Mar
16
2009
Jani Pirkola writes to tell us that Green Phosphor’s new project “Glasshouse” allows users to take database queries or spreadsheets and create 3D representations in a virtual world. Man what I wouldn’t give to mash my level 80 death knight up with some of the ugly joins I have run across in the past. “Users can see data, and drill into it; re-sort it; explore it interactively – all from within a virtual world. Glasshouse produces graphs which are avatars of the data itself. We’ve tailored the system for the use of biotech companies, specifically for drug discovery and development. Dr. David Resuehr, a molecular biologist, recently joined Green Phosphor as our Chief Scientist.”

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Comments Off on DB Query Becomes Browseable In Virtual World | tags: database, developer, google | posted in technical news
Mar
16
2009
stoolpigeon writes “Web applications are all the rage. Web applications that function within the context of social networking sites doubly so. I think it is safe to say that pretty much anyone looking to garner a large audience on the web, for financial or any other reasons, has to be considering how they can reach people on sites like Facebook, or all those users out there accessing the web via their iPhones. Sun Microsystems has entered this arena by providing a set of web based development tools and a platform on which to host the resulting products that is now in beta and named Zembly. And while Zembly has not been open to the public for all that long, two of Zemblys architects with the help of two writers have published a new cookbook for the aspiring Zembly developer, Assemble the Social Web with Zembly.” Read below for the rest of JR’s review.

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Comments Off on Assemble the Social Web with Zembly | tags: developer, facebook, google, iphone, network, networking, Phone, web | posted in technical news
Mar
16
2009
jammag writes “Most developers have worked with a dude like Josh, who’s so brilliant the management fawns over him even as he takes a dump in the lobby flowerpot. Eric Spiegel tells of one such Josh, who wears T-shirts with offensive slogans, insults female co-workers and, when asked about documentation, smirks, “What documentation?’ Sure, he was whipsmart and could churn out code that saved the company millions, but can we please stop enabling these people?”

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Comments Off on Are Quirky Developers Brilliant Or Dangerous? | tags: developer, google | posted in technical news
Mar
15
2009
SpuriousLogic writes “I work as a senior software engineer, and a fair amount of my time is spent interviewing new developers. I have seen a growing trend of what I would call ‘TV reality’ college graduates — kids who graduated school in the last few years and seem to have a view of the workplace that is very much fashioned by TV programs, where 22-year-olds lead billion-dollar corporate mergers in Paris and jet around the world. Several years ago I worked at a company that did customization for the software they sold. It was not full-on consultant work, but some aspects of it were ‘consulting light,’ and did involve travel, some overseas. Almost every college graduate I interviewed fully expected to be sent overseas on their first assignment. They were very disappointed when told they were most likely to end up in places like Decater, IL and Cedar Rapids, IA, as only the most senior people fly overseas, because of the cost. Additionally, I see people in this age bracket expecting almost constant rewards. One new hire told me that he thought he had a good chance at an award because he had taught himself Enterprise Java Beans. When told that learning new tech is an expected part of being a developer, he argued that he had learned it by himself, and that made it different. So today I see an article about the growing narcissism of students, and I want to ask this community: are you seeing the sorts of ‘crashing down to Earth’ expectations of college grads described here? Is working with this age bracket more challenging than others? Do they produce work that is above or below your expectations of a recent college grad?” We discussed a similar question from the point of view of the young employees a few months back.

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Comments Off on Narcissistic College Graduates In the Workplace? | tags: developer, google, news, program, tv | posted in technical news
Mar
15
2009
volume4 writes “The switch has been flipped and Jaiku has been moved to App Engine. Google will no longer be developing Jaiku, so the code and the future of Jaiku is in the hands of the open source community. From the Jaiku blog: ‘Today, we are open sourcing the Jaiku code base under the Apache License 2.0. The code is available as JaikuEngine on Google Code Project Hosting as of now. Anyone can set up and run their own JaikuEngine instance on Google App Engine.'” We discussed Google’s purchase of Jaiku in 2007, and their subsequent decision to halt development a few months ago.

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Comments Off on JaikuEngine Gets Open Sourced | tags: developer, google, open source | posted in technical news
Mar
14
2009
Apple on Thursday evening made available to its developer community yet another pre-release of Mac OS X 10.5.7, which stands to be the seventh maintenance and security update to the company’s Leopard Operating system in less than 18 months.
Comments Off on Over 80 bug fixes due in Mac OS X 10.5.7 "Juno" | tags: Apple, developer, Mac, security | posted in technical news
Mar
14
2009
Observer writes “Bugs in software are nothing new, but when they’re discussed in the open, how do open source projects adapt policy? A major regression in the Gnome project’s session manager has seen some major distributions choose to refuse to follow the update rather than drop a major feature. Between Gnome’s public bug tracker and similar trackers from distributions which released (and still distribute) the buggy version, months of debate provide an interesting case-study in the way front-line users and developers interact for better or for worse. What lessons can be learned here for release planning, bug triage, and marketing for a major open source project?”

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Comments Off on Public Bug Tracking and Open-Source Policy | tags: developer, google, open source | posted in technical news
Mar
14
2009
Kelson writes “As the release of Internet Explorer 8 approaches, Microsoft’s IE Team has published a list of differences between IE7 and IE8, and how to fix code so that it will work on both. Most of the page focuses on IE8 Standards mode, but it also turns out that IE7 compatibility mode isn’t quite the same as IE7 itself.”

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Comments Off on Site Compatibility and IE8 | tags: developer, google, microsoft, tv | posted in technical news
Mar
14
2009
As Apple gets ready to preview its new software developers’ kit and an updated iPhone operating system next week, there could be some changes to the company’s App Store too.
Comments Off on Rumor: iPhone to Get a Premium App Store | Gadget Lab from W | tags: Apple, developer, iphone, Phone | posted in technical news
Mar
13
2009
An anonymous reader writes “Following the long-awaited release of FFmpeg 0.5, Phoronix has conducted an interview with three FFmpeg developers (Diego Biurrun, Baptiste Coudurier, and Robert Swain) about this project’s recent release. In this interview they talk about moving to a 3/6-month release cycle, the criteria for version 1.0, Blu-Ray support on Linux, OpenCL and GPGPU acceleration, multi-threading FFmpeg, video APIs, their own video codecs, and legal challenges they have run into.”

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Comments Off on An Interview With the Developers of FFmpeg | tags: developer, google, linux, tv | posted in technical news