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Recent Entries...
Week 3, day 2 for push ups
I'm posting a bit more than a day or two per post, hoping I ...
Chin ups week 1 column 2, push ups week 3
August 6:
Push ups: 27 then 20 (wow these seem tougher than...
Exhausting chin ups, continuing with push ups
August 4:
I'm really glad I took the opportunity to rest ...
Logarithmic tag cloud
It's been a while since I've posted anything technical. Pos...
Weekend bike rides
August 2:
I got out on my bike today. I had to raise the s...
Still week 3 for push ups, finishing week 2 for chin ups
July 31st:
Push ups: 27 then 19 then 19 (the last 5 of whic...
Tough push ups, and easier chin ups? Oh, kettlebell, too!
July 29th: The push ups day I'm dreading. I'm feeling mostl...
Push ups exhaustion test, continuing on with the chin ups.
July 27th: Exhaustion Challenge, push ups. 31. Kind of dis...
Weekend Respite.... or is it?
So I ended up buying a kettlebell and getting back on my bik...
Gotta keep going - on with week 2
July 25:
Super tired today. Woke up very early, had a pedi...
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weblog | `web·lôg -läg |
noun
Another term for BLOG
ORIGIN 1990s: from web in the sense [World Wide Web] and log in the sense [regular record of incidents.]
blog | bläg |
noun
A web site on which an individual or group of users produces an ongoing narrative.
ORIGIN a shortening of WEBLOG.
Trying to display pre tags inside a pre block
 Posted by
on Saturday, March 17 2007, 11:00pm
I think I know why I can't show HTML pre tags inside a pre block, and it's not Kate's fault, and it's not Textile's fault.
It's my fault.
if( $text =~ m/<pre class="([^"]+)"/s ){
$lang = $1;
$text =~ s/<pre[^>]+>(.*)<\/pre>/$1/s;
}
See the problem?
I'll probably have a few more posts about this until I figure it out.
But it's not like you were doing anything better than reading this :)
Syntax highlighting
 Posted by
on Saturday, March 17 2007, 4:00pm
Always looking for inspiration, I happened upon Jonathan Rockway's blog and noticed that he makes use of syntax highlighting in his Angerwhale blog. After a few aborted attempts to use Text::VimColor, I broke down and decided to try out Syntax::Highlight::Engine::Kate.
I'm pretty pleased, after I finally figured out enough of how it formats bits of code and how to translate that to my vim colorscheme of choice.
All it takes is the following modifications to your text:
<pre class="Language">
# your code here
And if Kate recognizes your 'Language', it'll format your text.
N.B. -- I can't quite figure out how to show a closing 'pre' tag inside a 'pre' block. Hope that doesn't offend you.
What days do I post?
 Posted by
on Friday, March 16 2007, 4:00pm
As a follow-on to my last statistical post, I thought I'd also create a graph that tracks what days I generally post on.

The SQL is amazingly the same, but only slightly different. In fact, nearly everything is exactly the same -- I should just generalize the code.
Related Photos:
statistics
blog
Technical Debt
 Posted by
on Thursday, March 15 2007, 4:00pm
I don't mean to make this the "Andy Lester" week, but the company I work for is in technical debt -- there's no better way to put it.
For a little introduction on the concept of technical debt, there's a nice wiki page. But what brings it home for me are the slides from Andy's infamous technical debt, which are available on his website.
So what am I griping about?
Version control.
Love it.
Hate it.
Gotta have it.
Unfortunately, it's a big undertaking.
What we currently have in place is a script that does:
cp $current_file ARCHIVE/$filebase-`date`.$fileextension
rsync $current_file $production_cluster
It even has enough brains to accept multiple files as arguments, even if they're in separate directories, and create the backup in a given files' subdirectory. While this (kind of) works, it's a pain for "rolling back", which I just had to do due to technical problems at our other office out of state. Especially painful when there had been changes to files that haven't made it to production, but the developer (me, in this case) is blissfully unaware of said changes, so it's not clear which version to restore.
Ugh!
Similar frustration for trying to re-restore the changes for eventual re-promotion.
But moving to a real™ version control system is a chore. Why? Because there are 5-6 years worth of these archive files that would be nice to have as version history. Altogether, there are about 99,300 files total. And the perl program I wrote to import them into our version control system takes an average of about 3 seconds per file. My math tells me that's about 3.5 days.
When do I post?
 Posted by
on Wednesday, March 14 2007, 10:00am
I ran across some guys' blog recently where he decided that for every 100 posts to his blog, he should figure out some of his blogging statistics. Or something like that.
One of which was to see what time of day he generally posted. He explained some procedure for doing a database query from the shell, piping the output through some command line utilities, and then running some commands or somesuch to feed into some graphing program (gnuplot) to produce a chart.
Seemed like a terribly manual process.
Inspired by that, I created the following:

Which is pretty much what I stated, but it updates automatically. As in every time it gets displayed. What you see above is current, even now. However long ago this was actually written.
For the morbidly curious, the SQL to create the data looks like this:
select count(*) as posts,
substring(blog_date,12,2) as hour
from blog
group by hour;
Related Photos:
sql
statistics
blog
Trying to fix broken windows at work
 Posted by
on Tuesday, March 13 2007, 4:00pm
I keep getting reminded of the story about the broken window I read recently in a great book I've purchased called The Pragmatic Programmer.
