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More IPhone craziness

Posted by Keith Davey on February 28, 2008 at 05:53 PM

I have just read on AppleInsider that O2 will not be implementing Visual Voicemail in Ireland. Thats just nuts. One of the few features that might have kept me wanting a legit is gone.

Say Hello to the iPhone and goodbye to your money

Posted by Keith Davey on February 28, 2008 at 01:07 PM

Two things happened in the last two days. This morning the iPhone was announced for Ireland, as I pretty much expected O2 got it, they had it in the UK so it made sense.

However, also as you would expect the prices are a joke. €399 for the 8GB and €499 for the 16GB. It sells at these prices elsewhere in Europe so I suppose no surprise there.

The other thing that happened was that the Euro reached a new high against the dollar, $1.51. So €399 is now $602, and €499 is $753.49. In the states these two handset models sell at $399 and $499. So even accounting for VAT, we are still looking at over a $100 premium on the handset alone.

Then there are the tarrifs which are as follows:

Monthly charge (incl VAT)€45€65€100
Anytime minutes included100350700
Texts included100150250
Data included1GB1GB1GB
Additional texts10c10c10c
Additional Calls20c20c20c

Additional Data 2c per MB

Voicemail 15C

Well the 1GB data limit it clearly a joke, I don't think much needs to be said on that. We get ripped off for mobile data in Ireland unless you get one of their broadband modems. But if I can buy the modem and get 10gb for 24 euro I don't understand how they couldn't work that into their 100 Euro price plan.

Currently I am on the Business Time 500 plan. For €70 I get 500 minutes talk time, 150 anytime minutes or 250 texts, extra calls are 17c and extra texts 8c.

So price wise the €65 iPhone plan would be the equivalent plan. However, for the privilege of paying out a few hundred for a phone, I would have 150 minutes less talk time, 100 less text and actually pay MORE!! for additional calls and texts.

Only in Ireland.

It has to be said the idea of sticking to my existing plan, getting in a phone from the states, unlocking it and ignoring the fact that I have mobile safari on the phone is still looking like a viable option. Its still likely I will end out getting an iPhone but with these plans they have hobbled the use of a great device.

Outsourcing update

Posted by Keith Davey on February 22, 2008 at 12:38 AM

We have now employed our first oursourced resource and so far things are great. We have code coming in to our SVN server each day and we can see the project developing.

We got an extremely good developer from Russia who speaks great english. We found him through ODesk.

Odesk is very impressive, its a great platform. On signing up someone to do a project you get access to SVN and Bugzilla through their system. It also provides monitor of work done and hours put in by your resource.

We will continue to update how we get on and will give more details on what we are getting built soon enough.

Things other people have learned

Posted by Naoise Guerin on February 21, 2008 at 03:50 PM

Great creative project by Stefan Sagmeister "Things I have learned in my life so far". Project is also accepting contributions.

Explore, enjoy, contribute...
thingsihavelearnedinmylife.com

Coworking is essentially someone organising a space for people to work together who could be from different firms, freelancers etc. to work together in a shared space.

I really like this idea. I know when I was freelancing in the past I would have loved to be around other people working in related areas, sharing ideas etc. There would be great networking opportunities along with sharing the cost of rent, communications equipment and so on. And you can start going a bit crazy from lack of social contact if just working from home. :)

The New York Times has a great article on it here...

This is taking off now in Ireland too. More info at www.coworking.ie

Making New Things

Posted by Naoise Guerin on February 19, 2008 at 03:03 PM

Paul Graham on six principles for making new things: "I like to find (a) simple solutions (b) to overlooked problems (c) that actually need to be solved, and (d) deliver them as informally as possible, (e) starting with a very crude version 1, then (f) iterating rapidly."

Full article here...

This very much sums up our approach to a couple of products that are currently in development. It works. Of course the next step is making it a success once it's made. So we will probably just repeat process again there. Though the version that makes it to the public won't be the crude version 1.

Of course the advantage of working on your own product is you have more opportunity to iterate. This is rarely done on service based projects, due mainly to time constraints(poor planning) and possibly financial. Which is a shame as it really impacts quality.

Upgrading to Rails 2

Posted by Keith Davey on February 18, 2008 at 08:45 PM

I have held off using Rails 2 on our existing apps for a while now and I decided it was time to give it a try. We have a number of apps running on various releases of rails 1.2 but I always figured it would be too much work to upgrade them. However its turns out to be pretty easy.

