Rob's Mind Flow http://mindflow.robsutherland.net Random thoughts. Many topics. Find something interesting to you. posterous.com Mon, 20 Jun 2011 11:33:20 -0700 Cantemelon: Sometimes communication isn't about the correct word http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/cantemelon-sometimes-communication-isnt-about http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/cantemelon-sometimes-communication-isnt-about My 2-year-old nephew was eating supper last night and had vegetables, awesome beef tenderloin some watermelon and cantaloupe. He pounced on the fruit devouring it before touching anything else. He them pointed to the place watermelon had been on his plate and informed his parents in no uncertain terms that he wanted more "cantemelon". He then pointed to the place that the cantaloupe had been and said "more cantemelon". He wasn't confused just simplifying. Everyone around the table new just what he wanted and when he wanted. (Although he did have to eat some veggies first).

As a side note: the cantemelon were both good and I had more than one serving myself. Welcome summer.

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Wed, 01 Jun 2011 08:29:56 -0700 Free and easy screen sharing with Mikogo http://www.mikogo.com http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/free-and-easy-screen-sharing-with-mikogo-http http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/free-and-easy-screen-sharing-with-mikogo-http

From time to time we all need to share our desktop with someone else. Sales call. Showing a feature of an application. Training. Whatever. There are several options out there that let you do this. Some you have to pay for. Yesterday I was introduced to Mikogo http://www.mikogo.com/ so I just thought I'd pass it along. It's free and easy to use. 

He called and told me to go to the Mikogo Web site. I did. Downloaded the .dmg for Mac. Ran the app and entered the conference code. Took all of 3 minutes and we were going. I just signed up for my account so I can use it next time I need it. 

(And no, I don't have the frequency of posts or the readership to get paid for promoting a product.)

 

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Thu, 28 Apr 2011 18:13:43 -0700 Task Paper: I love this little app for managing todo lists http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/task-paper-i-love-this-little-app-for-managin http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/task-paper-i-love-this-little-app-for-managin Works really well. Manage multiple lists, projects, notes and task. Easily. Very Easily.
http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/taskpaper/id424281111?mt=12
Haven't tried it on the iPad yet. Didn't seem to sync well from what I read, but once that's resolved could see using it there as well.
Just thought I'd share.

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Wed, 16 Feb 2011 14:30:00 -0800 Does doing what you do make you you? http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/does-doing-what-you-do-make-you-you http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/does-doing-what-you-do-make-you-you

Through a Twilert I had running I found Jenna Frye (@jenna_frye). I managed to make it to her blog where I read this:

"Due to recent self-reflection, I realize I'm learning a lesson: my job should not be how I measure my worth. I have so many skills and traits so I need to seek a job that compliments who I already am, not vice versa."

Who are you without your job @ jenna-frye.com

I think we'd all be better of if we all learned the lesson now that our job does not define us. I said that for years without actually meaning it. When I dug deep and took it for truth and started living it life got dramatically better. I still work. I still pay bills. And work and life are both still hard at times, but what defines me - what makes me - is outside any 8-5 work.

I still love doing what I do. Wearing, with pride, all my well-worn and varied hats. Getting comfortable in the new ones that I'm just breaking in. Looking forward to putting on that new hat for a while too. I don't just do one thing. I do many. I'm better at some than others. I enjoy some more than others. But I'm not defined by what I do to make money. I'm defined by what I choose to be defined by. I make money so that I can do those things.

By the way, if you're looking for someone to do PR, think about Jenna. She might be a good fit.

 

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Fri, 11 Feb 2011 12:54:00 -0800 Don't be afraid to let your visitors leave your web site http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/dont-be-afraid-to-let-your-visitors-leave-you http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/dont-be-afraid-to-let-your-visitors-leave-you

A few years ago it was really common for sites to open a new window (and later a new tab) for any page that was on a different web site. As a developer and designer I never really liked the idea but I did it too. Some clients specifically mandated it for legal reasons, but that's another topic.

As a site owner it’s normal to want to keep people on your site, just like a retail store wanting to keep shoppers in their store. That’s all well and good. But what you need to do is serve your customer—and serve them well. That may mean that you recommend they read an article on another site or—heaven forbid—actually buy something from another site.

