software development concepts
If I had to make a list of the top 10 things I've done in my life that I regret, "writing a book" would definitely be on it. I took on the book project mostly because it was an opportunity to work with a few friends
programming
In The Programming Aphorisms of Strunk and White, James Devlin does a typically excellent job of examining something I've been noticing myself over the last five years:
The unexpected relationship between writing code and writing.
There is perhaps no greater single reference on the topic of writing than
blogging
I started out in early 2004 as a blog skeptic. But over the last four years, I've become a born-again believer. In that time, I've written almost a thousand blog entries, and I've read thousands upon thousands of blog entries. As a result, I&
writing
When I meet people that have something to say, and an interesting way of saying it, I encourage them to blog. But there's one big hurdle many people simply never get past: the actual writing.
I can respect that. Writing is hard. People spend their entire lives learning
email
It's easy to fire off an email with barely any effort at all. And that's exactly
how much effort goes into most emails: none. Ole Eichhorn's Tyranny of Email
[http://www.w-uh.com/articles/030308-tyranny_of_email.html] offers a succinct
set of guidelines
blogging
I’ve avoided the incestuous nature of blogging about blogging until now, but the topic does come up occasionally. Not everyone is a believer in the utility of blogs; I was a skeptic only two years ago, and Michael Brundage went out of his way late last year to point