Tuesday, August 06, 2002


New Mexico IMC Site Relaunched

The New Mexico IMC is a local group affiliated the global Independent Media Center. We started our local group last fall. We got off to a good start, but then interested faded a bit during the early part of this year.

Originally we were hosted on a server run by the Philadelphia IMC, running the Standard Active software for IMCs. Philly had some serious hardware problems back in June. So we moved the site to an IMC server hosted by the Albuquerque Bandwidth Coop. In the process we switched to using the dadaIMC software.

dadaIMC was easy for us to setup and manage. Now the harder work for us remains: network with local activists so that the site is used.


1:56:13 PM    

My Online Real Estate & Tierra Madre Realty

A current project that I'm spending a lot of time on is developing website hosting tools for real estate agents. These tools allow agents to integrate listings from the local Multiple Listing Service into their websites. People searching for homes can get more of the information they're looking for. And it's branded by the agent, increasing their prospects and clients.

The project is in an early state of development, but you can see the initial work at:


1:46:00 PM    

I'm Back

I started this site several months ago. At the same time I registered Radio Userland, I also downloaded an evaluation version of Frontier. My plan was to purchase Frontier and use it for my real estate project.

After a few months using it, I've changed my mind. Mostly I just don't want to run Windows server:
  • I don't know anything about Windows adminstration and I'm not interested in learning. I already spend way too much time trying to keep up with security issues on Unix.
  • I already have a lot of Unix server power that needs to be used.
  • The Windows server needs a lot more babysitting. The Unix boxes just run on their own once they're configured.

I realized that I already have server solutions that I'm happy with. What I want is a good weblogging desktop program. That's Radio. What I need now is better integration of Radio with the other tools I use: Zope, Plone and dadaIMC.


1:27:03 PM    


  Friday, March 29, 2002


Oops, apologies to Userland

I complained that they didn't answer my email requesting a trial of Frontier. After calling them I discovered that they tried to respond, but the emails bounced. I was lying awake last night, and that possibility occurred to me... I take back what I said- Userland still rocks.


3:54:14 PM    

Isaiah

A picture named 95.jpgThis is my son, Isaiah. I could tell you that he's the cutest kid in the whole world, but you wouldn't believe me.

He's got his own website. I'll probably convert it over to a Radio site, if I continue using RU.


3:45:29 PM    

Radio Userland vs. Frontier?

A couple of people responded to my rant about Userland, asking if Radio wouldn't work for my projects instead of Frontier. Well, since I'm not very familiar with either product, so I don't know.

I have two projects I'm considering Frontier/RU for.

The first is a project with a group of 60 eighth graders. I'm a volunteer and technical consultant for them. Their teachers and I are planning a group web publishing project. As part of that, I'd like each student to have his/her own weblog.

The class has its own intranet with about 10 computers. Radio seems like it would work fine, except that it is geared for an individual user creating a single weblog. I'd like any student to be able to edit his/her weblog from any computer. Some people have suggested using categories but it doesn't seem like it would work well.

The second project is for real estate brokers and agents. The local Multiple Listing Service is offering access to their database of property listings. I can bring that data into my own database and sell services to brokers, giving them full search capabilities on their own websites. I already have a prototype implemented in Zope.

However, I'd like each client to be able to maintain a weblog-like page or pages on their site. Zope has some weblog products, but none are as mature as Radio/Frontier/Manila. So I need to be able to write scripts that make xmlrpc calls and weave the results into the webpages. My impression is that Radio uses the object database on the user's computer and publishes static pages to the hosting computer. I need a dynamic application running on the webserver. So it looks like Frontier.

 


3:36:02 PM    


  Thursday, March 28, 2002


Userland Rant

I'm considering using Frontier in a project. A week ago I emailed Userland "customer service" asking for an evaluation copy of Frontier. This is what their webpage says to do.

A week has now passed and I've heard nothing from them. I even sent a follow up email. Two phone calls during business hours got an answering machine. I've been a reader of Scripting News for four years and have casually followed Frontier and Radio. Now there's a good chance I'll decide to buy their product and they're making it very difficult.

Has the Internet spoiled me, or is a week too long to wait for a response?


2:44:01 PM    

Thanks for the link

Looking through the server logs, I saw a big spike in traffic. Welcome to all the readers of Workbench, Rogers Cadenhead's weblog. If you haven't checked it out, you should. It's definitely one of the best on the PyCS server :)


2:38:11 PM    


  Wednesday, March 27, 2002


Thanks to Phillip

Many thanks to Phillip Pearson for writing PyCS and hosting these sites. Phillip, do you need any help? I'm a Python programmer... I'd also like to know more about what your plans are for the code and hosting sites.


4:21:11 PM    


  Friday, March 22, 2002


User #2

Hey, cool, I'm user #0000002 on the Python Community Server. That reminds me of a college friend who ran for vice-president of an organization he was in. In his speech he said, "I always wanted to be the second man to walk on the moon. I want to win a silver medal in the Olympics. That's why you should vote for me..."


6:32:27 PM