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2014-03-24
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HTTP/1.1 200 OKDate: Sat, 09 Nov 2024 20:25:23 GMTServer: ApacheX-I-Am-Le-Tired: Fine, take a nap.Link: http://www.nextthing.org/wp-json/>; relhttps://api.w.org/Upgrade: h2Connection: UpgradeCache-Control: max-age600Expires: Sat, 09 Nov 2024 20:35:23 GMTVary: Accept-Encoding,User-AgentContent-Length: 29040Content-Type: text/html; charsetUTF-8 !DOCTYPE html PUBLIC -//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd>html xmlnshttp://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml>head profilehttp://gmpg.org/xfn/11>meta http-equivContent-Type contenttext/html; charsetUTF-8 />title>nextthing.org /title>meta namegenerator contentWordPress 4.7.29 /> !-- leave this for stats -->link relstylesheet hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/wordpress/wp-content/themes/mine2_0/style.css typetext/css mediascreen />link relstylesheet hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/wordpress/wp-content/themes/mine2_0/print.css typetext/css mediaprint />link relalternate typeapplication/rss+xml titlenextthing.org RSS Feed hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/feed />link relpingback hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/wordpress/xmlrpc.php />link reldns-prefetch href//s.w.org /> script typetext/javascript> window._wpemojiSettings {baseUrl:https:\/\/s.w.org\/images\/core\/emoji\/2.2.1\/72x72\/,ext:.png,svgUrl:https:\/\/s.w.org\/images\/core\/emoji\/2.2.1\/svg\/,svgExt:.svg,source:{concatemoji:http:\/\/www.nextthing.org\/wordpress\/wp-includes\/js\/wp-emoji-release.min.js?ver4.7.29}}; 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/script> style typetext/css>img.wp-smiley,img.emoji { display: inline !important; border: none !important; box-shadow: none !important; height: 1em !important; width: 1em !important; margin: 0 .07em !important; vertical-align: -0.1em !important; background: none !important; padding: 0 !important;}/style>link relhttps://api.w.org/ hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/wp-json/ />link relEditURI typeapplication/rsd+xml titleRSD hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/wordpress/xmlrpc.php?rsd />link relwlwmanifest typeapplication/wlwmanifest+xml hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/wordpress/wp-includes/wlwmanifest.xml /> meta namegenerator contentWordPress 4.7.29 />/head>body>div idpage>div idheader> h1>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/>nextthing.org/a>/h1> h2>by Andrew Wooster/h2>/div>hr /> div idcontent classnarrowcolumn> div classpost idpost-56> h2>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2015/04/07/56 relbookmark titlePermanent Link to >/a>/h2> small>April 7th, 2015 !-- by Andrew -->/small> div classentry> p>I’m mostly posting over at a hrefhttp://log.andrewwooster.com/ titlelog.andrewwooster.com>log.andrewwooster.com/a> these days./p> /div> p classpostmetadata>Posted in a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/categories/general relcategory tag>General/a> | a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2015/04/07/56#respond>No Comments »/a>/p> /div> div classpost idpost-51> h2>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2011/11/21/africa relbookmark titlePermanent Link to >/a>/h2> small>November 21st, 2011 !-- by Andrew -->/small> div classentry> blockquote>p>The only members of the crew who didn’t come down with dysentery were Huston and Bogart, because they were drinking whisky rather than the water, which turned out to be the source of the infection./p>/blockquote>p>– a hrefhttp://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/films/features/the-african-queen--bogart-hepburn-and-a-case-of-the-jungle-jeebies-1965323.html titleThe African Queen>The African Queen/a>/p>p>On a related note, I’ll be headed to Africa for a month, albeit the other side of the continent, next February. /p>p>I’ll need to pack some whisky./p> /div> p classpostmetadata>Posted in a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/categories/links relcategory tag>Links/a>, a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/categories/travel relcategory tag>Travel/a> | a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2011/11/21/africa#respond>No Comments »/a>/p> /div> div classpost idpost-42> h2>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2010/11/19/daniel-jalkut-on-asking-for-help relbookmark titlePermanent Link to Daniel Jalkut on Asking for Help>Daniel Jalkut on Asking for Help/a>/h2> small>November 19th, 2010 !-- by Andrew -->/small> div classentry> blockquote>p>All the bugs in our group were difficult. One day I was assigned a particularly vexing one. I had shown a knack for tracking down tricky issues, but this one stymied me. I hammered away at the bug but I couldn’t figure out the cause. I couldn’t even think of where to go next. I was petrified./p>/blockquote>p>– a hrefhttp://www.red-sweater.com/blog/1505/ask-for-help titleAsk For Help>Red Sweater Blog – Ask For Help/a>/p>p>Read the post, it’s worth it. The moral is, if you need help, ask for it. By the time I was at Apple, this was one of the things we drilled into new recruits, for precisely the reason that it could be paralyzing to be dropped into that environment. The company very much has a Do-It-Yourself culture, but not asking for help when you need it can be paralyzing and demoralizing, and totally unnecessarily so. It’s not a defect to need help once in awhile./p> /div> p classpostmetadata>Posted in a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/categories/general relcategory tag>General/a>, a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/categories/links relcategory tag>Links/a> | a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2010/11/19/daniel-jalkut-on-asking-for-help#comments>1 Comment »/a>/p> /div> div classpost idpost-40> h2>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2010/07/08/ross-perot-and-scott-mcnealy relbookmark titlePermanent Link to Ross Perot and Scott McNealy>Ross Perot and Scott McNealy/a>/h2> small>July 8th, 2010 !