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Here Comes… Google.

So I am thoroughly enjoying reading Here Comes Everybody by Clay Shirky, but at the same time I think this review by Tom Slee sums up the negatives of the book really well. The book is full of great insights, but some of the conclusions it seems to draw strike me as very optimistic or naive.

Meanwhile Google unveiled its Google App Engine service earlier this week. So far I’ve just done the tutorial and uploaded the “Hello World” app. I love the dashboard for the applications. Obviously I’d love to see Ruby support baked in, and if I had more time I certainly wouldn’t mind doing some Python hacking. It would be fun to throw up some situated software on that infrastructure, but clearly I wouldn’t think of putting anything of potential Business Value on it. It will be interesting to see how this drives the development of Heroku and other competing services.

The whole hoo-ha about the Campfire clone (that was subsequently pulled down) has been a big PR disaster for the “Don’t be Evil” PR Masters. Damned for releasing a blatant clone of an existing product and damned again for pulling it down.

And in a week that seemed to have had a lot of Web Application Hosting news, some interesting news about Rails deployments. Could Passenger finally make Rails deployments as easy as PHP? Here’s hoping.

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Google Developer Day 2007

I’m pleased to say that I’ll be attending the Google Developer Day in London this week. I managed to get a late invitation to the event, and secured some time away from the project I am currently working on for a client.

I’m looking forward to learning more about Google’s Web Services API designs and their work in the mobile space. With this and the upcoming Hack Day event, on top of regular client work and various other projects, it’s a busy time. Hopefully I’ll manage to find some time soon to finish off and publish the new Logic Colony website…

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Mondrian: Guido van Rossum’s first Google project

Guido van Rossum unveiled his first Google project, Mondrian, tonight during a Python tech talk at the Google campus in Mountain View. Mondrian is a web-based code review system built on top of a Perforce and BigTable backend with a Python-powered front-end. Mondrian is a pretty impressive system and is currently in use across Google.

Link.
(Guido van Rossum is the creator of the Python language).

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