down in front of my three monitors (all the better to judge with!) and … saw that there were around 340 entries. Thats when I started to get a little freaked out about the math. Perhaps we can throw 5% of the entrants out as obviously incomplete or unfinished. That leaves 323 entries to judge. Personally, Im not comfortable saying I judged a competition unless I actually look at each one of the entries, so at an absolute minimum I have to click through to each webapp. Once I do, I couldnt imagine properly evaluating the webapp without spending at least 30 seconds looking at the homepage. Lets be generous and say I need 10 seconds to orient myself and account for page load times, and 30 seconds to look at each entry. That totals three and a half hours of my, yknow, infinitely valuable time. In which I could be finding a cure for cancer, or clicking on LOLcats. I still felt guilty about only allocating half a minute per entry; is it fair to the contestants if I make my decision based on 30 seconds of scanning their landing page and maybe a few desultory clicks? But then I had an epiphany: yes, deciding in 30 seconds is totally completely unfair, but thats also exactly how it works in the real world. Users are going to click through to your web site, look at it for maybe 30 seconds, and either decide that its worthy, or reach for the almighty back button on their browser and bug out. Thirty seconds might even be a bit generous. In one Canadian study, users made up their mind about websites in under a second. Researchers led by Dr. Gitte Lindgaard at Carleton University in Ontario wanted to find out how fast people formed first impressions. They tested users by flashing web pages for 500 millseconds and 50 milliseconds onto the screen, and had participants rate the pages on various scales. The results at both time intervals were consistent between participants, although the longer display produced more consistent results. Yet, in as little as 50 milliseconds, participants formed judgments about images they glimpsed. The "halo effect" of that emotional first impression carries over to cognitive judgments of a web sites other characteristics including usability and credibility. The opportunity cost to switch websites is one tiny little click of the mouse or tap of the finger. What I learned from judging the Rails Rumble most of all is that your websites front page needs to be kind of awesome. It is never the complete story, of course, but do not squander your first opportunity to make an impression on a visitor. It may be the only one you get. Im not sure I was learning much about these apps while I judged, and for that I am truly sorry. But along the way I accidentally learned a heck of a lot about what makes a great front page for a web application. So Id like to share that with you, and all future Rails Rumble entrants: Load reasonably fast. Ive talked about performance as a feature before; the sooner the front page of your site loads, the sooner I can decide whether or not I am interested. If you are slow, I will resent you for being slow, and the slower you are the more I will resent you for keeping me from not just finding out about you but also keeping me from moving on to the next thing. I need to be an efficient informavore. That means moving quickly. Above all else, load fast. What the %#!@^ is this thing? The first challenge you have is not coding your app. It is explaining what problem your app solves, and why anyone in the world would possibly care about that. You need an elevator pitch on your front page: can you explain to a complete stranger, in 30 seconds, why your application exists? Yes, writing succinctly and clearly is an art, but keep pounding on that copy, keep explaining it over and over and over until you have your explanation polished to the fine sheen of a diamond. When youre confident you could walk up to any random person on the street, strike up a conversation about what youre working on, and not have their eyes gloss over in boredom and/or fear – thats when youre ready. Thats the text you want on your home page. Show me an example. OK, so youre building the ultimate tool for cataloging and sharing Beanie Babies on Facebook. Awesome, let me be an angel investor in your project so I can get me a piece of those sweet, sweet future billions. The idea is sound. But everyone knows that ideas are worthless, whereas execution is everything. I have no clue what the execution of your idea is unless you show it to me. At the very least throw up some screenshots of what it would look like if I used your webapp, with some juicy real world examples. And please, please, please, for the love of God please, do not make me sign up, click through a video, watch a slideshow, or any of that nonsense. Only emperors and princes have that kind of time, man. Show, dont tell. Give me a clear, barrier-free call to action. In the rare cases where the app passes the above three tests with flying colors, Im invested: I am now willing to spend even more of my time checking it out. What do I do next? Where do I go? Your job is to make this easy for me. I call this "the put a big-ass giant obvious fluorescent lime green button on your home page" rule. You can have more than one, but Id draw the line at two. And make the text on the button descriptive, like Start sharing your favorite Beanie Babies ? or Build your dream furry costume ?. If you require login at this point, I strongly urge you to skip that barrier and have a live sample I can view without logging in at all, just to get a taste of how things might work. If youre really, really slick you will make it seamless to go from an unregistered to a registered state without losing anything Ive done. Embrace your audience, even if it means excluding other audiences. Even if you nail all the above, you might not fit into my interest zone through absolutely no fault of your own. If you built the worlds most innovative and utterly disruptive Web 5.0 Pokédex, theres a lot of people who wont care one iota about it, because theyre not really into Pokemon. This is not your fault and it is certainly not their fault. You need to embrace the idea that half of all success is knowing your core audience and not trying to water it down so much that it appeals to "everyone". Dont patronize me by trying to sell me on the idea that everyone should care about babies, or invoicing, or sports, or being a student, or whatever. Only the people who need to care will care, and thats who you are talking to. So have the confidence to act like it. I realize that Rails Rumble apps only have a mere 48 hours to build an entire app from scratch. I am not expecting a super professional amazing home page on every one of the entries, nor did I judge it that way. But I do know that a basic sketch of a homepage design is the first thing you should work on in any webapp, because it serves as the essential starting design document and vision statement. Unless you start with a basic homepage that meets the above 5 rules, your app wont survive most judges, much less the herds of informavores running wild on the Internet. [advertisement] Hiring developers? Post your open positions with Stack Overflow Careers and reach over 20MM awesome devs already on Stack Overflow. Create your satisfaction-guaranteed job listing today!