I remember an experience I had at Advance Auto Parts. It was a Saturday morning and I needed a part to fix my car. They didn’t have it in stock but could have it in the store Monday. Well, that wasn’t going to work. I needed to fix the car. So instead of just throwing up his hands and saying, “Sorry, you’ll just have to wait,” he picked up the phone. He dialed a familiar number and said, “Hey Frank, this is John at Advance. I’ve got a guy here who needs an valve cover gasket. We’re out. Do you have one?” He then proceeded to give the details. Short pause. “Great. Thanks, I’ll send him over to you.” I got back in my car and drove literally across the street to their competitor O’Reilly Auto Parts. I went in the store and the part was waiting for me. I paid and went home and fixed the car. So now, whenever I need a part for my car I go to Advance Auto Parts first. Not O’Reilly. Why? Because Advance helped me out. O’Reilly just sold me the part. 

This was inspired in part by this article at Understanding Your Customers. Here’s a quote:

“Don’t be afraid to link off your site, as long as it’s relevant and rewarding. If you’re truly offering a great product, people will appreciate your link generosity and come back to your page even more excited to try out your product.” (empahsis added)

They use MailChimp (one of my favorite products) to prove their point. Enjoy!

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Wed, 19 Jan 2011 04:41:00 -0800 Can you Fail Well? http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/can-you-fail-well http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/can-you-fail-well

Watching this TED video last night Diana Laufenberg: How to learn? From mistakes got me to thinking. I really like what she had to say and it makes sense. I hate bubble tests. Bet let me skew the point a different way.

Where I tend to get the most frustrated at failure isn't really at the failure though. I produce Web sites and write applications. I work in code. Most of the time my code works, but I can't stop there. The code has to be "right." Right as defined by the experts. Use the "right" code to do what I'm doing not just code that works. Sounds crazy and it is a little bit crazy. But I do like to feel that my code is "right" not just "it works."

And that isn't the big picture Diana talks about, but it is something that I pulled out. How do we teach ourselves, our kids and each other how to fail well? How do we give each other room to go out on the proverbial limb and take risks without holding them over the fire for it.

We're all going to fail. A lot. But instead of focusing on the failure learn from it. Let it teach you.

In programming there's a group that focuses on something called Test Driven Development or TDD. That means that we test our code with code before we write the code. Basically we write test cases first. Then write code to make those tests pass. We start with failure. Then do the least we can to get the test to pass and move on to the next failure.

I wish I could apply this principle to life. But I can't. Life isn't testable. You can't really test the water without getting in the water and experiencing the water. Most of the time we look at it as right or wrong, yes or no without anything in between. But most of the time it isn't that way. Motives outweigh actions. Why is more important than what. Other things have to be considered before we really decide if we failed or not.

We should expect to fail. To not be perfect all the time. Then, when we fail, we can learn from it and be better for it. And help others when they fail. Just remember that failure has levels and isn't always bad.

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Sun, 16 Jan 2011 19:47:00 -0800 To be a Child Again http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/to-be-a-child-again http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/to-be-a-child-again

I was given a book Bad Dogs Have More Fun by John Grogan (author of Marly and Me and journalist for the Philadelphia Inquirer) for Christmas named. It's a collection of stories. The first is about Caitlin, an 11-year-old girl born deaf, performing her first violin recital. She played Twinkle Twinkle Little Star and Mary had a Little Lamb. According to the article her timing and sound were perfect. Grogan says this:

A girl without hearing tackled an instrument that has everything to do with hearing, and she didn't give up. For the determined, she learned, even the steepest mountains can be scaled, one step at a time.

Caitlin went to a typical school that had classes for the deaf. She would see other hearing students with musical instruments. She decided she wanted to play. And she did.

There's something about being a kid. As kids we could all draw, paint, dance and sing. We grow older and learn—or maybe we're taught—that we can't. Kids also have an amazing ability to believe. To trust. To create. To forgive.

Christ once said that we are to come to him with faith like a child. As I tacked another year on yesterday may we all be reminded to believe like a child and in some ways think like a child. Not abandoning maturity but accepting ourselves and those around us and letting our imaginations run so that we not only create, but believe that what we create is amazing and beautiful.

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Fri, 14 Jan 2011 17:23:00 -0800 How do You Stay Productive? http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/how-do-you-stay-productive http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/how-do-you-stay-productive

Are you an analog or a digital person? Do you keep you todo list in your head? on paper? or with software? I fight between the options. Try to find what works best. But I think in reality I'm just trying to find the one that is the least effort and the easiest to ignore.