-- by Andrew -->/small> div classentry> blockquote>p> Before they flew east, Alvy and Ed were apprehensive. They had heard strange things about Ross Perot from a credible source, Scott McNealy, the chief executive of Sun Microsystems, a rising young star in Silicon Valley. Scott talked about how he and Ross were supposed to meet at Chicago’s O’Hare Airport to shake hands on a deal. The terms had already been negotiated by their people, but the two leaders had never met in person.br /> At O’Hare, Ross Perot sized up the younger man and asked: “Are you married?”br /> “No.”br /> “Where do you live?”br /> “California.”br /> That was all Ross Perot wanted to know.br /> He stormed away. The deal was off./p>/blockquote>p>– a hrefhttp://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0767904338?ieUTF8&tagandrewwooster-20&linkCodeas2&camp1789&creative9325&creativeASIN0767904338>The Second Coming of Steve Jobs/a>/p>p>I heard this story awhile ago, but this is the only reference I can find to it in print./p> /div> p classpostmetadata>Posted in a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/categories/general relcategory tag>General/a>, a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/categories/links relcategory tag>Links/a> | a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2010/07/08/ross-perot-and-scott-mcnealy#respond>No Comments »/a>/p> /div> div classpost idpost-39> h2>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2010/05/18/kellan-elliott-mccrea-on-flickr-and-data relbookmark titlePermanent Link to Kellan Elliott-McCrea on Flickr and Data>Kellan Elliott-McCrea on Flickr and Data/a>/h2> small>May 18th, 2010 !-- by Andrew -->/small> div classentry> blockquote>p>With Flickr you can get out, via the API, every single piece of information you put into the system. Every photo, in every size, plus the completely untouched original. (which we store for you indefinitely, whether or not you pay us) Every tag, every comment, every note, every people tag, every fave. Also your stats, view counts, and referers. … Flickr actually goes a bit farther, not only can you get your data out, but it gets enriched as it passes through the system. … This isn’t the exhaustive list, just a few of the things Flickr does to respect, and collaborate with the people who share their time and data with us./p>/blockquote>p>– a hrefhttp://laughingmeme.org/2010/05/18/minimal-competence-data-access-data-ownership-and-sharecropping/>Minimal Competence: Data Access, Data Ownership, and Sharecropping./a>/p>p>Anyone who writes a web service should be aiming for this. Anybody who uses someone else’s service that doesn’t provide this level of access should be asking why./p> /div> p classpostmetadata>Posted in a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/categories/links relcategory tag>Links/a> | a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2010/05/18/kellan-elliott-mccrea-on-flickr-and-data#respond>No Comments »/a>/p> /div> div classpost idpost-38> h2>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2009/04/25/the-best-spidering-project-ever relbookmark titlePermanent Link to The Best Spidering Project Ever>The Best Spidering Project Ever/a>/h2> small>April 25th, 2009 !-- by Andrew -->/small> div classentry> p>I keep losing the link to the oddly-named a hrefhttp://www.drunkmenworkhere.org/>Drunk Men Work Here/a> project. This is, frankly, the best (which in my quirky view is some combination of unique, creative, awesome, and data-intensive) analysis of web spiders I’ve ever seen./p>p>For anyone interested in how to induce the internals of spiders, this is required reading./p> /div> p classpostmetadata>Posted in a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/categories/general relcategory tag>General/a> | a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2009/04/25/the-best-spidering-project-ever#respond>No Comments »/a>/p> /div> div classpost idpost-37> h2>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2008/10/30/office-hours relbookmark titlePermanent Link to Office Hours>Office Hours/a>/h2> small>October 30th, 2008 !-- by Andrew -->/small> div classentry> p>Tonight a hrefhttp://twitter.com/wooster/status/980116222>I held/a> my first office hours in Palo Alto at Coupa Café. Office hours are an idea a hrefhttp://buzz.vox.com/library/post/design-for-life-2007.html>I got/a> from my good friend a hrefhttp://log.scifihifi.com>Buzz Andersen/a>, who held them on a semi-regular basis at a hrefhttp://www.alembicbar.com/>The Alembic/a> in San Francisco, and which I endeavored to attend whenever possible./p>p>The basic idea of office hours is that I (or whoever holds them) will be at a certain location at a certain time, and anyone who wants to talk to me, ask questions, etc, can come by and do so. It seems a bit ego-centric, but really I feel that it’s the opposite. I’m interested in what other people have to say, and feel that modern society has disconnected us from talking to one-another on a regular basis in the ways that were previously available. The sharing of ideas that were the foundation of a hrefhttp://www.amazon.com/Benjamin-Franklin-American-Walter-Isaacson/dp/074325807X/refsr_1_1?ieUTF8&sbooks&qid1225352121&sr1-1>social clubs/a>, pubs, libraries, a hrefhttp://www.amazon.com/Conspiracy-Paper-Ballantine-Readers-Circle/dp/0804119120/refpd_bbs_sr_1?ieUTF8&sbooks&qid1225351987&sr8-1>coffee shop/a> discussions, and even a hrefhttp://www.amazon.com/Born-Blood-Lost-Secrets-Freemasonry/dp/0871316021/refsr_1_8?ieUTF8&sbooks&qid1225352065&sr1-8>secret societies/a> of say, the 17th through 19th centuries have been eclipsed by a hrefhttp://www.amazon.com/Office-Space-Special-Flair-Widescreen/dp/B000AP04L0/refpd_bbs_sr_1?ieUTF8&sdvd&qid1225352320&sr8-1>water