It was very interesting listening to the Overload session recording from ITConversations.
Unfortunately, there are no transcripts of the recording available. Having to listen to the record second time just to pick up points worth of commenting on is somewhat annoying.
One thing however I do want to say. Robert Scoble was the moderator, due to his 1000-blogs-a-day reading routine. Unfortunately, he did not contribute enough of his own methods to provide the enlightment.
David Rupp writes - eloquently - that he does not understand why people are reluctant to use software that auto-generates code (e.g. Hibernate and AOP/AspectJ).
He is of course right. Code generation on the fly is in exactly the same league as JSPs, EJBs and dynamic proxies in terms of how the code one writes does not corresponds to the code that actually runs.
But he is also wrong. What we have here is not a Good/Bad breakdown, but rather a spectrum.
It looks like search is starting to gain momentum, both desktop and service based. In the last couple of weeks, we had:
Desktop Search Google Desktop renewed interest in Lookout (Lucene .Net based) nascent Lucene Desktop is generating a lot of interest, though it is hard to say how it will deferentiate itself from Zilverline And many more. See comparison on FileHand’s pages Web based search miniapps JarHoo will help you to locate a Jar where a class is defined
Guillaume Laforge writes about the ‘New Author’ treatment.
I hope he will continue writing about Life as an O’Reilly Author.
I also wish somebody with a different publisher would write about their experiences.
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Lara D’Abreo decided to classify developers according to their attitude to Java Frameworks.
I feel I can claim to be Pragmatic, but the truth will most probably reveal at least some of Oblivious. I also seem to remember Dogmatic period of my career, but I have (hopefully) overgrown it a while ago.
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