Sign in
Steve Rowe's Blog
Ruminations on Computing - Programming, Test Development, Management and More
Options
Blog Home
About
Email Blog Author
RSS for posts
Atom
RSS for comments
OK
Search
Tags
Architecture
Audio
Books
Computing History
Interviewing
Learning to Code
Management
Media Center
Netcasts
Other
Pages
Personal
Programming
Software Process
Testing
Video
Vim
Windows
Archive
Archives
April 2012
(2)
March 2012
(4)
October 2011
(2)
September 2011
(4)
May 2010
(1)
April 2010
(1)
March 2010
(3)
February 2010
(1)
December 2009
(1)
November 2009
(4)
October 2009
(1)
September 2009
(1)
August 2009
(1)
July 2009
(2)
May 2009
(2)
April 2009
(5)
March 2009
(4)
February 2009
(5)
January 2009
(2)
December 2008
(6)
November 2008
(2)
October 2008
(9)
September 2008
(6)
August 2008
(5)
July 2008
(3)
June 2008
(9)
May 2008
(9)
April 2008
(5)
March 2008
(12)
February 2008
(10)
January 2008
(8)
December 2007
(10)
November 2007
(14)
October 2007
(11)
September 2007
(13)
August 2007
(19)
July 2007
(21)
June 2007
(7)
May 2007
(11)
April 2007
(23)
March 2007
(14)
February 2007
(15)
January 2007
(16)
December 2006
(7)
November 2006
(2)
October 2006
(2)
September 2006
(2)
August 2006
(7)
July 2006
(2)
June 2006
(4)
May 2006
(7)
April 2006
(9)
March 2006
(11)
February 2006
(7)
January 2006
(5)
December 2005
(2)
November 2005
(3)
October 2005
(3)
September 2005
(2)
July 2005
(1)
June 2005
(2)
May 2005
(1)
April 2005
(5)
March 2005
(3)
February 2005
(6)
January 2005
(6)
November 2004
(3)
October 2004
(1)
April 2004
(1)
March 2004
(2)
November, 2007
Posts
Subscribe via RSS
Sort by:
Most Recent
|
Most Views
|
Most Comments
Excerpt View
|
Full Post View
Steve Rowe's Blog
Design Principles To Live By
Posted
over 6 years ago
by
SteveRowe
0
Comments
Object-oriented design and design patterns can seem complex. There are a lot of ideas and cases to consider. However, there are a handful of principles that, if followed, will result in code that complies with most if not all of the patterns. These are...
Steve Rowe's Blog
Inbox Zero
Posted
over 6 years ago
by
SteveRowe
2
Comments
If you're anything like me, you have way too much e-mail to read it all. To try to cope with this, I've resorted to a collection of rules that sorts my mail into a Byzantine structure of folders. This helps a little, but has the problem of helping me...
Steve Rowe's Blog
Video Podcasts
Posted
over 6 years ago
by
SteveRowe
2
Comments
With my new Zune, I've started watching some video netcasts. Here are the ones I've found the most interesting so far: Tekzilla - Feels a lot like old TechTV. 1/2 hour an episode talking about everything from routers to Black Friday sales. The GigaOm...
Steve Rowe's Blog
The New Zune Revue
Posted
over 6 years ago
by
SteveRowe
1
Comments
Over the past few years I have become an avid podcast listener. I've been using Creative MP3 players until this point. I have owned a Zen Nano, Zen Stone Plus, and a Zen Vision M. The first was good its 1 GB size became restricting. The second was a good...
Steve Rowe's Blog
Happy Thanksgiving!
Posted
over 6 years ago
by
SteveRowe
0
Comments
It is Thanksgiving today. My wife and I will be having a small gathering of about nine family members. I always enjoy getting some time to put work aside for a few days just hang out with family. I hope you all have a great Thanksgiving today and that...
Steve Rowe's Blog
Resume Advice
Posted
over 6 years ago
by
SteveRowe
2
Comments
Some resume advice from Steve Yegge. I don't agree with all of it but it's good stuff to consider when writing your technical resume.
Steve Rowe's Blog
Phone Screen Questions
Posted
over 6 years ago
by
SteveRowe
0
Comments
Steve Yegge from Amazon offers his Five Essential Phone Screen Questions . It's an old post, but a good one. His advice is solid. It's always disappointing to bring in a promising candidate for an interview only to have them bomb. It would be much better...
Steve Rowe's Blog
"Everyone" Is Not A Valid Owner
Posted
over 6 years ago
by
SteveRowe
0
Comments
Saw this over on {Codesqueeze}. He talks about the danger of self-organizing teams. When people aren't given clear responsibilities, things get dropped. If there is a task which belongs to everyone it will in the end be accomplished by no one. Everyone...
Steve Rowe's Blog
Analog to Digital Conversion
Posted
over 6 years ago
by
SteveRowe
1
Comments
If you want digital audio in a computer, you have to get it from somewhere. Usually that means taking analog sound out of the air and turning it into the bits that a computer can understand. Ars Technica gives us another installment of the AudioFile....
Steve Rowe's Blog
Always Question the Process
Posted
over 6 years ago
by
SteveRowe
4
Comments
Let me recount a story from the television show Babylon 5 . In one episode there is the description of guard posted in the middle of an empty courtyard. There is nothing there to protect. When one of the characters, Londo, questions why, he finds that...
Steve Rowe's Blog
The Ultimate Geek Jacket
Posted
over 6 years ago
by
SteveRowe
1
Comments
With Christmas approaching, here is a cool idea for the gadget-lover. The ScottEVest Evolution Jacket is a waterproof jacket with 25 pockets for all the cellphones, Zunes, PDAs, pens, etc. that we tend to carry these days. The jacket also has special...
Steve Rowe's Blog
Keep Process Simple
Posted
over 6 years ago
by
SteveRowe
1
Comments
Year ago one of our Software Test Engineers was tasked with documenting our smoke* process. It should have been something simple like: Developer packages binaries for testing Developer places smoke request on web page Tester signs up for smoke...
Steve Rowe's Blog
The Need for a Real Build Process
Posted
over 6 years ago
by
SteveRowe
1
Comments
Jeff Atwood at Coding Horror has a good post about how " F5 is not a build process ." In it, he explains how you need a real centralized build process. F5 (the "build and debug" shortcut key in Visual Studio) on a developer's machine is not a built process...
Steve Rowe's Blog
Don't Blame the User for Misusing Your API
Posted
over 6 years ago
by
SteveRowe
4
Comments
A conversation the other day got me thinking about interfaces. As the author of an interface, it is easy to blame the users for its misuse. I think that's the wrong place for the blame. An interface that is used incorrectly is often poorly written. A...
Page 1 of 1 (14 items)