First off I ran:

rake rails:freeze:edge TAG=rel_2-0-2

The funny thing is that you have to run this twice. The reasoning is that the first time you run it you are running your rake command from rails 1.2, which isn't aware of several new pieces of rails 2, in my case Active Resource.

So if you get this error:

..vendor/rails/railties/lib/initializer.rb:159:in
`require_frameworks': no such file to load—active_resource

All you need to do is run the rake command the second time.

The advantage of freezing is that you can easily unfreeze later if you run in to problems.

The next item that came up is that a session key needs to be set in the environment.rb file. This takes the form of:

config.action_controller.session = { :session_key => '_project_session', :secret => 'blahblahblahblahblahblahblahblah' }

where the blah blah bit is a genuine key.

Without this the rails 2 app doesn't want to start.

Once those two were resolved our apps started up fine. They still nag about a few things, mostly deprecated items in our code. The only other config item that we had change was that
in config/environment/development.rb the line

config.breakpoint_server = true

has no effect anymore and I just commented it out.

So all in all its pretty easy to upgrade, and although your milage may vary, I'd recommend giving it a shot.

Comments: 0 (view/add your own) Tags: rails

The Rails Way

Posted by Keith Davey on February 17, 2008 at 06:11 PM

For those of you interested in Rails Development, we recently purchased a copy of The Rails Way by Obie Fernandez. It is the best rails book I have read bar none.

Don't get me wrong, the Pragmatic books are excellent too but The Rails Way takes it to a whole new level, going in to the detail you will need as you try to progress beyond the basics of rails.

I've been doing rails sites for one and a half years now and I am still learning stuff thanks to this book. It even has a forward by DHH (He hates that apparently, but it sounds too familiar to call him David as he prefers.)

Comments: 0 (view/add your own) Tags: books, rails

Amazing Design and Use of Space

Posted by Naoise Guerin on February 15, 2008 at 03:04 PM

Casulo have essentially designed a box with the contents of an apartment inside. Now that is really reducing complexity down to something seemingly simple. Not sure how easy it is to take apart though and put together into the box. Still, fantastic design and space saving.

More coverage at Treehugger...

Comments: 0 (view/add your own) Tags: design

Laws of Web Design and Web Development

Posted by Naoise Guerin on February 14, 2008 at 07:51 PM

Blue Flavor have posted a list of laws and how they apply to web design and development.

My favourite of the bunch is Conway's Law "Any piece of software reflects the organizational structure that produced it."

Full post here...

Comments: 0 (view/add your own) Tags: design, web

Irish Public Services

Posted by Keith Davey on February 14, 2008 at 04:21 PM

In the last few weeks we have hit a couple of instances of Irish Banana republic public services.

We moved in to our offices and naturally wondered about how to get our bins collected. We have no room for a wheelie bin. We are on the first floor, we have no access to the back of our building and the front goes straight out on to the street. So we figured its no problem, we will get those stickers for the bags.

So we called Dublin Waste only to be told under the current rules we cannot use bags. Now bear in mind, we can see other people using bags. This was about six weeks ago.

After numerous calls by Naoise we were told we should use a private company, Greenstar. We called them. They didn't come out. Well ok they did but only after calling the guys supervisor on the fourth or fifth call. Then out he comes.

We generate about one bag of waste a week. The guy comes out and explains that we have to buy the bags 200 at a time and in total it will come to about €1500. Now ok, we are a business and I accept the fact that we have to pay for things but paying for four years of bin service in advance seemed a bit much to me.

To top it off at the same time we got a letter "demanding" the first "moiety" of our rates. I highlighted the two words on purpose. Firstly, they demand the rates. This is the first communication we have received about this "moiety". Given we can't even get our bins collected you can imagine how we feel about this. The second problem was I didn't have a clue what a moiety was, unless we are talking quiet man stuff here and someone is a "moiety fella". A quick search turns up the fact that moiety is the old french word for half. So these people who can't even collect our bins and demand our money can speak old French.

In the end Naoise got on the phone to Dublin Waste and threatened them with calls to politicians. The guy then says, while he was on the phone, that the inspector has just approved our request. Hmmm.