cooler discussions/a> and team meetings. Instead of a roundtable of ideas shared in the open among a group of like-minded people, we have substituted a hrefhttp://www.amazon.com/Antitrust-Ned-Bellamy/dp/B00005AUDW/refpd_bbs_sr_1?ieUTF8&sdvd&qid1225352372&sr8-1>proprietary trade secrets/a> and patent applications, action items and Gantt charts, vapid launch parties and a hrefhttp://valleywag.com/5062424/its-the-end-of-web-20-as-we-know-it>lavish offsites/a>./p>p>I feel that office hours are a good start in getting back to the foundations of the Enlightenment and, with much less importance, our industry. They are a brief pause where we can exchange ideas, talk to each other frankly, share our ideas, and come together in a spirit of pushing society and ourselves further. Many may consider this to be utopian garbage, but even on a utilitarian basis I’ve found office hours to be a welcome break from the hyper-competitive nature of our industry, and an invaluable way to exchange approaches to problems, solutions and expertise, and even industry gossip (*gasp*)./p>p>At my first office hours, the topics ranged from iPhone memory management questions to open geodata initiatives to the future plans of our respective lives and businesses. It was a lively exchange of ideas, and one I’m glad to have had. For those of you in the Bay Area interested to coming to my next office hours, I encourage you to follow me on a hrefhttp://twitter.com/wooster>Twitter/a>. For people interested in holding their own office hours, I say, “just do it”. You may just be pleasantly surprised by the results./p>p>b>Update/b>: a hrefhttp://tlrobinson.net/>Tom Robinson/a> of a hrefhttp://280north.com/>280 North/a> suggests using an a hrefhttp://search.twitter.com/search?q%23officehours>#officehours/a> tag in Twitter to announce office hours. I think this is a great idea, and will be using this for my future office hours announcements./p> /div> p classpostmetadata>Posted in a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/categories/general relcategory tag>General/a>, a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/categories/programming relcategory tag>Programming/a> | a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2008/10/30/office-hours#comments>5 Comments »/a>/p> /div> div classpost idpost-36> h2>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2008/05/02/adding-default-descriptions-to-trac-tickets relbookmark titlePermanent Link to Adding Default Descriptions to Trac Tickets>Adding Default Descriptions to Trac Tickets/a>/h2> small>May 2nd, 2008 !-- by Andrew -->/small> div classentry> p>I’ve been using Trac for the new projects I’m working on, and am liking it so far. I have, however, done a bit of customization to make it fit my needs a bit better. One thing that took awhile was figuring out how to change the default ticket description./p>p>I like having some structure to my bug descriptions, including steps to reproduce, regression information, etc. Thankfully, a hrefhttp://genshi.edgewall.org/wiki/Documentation/xml-templates.html titleGenshi>Trac’s template system/a> allows you to replace output with an override template (typically found in ) that is applied before content is sent across the wire. It was a bit time-consuming to figure out how to do what I wanted to do, but I eventually ended up with a file that looks something like this:/p>p>code classsource>/code>/p>p>I hope this is useful for someone. 🙂/p> /div> p classpostmetadata>Posted in a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/categories/general relcategory tag>General/a> | a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2008/05/02/adding-default-descriptions-to-trac-tickets#comments>4 Comments »/a>/p> /div> div classpost idpost-35> h2>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2008/04/30/leaving-apple relbookmark titlePermanent Link to On Regret Minimization, Leaving Apple, and Playing Pinball>On Regret Minimization, Leaving Apple, and Playing Pinball/a>/h2> small>April 30th, 2008 !-- by Andrew -->/small> div classentry> p>It’s been a month now since I left Apple to start a company. I’d been working on Time Machine (an interesting and challenging project) as a software engineer, with a fantastic group of people, and was in a situation that was really pretty great. So, why did I decide to leave and go do my own thing? a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2008/04/30/leaving-apple#more-35 classmore-link>Read the rest of this entry »/a>/p> /div> p classpostmetadata>Posted in a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/categories/general relcategory tag>General/a>, a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/categories/startup relcategory tag>Startup/a> | a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2008/04/30/leaving-apple#comments>6 Comments »/a>/p> /div> div classpost idpost-33> h2>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2007/10/26/happy-leopard-day relbookmark titlePermanent Link to Happy Leopard Day!>Happy Leopard Day!/a>/h2> small>October 26th, 2007 !-- by Andrew -->/small> div classentry> p>In January, I started working as a software engineer on Leopard. I was lucky enough to get to work on two of the top ten features for this release of OS X:/p>p>a hrefhttp://www.apple.com/macosx/features/timemachine.html titleTime Machine>img src/blog/images/timemachine_icon.png altTime Machine />/a> a hrefhttp://www.apple.com/macosx/features/parentalcontrols.html titleParental Controls>img src/blog/images/parentalcontrols_icon.gif altParental Controls />/a>/p>p>For the past few months I worked seven days a week pretty much non-stop on making the back end of Time Machine faster and more reliable. It was a lot of work, but overall a very rewarding experience, and I’m happy that I got to work on such a kick-ass release of OS X. Enjoy!/p>p>Now, I’m off to a beer bash for some much needed relaxation. 