Hot Hot Hot

We’ve just had the first really good weekend of the summer, unbroken sunshine and some properly warm temperatures. Of course we are not really set up to handle hot weather (or cold weather) and so everything breaks with the first hot day of the year. The office hasn’t got any air-con this morning, currently it is about 28 degrees in here (about 82 in old money), but luckily we can open the front door and get a few fans blowing to get some air movement.

It’s also traditional at this time of year for the trains to go belly up for a while, hopefully the "new" rolling stock won’t be quite as bad as before but it wouldn’t surprise me.

This is not to say I’m complaining, the weekend was about as perfect as you could wish for… hot weather, barbeques everywhere and as much sport on the TV as you can shake a stick at. Hugely relaxing just sitting in the garden with the portable TV in the shade, a few beers and England even winning in the football (we won’t mention the rugby).

Long may it last.

Useful Macbook / Boot Camp Tip

I haven’t spent this long working exclusively on a notebook for a long time, I had forgotten the impact it has on your back and neck when the screen is in the wrong position. In addition I have also been finding that the power management in Windows doesn’t play well with the MacBook so the case was getting extremely hot by the middle of the afternoon.

I was chatting with one of the guys in the office and he mentioned that you can get notebook stands which also have fans built into them, there was an old one lieing around unused and unloved in the office so I have nabbed it and been using it today, it makes a huge difference on both counts. So a big thumbs up goes out to the Notepal by Cooler Master. The heat problem is probably exacerbated by the MacBook but I think the stand will make a difference to anyone who uses a meaty notebook for extended periods, it’s got to the end of the day and most of the casing is actually cold rather than bordering on dangerously hot and my back doesn’t feel like I’ve been jumped up and down on all day!

A weekend of cricket

I was up in Nottingham again this weekend to enjoy a trip to Trent Bridge and the third test between England and Sri Lanka. With all the rain we’ve been having recently I was fearing the worst but in the end both days of the weekend were just right. Saturday was scorching, but at least we could go inside, when we were in the stands on Sunday it would have been impossible to avoid the really serious sunshine (or rain if there were any) so overall it couldn’t have been better.

The cricket itself was pretty poor to be honest, Sri Lanka have got themselves into a position at the end of the third day where England need to post a record run chasing score and there are a few injuries to deal with as well. But the beauty of watching cricket is that there are always other things to see besides the sport. I think we were in the roudiest stand on Sunday with several stag parties all trying to out drink and out sing each other. Lots of beer was drunk (except by me unfortunately as I had to drive home last night), to the point where one guy who was three sheets to the wind twice tried to carry a tray of beers back to his seat but failed both times due to the barrage of things thrown at him by the rest of the croud. Very funny.

If you’re looking for a chilled day out there are not many better ways to go than a day at the cricket with a newspaper, a few drinks and good company.

It’ll be interesting to keep an eye on the scoreboard today to see if England pull the game back from the brink, I’d be very surprised but they have managed it in the past so we’ll keep the faith for the moment.

Macbook Pro Experiences

So at the weekend I couldn’t hold back any longer, I went and bought a spanking new MacBook Pro 17" behemoth of a machine. I justified it to myself because I have to use my own kit in this new contract. Lovely as the Powerbook is, running Virtual PC all day long is just no fun at all.

The first thing to say is that this is, by a long margin, the fastest computer I have ever owned, notebook or desktop. Of course I spent most of the weekend rebuilding it to my requirements. The OS X element was very easy with the migration tools which Apple provide you just plug in a firewire cable to your old machine and leave it for an hour. When you come back everything including all of the applications data and, most impressively of all, configuration, has been copied across and you’re just ready to go with no more effort required.

Of course the big draw for me of the new machine is the Intel chipset and BootCamp which allows me to run Windows on a new partition on the disk. For beta software it was very easy to get going, just decide what size disk you want Windows to have (I’ve gone for 40gb) and then run through the usual Windows installation process and install the Mac  video, sound and network drivers that BootCamp provides for you. Everything was all set up within a couple of hours, after which I spent the traditional 6 or 7 hours installing all of the various software I need for work and securing the leaky sieve that is Windows security.

So I’ve been using the Windows installation at work all week and as a pure Windows machine it flies along quite happily. There are a few little annoyances to do with key mappings… There is no delete key (the Apple delete key becomes backspace by default) so I have used Remap Key to change the right Apple key to be delete. The other problem is the one button trackpad, you can’t work in Windows without a right mouse button so you need to download this little program which makes the Control key act as the right button in the same way it does in OS X. But given that BootCamp is beta software and in the end Apple really don’t want you to be using Windows much anyway I am incredibly impressed.

The beauty of my setup now is that I effectively have two computers, an official work one and my "real" computer which can be used when I’m not in the office. If you can afford the premium of going for the Pro I can heartily recommend it, whether you’re a Mac user or not. Overall I am guessing this is exactly what Apple want to happen, their kit is so much better than any of the other manufacturers, so if they can tempt some Windows users across with the lure of BootCamp I can’t believe that many wouldn’t enjoy the experience and become confirmed Mac accolites for the future.

Two Quickies

I haven’t done a SnTT post for a long time and I’m not really sure this qualifies as it’s just two bits of information…

Firstly get yourself over to Ben Poole’s site where the first beta version of DominoWiki 1.1 has been released for testing. Have a look and please log any issues so that we can get as stable a release as possible.

Secondly is just something that I recently learned about scheduled agents. It’s probably that this just passed me by and that everyone else already knows it, but did you know that scheduled agents can open databases on servers other than themselves in ND6 and 7? I didn’t, but it’s not something I have tried to do since the old R4 days when it wasn’t possible.

There, told you they were both quickies didn’t I!

One Week In

Well it’s almost a week into the new contract and so far things are looking good. I have never worked in a purely IBM shop before and it’s a very refreshing change with all of the latest versions of software being used from DB2 right up to Domino 7.0.1 on some of the servers. They’ve got me working on an interesting project which involves Web Services integration and PDF generation both of which are relatively new to me.

The environment is nice and relaxed and the rest of the guys on the floor have been very forgiving with all of my stupid new-boy questions. We’ll see how the social side is tomorrow night with a trip out to a pub or two.

Overall it’s good to be back doing what I enjoy in an environment which just lets you get on with it. And joy of joys I haven;t even encountered any politics (yet!).

Back to Work

To be honest I thought it would take somewhat longer to find a new contract but it’s always nice to be surprised. In total I’ve spent eight days looking and this morning I heard that one of the earlier contracts which I thought had gone were actually very keen to hire me. So a little bit of negotiation later (not much to be honest, the work seems pretty interesting) and we have an agreement. Everything is happening quickly now as they want me to start tomorrow, so I have to get my brain back into proper work mode, buy train tickets, iron shirts and exciting things like that.

I’ve really enjoyed not working for a while, it’s given me a much needed break, not because I was particularly tired but because I had been in the same job for a long time and things were beginning to get me down a little. Hopefully a new company, new colleagues and new projects will keep me reinvigorated. The only down side is that I had been making some real progress with my own applications and that’s going to slow down dramatically now. Still earning a little money after just spending (quite heavily) since March makes me feel a lot better!

Domino Designer in Eclipse

Maureen alluded to this during Beat the Developers at Lotusphere earlier in the year but I am guessing this post will meet with universal approval. If it’s only at the proof of concept stage then a production grade release is obviously some time off but it can’t come soon enough for me. The ability to properly integrate my Java code (which I write in Eclipse) with Domino is massively overdue.