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Coders Diary: What Quiz
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Microsoft in Denial: Google Threat is Classic Disruption
Study: Googling oneself is more popular.
Google to take on Wikipedia
Autoruns for Windows
Transistor sixty years old today
Space shuttle attacked by giant spider!
Your next laptop may be eaten by a Panda
Ducks and Frogs
Nothing Quite Says You Care About The Green House Effect Like Running Hundreds Of Workstations And Servers Around The World
Well it worked on my computer...
Yay! Viruses have gone 2.0! They already were open source for a while now...
Mozilla, Opera look to make video on the Web easier
Am I the only one who doesn't get Second Life?
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The opinions expressed herein are my own personal opinions and do not represent my employer's view in any way.

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 Tuesday, December 18, 2007
Tuesday, December 18, 2007 10:32:15 PM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) ( Coders Diary )

First thing in the morning courier arrives with some new rfid goodies. Part of running a business like this is we constantly have to try out new ideas, concepts and technologies. I estimate as much as a third of our time and income is reinvested in learning and trialling new ideas and technology.

Today spent time with Andrew (the other NECS developer) doing a Scrum of all our projects and where they are at, as we prepare to wind down for Christmas. Afterwards we reviewed our project task list for the next release of rfid Learning Table and decided to start speccing out the database and feature list for the new Quiz component of rfid Learning Table. Yes if you read the blog, you might get the odd sneak peak at what is in future releases. :)

Did some story boarding and even role playing, as we tried to step through the process that a teacher might go through to create and setup a quiz. Fortunately this process is made a bit easier by the fact we both have a teaching background. Also thought about issues such as the user interface and some rough notes on the database design. One of the challenges is we are drawing up a featurelist they may not be seen by the user for several iterations of LT, but we still have to think about them and accommodate them in the work we do now. By the time we finished we had done about four hours of work on all this, with two brief interruptions for phone calls.

Spent some time near the end thinking about maintenance issues with the new quiz component and how to keep that manageable. With a Micro ISV support issues (and costs) are critical. If we have to do support work, then another project might be delayed. At the very least the family see less of both of us.

Tomorrow we spec out the database in detail and build it.

Finished the normal work day with processing an order and payment for LT, reviewing and answering some email (I do this twice a day) and researching a new drop down category listbox I want to code for another project called Time Trax.

About to finish and get a phone call from our hardware guru Alex Bell, who lets me know that a component from Switzerland we have been waiting on has arrived. Early testing looks promising. We are trying to find a way to cost reduce our desktop high frequency readers, so they are affordable for markets like education. He does advise me that we will probably have to roll our own device drivers for Windows for this to work. I've already played a bit with the hardware with a TTL to Serial adapter so was expecting this. Look at my project list and sigh. Looks like we have to squeeze that development in before mid year to meet our internal deadlines. Discuss some ideas to make the hardware easier and cheaper to pull together and agree to meet and discuss Alex's progress on the weekend.

Post a response on Sue Waters blog about the MLearn Conference and Sue replies. Sue has some excellent resources if you are interested in the web 2.0 world here. Sue is rather obsessed with the internet, even sharing and documenting her obsession with the lolly jar here. Give a quick reply to her and then think about dinner.

After dinner spent another hour or so with my wife (a PT TAFE Teacher) discussing the pros and cons of the database design. She had, as always another perspective on a couple of design issues. I documented them and will need to discuss them with Andrew in the morning.

Saw kids to bed and then updated one of our code tools (ReFactor) which had just been updated by the developers. Checked the readme file and was somewhat relieved to see it was just a maintenance release. In the past month we have had several updates of our coding tools that have mean't I have had to take time out to see what new features and changes were made.

Reviewed some blogs and web sites to see what IT news happenings went on today. Finally decided to make this blog entry and sign off for the day at 11:46pm.

 

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Tuesday, December 18, 2007 10:16:49 PM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) ( Coders Diary )

I thought some of you might like an insight into some of the things we do as developers when working on projects like rfid Learning Table and Virtual Guide among others. So what I have decided to do is post this occasional blog entries where I will discuss some of the things we do in the course of a normal day, in the hope it gives you an insight into a Micro ISV (Independent Software Vendor) works. I have decided to tag these as “Coders Diary”.

My thanks to Harriet Wakelam from TAFE WA for the suggestion. Harriet and I both hope to expand on this concept in the new year.

 

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Tuesday, December 18, 2007 11:51:29 AM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) ( Education | Technology )

An excellent blog post from The Silicon Valley Insider on how companies like Google disrupt and eventually will take over the lead from old IT like Microsoft. Microsoft themselves have used these techniques in the past to win market share. Anyone remember Netscape?

http://www.alleyinsider.com/2007/12/microsoft-in-denial-google-threat-is-classic-disruption.html

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 Monday, December 17, 2007
Monday, December 17, 2007 3:48:24 PM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) ( Technology )
Don't do it to often or you will go blind
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Monday, December 17, 2007 1:12:06 PM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) ( Education | Technology )
 Sunday, December 16, 2007
Sunday, December 16, 2007 1:07:37 PM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) ( Technology )

If you run Windows, Microsoft have a fantasic free utility that allows you to see what is being automatically started when your PC boots and allows you to disable those apps if you want to. Please make sure you know what you are disabling first as some things are needed for Windows to run properly, usually a Google search will help to determine what the file or process does.

http://www.microsoft.com/technet/sysinternals/Utilities/AutoRuns.mspx

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Sunday, December 16, 2007 8:15:47 AM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) ( Technology )

Happy birthday to a very important fella.

