The Diary of an Axeman site, a tribute site to Randy Rhoads, has been redesigned. I have to say, it looks great! The downloads section has been updated with a performance of Crazy Train from Chicago’s Rosemont Horizon from January of 1982.
Author Archives: Ron Bieber
Oracle to release “free” low end database
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I found this article on ZDNET talking about how Oracle will be releasing a free version of Oracle 10g to try and head off Open Source databases like MySQL.
Robert Feder: Recent Chicago Radio News
With the departure of Howard Stern, WCKG identifies his replacement. Unlike New York, Chicago did not pick David Lee Roth, but some guy named Rover. In other news, Jonathon Brandmeier returns to The Loop (WLUP-FM) starting on October 31 – assuming his studio is installed in time.
Brandmeier first joined the Loop in 1983 and served as morning man there until 1997. Joining Brandmeier in his new role will be Bruce Wolf, broadcasting remotely from Channel 32 studios, where he is still morning news sports anchor.
Welcome back Johnny.
Numbers Not Up for the Quarter? Clamp Down on Bathroom Breaks!
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Ford Motor Company reports a third quarter loss and decides that employees are spending too much time in the bathroom. If this were my company, I’d check the lunchroom.
The Tux-O-Lantern
Photo by rbieber
Jonna and Andy carved pumpkins this evening. This is Jonna’s. Yep, the only house on the block with a Linux Tux-O-Lantern!
USATODAY.com – Tech people appear hyped about their industry again
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Kevin Maney posts a review of the Web 2.0 conference held in San Franciso earlier this month.
The Story of the Most Popular Guy on MySpace
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A guy named Samy documents his experience after hacking MySpace to become more popular. Pretty amusing read. It seems he learned his lesson and will be more honest moving forward.
Riya – Real Competition for Flickr?
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Nalla sent me a link to TechCrunch » First Screen Shots of Riya, an article about a new photo service with built in photo recognition. This looks pretty cool, aside from the stated 4 hour upload time per gigabyte of data.
Charles Petzold: Does Visual Studio Rot the Mind?
Charles Petzold, author of Programming Windows (the Bible of Windows programming when I was coming up) has written an article called Does Visual Studio Rot the Mind?. In this very well written (and very LONG) article, Charles goes through the history of Windows programming as he sees it and explains how he feels Visual Studio removes a lot of the “real programming” out of Windows development these days.
I too have fond memories of the “old days”. I remember being the only one in my department that could recite all eleven CreateWindow parameters and being the “Windows API” manual for the department. Nowadays, as Charles points out, Intellisense and code generation have given programmers the ability to “opt out” of actually learning the environment that they work in, as the full API is only a keystroke away. The IDE does way too much for people these days.
Damn all this technology. Give me my BRIEF editor or EMACS any day.
Ed Gibbs: Selling TDD
Ed Gibbs talks about the difficulty in selling Test Driven Development (TDD) to his development staff. I agree with him 100%. I’ve been trying to express the value I’ve found in this technique for quite some time now and am not getting the best reception or adoption from my staff. We still find the majority of the tests are written after development has been completed and at a time when most of the relevant details that should be in the test cases are forgotten due to release schedules.
My first foray into TDD was invaluable and taught me quite a bit about the value of writing tests WITH the code you are writing. I was writing a set of object oriented Python scripts that managed our CVS repository. These scripts were originally written in PERL and I had begun learning Python and wanted a real project to use it on. This was also a very good project for object orientation and objects are something that I really despised doing in PERL, so Python was the obvious choice.
In the decision to rewrite these scripts in Python, I found that Python came with PyUnit and thought it was a great opportunity to try TDD since I had just read Kent Becks book, Test Driven Development: By Example. I’m one of those people that can force himself to try something new out of sheer will, even if I don’t quite believe that it will have benefit.
During the development of these scripts, I created an object model in which I could manage multiple source repositories and perform actions on them such as checking out a workarea, branching the repository, and creating new work areas with new build numbers assigned to them. The application wound up being more than I thought it would be, but I stuck with the TDD approach and wrote my tests.
When we made the decision to move to the Subversion Version Control System, I had quite a bit of refactoring to do in order to support both the CVS repository and the Subversion repository in order to reduce cutover time (we basically had to change a property file when we had completed to move to the new source control system). The tests that I had written during original development were invaluable in reducing the development time in refactoring the base source control objects to support the Subversion system and we wound up with a fairly robust application that supported the original requirements of the CVS repository on Subversion.
The best part is that I knew that all of my requirements were met, because I had the tests to run and prove it.
Even with this (I think pretty compelling) example, the TDD approach has been a hard sell. I think that reason #1 in Eds post is the reason. People just think it will take more time. It does take more time, but not that much and from my experience you really don’t notice it that much. As a matter of fact, for me it added a little extra excitement watching the tests pass at regular intervals during the development cycle. Furthermore, if the time is included in the original schedule, who cares if it takes more time? If you budgeted the time, you’ve set expectations!
Still after all of this, there is resistance. I would be very interested in hearing from others who have successfully implemented this in their organizations. There are instances in which ‘leading by example’ still doesn’t work, as people fear changing what they do and find any reason they can not to. Add to that that if the one “leading” isn’t involved in day to day project work, he doesn’t have the credibility as someone who is. It looks like just another “change” the manager wants to make.
So, if you’ve made this change, I’d be really grateful if you could post your experiences in the comments section of this blog. Tell me about what you did to make this change and, more importantly, the benefits you received as a result of the change. I’d love to read them and have a place where my staff can come and read them as well.