🙂/p> /div> p classpostmetadata>Posted in a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/categories/general relcategory tag>General/a> | a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2007/10/26/happy-leopard-day#comments>2 Comments »/a>/p> /div> div classnavigation> div classalignleft>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/page/2 >« Previous Entries/a>/div> div classalignright>/div> /div> /div> div idsidebar> ul> li> form methodget idsearchform actionhttp://www.nextthing.org/>h2>Search this blog:/h2>div> input typetext value names ids /> input typesubmit idsearchsubmit valueGo />/div>/form> /li> !-- Author information is disabled per default. Uncomment and fill in your details if you want to use it. li>h2>Author/h2> p>A little something about you, the author. Nothing lengthy, just an overview./p> /li> --> li> /li> li classpagenav>h2>Pages/h2>ul>li classpage_item page-item-22>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/about>About Me/a>/li>li classpage_item page-item-21>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/bot>About the Robot/a>/li>/ul>/li> li>h2>Archives/h2> ul> li>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2015/04>April 2015/a>/li> li>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2011/11>November 2011/a>/li> li>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2010/11>November 2010/a>/li> li>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2010/07>July 2010/a>/li> li>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2010/05>May 2010/a>/li> li>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2009/04>April 2009/a>/li> li>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2008/10>October 2008/a>/li> li>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2008/05>May 2008/a>/li> li>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2008/04>April 2008/a>/li> li>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2007/10>October 2007/a>/li> li>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2007/06>June 2007/a>/li> li>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2007/03>March 2007/a>/li> li>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2007/02>February 2007/a>/li> li>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2007/01>January 2007/a>/li> li>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2006/12>December 2006/a>/li> li>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2006/10>October 2006/a>/li> li>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2005/08>August 2005/a>/li> li>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2005/07>July 2005/a>/li> li>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2005/03>March 2005/a>/li> li>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2005/01>January 2005/a>/li> li>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2002/11>November 2002/a>/li> li>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2002/10>October 2002/a>/li> li>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2002/09>September 2002/a>/li> li>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/archives/2002/07>July 2002/a>/li> /ul> /li> li>h2>Categories/h2> ul> li classcat-item cat-item-1>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/categories/general >General/a> (29)/li> li classcat-item cat-item-5>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/categories/links >Links/a> (4)/li> li classcat-item cat-item-2>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/categories/programming >Programming/a> (8)/li> li classcat-item cat-item-4>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/categories/startup >Startup/a> (1)/li> li classcat-item cat-item-3>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/categories/travel >Travel/a> (4)/li> /ul> /li> li idlinkcat-7 classlinkcat>h2>Blogroll/h2> ul>li>a hrefhttp://www.scifihifi.com/ relfriend met co-worker>Buzz Andersen/a>/li>li>a hrefhttp://outofcheese.org/ relfriend met co-worker>Eric Albert/a>/li>li>a hrefhttp://www.tumultco.com/blog/ relfriend met co-worker>Jonathan Deutsch/a>/li>li>a hrefhttp://blog.joshlewis.org/ relfriend met co-worker colleague titleA coworker.>Josh Lewis/a>/li>li>a hrefhttp://ridiculousfish.com/blog/ relfriend met co-worker>Peter Ammon/a>/li> /ul>/li> li idlinkcat-10 classlinkcat>h2>Links/h2> ul>li>a hrefhttp://www.scifihifi.com/cocoalicious/ titleI worked on this with Buzz.>Cocoalicious/a>/li>li>a hrefhttp://www.djpeterhenry.com/ relfriend met co-resident titleOne of my housemates.>DJ Peter Henry/a>/li>li>a hrefhttp://www.uscattlemen.org/ title(I’m also a cattle rancher, and a member.)>US Cattlemen Association/a>/li> /ul>/li> li idlinkcat-8 classlinkcat>h2>Me/h2> ul>li>a hrefhttp://andrewwooster.com/ relme titleMy vanity page.>AndrewWooster.com/a>/li>li>a hrefhttp://del.icio.us/wooster relme>My bookmarks on del.icio.us/a>/li>li>a hrefhttp://upcoming.org/user/17789/ relme>My events on upcoming.org/a>/li>li>a hrefhttp://www.cs.hmc.edu/~awooster/ relme>My homepage at Mudd/a>/li>li>a hrefhttp://www.flickr.com/photos/awooster/ relme>My photos on flickr/a>/li>li>a hrefhttp://twitter.com/wooster relme>My status on Twitter/a>/li> /ul>/li> li idlinkcat-9 classlinkcat>h2>My Projects/h2> ul>li>a hrefhttp://amid.st/ titleMy social place bookmarking site>Amidst/a>/li>li>a hrefhttp://planetaryscale.com/ titleMy Company>Planetary Scale LLC/a>/li> /ul>/li> li>h2>Meta/h2> ul> li>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/wordpress/wp-login.php>Log in/a>/li> li>a hrefhttp://validator.w3.org/check/referer titleThis page validates as XHTML 1.0 Transitional>Valid abbr titleeXtensible HyperText Markup Language>XHTML/abbr>/a>/li> li>a hrefhttp://gmpg.org/xfn/>abbr titleXHTML Friends Network>XFN/abbr>/a>/li> li>a hrefhttp://wordpress.org/ titlePowered by WordPress, state-of-the-art semantic personal publishing platform.>WordPress/a>/li> /ul> /li> /ul>!-- Start of Flickr Badge -->script typetext/javascript>!