When I really want to focus on getting things done I resort to paper. Writing things down. Then when those things don't get done I manually have to rewrite them the next day. The process of writing the task again and again and again when I've failed to do it that day makes me feel the pain of not getting something done.

Digitally it just falls through to the next day or gets put on some form of a more urgent list. Easy to ignore.

I also prioritize better on paper. It doesn't get easier than drawing a arrow or using a number to reorder things on a written list.

Don't get me wrong, I love digital. It's what I do. I build those apps that help us accomplish tasks. But the perfect todo list just doesn't exist. At least not one that is as easy to use as a paper and a pen.

Of course what works for you is what you should do. Share. What does work for you?

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Thu, 13 Jan 2011 15:00:00 -0800 Leading the Reader Through Your Web Site http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/leading-the-reader-through-your-web-site http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/leading-the-reader-through-your-web-site

Been on the New York Times Web site a bit more than usually lately reading through a few articles.

The first time I saw this feature I kinda missed it. The second time I used it and the third time I realized what a good idea it is.

Take a look at one of their articles. (Here's one that might amuse you a bit.) As you near the bottom of the article a box will slide in from the right side of your browser window. (see the image below)

This box has headlines and links in to related stories. If you scroll back up the article page the box will slide back out of view. 

Nyt_article_teaser

Nice feature and unobtrusively guides the reader to related or featured content. And gets out of the way when the reader is looking to stay on this page longer.

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Sun, 09 Jan 2011 21:20:00 -0800 Share Relentlessly http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/share-relentlessly http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/share-relentlessly

Imagine what we can make together if we share relentlessly.

I've been working on a project and needed to look up some documentation for a code library I'm using. The above quote was on the creator's Web site. Rails developers may recognize it, but everyone can learn something from it. 

Think about it for a minute. A full minute. Now, share. 

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Fri, 07 Jan 2011 18:36:00 -0800 Waiting to make a decision? http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/waiting-to-make-a-decision http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/waiting-to-make-a-decision

Sure he [made wrong decisions]. And he owned those decisions. But he never felt guilty about them because he knew that you can't move forward in the face of uncertainty if you aren't willing to make mistakes. And gradually, he made fewer and fewer mistakes. In fact, people said he developed an amazing ability to make good decisions without enough information. They thought he was really smart.

from The Five Temptations of a CEO - a Leadership Fable by Patrick Lencioni

Is any decision is better than no decision?

It's really easy to get bogged down in details and keep from making a decision. I've always been pretty good at making decisions quickly. I've made a lot of decisions I regret, but most of the decisions I've made I'm glad that I made them when I did. 

I'm not saying that you should make rash decisions. I'm suggesting that you don't have to know the answer to every question before you make a decision. Don't be stupid, for sure, but don't be afraid either. Ever business decision has side effects. And no decision will be 100% correct. Our "guts" are often smarter than we give them credit for.

Is fear the reason for your delay?

I'm usually pretty quick and good at making decisions. I don't have a perfect track record and some decisions definitely take me longer to make than others. 

If I wanted to really be honest with myself I'd have to say that the decisions that take the longest to make or the ones I'm afraid to make. I'm usually afraid of any of the options. 

It is okay to be wrong

Most decisions we delay to make are because we don't want to be wrong. That's rational. I can't think of anybody who wants to be wrong, but being wrong isn't the end of the world. 

The best thing to do when you make a wrong decision is to admit it - quickly. You may not even need to apoligize. Just admit it, learn from it, correct it and move on.

Again, don't be stupid or rash. Don't burn bridges, But please don't let fear of being wrong keep you from making important decisions.

Share your thoughts. What decisions are you procrasitinating on?

 

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Thu, 06 Jan 2011 06:40:00 -0800 Social Media Link Generation: StumbleUpon vs. Facebook http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/social-media-link-generation-stumbleupon-vs-f http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/social-media-link-generation-stumbleupon-vs-f

Heard of StumbleUpon?

I have, but I don't use it. Not regularly anyway. Heck, I don't really use any social tool regularly although I'm starting to.

Here's a description of StumbleUpon from StumbleUpon

Discover photos, videos, and web pages recommended by friends and people sharing your interests. StumbleUpon learns what you like, so you only see what's interesting to you from across the web.

According to this article on Search Engine Land StumbleUpon generated more links to sites than Facebook or Twitter. Facebook and Twitter are definitely more popular among typical Web users, but if you're trying to generate links to your site then you should be turning your attention to other social sites.

