Monthly Archive for September, 2008

Letters to nowhere

Today was an exhausting day. Continue reading ‘Letters to nowhere’

My soundtrack’s title track

I woke up this morning with a funny taste in my head.

Continue reading ‘My soundtrack’s title track’

Movie Galore

Finally had some time to catch up on movies and figured I would give my quick review of them:

  • Iron Man: Pretty impressive. Didn’t see till the very end, that it was a Jon Favreau movie; made sense. I liked the story and was actually impressed by Robert Downey Jr.’s performance — who I am not really all too fond of. Therefore Jeff Bridges didn’t blow me away as he usually does; might have been due to the nature of his role though. Anyways; take away the big patriot theme waving over the (at times a bit too long) story and it’s impressive sci-fi action entertainment.
  • Indiana Jones: I really did not expect anything from this one, especially after what I had heard from the people I know, who rushed to the theater on opening night and were pretty disappointed. Granted, that alien theme was a little bit over the top, but all in all I did enjoy this movie a lot. Both Harrisson Ford, as well as Shia LaBeouf did a really good job. The comedy was fun and the general appeal was very clean Spielberg style. This one made me want to revisit the old Indy-trilogy soon.
  • Made of Honor: Yes, this is a chick flick. But I really did like it a lot and would watch it again in a heartbeat. I do like Patrick Dempsey and I like him in this role. I like that this rather emotional movie also showcases how guys struggle with love issues sometimes. How hard it can be to admit what they want and how shitty it feels when it’s all just a heartbeat too late. The New York scenery adds to the really comfortable yet aching feeling I got from it.
  • 21: I always liked the “Breaking Vegas” series on Discovery. I do like Laurence Fishburn and I like Kevin Spacey even more. Having just been to Vegas a few months ago and recognizing a lot of the places in the movie is cool as well. The main casino in the flick is the one at Planet Hollywood, which — coincidentally — we used to spend most of our time at as well. The story is told well; the main characters money raising problem for Harvard Medical School is maybe a little too much, but still, yet another movie I would like to watch again.

In the past couple of years, I have seen more bad than good movies, but this batch definitely was a selection of very fine entertainment i can recommend to anyone.

Ars Electronica: Mission Future

Mission Future

Yesterday I made my way to Linz, to the Mission Future event of 2008. All in all it was alright, but had I paid the 892 EUR for a regular ticket, I would have been pissed. Continue reading ‘Ars Electronica: Mission Future’

CMS 2.0 ideas: Quo Vadis?

Now, I think that in a discussion with Mike I finally got the the root of the question what’s wrong about current CMS systems. On the one hand, you have the big players, such as Red Dot and even bigger ones. They charge an arm and a leg for licencing and claim to be just about doing everything. Now, as a developer they still suck. If you know what you want and how easily you can often times achieve just that, without having to squeeze your idea into the corset of such a system, it can be frustrating to be forced to work with such. On the other hand there are open source systems such as Joomla or Typo3. I think the verdict is out on Typo3, that the usability just sucks. Both systems have the problem that they still are rather limited when trying to implement very custom features and/or applications. But even the pricey systems have that problem. And why? Because they all claim that they are able to handle any problem and be this 100% alround tool.

Well, I disagree, as well as do at least 2 of my former co-CMS-developers, that this really isn’t what I need as a developer. Especially not in every day agency work. A CMS is what it’s name says: A Content Management System. And that’s that. It doesn’t need to be supporting all kinds of extras and especially not any front end display issues. It shouldn’t even dictate the technology that should be used for that.
I want a system, that clearly seperates the layers. I want to define the data structure and it should be able to generate some basic environment from those settings. A little like Rails’ scaffolding feature. Then it needs the most important part, a smart business logic layer. Support plugins, etc. Keep the features limited and make things like publishing schedules optional plugins. Build a Content Management System. Keep it open and clean, which requires a great concept and specification to begin with. This business logic layer allows the editor to fill his system with the information necessary, in a — very importantly — clean environment. In interfaces less is more. Don’t dump every option possible on that usually just half IT-savvy guy.

Finally, we don’t want to have to deal with front end programming here. I want an clean, well defined and smart interface to query retrieve my objects from- Then I want to be able to use any sort of technology to display the objects I just derived: Be it PHP, .NET, Java, ColdFusion, Flash, … hell, even Desktop or remote applications can be supported.
From what I have seen, there are some sort of “Database modelling” tools already out there — like Strg.at’s “spunQ” — and they work! But what I would like to have is something, that is more tailored to the needs of an editor, who just wants a clean and pretty much “self explanatory” interface. The second focus is on the developer: All they have left to do is

  • set up the data structure
  • retrieve the objects and build a front end on top of them
  • write applications to weave in (optional)

That’s it!

Happiness is a warm gun gum

It’s been a while… Continue reading ‘Happiness is a warm gun gum’