--zg_insert_badge function() { var zg_bg_color ffffff; 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HTTP/1.1 200 OKDate: Sat, 09 Nov 2024 20:25:24 GMTServer: ApacheX-Han: Shot first!Link: https://www.nextthing.org/wp-json/>; relhttps://api.w.org/Upgrade: h2Connection: UpgradeCache-Control: max-age600Expires: Sat, 09 Nov 2024 20:35:24 GMTVary: Accept-Encoding,User-AgentContent-Length: 29121Content-Type: text/html; charsetUTF-8 !DOCTYPE html PUBLIC -//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd>html xmlnshttp://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml>head profilehttp://gmpg.org/xfn/11>meta http-equivContent-Type contenttext/html; charsetUTF-8 />title>nextthing.org /title>meta namegenerator contentWordPress 4.7.29 /> !-- leave this for stats -->link relstylesheet hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/wordpress/wp-content/themes/mine2_0/style.css typetext/css mediascreen />link relstylesheet hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/wordpress/wp-content/themes/mine2_0/print.css typetext/css mediaprint />link relalternate typeapplication/rss+xml titlenextthing.org RSS Feed hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/feed />link relpingback hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/wordpress/xmlrpc.php />link reldns-prefetch href//s.w.org /> script typetext/javascript> window._wpemojiSettings {baseUrl:https:\/\/s.w.org\/images\/core\/emoji\/2.2.1\/72x72\/,ext:.png,svgUrl:https:\/\/s.w.org\/images\/core\/emoji\/2.2.1\/svg\/,svgExt:.svg,source:{concatemoji:https:\/\/www.nextthing.org\/wordpress\/wp-includes\/js\/wp-emoji-release.min.js?ver4.7.29}}; 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/script> style typetext/css>img.wp-smiley,img.emoji { display: inline !important; border: none !important; box-shadow: none !important; height: 1em !important; width: 1em !important; margin: 0 .07em !important; vertical-align: -0.1em !important; background: none !important; padding: 0 !important;}/style>link relhttps://api.w.org/ hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/wp-json/ />link relEditURI typeapplication/rsd+xml titleRSD hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/wordpress/xmlrpc.php?rsd />link relwlwmanifest typeapplication/wlwmanifest+xml hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/wordpress/wp-includes/wlwmanifest.xml /> meta namegenerator contentWordPress 4.7.29 />/head>body>div idpage>div idheader> h1>a hrefhttp://www.nextthing.org/>nextthing.org/a>/h1> h2>by Andrew Wooster/h2>/div>hr /> div idcontent classnarrowcolumn> div classpost idpost-56> h2>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2015/04/07/56 relbookmark titlePermanent Link to >/a>/h2> small>April 7th, 2015 !-- by Andrew -->/small> div classentry> p>I’m mostly posting over at a hrefhttp://log.andrewwooster.com/ titlelog.andrewwooster.com>log.andrewwooster.com/a> these days./p> /div> p classpostmetadata>Posted in a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/categories/general relcategory tag>General/a> | a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2015/04/07/56#respond>No Comments »/a>/p> /div> div classpost idpost-51> h2>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2011/11/21/africa relbookmark titlePermanent Link to >/a>/h2> small>November 21st, 2011 !-- by Andrew -->/small> div classentry> blockquote>p>The only members of the crew who didn’t come down with dysentery were Huston and Bogart, because they were drinking whisky rather than the water, which turned out to be the source of the infection./p>/blockquote>p>– a hrefhttp://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/films/features/the-african-queen--bogart-hepburn-and-a-case-of-the-jungle-jeebies-1965323.html titleThe African Queen>The African Queen/a>/p>p>On a related note, I’ll be headed to Africa for a month, albeit the other side of the continent, next February. /p>p>I’ll need to pack some whisky./p> /div> p classpostmetadata>Posted in a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/categories/links relcategory tag>Links/a>, a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/categories/travel relcategory tag>Travel/a> | a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2011/11/21/africa#respond>No Comments »/a>/p> /div> div classpost idpost-42> h2>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2010/11/19/daniel-jalkut-on-asking-for-help relbookmark titlePermanent Link to Daniel Jalkut on Asking for Help>Daniel Jalkut on Asking for Help/a>/h2> small>November 19th, 2010 !-- by Andrew -->/small> div classentry> blockquote>p>All the bugs in our group were difficult. One day I was assigned a particularly vexing one. I had shown a knack for tracking down tricky issues, but this one stymied me. I hammered away at the bug but I couldn’t figure out the cause. I couldn’t even think of where to go next. I was petrified./p>/blockquote>p>– a hrefhttp://www.red-sweater.com/blog/1505/ask-for-help titleAsk For Help>Red Sweater Blog – Ask For Help/a>/p>p>Read the post, it’s worth it. The moral is, if you need help, ask for it. By the time I was at Apple, this was one of the things we drilled into new recruits, for precisely the reason that it could be paralyzing to be dropped into that environment. The company very much has a Do-It-Yourself culture, but not asking for help when you need it can be paralyzing and demoralizing, and totally unnecessarily so. It’s not a defect to need help once in awhile./p> /div> p classpostmetadata>Posted in a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/categories/general relcategory tag>General/a>, a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/categories/links relcategory tag>Links/a> | a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2010/11/19/daniel-jalkut-on-asking-for-help#comments>1 Comment »/a>/p> /div> div classpost idpost-40> h2>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2010/07/08/ross-perot-and-scott-mcnealy relbookmark titlePermanent Link to Ross Perot and Scott McNealy>Ross Perot and Scott McNealy/a>/h2> small>July 8th, 2010 !