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Bloglines counted

I use Bloglines to read my daily dose of RSS. My work is spread around multiple places with multiple computers, and the thought of synchronizing 140+ feeds (what have I read, what haven’t I read) over those computers just doesn’t jive with me. And I’m not even sure, it this would work at all. Anyway: Bloglines has a nice feature, that tells you, how many people have subscribed to a particular feed. Of course, the ego-maniac in me has subscribed to my own feed (the Atom feed of course, me also being modern). There are 4 subscribers to that. Coupled with a lot of people coming here to search for ASCII porn (my number 1 Google search term), I thought that I had a relative small audience. Then today, I subscribed to my RSS2 feed also – and behold – there are 46 subscribers to that one. My regular readership just 10 folded, my ego got boosted to new heights. ...

Jens-Christian Fischer
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XP Practicing Group Zurich

No, we’re not talking Windows XP, but eXtreme Programming. (Small but important difference) Jim Weirich is doing an interesting thing in the Cincinnati XP Users Group. They meet once a month to not only talk about XP, but to actually practice it. Doing this, they write software for a children hospital and learn XP (and they probably have fun too) As a practicioner of ExtremeHacking (that is working alone, using some of the XP methods) I’d be extremely interested in starting something like this in Switzerland (and maybe even in Zurich). There is a XpAdoptersGroupSwitzerland and I have posted the same on the mailing list, but I’ll repeat it here: ...

Jens-Christian Fischer
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Rails 0.9.4

Damn - David & the assorted crew are so fast. I have the development timeline of RubyOnRails in my Bloglines and it’s almost always the feed with the most new entries. Now Rails 0.9.4 has been released and there’s a lot of stuff, that again will make my life easier. Mange Tak, David! Working with Rails has been an incredible ride, I have learnt a bunch and I’m getting closer and closer to actually deploy and use Amuda for real. Developing in Rails is refreshing simple. Many times, one single line of code does what in Java would have taken dozens. ...

Jens-Christian Fischer