Wednesday, August 31, 2005

Mas quem é que lhe pediu isto?

A política portuguesa nunca deixou de surpreender. Eu ainda tinha esperança, bem lá no fundo, que a Maria de Jesus lhe pusesse a cabeça no sítio, mas pelos vistos nada havia a fazer. O monarca avançou mesmo com a candidatura.

Agora pergunto eu: vamos mesmo votar nele? Acham que ele vai ganhar as eleições? Eu até tenho medo da resposta, pois arrisca-se muito a ser positiva, e vamos mais uma vez mostrar a todos os nossos parceiros europeus que não queremos avançar. O que nós queremos é continuar a viver na utopia do "antes é que era bom" e vamos votar em alguém cujo maior contributo para a nação portuguesa - em tempos recentes - foi criticar publicamente toda a estrutura da União e do próprio parlamento que ele - soi disant - representava. Sim, soi disant porque monsieur Mário Soares por vezes dignava-se a comparecer no PE, quando não estava ocupado a escrever artigos de opinião para revistas conceituadas - artigos esses pagos a peso de ouro, não duvido.

Eu que até já me tinha habituado ao tweetie - e ao seu excelente inglês - vou agora ter que passar pela vergonha de confirmar que sim, voltámos a ter o mesmo presidente, sim, ele tem já mais de 80 anos, sim, arrisca-se a ter funeral de estado, sim, esse mesmo, aquele que dizia viver em Bruxelas, sim, aquele que criticou tudo e mais alguma coisa sobre a união europeia (aqui entre nós, chegados àquela idade não há muito mais para fazer senão criticar os outros).

Cresçam e apareçam portugueses, não se deixem levar por esta farsa.

Dizia - salvo erro - o Pacheco Pereira, e muito bem, que Soares vai possivelmente vencer por ser a alternativa a Cavaco, nunca por mérito próprio. É bom saber que ainda há gente sem papas na língua...

Shaking up the establishment

For a long, long time, XML-Spy has been the dominant (and only) XML/XSL/X-Whatever tool we used in Tridion.

Since our product is extremely heavy on XML and XSL, this is an invaluable tool, and all of us use it - despite its rather steep licensing price.

Then, one day, I needed to debug some XSLT that was not transforming correctly using Xalan. It did work perfectly in MSXML and the internal built-in XML-Spy processor.

Cutting a long story short, I ended up downloading and trying <oxygen/>, and simply fell in love with it. So, I asked our internal IT department to get me a licence.

Up to here nothing unusual. Except for the little fact that Oxygen's licences can cost about 25% of XML Spy's. So, IT is now trying to convince the whole of Tridion to use Oxygen instead. I don't really care which way it goes, as long as I get my Oxygen licence...

Getting WebSphere and Tridion to work together

Q: What takes longer when setting up an environment for WebSphere and Tridion interoperability?
A: Downloading and installing Windows 2003 Service Pack 1...

Tuesday, August 30, 2005

You know something's wrong when...

The replacement car you get has better options than yours (MP3 reader!)

My XP "most used" list

Nothing tells you more about one person than the list of most used applications automagically generated by Windows XP.

I do often reset the whole thing just for the fun of seeing it filling back again. So... here goes my list:

  1. Macromedia DreamWeaver MX
  2. Eclipse
  3. Remote Desktop Connection
  4. VMWare Workstation
  5. Textpad
  6. Notepad
  7. Winrar
  8. Oxygen XML Editor
  9. Adobe Reader 7.0
  10. Internet Explorer
  11. Paint Shop Pro
  12. Trillian
It is funny how so many applications are not taken into account (I think it has something to do with the way they're launched - from the Start menu or from some quick-bar shortcut).

Firefox is constantly open and doesn't show up in the list. The same goes for Outlook and iTunes...

Well, never mind. Care to share yours?

WinFS Beta 1 out

So, Microsoft finally delivered Beta 1 of Cairo. If it took them approximately 11 years to deliver the first beta (about 200 years Internet-life time) how long until they release the first final version?

And how long until someone decides it is actually a good idea? As with anything database related, a Database-driven file system will only be as good as its data.

Corporate servers know where the data they need is located. And very seldomly need to do versioning.

Home users never know where a file is, but will be too lazy to fill in enough metadata about any file to make such a system useful. And will still not be able to find their files back.

I might be a bit too pessimistic about it, but I just don't see the need for this anymore. Of course, I'm sure MS' marketing team will make it an absolute hit (TM) and manage to squeeze some more licensing money through it.

Anyway, if you're feeling adventurous, here's the link. (You do need to be a subscribed MSDN user).

I guess you're used to this by now...

Had a "kind of" writer's block around here. 1000 different subjects came and went and never made it to the Publish queue in blogspot.

Never mind, I'm back and with loads of content coming up, mainly on the Tridion news and some other nice and funny stuff.

Keep you posted,

Nuno

Monday, August 15, 2005

Nice place to live in?

Intriguing name in any case... pity about the signs constantly disappearing though...

Monday, August 08, 2005

Back from paradise

This was the view from my hotel room.

Of course, 'round here there's nothing but rain and cold. Damn.