Here's the data

Take a look at the chart. Facebook was the champ for most of last year. The uptick of StumbleUpon may be temporary. But it is still way above all the other social media outlets (almost combined).

Statcounter-social_media-us-mo

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Wed, 05 Jan 2011 08:43:00 -0800 Simple Web Server for Front-End Development http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/simple-web-server-for-front-end-development http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/simple-web-server-for-front-end-development

Note: I'm using Mac OS X Snow Leopard. Windows user's you'll have to do something else with CygWin or the like.

You're working on HTML, CSS and JavaScript files on your local machine and hate having to upload to a server to test or using file:/// to review the work. Somethings just don't work (most JS in some browsers) from the file protocol and having to upload to a remote server for simple tweaks is just a pain in the rear.

If you're on a Mac like I am this is just use a quick script to server up a directory. (sorry, but you will have to use the console.)

From the console and in directory you want to serve type:

$ python -m SimpleHTTPServer 8080 

 

Then browse to http://localhost:8080/ in your browser.

Yep, that's pretty simple. That's a lot type ever time so lets make it a bit simpler.

You'll have to edit the .profile (Mac OS X) file in your user folder. You can use Vim (vi) or TextMate or anything else that can edit plain text files. Just add the following line at the end:

alias server="open http://localhost:8080/ && python -m SimpleHTTPServer 8080"

Save the file. Log out of any console sessions you have going and start a new one. Now you can just type:

$ server

from the console prompt in the directory you want to serve. Your default browser will open to the right URL for you. How cool is that.

Want to get a bit more adventurous?

$ python -m CGIHTTPServer 8080 

 

Now you can serve up .py files as well - Yep, there are still Python devs out there and some of them are doing cool stuff.

I know this isn't a game changer

.NET and Ruby already have ways to review their sites using a unique port on localhost using tools provided within those frameworks. This makes it simple for front end developers to test in a proper context.

Thanks

Thanks to @rem and @mathias for Tweeting this. Just thought I share a bit more information. It's out there in other places, but now I'll always know where to find it.

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Wed, 05 Jan 2011 08:12:00 -0800 What Kills your Productivity? http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/what-kills-your-productivity http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/what-kills-your-productivity

Have you downloaded that new productivity app yet?

As [people], we can often rationalize spending time on shopping by telling ourselves that we’re investing our time, energy, and money in a new tool – [it’s] going to catapult our [productivity] to the next level. Maybe it’s a new computer, maybe it’s a musical instrument, maybe it’s [an office] of one’s own. Once you get that new thing, you think, you’ll have a superior means to complete your work

from Is Consumerism Killing Our Creativity? at the 99% *I’ve replaced creativity with productivity in these quotes. Yes I know the two aren’t the same, but they are closely related.

I always want the latest tool or gadget or software or app that I think will help me complete my task, be more productive or enjoy life more. I’m looking for that one thing – book, article, tool – that will give me the “aha” moment and all the things I’ve learned over the years will come together and I’ll be exponentially more productive in life and work.

It’s a myth, I know. There is no such product, but still I think it will happen, hope it will happen.

This can’t be true, can it?

It’s a false promise, of course. A means of procrastination baked into our consumerist culture. No external thing can prompt [productivity], and there’s no substitute for just getting down to doing the work.

“A means of procrastination.” Ouch! The truth hurts, doesn’t it?

In fact, it’s been proven that hardship – being deprived of things – stimulates [productivity] more than being well-off. A recent Newsweek article on America’s declining creativity reported

About six months ago I simplified my life a bit. I changed the layout of my office, the computers that I used. I removed anything extra that I could. It has gotten cluttered again and again and I fight it off every time. I also changed my business focus. I made decisions as to where I would spend my time and how I would spend my time, what I would think about and read, what work I would look for and take.

It hasn’t been easy and I haven’t been perfect. I’ve made many mistakes. It is a process not an overnight change.

Make everything as simple as possible, but not simpler. – A. Einstein

That is the challenge. How simple can I live? Do I really need all the stuff, gadgets, software, apps that I’ve collected over the years?They may not take up physical space but what about mental space? Which is more valuable – mental or physical?

Starting comes before finishing

I find that as I simplify my task it becomes easier to start. And it’s obvious that to finish I actually have to start at some point.

I still have problems finishing, but I have less problems starting.

Where should I start?