http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/2012/10/judging-websites.html



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The Future of Markdown

Markdown is a simple little humane markup language based on time-tested plain text conventions from the last 40 years of computing. Meaning, if you enter this… …you get this! Lightweight Markup Languages============================According to **Wikipedia**:> A [lightweight markup language](http://is.gd/gns)is a markup language with a simple syntax, designed to be easy for a human to enter with a simple text editor, and easy to read in its raw form. Some examples are:* Markdown* Textile* BBCode* WikipediaMarkup should also extend to _code_: 10 PRINT "I ROCK AT BASIC!" 20 GOTO 10 Lightweight Markup Languages According to Wikipedia: A lightweight markup language is a markup language with a simple syntax, designed to be easy for a human to enter with a simple text editor, and easy to read in its raw form. Some examples are: Markdown Textile BBCode Wikipedia Markup should also extend to code: 10 PRINT "I ROCK AT BASIC!"20 GOTO 10 You can think of Markdown as a radically simplified and far more human readable form of HTML. I have grown to love Markdown over the last few years. If youre a programmer of any shape, size, or color, you cant really avoid using Markdown, as its central to both GitHub and Stack Overflow. For that matter, my new project uses Markdown, too. Markdown is a wonderful tool, but it does suffer a bit from lack of project leadership. The so-called "spec" is anything but, and there are dozens of different flavors of Markdown out there, all with differences in the way they behave. While they are broadly compatible, Stack Overflow and GitHub have both tweaked Markdown in ways that can trip you up if youre familiar with one but not the other; compare GitHub Flavor with Stack Overflow Flavor. Thats why I was so excited to get this email from David Greenspan a few days ago: Im the creator of EtherPad (a collaborative WYSIWYG editor), now working at Meteor. At Meteor, were trying to "pave the web" for developers by writing better components. For example, we just released universal login buttons that talk over WebSockets and are wired into the users table of the apps database. Since Markdown is increasingly ubiquitous for writing content, its going to be part of the Meteor toolchain. I wouldnt be surprised if we end up releasing a component like Stack Overflows editor, with the full "Meteor" standard of code quality, so that no one has to roll their own again. Today, we use Markdown in our API docs generation, and were going to be writing more and more content in it -- which is a scary thought. I think you and I share some concern (horror?) about Markdowns lack of spec and tests. The code is ugly to boot. Extending or customizing Markdown is tricky (we already have some hacks and they are terrible), and I worry about "bit rot" of content if the format doesnt have a spec. Im evaluating the possibility of starting over with a new implementation coupled with a real spec and test suite, and Ive been thinking a lot about how to parse a language like Markdown in a principled way. Im pretty fearless about parsers, by the way; I wrote a full ECMAScript parser in a week as a side project. I want this new language – working name "Rockdown" – to be seen as Markdown with a spec, and therefore only deviate from Markdowns behavior in unobtrusive ways. It should basically be a replacement that paves over the problems and ambiguities in Markdown. Im trying to draw a line between what behavior is important to preserve and what behavior isnt. I was excited because, like David, I freaking love Markdown. I love it so much that I want to see it succeed and flourish over the next 20 years. I believe the best way to achive that goal is for the most popular sites using Markdown to band together and take ownership of Markdown as a standard. I propose that Stack Exchange, GitHub, Meteor, Reddit, and any other company with lots of traffic and a strategic investment in Markdown, all work together to come up with an official Markdown specification, and standard test suites to validate Markdown implementations. Weve all been working at cross purposes for too long, accidentally fragmenting Markdown while popularizing it. Like any dutiful and well-meaning suitor, we first need to ask permission for this courtship from the parents. So Im asking you, John Gruber: as the original creator of Markdown, will you bless this endeavor? Also, as a totally unreleated aside, have I mentioned what a huge Yankees fan I am? Derek Jeter is one of the all-time greats. I realize that the devil is in the details, but for the most part what I want to see in a Markdown Standard is this: A standardization of the existing core Markdown conventions, as documented by John Gruber, in a formal language specification. Make the three most common real world usage "gotchas" in Markdown choices with saner defaults: intra-word emphasis (off), auto-hyperlinking (on), automatic return-based linebreaks (on). A formal set of tests