
On Friday we had Max, Ilya and Raphael from Diaspora over at Mozilla. They talked about their effort in creating a distributed social network. Where I think they are on the right track, and where they should think even bigger.
As a side project during my internship at Mozilla, I worked with Aakash from Mozilla QA to bring a new feature to the Mozilla Input website.
I can't believe in only 40 days my internship will be over. What I've done in the last month in California besides working for Mozilla.
The two first weeks as an intern at Mozilla were like a blast. Now we are heading for the worldwide Summit 2010 in Whistler, Mountain View.
To work on my intern project at Mozilla, I have learned my way around with Pentaho Data Integration (aka Kettle).
On Monday, my internship at Mozilla started, and I can tell you how great it is. Since everything is open source anyway, I am actually encouraged to blog and talk about my work there.
After nineteen hours of travel, with stops in London and Los Angeles, yesterday I arrived in Mountain View, CA. It is a beautiful place.
Starting on Monday, June 21 I am going to intern at the Mozilla Corporation (MoCo) in Mountain View, California. Yay!
Almost a month ago, the presentation of OneSocialWeb at the android developers conference droidcon.be was one of the most interesting talks there. Recently the XMPP-centric framework has gone open source.
This morning on Facebook syndication, I reviewed the article on android that I wrote yesterday. And one of the few HTML-incompatible XHTML-properties assaulted my eyes, impersonated by a bunch of entity references.
Nearly finished with an Android app that some fellow students and myself did for the mobile lab at RWTH University (simple foursquare like thing: maps, contacts, web services...). I am going to collect some of things that I liked about the Android platform and stuff that annoyed me when working with it.
While not officially supported, the Google Earth Browser Plug-in seems to work just fine with nightly builds of Mozilla Firefox 3.5, codename Shiretoko. Here is a simple hint to get it up and running.
Yesterday, Google announced the availability of Java as the new programming language for the App Engine, refuting my guess from last year that it might be JavaScript — though of course, not entirely.
Wireless playback of your music collection from iTunes to your stereo equipment, using the iPhone instead of cables or an AirPort Express. Requires a Mac, an iPhone, the Apple Developer tools and Fink, and the power to use them all.
As the language of the browser, JavaScript has become a kind of common denominator among web programmers. On the server it is rare compared to Java, PHP, Ruby or Python. Could this change, since Google has built an implementation of JS and an affordable yet scalable web application infrastructure?
Sometimes you need to track down problems in a production setup. How the combination of Django and Flup make this difficult, and why I think that both should provide more than log by mail
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