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August 6, 2008

Free Advice - Worth Every Penny

Filed under: Books, KDS, Coding — Jake @ 4:47 pm

I talked to my friend Scott for the first time in a long time yesterday.  He and I were like brothers growing up and share like and dislike, almost without exception.  The one major difference between us would probably be our chosen paths.  While he went the photography route (the roundabout way through several stops) I went the web programming route (also the roundabout way).

imageThe most common questions I get asked by people who are really interested in what I do is ‘what are you using to build your websites with’ and ‘what javascript framework  do you use?’  It was in explaining my choices to Scott that I felt like it would be worth explaining them to the world (potential clients may be curious).

The lesser of the two questions is what I’m using to build websites.  The desktop application I’m using is Adobe Dreamweaver but I’m really only using that for the code collapsing, snippets and site organization.  My foundation of choice is WordPress.  I’ve found it to be almost infinitely customizable and flexible enough to cover just about any project.  I found Joomla too big and hit WordPress next.  I’d love to give Drupal a try but I have a strong belief that being really strong with one tool makes you more marketable than being slightly experienced with several.  I have not met a site that WordPress didn’t like.  (But just because WordPress is in my ‘lesser’ category, don’t be fooled into thinking it’s not important.  WordPress is amazing.  It’s only lesser because it’s so easy to use and largely unnoticed by site visitors.)

The bigger impact tool I’m using right now is a javascript framework called MooTools.  Scott had never heard of MooTools and I guess this is where the line between web surfer extraordinaire and web programmer is drawn.  A surfer may know which blogging tool or BB platform he’s looking at but he’s unlikely to know which javascript framework is in use.

MooTools isn’t for javascript n00bs.  You have to be fairly comfortable with coding in general but also with CSS and the DOM.  Once you’re pretty good with those, stepping into MooTools is heaven.  Once I started working with MooTools I realized that there really wasn’t a single thing I couldn’t do with a web page.  It’s that powerful.

Once you’ve decided that MooTools is interesting and deserves looking into further, have a look at Aaron Newton’s Clientside.  All of the things you want to do on a daily basis with MooTools are covered.  Man, it’s almost all done for you!  Aaron’s got a book coming out in August and I can’t wait to get my hands on it.

I used to rely pretty heavily on the official MooTools forum which was shut down when version 1.2 of the framework was released.  I don’t lean quite as heavily on the community now but I invite everyone struggling with a MooTools script to try the unofficial forum at http://mooforum.net.  I cruise it quite often and try to help where I can.  My handle there is Lweel8 (it’s a bumper stumper for my punctuality when it comes to sporting events).

Best of luck to everyone out there.  I hope to see you in the forum.

July 21, 2008

Another Book to Make You Hug Your Kid

Filed under: Books, Family, Movies, Mind Omelettes — Jake @ 3:56 pm

As if you needed an excuse.

My boss is really into post-apocalyptic movies and books.  If it’s dark and dreary (or has vampires in it) he loves it.  He recommended that I read Cormac McCarthy’s The Road a long time ago but it wasn’t until I saw the movie No Country For Old Men (based on a McCarthy novel) that I decided to pick it up.  I hate seeing a great movie knowing I could have read the book first.

You see, the movie The Road comes out this fall.  I know it will be good because it stars Viggo Mortensen, and he doesn’t make crap.  I’ve tried to steer clear of any spoilers because I’m now reading the book but what I do know is the general story.  It is, of course, a post-apocalyptic story about a man and his son heading south to avoid the freezing cold of the coming winter.  From what I’ve read in the first 25 pages, the event occurred several years ago and the man has survived much longer than most.

The book very quickly goes from dismal to scary.  On page 5 is a phrase that so closely aligns with how I feel about my kids that I wish I’d written it.  The man is watching over his son while he sleeps and he says, “If he is not the not the word of God God never spoke.”  At this point I was very in touch with the man and thought how much we are alike.  I put the book down for a break when the man asks himself on page 29, “Can you do it?  When the time comes?  Can you?”  Clearly this is not the world I live in.  The thought of saving your child from unspeakable horrors by ending his life - that deserves a break.

It’s another one of those, “what would you do in the same situation” type of books that I love and love to talk about.  Feel free to leave me your impressions of The Road.  I promise not to read them until I’ve finished the book (which will likely be very, very soon at the rate I’m reading it).

Update:
Finished the book in one  day - a new record for me!  I do recommend it but it is not for the faint of heart.  Very emotional for fathers of young kids anywhere.  The large print and style of writing makes for a nice quick read - you could probably get through the whole thing in one transatlantic flight…

June 11, 2008

Poor Eddie Willers

Filed under: Books, Movies, Mind Omelettes — Jake @ 11:27 am

I picked up a copy of Atlas Shrugged at a book swap for 25 cents.  The paperback was old enough that the price on the cover said 95 cents.  I thought I had heard of the title before and there was a faint Spideysense tingling that it was important.  I started to read it an knew immediately that it was something I would remember forever.

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