Most recently was this set of conversations between a coworker and myself, and my manager and myself.
Coworker Y: "Kent, can you please run sudo command xyz on the production cluster?"
me: "Sure, but only if you promise to fix the race condition that causes condition X on the production cluster."
Coworker Y: "I would, but it's not on my platter."
me: "Whose platter is it on?"
Coworker Y: "Coworker Z."
me: "This has been a known issue for nearly a half a year, hasn't it?"
Coworker Y: "Actually, about 9 months."
... time passes ...
phb: "Kent, does sudo really need to be run for command xyz? Can't you just do it with normal user privileges?"
me: "I assume so - they wouldn't ask me to do it otherwise, no? BTW, the cumulative time taken to run or have someone else run [sudo] command xyz every time this happens is probably much greater than just fixing the race condition that causes condition X, which as I understand has been a known issue for at least 9 months."
phb: "They tried to fix the race condition and failed. But I didn't know coworker Z had been running sudo command xyz all along, I thought he had another way to deal with it. Until he comes back from vacation, can you take care of these requests?"
me: "I'd much rather the race condition get fixed."
phb: "I agree, however coworker Z is out of the office this week and coworker Y is swamped -- we will have to wait."
me: "Coworker Z hasn't been out of the office for 9 months, though."
phb: "Coworker Z and coworker W tried a couple of times and could not get it fixed."
me: "Did they exhaust the entire technical resources of our company?"
phb: "No one really had lots of time on their hands. If coworker Z tells me again they can not fix it, I will hand it over to someone else for sure."
I really wish conversations like this didn't happen.
I really wish that more people at my job cared more about what they did.
Why did coworker Z and coworker W give up?
Why didn't they ask anyone for advice?
Sure it doesn't take much time to run sudo command xyz, but how much time is lost from breaking your concentration, switching contexts into "firefighting" mode, running the command, and trying to pick back up wherever you left off? And then what if you're so distracted by this craziness that you have to write a blog post about? How much time gets lost then?
I really wish people would care more.
Pardon my dust
 Posted by
on Sunday, February 25 2007, 11:00pm
Please forgive me - I'm working on updating this. "This", of course, can mean different things. But what I mean is that I'm working on finishing my Grand Unification Project. What's that? Well, I'm finally bringing everything together. And finally making my blog public. It's done in Catalyst, everything else is plain CGI.
All this means is that you might find some things that don't work from time to time. If you encounter this, please excuse me. I'm only human. I can't know about every single bug. Yet.
So far, most of my blog has been updated. I even have a new version of my photos up and running. Even my resume has been somewhat updated... :)
Catalyst wins again
 Posted by
on Thursday, February 15 2007, 12:00pm
So I'm in love with catalyst all over again.
I got tired of trying to figure out all these fancy-schmancy Object Relational Mapping database classes and trying to massage them to be able to understand my simplified database - which is a single table which is joined to itself for attaching a comment to a particular entry. I really didn't see any need for a separate table, since the structure of a comment doesn't really differ from the structure of a root post. Other than the fact that a root post doesn't have a parent.
Thinking that restructuring the database was just too much work, I just ripped out the ORM and created a model class that simply ran queries and returned the results.
Also, I added support for running my blog as a CGI and found that it was a really simple conversion, and only needed to update a few methods that I wasn't properly using before.
Related Photos:
catalyst
orm
cgi
dbi
Is it just me?
 Posted by
on Tuesday, February 13 2007, 2:00pm
Snippet from a real conversation with names and features renamed to protect the guilty, on implementing a test feature for a piece of software I've been tasked to write:
me: "Here, look at feature A, which is a test of X!"
phb: "Oh, that's wrong, it's supposed to be B."
me: "... But that's not spelled out in the requirements."
phb: "Oh, it's there."
me: "No, I just read them again, B is not mentioned. X is mentioned, Y is mentioned, B is clearly not mentioned. B is implied indirectly, but it is not mentioned. I implemented A to test X, but nowhere do the requirements say that A should be B. In fact, A is not mentioned, either."
phb: "But it's in there"
me: "No, X is mentioned, and to test X most easily, A should happen, but A is not mentioned, and B is clearly not mentioned. Regardless, if you wanted B a particular way, perhaps you should've, I don't know. mentioned it?"
Had I only had a copy of the requirements handy, I would've happily requested said PHB to point me to the specific section.
Wow, IE is broken.
 Posted by
on Monday, January 08 2007, 4:00pm
I hope you're not looking at this using Internet Explorer. If you are, I'm surprised you're able to read this. "This", of course, referring to my new home page that I've been working on lately.
I've run afoul of some of the more heinous differences between Internet Explorer and the rest of the more standard-compliant web browsers. Specifically, as it relates to Tableless web design using solely CSS for element positioning. It looks so easy at CSS Zen Garden!
Please pardon my dust as I learn to work around these issues. Assuming you can even read this. And I just checked. It's quite likely you can't :(.
Related Photos:
ie
broken
css
design
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