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 Saturday, December 15, 2007
Saturday, December 15, 2007 1:25:22 PM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) ( )

Well its actually a spider on the camera lense, but worth a look!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NtVR172yFMA

Thanks to Dvorak.org/Blog for the original heads up.

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Saturday, December 15, 2007 11:52:01 AM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) ( Technology )
Saturday, December 15, 2007 9:58:02 AM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) ( Education | Technology )

Recently at the M-Learn Conference in Melbourne, I had the good fortune to meet Jim Plumber, a lecturer in Environment, Conservation and Horticulture from South Australia TAFE.

Jim’s presentation on RFID and his practical application of RFID in learning was one of the conference highlights for me. So it was a real thrill to me when Jim asked about taking back an rfid Learning Table with him to South Australia.

It didn’t take long before I received an email and these photos and an explanation of what he had come up with it. Its called “RFID Ducks and Frogs” and uses rfid Learning Table to help explain to staff and students how a water recycling system works. Each duck or frog sits on a map that represents a part of the water recycling system. If you pick up and scan any of the ducks or frogs, the rfid tags embedded in the toys trigger an instructional video that explains that part of the water recycling process.

Jim noted that the rfid Learning Table was very well received by everyone and he has received a number of requests to demo the technology to other departments.

The ducks and frogs laid out on the water recycling map. Each duck and frog has had an RFID tag embedded in it.

 

The application was a big hit with the teaching staff.

Thanks Jim for sharing your project!

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 Friday, December 14, 2007
Friday, December 14, 2007 1:40:19 PM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) ( Education | Technology )

Nothing quite says you care about the green house effect, like running hundreds of workstations and servers around the world, using non renewable energy to host a second life conference.

Still the conference concept is interesting.

http://www.news.com.au/technology/story/0,25642,22923209-5014117,00.html

 

 

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 Wednesday, December 12, 2007
Wednesday, December 12, 2007 8:31:17 AM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) ( Programming )

Well a few weeks back I released rfid Learning Table to the wild and was surprised to find that not everyone else’s PC was identical to mine. ;)  Turns out some folks really did buy Vista and install it on their PC. After sitting down and thinking about that for a while, I realised I would have to find out what was going wrong for my newly found Vista customers.

I booted Vista in VMWare’s excellent VMware Workstation and got to testing. The Learning Table Editor worked fine, but for some reason the Player application kept complaining it couldn’t find the multimedia files to play back.

A little more investigation found that Vista had determined the files were user data and media files and had simply changed the physical location and path to where the files were stored on the PC! Now it wasn’t a bad location it put the files in and really, I probably should have put them there in the first place, but I didn’t and instead had them in the same folder as the executable. Vista was doing a good job of redirecting the Editor to look in the new location, but didn’t do the same for the Player and that’s where the fun started for our Vista customers.

So back into the code and after a day and a half of testing the new and improved rfid Learning Table was Vista compatible.

Anyway it was a good lesson and reminder to delve into the world of Vista a bit more and learn what else has changed...

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Wednesday, December 12, 2007 8:16:58 AM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) ( Technology )

Trojan 2.0 Crafted Using Web 2.0 Technology

Blogger, MySpace, and Facebook can provide an easily accessible place to store stolen data until it can be collected and deleted, security researchers warn.

 

http://www.informationweek.com/story/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=204800655

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 Monday, December 10, 2007
Monday, December 10, 2007 8:11:36 PM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) ( )

Interesting read about the possibility of an extension to HTML to support video easily in browsers.

http://www.infoworld.com/archives/emailPrint.jsp?R=printThis&A=/article/07/12/07/Mozilla-Opera-look-to-make-video-on-the-Web_1.html

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 Sunday, December 09, 2007
Sunday, December 09, 2007 2:29:36 PM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) ( Education )

So far I have only seen mentioned one application for Second Life that makes sense to me. The suggestion was to use Second Life as a way to simulate the drug trade, so students could see and interact with this culture as part of their learning, without placing themselves or their teachers at harm.

 

The thing is that everything else I see is something that could be done just as effectively or more so, using other online tools or heaven forbid, in a classroom.

 

So what is the attraction of Second Life? Is it the promise of what future virtual world technologies might do? What about its fairly significant technical limitations?

 

If you are using Second Life in teaching I would love to hear how and why you use it?

 

It’s not like I am opposed to new ways of delivering content, heck I came up with rfid Learning Table, but somehow this one is escaping me.

 

Maybe it’s the cheesy pre Commodore Amiga generation graphics. J

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Sunday, December 09, 2007 2:10:13 PM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) ( Education )

If you enjoy stories with a message, that are fun to read, then you might want to check out the stories here, from www.businessballs.com.

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