anyone can use to validate a Markdown implementation. Some cleanup and tweaks for ambiguous edge cases that exist in Markdown due to the lack of a formal specification. A registry of known flavor variants, with some possible future lobbying to potentially add only the most widely and strongly supported variants (I am thinking of the GitHub style code blocks which are quite nice) to future versions of Markdown. And thats it, really. I dont want to extend Markdown by adding tons of crazy new functionality, or radically change the way it currently works, or anything like that. Id be opposed to such changes. I just want to solidify and standardize the simple, useful version of Markdown that is working so well for everyone right now. I want there to be an unambiguous, basic standard that everyone using Markdown can expect to work in the same way across all web sites in the world when they begin typing. Id really prefer not to fork the language; Id much rather collectively help carry the banner of Markdown forward into the future, with the blessing of John Gruber and in collaboration with other popular sites that use Markdown. So … whos with me? [advertisement] Stack Overflow Careers matches the best developers (you!) with the best employers. You can search our job listings or create a profile and even let employers find you.
http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/2012/10/the-future-of-markdown.html



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Do You Wanna Touch

Traditional laptops may have reached an evolutionary dead-end (or, more charitably, a plateau), but it is an amazing time for things that … arent quite traditional laptops. The Nexus 7 is excellent, the Nexus 10 looks fantastic, I cant wait to get my hands on the twice-as-fast iPad 4, the new Chromebooks are finally decent and priced right, and then theres the Microsoft Surface RT. In short, it is a fantastic time to be a computer nerd. I love computers, always have, always will. My strategy with new computing devices is simple: I buy em all, then try living with them. The devices that fall away from me over time – the ones that gather dust, or that I forget about – are the ones I eventually get rid of. So long, Kindle Fire! I knew that the Nexus 7 was really working for me when I gave mine to my father as a spontaneous gift while he was visiting, then missed it sorely when waiting for the replacement to arrive. As I use these devices, Ive grown more and more sold on the idea that touch is going to dominate the next era of computing. This reductionism is inevitable and part of the natural evolution of computers. Remove the mouse. Remove the keyboard. Remove the monitor. Reducing a computer to its absolute minumum leads us inexorably, inevitably to the tablet (or, if a bit smaller, the phone). All youre left with is a flat, featureless slate that invites you to touch it. Welcome to the future, heres your … rectangle. Ive stopped thinking of touch as some exotic, add-in technology contained in specialized devices. I belatedly realized that I love to touch computers. And why not? We constantly point and gesture at everything in our lives, including our screens. Its completely natural to want to interact with computers by touching them. Thats why the more unfortunate among us have displays covered in filthy fingerprints. Although I love my touch devices, one thing Ive noticed is that they are a major disincentive to writing actual paragraphs. On screen keyboards get the job done, but if I have to scrawl more than a Twitter length reply to someone on a tablet or phone, its so much effort that I just avoid doing it altogether, postponing indefinitely until I can be in front of a keyboard. By the time that happens Ive probably forgotten what I wanted to say in the first place, or that I even needed to reply at all. Multiply that by millions or billions, and you have a whole generation technologically locked into a backwater of minimal communication. Yelp, for example, does not allow posting reviews from their mobile app because when they did, all they got was LOL OMG raspberry poop Emoji. Its not good. In fact, its a little scary. I realize that there are plenty of ways of creating content that dont involve writing, but writing is pretty damn fundamental to communication and civilization as we know it. Anything that adds a significant barrier to the act of placing words on a page is kind of dangerous – and a major regression from the world where every computer had a keyboard in front of it, inviting people to write and communicate with each other. So the idea that billions of people in the future will be staring at touchscreen computers, Instagramming and fingerpainting their thoughts to each other, leaves me with deeply mixed feelings. As Joey Hess said: If it doesnt have a keyboard, I feel that my thoughts are being forced out through a straw. When I pre-ordered the Microsoft Surface RT, I wasnt expecting much. This is a version one device from a company that has never built a computer before, running a brand new and controversial operating system. On paper, it