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Tags Are Utopian, Search Is Reality

Published on September 9th, 2011 18 Comments

I’m having a spirited debate about tagging with Matthias Müller-Prove (@mprove) on OraTweet, and I thought it would be interesting to open it up to long format and other viewpoints. Plus, we’re flooding OraTweet, which I’m not sure people appreciate. Setting the Stage I like tags. They’re quite valuable and provide an easy way to [...]

Anthony’s Last Day

Published on September 9th, 2011 5 Comments

Editorial note: This post is by Anthony, in case it’s not obvious. Contrary to appearances, this is a team blog. Today will be my last day at Oracle. In retrospect of my 11 years at Oracle, it has been a fun and enjoyable experience. One of the things I want to do in my life [...]

How an Algorithm Helped Arrange the Names on the 9/11 Memorial

Published on September 8th, 2011 Leave a Comment

Not much to say here other than this is an incredible tribute. Commemorative Calculus: How an Algorithm Helped Arrange the Names on the 9/11 Memorial: Scientific American 343

Mea Culpa: Maybe It Did Just Work

Published on September 8th, 2011 4 Comments

As a coda to my Macbook Pro wifi network dropping tribulations, I should note that the MBP probably wasn’t to blame for the wifi drops. I provide this explanation as a bookmark for myself, as I’m sure to need it later, and also as an offering to the robot overlords, since I’m sure someone with [...]

Sometimes It Doesn’t Just Work

Published on September 6th, 2011 2 Comments

I don’t consider myself a fanboi, but I’ve always found that Apple’s products just work and do so well. Over the years, I’ve owned Macbooks, an iMac, an original iPhone and an original iPad. My latest purchase, a 15-inch Macbook Pro, might be the first exception to the “it just works” mantra. I’ve already invested [...]

Search by Drawing with Google Correlate

Published on September 2nd, 2011 Leave a Comment

This is pretty fun and very cool. Draw – Google Correlate (h/t kottke.org) You draw a curve, and Google Correlate matches search terms to it from search data collected from January 2003 to the present. Playing with it for a few minutes is bound to turn up something that makes you cock an eyebrow, like this [...]

Intel Stopping MeeGo Development?

Published on September 2nd, 2011 Leave a Comment

MeeGo has a ton of promise, as demonstrated with the ogling and ink spilled over the Nokia N9, which really looks spectacular. Too bad it won’t ever reach the US. Now there’s a rumor floating around that Intel might suspend its MeeGo development. I hope this one isn’t true. Intel reportedly plans to back off MeeGo OS (h/t TechCrunch) [...]

Welcoming the Social Enterprise

Published on August 31st, 2011 Leave a Comment

I spend most of my time thinking about new and upcoming technology, but sometimes, it’s nice to reflect. The social enterprise is big news this week, and I’m glad this idea’s time has finally come. If you read here, you’ll know we were early proponents of socializing work, launching the IdeaFactory, which became Oracle Connect, [...]

What If Enterprise Software Were Produced?

Published on August 30th, 2011 8 Comments

I don’t know very much about game development. Very little. I know a lot about enterprise software development. A metric ton. I wonder what would happen if enterprise software development took more cues from game development. The two aren’t really that different. You have users/players. Ostensibly, you want them to use the software/play the game. Your [...]

Self-Reward: New Macbook Pro

Published on August 29th, 2011 10 Comments

I finally broke down and bought a new Macbook Pro on Friday. Since the unibody models were released a few years ago, I’ve been admiring them from afar, but I vowed to run my old white Macbook into the ground first. When I bought it back in 2006, I went for the low end model, [...]

Memories

Published on August 25th, 2011 3 Comments

From Bits & Pieces, h/t Geekosystem

Ladies Love Cool eReaders?

Published on August 25th, 2011 8 Comments

Ordinarily, this type of research wouldn’t interest me enough to post, but this hits home. Ladies love e-readers; guys prefer tablets — Tech News and Analysis Just last week, while traveling for the first time with our daughter, my wife announced that she wanted a Kindle. Her timing was funny, considering she had just bought [...]

Diaspora is Lonely

Published on August 23rd, 2011 8 Comments

I guess a migration (diaspora) could begin as a lonely experience, but damn, Diaspora is a lonely place. You remember Diaspora, the open alternative to Facebook that kicked off with much fanfare in May 2010? Kinda the anti-Facebook. Anyway, I got an invitation to join over the weekend and decided to kick the tires. Paul [...]

Everything to Everyone is the New Black

Published on August 23rd, 2011 5 Comments

There’s a lot going on lately in the tech news arena. What’s interesting to me is that several major consumer players are converging to become all things to their users. Good old soup to nuts makes a triumphant return. Apple pioneered this model. They control every aspect of the user experience from the hardware all [...]

Tacit Haptic Glove for the Visually-Impaired

Published on August 23rd, 2011 Leave a Comment

This is very cool (h/t technabob). Project Tacit: Sonar For The Blind from Grathio Labs on Vimeo. Bonus points, it’s Arduino-based and CC-BY-NC licensed. Steve Hoefer (@grathio) even provides the code, schematics and parts list. This is the type of innovation I’m expecting will rise out of the Android ADK, announced at Google IO this year. Ben [...]

A Java ME Phone Like No Other

Published on August 23rd, 2011 3 Comments

In case you thought Java was for stuffy enterprise development, check out this Java ME-powered Hello Kitty phone. Behold the power of Java. Of course, Java ME powers a ton of devices, including loads of mobile phones, but this one is special. In case you think there’s no market for Hello Kitty phones, there’s an Android-powered [...]

Oracle OpenWorld WebCenter Sessions

Published on August 22nd, 2011 Leave a Comment

There will be tons of great WebCenter (@oraclewebcenter) sessions at OpenWorld this year. Check out Kellsey’s rundown: Oracle OpenWorld: Don’t Miss WebCenter Sessions (Oracle WebCenter Blog) In addition, check out the demo grounds, customer and partner sessions. Lots of WebCenter content this year, so make your plans now. In case you were wondering, we won’t [...]

Thanks and Good Luck Rich

Published on August 22nd, 2011 10 Comments

Just about a year after we said goodbye to Paul (@ppedrazzi), Rich (@rmanalan) is moving on to an outstanding opportunity at Atlassian. And then there was one, founding member of AppsLab, that is. As it was when Paul left, the mood is mixed. On the one hand, Rich is heading to a great company to [...]

The Final Countdown

Published on August 19th, 2011 29 Comments

T-minus 7 days (August 26th)… until my final day at Oracle, that is. tl;dr; On January 6, 1997, I launched my career in enterprise software with PeopleSoft. I spent my early days traveling around the US, Canada, and Australia as a PeopleSoft consultant, implementing PeopleSoft HR/Benefits/Payroll. I even wrote some COBOL, however, you won’t find [...]

Sarah Connor?

Published on August 15th, 2011 Leave a Comment

This is just funny, h/t Geekosystem. @111001001101010 Apparently, there’s some disagreement on the current (vs. future) spelling of Sarah’s last name. Is that you Neil Kodner (@neilkod)?

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