Small Mosaic


Categories:

/books
/career
/codinghorrors
/events
/geekstuff
/justdont
/languages
/languages/bash
/linkshot
/magazines
/meta
/misctech
/movies
/nottech
/operatingsystems
/operatingsystems/linux
/operatingsystems/linux/debian
/operatingsystems/solaris
/perl
/presentations
/programming
/python
/ruby
/security
/security/apache
/security/tools
/serversmells
/services
/services/dns
/sites
/specifications
/sysadmin
/testing
/tools
/tools/commandline
/tools/firefox
/tools/gui
/tools/network
/tools/online
/tools/online/greasemonkey
/tools/puppet
/unixdaemon

Archives:

July 20111
June 20112
May 20113
April 20112
March 20117
January 20111
December 20103
November 20103
August 20101
July 20101
June 20104
May 20102
April 20101
March 20108
February 20101
January 20102
Full Archives

Sun, 20 Mar 2005

Danger - Quicksand -- Short Review
I stumbled on to the site for Danger - Quicksand - Have A Nice Day through one of the other blogs I read and after reading the first couple of pages was sucked in.

The book doesn't cover anything really ground breaking but where it caught me was pointing out scenarios that I've been in and showing that I'm not the insane one for thinking they were odd or out of place. The author then tries to point out some of the available options. It's not a life changing book (well, not for me as I've lived through a lot of the topics it covers) but it is an interesting read; and there is a free pdf version for you to sample use to get your friends to buy a full paperback copy.

Like this post? - Digg Me! | Add to del.icio.us! | reddit this!

Posted: 2005/03/20 23:57 | /books | Permanent link to this entry | This entry and same date


Clearing the In-tray
Between being ill, attending FOSDEM, putting a GLLUG on, actually reviewing my review copies of books and a couple of other bits I can't yet mention, the things requiring my attention have been not-so-slowly piling up. I've taken a large chunk of this weekend to clear down the multiple mail boxes, RSS feeds and saved book-marks that I was supposed to read weeks ago.

One thing I have noticed is how much more productive I am when using client-side tools I can customise. I've stopped using rojo.com as my RSS aggregator of choice as I can't easily hack it to add filters, grep through the feeds etc. I'm in a similar position when reading mail. I read most of my mail using mutt (with a customised vim as the editor) and I can clear mails an order of magnitude faster than I can when reading and replying through gmail. I'm not against webapps but I need more access to them than they currently give me.

Like this post? - Digg Me! | Add to del.icio.us! | reddit this!

Posted: 2005/03/20 17:25 | /geekstuff | Permanent link to this entry | This entry and same date


books career codinghorrors events geekstuff justdont magazines meta misctech movies nottech operatingsystems/linux operatingsystems/linux/debian operatingsystems/solaris perl programming python ruby security security/apache security/tools serversmells services/dns sites sysadmin testing tools tools/commandline tools/firefox tools/gui tools/network tools/online tools/online/greasemonkey tools/puppet unixdaemon

Copyright © 2000-2010 Dean Wilson XML feed logo