-- by Andrew -->/small> div classentry> blockquote>p> Before they flew east, Alvy and Ed were apprehensive. They had heard strange things about Ross Perot from a credible source, Scott McNealy, the chief executive of Sun Microsystems, a rising young star in Silicon Valley. Scott talked about how he and Ross were supposed to meet at Chicago’s O’Hare Airport to shake hands on a deal. The terms had already been negotiated by their people, but the two leaders had never met in person.br /> At O’Hare, Ross Perot sized up the younger man and asked: “Are you married?”br /> “No.”br /> “Where do you live?”br /> “California.”br /> That was all Ross Perot wanted to know.br /> He stormed away. The deal was off./p>/blockquote>p>– a hrefhttp://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0767904338?ieUTF8&tagandrewwooster-20&linkCodeas2&camp1789&creative9325&creativeASIN0767904338>The Second Coming of Steve Jobs/a>/p>p>I heard this story awhile ago, but this is the only reference I can find to it in print./p> /div> p classpostmetadata>Posted in a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/categories/general relcategory tag>General/a>, a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/categories/links relcategory tag>Links/a> | a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2010/07/08/ross-perot-and-scott-mcnealy#respond>No Comments »/a>/p> /div> div classpost idpost-39> h2>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2010/05/18/kellan-elliott-mccrea-on-flickr-and-data relbookmark titlePermanent Link to Kellan Elliott-McCrea on Flickr and Data>Kellan Elliott-McCrea on Flickr and Data/a>/h2> small>May 18th, 2010 !-- by Andrew -->/small> div classentry> blockquote>p>With Flickr you can get out, via the API, every single piece of information you put into the system. Every photo, in every size, plus the completely untouched original. (which we store for you indefinitely, whether or not you pay us) Every tag, every comment, every note, every people tag, every fave. Also your stats, view counts, and referers. … Flickr actually goes a bit farther, not only can you get your data out, but it gets enriched as it passes through the system. … This isn’t the exhaustive list, just a few of the things Flickr does to respect, and collaborate with the people who share their time and data with us./p>/blockquote>p>– a hrefhttp://laughingmeme.org/2010/05/18/minimal-competence-data-access-data-ownership-and-sharecropping/>Minimal Competence: Data Access, Data Ownership, and Sharecropping./a>/p>p>Anyone who writes a web service should be aiming for this. Anybody who uses someone else’s service that doesn’t provide this level of access should be asking why./p> /div> p classpostmetadata>Posted in a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/categories/links relcategory tag>Links/a> | a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2010/05/18/kellan-elliott-mccrea-on-flickr-and-data#respond>No Comments »/a>/p> /div> div classpost idpost-38> h2>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2009/04/25/the-best-spidering-project-ever relbookmark titlePermanent Link to The Best Spidering Project Ever>The Best Spidering Project Ever/a>/h2> small>April 25th, 2009 !-- by Andrew -->/small> div classentry> p>I keep losing the link to the oddly-named a hrefhttp://www.drunkmenworkhere.org/>Drunk Men Work Here/a> project. This is, frankly, the best (which in my quirky view is some combination of unique, creative, awesome, and data-intensive) analysis of web spiders I’ve ever seen./p>p>For anyone interested in how to induce the internals of spiders, this is required reading./p> /div> p classpostmetadata>Posted in a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/categories/general relcategory tag>General/a> | a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2009/04/25/the-best-spidering-project-ever#respond>No Comments »/a>/p> /div> div classpost idpost-37> h2>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2008/10/30/office-hours relbookmark titlePermanent Link to Office Hours>Office Hours/a>/h2> small>October 30th, 2008 !-- by Andrew -->/small> div classentry> p>Tonight a hrefhttp://twitter.com/wooster/status/980116222>I held/a> my first office hours in Palo Alto at Coupa Café. Office hours are an idea a hrefhttp://buzz.vox.com/library/post/design-for-life-2007.html>I got/a> from my good friend a hrefhttp://log.scifihifi.com>Buzz Andersen/a>, who held them on a semi-regular basis at a hrefhttp://www.alembicbar.com/>The Alembic/a> in San Francisco, and which I endeavored to attend whenever possible./p>p>The basic idea of office hours is that I (or whoever holds them) will be at a certain location at a certain time, and anyone who wants to talk to me, ask questions, etc, can come by and do so. It seems a bit ego-centric, but really I feel that it’s the opposite. I’m interested in what other people have to say, and feel that modern society has disconnected us from talking to one-another on a regular basis in the ways that were previously available. The sharing of ideas that were the foundation of a hrefhttp://www.amazon.com/Benjamin-Franklin-American-Walter-Isaacson/dp/074325807X/refsr_1_1?ieUTF8&sbooks&qid1225352121&sr1-1>social clubs/a>, pubs, libraries, a hrefhttp://www.amazon.com/Conspiracy-Paper-Ballantine-Readers-Circle/dp/0804119120/refpd_bbs_sr_1?ieUTF8&sbooks&qid1225351987&sr8-1>coffee shop/a> discussions, and even a hrefhttp://www.amazon.com/Born-Blood-Lost-Secrets-Freemasonry/dp/0871316021/refsr_1_8?ieUTF8&sbooks&qid1225352065&sr1-8>secret societies/a> of say, the 17th through 19th centuries have been eclipsed by a hrefhttp://www.amazon.com/Office-Space-Special-Flair-Widescreen/dp/B000AP04L0/refpd_bbs_sr_1?ieUTF8&sdvd&qid1225352320&sr8-1>water cooler discussions/a> and team meetings. Instead