What’s up with all the cool web apps lately? Here’s some more
that I ran across in the past few days.
- TagSurf (tagsurf.com)
- I’m not sure how to describe this. It is kinda like a web forum with
tags applied to each message. What makes it really interesting is that if
you use a URL for a tag, then the posting is "about" that web
page. So, if you wish to talk about this posting (yes, the one you
are reading right now), then create a message with the
link onestepback.org/index.cgi/Tech/Web/MoreWebApps.rdoc
as a tag. Or, even easier, click the "tagsurf-it" link in the
article banner above and be taken immediately to TagSurf with the tags
prefilled and ready to go. (I’ve also added a TagSurf link below
marked for feedback). Give it a try.
Yes, you will have to sign up for TagSurf, but it is free. It is also
very alpha, so be warned. But it is definitely cool. Read about
how TagSurf came to be at Russell
Beattie's Blog.
- Google Maps: (maps.google.com/)
- Try it, you’ll like it!
Nuff said.
- Ta-Da Lists: (tadalists.com)
- I’ve mentioned Ta-Da lists before, but I started using it as a
temporary holding area for some ideas for an article on "10 Things
Java Programmers Should Know About Ruby". I just dumped suggestions on
to the list with minimal editting. Then I made the list public so that
folks could see what had already been suggested.
The list wasn’t up two days before it was noticed by some
Python guy who picked up on the "Fixes what’s wrong in
Python" link (ack … exactly the message I was not
trying to send, and it wasn’t even aimed at Python). Then a Smalltalk
guy (hi Avi!) blogs about it. I’ve gotten more attention on this
article (which I haven’t written yet) than most articles I actually
do write.
Part of the problem was that there was no place in the Ta-Da list to
explain its purpose. It was just a raw list of items without any context.
Given the title, I can see why some folks assumed it was the finished
product.
So I bemoaned the problem of no list description in Ta-Da. And then today,
as I was editing another list, I noticed that the Ta-Da lists now
do have a description field. Wow! Did I miss that? I would have sworn it
wasn’t there before. Perhaps did the Ta-Da folk read my mind and knew
exactly what I wanted. Anyways, I’m impressed. Thanks guys.
So, anyways, my apologies to the Python crowd. The "10 Things
…" list was never targeted at Python and was an
unedited compilation of feedback I had received. As Ian (the
Python guy) points out a comment …
-
- For Python and Ruby to try to take users from each other is a losing
game — we’re both small players, and there’s much better
and bigger pools of developers we should be trying to attract.
Ok, that’s enough for this rather rambling post.
Code Red
Code Ruby (or Python).
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