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  • Rotor v2 book draft available

    As Joel points out , we've made a draft of the SSCLI 2.0 Internals book available for download (via his blog). Rather than tell you all about the book, which Joel summarizes quite well, instead I thought I'd tell you about the process by which the book came to be. Editor's note: if you have no interest in the process by which a book can get done, skip the rest of this blog entry. One thing that readers will note that's different about this version of "the Rotor book" is that it's not being done through
    Posted to WCF Community Bloggers (Weblog) by Anonymous on August 20, 2008
    Filed under: .NET, Java/J2EE, Ruby, C++, Windows, Languages, Parrot, LLVM, F#
  • From the "Gosh, You Wanted Me to Quote You?" Department...

    This comment deserves response: First of all, if you're quoting my post, blocking out my name, and attacking me behind my back by calling me "our intrepid troll", you could have shown the decency of linking back to my original post. Here it is, for those interested in the real discussion: http://www.agilesoftwaredevelopment.com/blog/jurgenappelo/professionalism-knowledge-first Well, frankly, I didn't get your post from your blog, I got it from an email 'zine (as indicated by the comment "This crossed
    Posted to WCF Community Bloggers (Weblog) by Anonymous on July 25, 2008
    Filed under: .NET, Java/J2EE, Conferences, Ruby, XML Services, C++, Development Processes, Windows, Languages, Mac OS, Parrot, LLVM, F#, Visual Basic
  • From the "You Must Be Trolling for Hits" Department...

    Recently this little gem crossed my Inbox.... Professionalism = Knowledge First, Experience Last By J----- A----- Do you trust a doctor with diagnosing your mental problems if the doctor tells you he's got 20 years of experience? Do you still trust that doctor when he picks up his tools, and asks you to prepare for a lobotomy? Would you still be impressed if the doctor had 20 years of experience in carrying out lobotomies? I am always skeptic when people tell me they have X years of experience in
    Posted to WCF Community Bloggers (Weblog) by Anonymous on July 24, 2008
    Filed under: .NET, Java/J2EE, Ruby, XML Services, C++, Development Processes, Windows, Languages, Mac OS, Parrot, LLVM, F#, Visual Basic
  • Polyglot Plurality

    The Pragmatic Programmer says, "Learn a new language every year". This is great advice, not just because it puts new tools into your mental toolbox that you can pull out on various occasions to get a job done, but also because it opens your mind to new ideas and new concepts that will filter their way into your code even without explicit language support. For example, suppose you've looked at (J/Iron)Ruby or Groovy, and come to like the "internal iterator" approach as a way of simplifying moving
    Posted to WCF Community Bloggers (Weblog) by Anonymous on July 2, 2008
    Filed under: .NET, Java/J2EE, Ruby, C++, Windows, Languages, Flash, Mac OS, Parrot, LLVM, F#, Visual Basic
  • Guide you, the Force should

    Steve Yegge posted the transcript from a talk on dynamic languages that he gave at Stanford. Cedric Beust posted a response to Steve's talk, espousing statically-typed languages. Numerous comments and flamewars erupted, not to mention a Star Wars analogy (which always makes things more fun). This is my feeble attempt to play galactic peacemaker. Or at least galactic color commentary and play-by-play. I have no doubts about its efficacy, and that it will only fan the flames, for that's how these things
    Posted to WCF Community Bloggers (Weblog) by Anonymous on May 19, 2008
    Filed under: .NET, Java/J2EE, Ruby, XML Services, C++, Windows, Languages, Mac OS, Parrot, LLVM, F#, Visual Basic
  • I'm Pro-Choice... Pro Programmer Choice, that is

    Not too long ago, Don wrote : The three most “personal” choices a developer makes are language, tool, and OS. No. That may be true for somebody who works for a large commercial or open source vendor, whose team is building something that fits into one of those three categories and wants to see that language/tool/OS succeed. That is not where most of us live. If you do, certainly, you are welcome to your opinion, but please accept with good grace that your agenda is not the same as my own. Most of
    Posted to WCF Community Bloggers (Weblog) by Anonymous on May 11, 2008
    Filed under: Mac OS, Windows, XML Services, .NET, F#, Flash, Solaris, Visual Basic, VMWare, Parrot, Java/J2EE, Languages, LLVM, Ruby, C++
  • Thinking in Language

    A couple of folks have taken me to task over some of the things I said... or didn't say... in my last blog piece. So, in no particular order, let's discuss. A few commented on how I left out commentary on language X, Y or Z. That wasn't an accidental slip or surge of forgetfulness, but I didn't want to rattle off a laundry list of every language I've run across or am exploring, since that list would be much, much longer and arguably of little to no additional benefit. Having said that, though, a
    Posted to WCF Community Bloggers (Weblog) by Anonymous on May 9, 2008
    Filed under: Windows, .NET, Parrot, Java/J2EE, Languages, LLVM
  • The Complexities of Black Boxes

    Kohsuke Kawagachi has posted a blog entry describing how to watch the assembly code get generated by the JVM during execution, using a non-product (debug or fastdebug) build of Hotspot and the -XX:+PrintOptoAssembly flag, a trick he says he learned while at TheServerSide Java Symposium a few weeks ago in Vegas. He goes on to do some analysis of the generated assembly instructions, offering up some interesting insights into the JVM's inner workings. There's only one problem with this: the flag doesn't
    Posted to WCF Community Bloggers (Weblog) by Anonymous on April 6, 2008
    Filed under: .NET, Java/J2EE, Ruby, Parrot, LLVM
  • Rules for Review

    Apparently, I'm drawing enough of an audience through this blog that various folks have started to send me press releases and notifications and requests for... well, I dunno exactly, but I'm assuming some blogging love of some kind. I'm always a little leery about that particular subject, because it always has this dangerous potential to turn the blog into a less-credible marketing device, but people at conferences have suggested that they really are interested in what I think about various products
    Posted to WCF Community Bloggers (Weblog) by Anonymous on March 28, 2008
    Filed under: .NET, Java/J2EE, Ruby, Security, Reading, XML Services, C++, Windows, Languages, Flash, Mac OS, Solaris, VMWare, Parrot, LLVM, Review
  • Reminder

    A couple of people have asked me over the last few weeks, so it's probably worth saying out loud: No, I don't work for a large company, so yes, I'm available for consulting and research projects. If you've got one of those burning questions like, "How would our company/project/department/whatever make use of JRuby-and-Rails, and what would the impact to the rest of the system be", or "Could using F# help us write applications faster", or "How would we best integrate Groovy into our application",
    Posted to WCF Community Bloggers (Weblog) by Anonymous on March 22, 2008
    Filed under: .NET, Java/J2EE, Conferences, Ruby, Security, Reading, XML Services, C++, Development Processes, Windows, Languages, Flash, Mac OS, Solaris, VMWare, Parrot, LLVM
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