of a roundtable of ideas shared in the open among a group of like-minded people, we have substituted a hrefhttp://www.amazon.com/Antitrust-Ned-Bellamy/dp/B00005AUDW/refpd_bbs_sr_1?ieUTF8&sdvd&qid1225352372&sr8-1>proprietary trade secrets/a> and patent applications, action items and Gantt charts, vapid launch parties and a hrefhttp://valleywag.com/5062424/its-the-end-of-web-20-as-we-know-it>lavish offsites/a>./p>p>I feel that office hours are a good start in getting back to the foundations of the Enlightenment and, with much less importance, our industry. They are a brief pause where we can exchange ideas, talk to each other frankly, share our ideas, and come together in a spirit of pushing society and ourselves further. Many may consider this to be utopian garbage, but even on a utilitarian basis I’ve found office hours to be a welcome break from the hyper-competitive nature of our industry, and an invaluable way to exchange approaches to problems, solutions and expertise, and even industry gossip (*gasp*)./p>p>At my first office hours, the topics ranged from iPhone memory management questions to open geodata initiatives to the future plans of our respective lives and businesses. It was a lively exchange of ideas, and one I’m glad to have had. For those of you in the Bay Area interested to coming to my next office hours, I encourage you to follow me on a hrefhttp://twitter.com/wooster>Twitter/a>. For people interested in holding their own office hours, I say, “just do it”. You may just be pleasantly surprised by the results./p>p>b>Update/b>: a hrefhttp://tlrobinson.net/>Tom Robinson/a> of a hrefhttp://280north.com/>280 North/a> suggests using an a hrefhttp://search.twitter.com/search?q%23officehours>#officehours/a> tag in Twitter to announce office hours. I think this is a great idea, and will be using this for my future office hours announcements./p> /div> p classpostmetadata>Posted in a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/categories/general relcategory tag>General/a>, a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/categories/programming relcategory tag>Programming/a> | a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2008/10/30/office-hours#comments>5 Comments »/a>/p> /div> div classpost idpost-36> h2>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2008/05/02/adding-default-descriptions-to-trac-tickets relbookmark titlePermanent Link to Adding Default Descriptions to Trac Tickets>Adding Default Descriptions to Trac Tickets/a>/h2> small>May 2nd, 2008 !-- by Andrew -->/small> div classentry> p>I’ve been using Trac for the new projects I’m working on, and am liking it so far. I have, however, done a bit of customization to make it fit my needs a bit better. One thing that took awhile was figuring out how to change the default ticket description./p>p>I like having some structure to my bug descriptions, including steps to reproduce, regression information, etc. Thankfully, a hrefhttp://genshi.edgewall.org/wiki/Documentation/xml-templates.html titleGenshi>Trac’s template system/a> allows you to replace output with an override template (typically found in ) that is applied before content is sent across the wire. It was a bit time-consuming to figure out how to do what I wanted to do, but I eventually ended up with a file that looks something like this:/p>p>code classsource>/code>/p>p>I hope this is useful for someone. 🙂/p> /div> p classpostmetadata>Posted in a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/categories/general relcategory tag>General/a> | a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2008/05/02/adding-default-descriptions-to-trac-tickets#comments>4 Comments »/a>/p> /div> div classpost idpost-35> h2>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2008/04/30/leaving-apple relbookmark titlePermanent Link to On Regret Minimization, Leaving Apple, and Playing Pinball>On Regret Minimization, Leaving Apple, and Playing Pinball/a>/h2> small>April 30th, 2008 !-- by Andrew -->/small> div classentry> p>It’s been a month now since I left Apple to start a company. I’d been working on Time Machine (an interesting and challenging project) as a software engineer, with a fantastic group of people, and was in a situation that was really pretty great. So, why did I decide to leave and go do my own thing? a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2008/04/30/leaving-apple#more-35 classmore-link>Read the rest of this entry »/a>/p> /div> p classpostmetadata>Posted in a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/categories/general relcategory tag>General/a>, a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/categories/startup relcategory tag>Startup/a> | a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2008/04/30/leaving-apple#comments>6 Comments »/a>/p> /div> div classpost idpost-33> h2>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2007/10/26/happy-leopard-day relbookmark titlePermanent Link to Happy Leopard Day!>Happy Leopard Day!/a>/h2> small>October 26th, 2007 !-- by Andrew -->/small> div classentry> p>In January, I started working as a software engineer on Leopard. I was lucky enough to get to work on two of the top ten features for this release of OS X:/p>p>a hrefhttp://www.apple.com/macosx/features/timemachine.html titleTime Machine>img src/blog/images/timemachine_icon.png altTime Machine />/a> a hrefhttp://www.apple.com/macosx/features/parentalcontrols.html titleParental Controls>img src/blog/images/parentalcontrols_icon.gif altParental Controls />/a>/p>p>For the past few months I worked seven days a week pretty much non-stop on making the back end of Time Machine faster and more reliable. It was a lot of work, but overall a very rewarding experience, and I’m happy that I got to work on such a kick-ass release of OS X. Enjoy!/p>p>Now, I’m off to a beer bash for some much needed relaxation. 