productivity
Jun 08, 2009
it's the little things, or stuff I took away from pse09
In honor of the interrobang, 5 things I picked up at Plone Symposium East 2009 that left me both ? and !.
1. Don't write xml, export it‽
I think I saw four people in breakout sessions tweak their content settings TTW and then pop over to site_setup and export the profile to make pretty, well formed .zcml files. OK, ok, I get the point. It's very fast, accurate, and way less a pain in the ass than writing your own.
2. Everything I make gon be folderish from now on‽
I've sort of half been paying attention to the new content type story (a la occasionally checking the Dexterity changelog) for upcoming Plone releases, but it was a bit of an eye opener to watch limi's Plone 5 demo and see Plone's moving to a single, folderish content type. Out-effin-standing. Everything folderish make incredible sense, and I've been tweaking my dev content types accordingly.
3. Use more ZopeSkel‽
Again, small encouragements. jjmojojjmojo's demo capped a couple days thinking that I ought to get more conversant with what ZopeSkel can do. Somehow I had been missing the
addcontent atschemacommand. I know, I know.... I came home and scaffolded 5 content types in an hour. zang.
4. People want awards‽
I've been working on a Plone Community Awards idea, mostly in a vacuum. I knew a couple people from the Board were interested, but I was suprised so many people not only turned up for the BoF, but had also actually read my very, very long draft. Unfortunately, the BoF didn't get very far before they shooed us all off to dinner. Putting faces and names together was very helpful, and we've now got something to go to the Board hopefully this week. When the dust settles, I'll do a separate post or five about the awards.
5. A couple cheers for the little guy‽
At a conference of about a hundred on campus at Penn State, you expect that a bunch of people would be attached to institutions or medium-ish companies, and that was about right. There was the WebLion/Penn State contingent, which seemed to be a hell of a lot of people, and there was the 6FtUp blackshirt army, too.
But, there were also a whole bunch of 'small shop' people there, independent developers or small biz owners, or single Plone people inside larger companies. It reinforces, actually, what I've been thinking for a while, namely that there's been a bunch of commotion lately about positioning Plone as an enterprise level CMS/platform, but there doesn't seem to be so much attention on the fact that many of us work in the small business sphere, and that Plone can be an excellent small biz solution. And, that small shop Plonistas have particular needs and challenges.
Interestingly, the Evangelism BoF did appear pretty heavily weighted with small shop attendance.
Based on the location and the expertise of the WebLion folks, it seemed right that there were lots of sessions devoted to what seemed to me institutional issues, though based on the attendance, there should have been at least one session about Plone from the freelancer/small shop perspective.
Mar 16, 2009
Loving Backdrop
Combined with Megazoomer, it saves me from myself.
Backdrop is a freeware app for Mac that hides everything but the app you're working in. It's different from Finder's 'Hide Others' command in that it also hides the desktop, and replaces it with a single color that you can tweak. For scatterbrained compulsives like me, it's great.
Combine that with Megazoomer, specially tweaked for TextMate. By default, Megazoomer expands the current window to fill the screen. I've got a tweaked version that only expands the window vertically, which makes more sense when you're writing something and want to keep the page normal.
Feb 06, 2009
Reading notes wiki
This is an experiment I'm not even close to sure will work. But it seems interesting. I'm going to try to mix in wiki functions with this blog as I create an online notes log of some books I'm working through.
The real test will be whether making notes this way is any more helpful than keeping them somewhere locally or in Evernote. Also, the idea behind storing them publicly is that maybe they'll be helpful to somebody else.
Here are the books on my desk:
Web Component Development with Zope 3 by Philipp von Weitershausen ISBN 978-3-540-76447-2
Programming Web Services with XML-RPC[+] by St. Laurent, Johnston and Dumbill ISBN 978-0-596-00119-3
Parables of the Virtual[+] by Brian Massumi ISBN 978-0-822-32897-1
The Fold[+] by Gilles Deleuze ISBN 978-0-816-61601-5
Wiki?
Dec 10, 2008
Thinking about workflow, part 1: The problem
Especially in the last year, I've accumulated a whole slew of apps and processes that are supposedly helping me to save time and keep connected, yada yada. This thread follows my attempt to narrow everything to the bare minimum.
- Facebook, Myspace and twitter
- Friendfeed, feedalizr, and now moodblast
- blip, YouTube, archive.org
- Tumblr, my own Quills blog
- 6-8 mailing lists
- Yojimbo, Evernote, OmniFocus
- iBlogger, MarsEdit
- Mail.app, Gmail
- me.com albums, flickr, picasa
- Google reader
OK, so the objective is this:
- write/post things the fewest number of times,
- making them visible the most number of places
- using the fewest applications/processes
- maintaining the most metadata and formatting
- without creating any duplicates entries anywhere