doesnt seem like a significant change from all the other tablets on the market, and its primary differentiating feature – the touch keyboard – can be viewed as merely flipping a regular laptop over, so the "fat" side is on the display rather than the keyboard. Surface is just like the first iPad in that it has all the flaws and rough edges youd expect in a version one device. But it is also like the first iPad in that there is undeniably the core of something revelatory and transformative here – a vision of the future of computing that doesnt sacrifice either keyboard or touch. Reviewers think Surface is intended to be a tablet killer, but it isnt. Its a laptop killer. After living with the Surface RT for a few days now, Im convinced that this form factor is the replacement and way forward for the stagnant laptop. I cant even remember the last time I was this excited about a computer. The more I use it, the more I think that touch plus keyboard is the future of all laptops. How wonderful it is to flip open the Surface and quickly type a 4 paragraph email response when I need to. How wonderful it is to browse the web and touch whatever I want to. And switching between the two modes of interaction – sometimes typing, sometimes touching – is completely natural. Remember when I talked about two-fisted computing, referring to the mouse and keyboard working in harmony? With Surface, I found that also applies to touch. In spades. This isnt a review, per se, but let me get into a few specifics: Yes, it is ridiculous that the keyboard cover is not included in the base Surface, as the near-perfect integration of keyboard with touch is the whole story here. Dont even consider buying a Surface without the touch keyboard cover. Within an hour or so I was hitting 80% of my regular typing speed on it, and its firm enough to be used on a lap without too much loss of accuracy. Astonishingly, the tiny fabric touchpad is quite good, better than the ones Ive used on many laptops. Which probably says more about the sad state of the PC ecosystem than it does about Surface, but still. Yeah, yeah, it doesnt run x86 apps. So your beloved copy of Windows Landscape Designer 1998 wont run on Surface RT. Youll need to wait a few months for Surface Pro to do that, but youll pay the Intel Premium™ in price, battery life, and size. Rumor has it that Intel will get their act together with Haswell, and finally be competitive with ARM in price, performance, and power consumption, but Ill believe that when I see it. The hardware design is beyond reproach; Id even argue its better than Apple quality hardware design. Unless youre required by God to hate all things touched by Microsoft, Theres no way you could handle a Surface and not think that this is a genuinely well made thing. The default Surface mail application is an embarrassment and everyone associated with it should be fired. Android and iOS both have decent default mail apps, as well they should, because email is bedrock. Not having this right really hurts. If Microsoft doesnt get their A Team "hey dummies, all you have to do is just copy Sparrow already" team on that soon, theyll be sorry. Many of the native applications currently available run poorly on Surface RT due to lack of optimization and testing for the ARM platform versus x86. Probably not terribly different from the iPad 1 on launch day, but it remains to be seen how quickly that will get resolved. The web browser is stellar and a model of how the Internet should work on a tablet. You are almost always in fullscreen mode, swiping around with nothing but content on your screen, the way it should be. However, back button performance is bizarrely slow, and the way IE10 handles web hovers is poor, much worse than Mobile Safari and Chrome. Try upvoting a comment on Stack Overflow to see what I mean. Notice how the 2010 iPad 1 is already obsolete? Expect the same thing with the Surface RT. Its a fascinating glimpse into the future, but itll be totally utterly obsolete in 2 years. Do not buy this device expecting longevity. Buy it because you want to see tomorrow today. The received wisdom about touchscreen interaction with computers was that it didnt work. That youd get "gorilla arm". Thats why we had to have special tablet devices. But Surface proves thats not true; typing and touching are spectacularly compatible, at least for laptops. And Im beginning to wonder about my desktop a little, because lately Im starting to I think I wanna touch that, too. [advertisement] How are you showing off your awesome? Create a Stack Overflow Careers profile and show off all of your hard work from Stack Overflow, Github, and virtually every other coding site. Who knows, you might even get recruited for a great new position!
http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/2012/11/do-you-wanna-touch.html



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Chrome 123 to Replace GoogleUpdate.exe with New Updater.exe Tool

SUMMARY: Chrome 123.0 and later versions will use a new version of Google Update tool. The previous GoogleUpdate.exe will be replaced with n...