🙂/p> /div> p classpostmetadata>Posted in a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/categories/general relcategory tag>General/a> | a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2007/10/26/happy-leopard-day#comments>2 Comments »/a>/p> /div> div classnavigation> div classalignleft>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/page/2 >« Previous Entries/a>/div> div classalignright>/div> /div> /div> div idsidebar> ul> li> form methodget idsearchform actionhttps://www.nextthing.org/>h2>Search this blog:/h2>div> input typetext value names ids /> input typesubmit idsearchsubmit valueGo />/div>/form> /li> !-- Author information is disabled per default. Uncomment and fill in your details if you want to use it. li>h2>Author/h2> p>A little something about you, the author. Nothing lengthy, just an overview./p> /li> --> li> /li> li classpagenav>h2>Pages/h2>ul>li classpage_item page-item-22>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/about>About Me/a>/li>li classpage_item page-item-21>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/bot>About the Robot/a>/li>/ul>/li> li>h2>Archives/h2> ul> li>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2015/04>April 2015/a>/li> li>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2011/11>November 2011/a>/li> li>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2010/11>November 2010/a>/li> li>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2010/07>July 2010/a>/li> li>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2010/05>May 2010/a>/li> li>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2009/04>April 2009/a>/li> li>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2008/10>October 2008/a>/li> li>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2008/05>May 2008/a>/li> li>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2008/04>April 2008/a>/li> li>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2007/10>October 2007/a>/li> li>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2007/06>June 2007/a>/li> li>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2007/03>March 2007/a>/li> li>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2007/02>February 2007/a>/li> li>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2007/01>January 2007/a>/li> li>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2006/12>December 2006/a>/li> li>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2006/10>October 2006/a>/li> li>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2005/08>August 2005/a>/li> li>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2005/07>July 2005/a>/li> li>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2005/03>March 2005/a>/li> li>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2005/01>January 2005/a>/li> li>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2002/11>November 2002/a>/li> li>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2002/10>October 2002/a>/li> li>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2002/09>September 2002/a>/li> li>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/archives/2002/07>July 2002/a>/li> /ul> /li> li>h2>Categories/h2> ul> li classcat-item cat-item-1>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/categories/general >General/a> (29)/li> li classcat-item cat-item-5>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/categories/links >Links/a> (4)/li> li classcat-item cat-item-2>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/categories/programming >Programming/a> (8)/li> li classcat-item cat-item-4>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/categories/startup >Startup/a> (1)/li> li classcat-item cat-item-3>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/categories/travel >Travel/a> (4)/li> /ul> /li> li idlinkcat-7 classlinkcat>h2>Blogroll/h2> ul>li>a hrefhttp://www.scifihifi.com/ relfriend met co-worker>Buzz Andersen/a>/li>li>a hrefhttp://outofcheese.org/ relfriend met co-worker>Eric Albert/a>/li>li>a hrefhttp://www.tumultco.com/blog/ relfriend met co-worker>Jonathan Deutsch/a>/li>li>a hrefhttp://blog.joshlewis.org/ relfriend met co-worker colleague titleA coworker.>Josh Lewis/a>/li>li>a hrefhttp://ridiculousfish.com/blog/ relfriend met co-worker>Peter Ammon/a>/li> /ul>/li> li idlinkcat-10 classlinkcat>h2>Links/h2> ul>li>a hrefhttp://www.scifihifi.com/cocoalicious/ titleI worked on this with Buzz.>Cocoalicious/a>/li>li>a hrefhttp://www.djpeterhenry.com/ relfriend met co-resident titleOne of my housemates.>DJ Peter Henry/a>/li>li>a hrefhttp://www.uscattlemen.org/ title(I’m also a cattle rancher, and a member.)>US Cattlemen Association/a>/li> /ul>/li> li idlinkcat-8 classlinkcat>h2>Me/h2> ul>li>a hrefhttp://andrewwooster.com/ relme titleMy vanity page.>AndrewWooster.com/a>/li>li>a hrefhttp://del.icio.us/wooster relme>My bookmarks on del.icio.us/a>/li>li>a hrefhttp://upcoming.org/user/17789/ relme>My events on upcoming.org/a>/li>li>a hrefhttp://www.cs.hmc.edu/~awooster/ relme>My homepage at Mudd/a>/li>li>a hrefhttp://www.flickr.com/photos/awooster/ relme>My photos on flickr/a>/li>li>a hrefhttp://twitter.com/wooster relme>My status on Twitter/a>/li> /ul>/li> li idlinkcat-9 classlinkcat>h2>My Projects/h2> ul>li>a hrefhttp://amid.st/ titleMy social place bookmarking site>Amidst/a>/li>li>a hrefhttp://planetaryscale.com/ titleMy Company>Planetary Scale LLC/a>/li> /ul>/li> li>h2>Meta/h2> ul> li>a hrefhttps://www.nextthing.org/wordpress/wp-login.php>Log in/a>/li> li>a hrefhttp://validator.w3.org/check/referer titleThis page validates as XHTML 1.0 Transitional>Valid abbr titleeXtensible HyperText Markup Language>XHTML/abbr>/a>/li> li>a hrefhttp://gmpg.org/xfn/>abbr titleXHTML Friends Network>XFN/abbr>/a>/li> li>a hrefhttp://wordpress.org/ titlePowered by WordPress, state-of-the-art semantic personal publishing platform.>WordPress/a>/li> /ul> /li> /ul>!-- Start of Flickr Badge -->script typetext/javascript>!--zg_insert_badge function() { var zg_bg_color ffffff; 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