This has all happened in the same week that our telco left us without a phone for a week and now I have just been told I am getting no post at home all week as the postman is holidays and there is no cover.

I'm supposed to pay some VAT and PRSI now but I'm just not feeling it.

More Apple Pricing madness

Posted by Keith Davey on February 13, 2008 at 10:39 PM

Now lets get this straight. I am a bit of an Apple fan boy. Not the rush out the door every time they release a product type, nor the type who gets overly excited when the store goes down but I really like their machines and software. I have personally converted several people to be apple users as well.

However, the one thing that constantly annoys me is the price difference between Ireland (or generally europe for that matter) and the US.

The new Apple TV is $229 in the US. By google magic this is €157.46. On the Apple Ireland site, €299!! Almost twice the price.

Now I can understand that Apple can't keep up with currency variations on a day by day basis but this is ridiculous. Come on Apple get your act together.

RailsConf Europe 08

Posted by Keith Davey on February 13, 2008 at 05:30 PM

I noticed the O'Reilly Rails Conf Europe for 2008 site is up. Its on the 2nd to the 4th of September in Berlin.

I'd be very interested in having Marino Software there in force but I am wondering is it worthwhile. Did anyone go to the 2007 version? Did you pick up anything worthwhile?

Outsourcing Experiment Update

Posted by Keith Davey on February 12, 2008 at 11:33 PM

We now have 4 bids in for Rails Manager application. The prices vary quite a bit and also it difficult to determine what the price will end out at as some are offering fixed price and some hourly rate. Its also hard to determine how good the people are but I am fairly impressed by the calibre of what I have read anyway.

And we have uploaded our second project up on to the sites today. Its a more web based one so I expect more quotes as web projects seem to draw more quotes anyway.

Whats the hold up on free wireless?

Posted by Keith Davey on February 07, 2008 at 11:58 PM

Today I travelled through 2 airports, Heathrow and Dublin.

Now Heathrow at least had a large selection of wireless networks I could join, although all at a price.

Dublin Airport was a joke. The new gates, the ones starting with D don't have any wireless at all. None whatsoever. I actually couldn't believe I didn't have the option of paying.

But how operations the size of major airports cannot afford an internet connection and a few wireless access points is beyond me. Business travelers have to go through these completely under serviced and overpriced building on a regular basis, can't we at least expect to be able to get some work done while there.

Time Warner and AOL to Split?

Posted by Keith Davey on February 06, 2008 at 09:57 PM

Funnily enough, just after I mentioned that the merger between AOL and Time Warner never really worked there are rumors about that they are going to split.

Its hit Slashdot today - Time-Warner Planning AOL Split

Outsourcing Experiment

Posted by Keith Davey on February 06, 2008 at 12:52 AM

I've wanted to experiment with some of the outsourcing sites like ODesk for a while now. It always sounds like a good idea but when I head stories about outsourcing it often falls flat.

I've just posted a test job though. You can see it here: Rails Manager

The idea is I'll get someone to build a simple rails manager for Leopard and see what happens. If its good I'll put it up for download. Its a small enough app that its not a big risk and its no risk to our core business.

I'll continue to post updates on how we get on, but I'm getting worried now. The job is posted an hour and we have no bids :(

No Country for Old Companies

Posted by Keith Davey on February 04, 2008 at 08:54 PM

Looking at the proposed merger of Yahoo and Microsoft I am reminded of the merger of Time Warner and AOL.

I worked for Netscape up until 1999 and saw Netscape get swallowed up in AOL and then the merger of two huge companies. It didn't work at all. In fact very quickly the Time Warner people wanted their old shares back. It still hasn't worked and the share price will never get back to its old levels.

Another example was the HP Compaq merger, while it has worked out ok long term it slowed them down for the first couple of years.

If the deal goes through it is inevitable that someone will pay the price, whether its Yahoo or Microsoft it will most probably be in some way the shareholders. Pulling the two companies together will take time, time that Google will enjoy. If you take two large companies that can't beat Google, I don't think putting the two of them together makes a company that can beat Google.

Also, the ethos at the two companies is miles apart right now. Yahoo runs on Open Source and champions open source projects, I don't have to mention how MS sees this hippy stuff.

If you look at this deal in light of the level of cash that Microsoft has left, it looks like a huge gamble to get in on the internet game by Microsoft. One that I can only see backfiring.