Hmm. Tough question. And you have to answer it for yourself. But answering this first may help: Where’s your heart? Your passion? You can’t stray far from that and be productive.

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Wed, 22 Dec 2010 08:53:54 -0800 The Future of the Tablet? http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/the-future-of-the-tablet http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/the-future-of-the-tablet Mashable released an article this morning touting the Huge Growth Projected for Tablet PCs. While I think there is a huge growth potential with tablet I think it is just wrong to talk about predictions for the tablet into 2014. That's 3 years from now and who knows what will be available in 3 years. Think back over the last 3 years and all the tech changes and devices that came and went or grew or fell sharply. 

The article goes into detail of usage and who owns tables. It's a good read. don't get me wrong I just can't see forecasting device option 3 years out. 

By the way, I love my iPad and use it regularly for just about anything: Business, presentations, email, writing, reading, gaming, flash light, radio, television, teaching tool, etc. It is a great device. 

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Sat, 18 Dec 2010 17:00:38 -0800 At the end of a day http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/at-the-end-of-a-day http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/at-the-end-of-a-day I feel as if I'm fading fast
I do not think I'm going to last

Today has really been a blast
but I fear I fear it's kicked my ...

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Fri, 17 Dec 2010 18:03:00 -0800 No man dies before his time... http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/no-man-dies-before-his-time http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/no-man-dies-before-his-time

A friend of mine posted this on Twitter earlier. "No man dies before his time" Jewish saying . Amen! #JewishWorldReview. Read the tweet here.

This is a saying; it is not a truth. The truth is many men, women, children, and the unborn die well before their time. It is appointed unto man to die, but God has not planned every death. In fact, He sent Jesus to give us abundant life. He has prepared us for life not for death. Death was not part of God's plan; it is a consequence of humanity's disobedience. God rejoices when one of His comes to Him, but He did not plan or cause the death.

All too often we blame God for things He did not do and forget to celebrate Him for the things He did do. We bury the greatest gift in a sleigh pulled by reindeer and the resurrection we replace with a bunny that lays eggs. As Christmas approaches let us remember what we are really celebrating: the love of the Father and the gift of a Savior.

May your season - and life - be filled with the knowledge and grace of God and the knowledge that God's plan for you is health and prosperity and thankfulness and humility and an honest life lived by following Jesus.

Follow. Believe. Obey.

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Thu, 23 Sep 2010 09:36:07 -0700 SPF records and email validation http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/spf-records-and-email-validation http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/spf-records-and-email-validation Here's a great tool to help check the SPF records for your domain: http://www.kitterman.com/spf/validate.html

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Thu, 23 Sep 2010 09:29:27 -0700 Beginning Running http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/beginning-running http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/beginning-running I haven't run for exercise since I was required to in Jr. High. That's been a while. I'll play a weekly game of Ultimate, but that's about all the real exercise I get in a week. I sit at a desk most days so I'm not what anyone would call in shape. I've decided I want to loose 20-30 pounds and get in better shape while I'm at it. So I've started a running plan.

I found a "couch potato to 5k in 12 weeks" program (just do a google search there's tons of them). I started it on Tuesday and today was my second day to jog/walk. (5 minute warm-up walk, stretch, 1 minute jog 1.5 minute walk for 20 minutes). Nothing fancy I know, but for a couch potato (or desk potato if you prefer) it is a start.
My calf muscles are tight, but overall I feel pretty good. It's only day two and there are many more to come, but I'm kinda looking forward to them. And that's new to me. My plan is to run every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. Ultimate on Sunday and rest on Monday.
I'm tired of being a 34 year old 220 pound out of shape guy. I can't control the age, but I can do something about the other two and as the saying goes "2 out of 3 ain't bad."

What do you other desk potatoes do for exercise?

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Thu, 15 Jul 2010 06:21:58 -0700 ASP.NET MVC to Ruby on Rails - a possible move? http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/aspnet-mvc-to-ruby-on-rails-a-possible-move http://mindflow.robsutherland.net/aspnet-mvc-to-ruby-on-rails-a-possible-move

I’ve been working in Ruby (on Rails) some for the last couple of weeks. I’ve enjoyed it immensely for the most part. I like the power of the command line. How quickly some things work. Some things – like setup and deployment on Ubuntu – have been a bit daunting for me, but once there and working it’s, well, there and working – and with a lot less resources than IIS7 and Windows Server.

It’s hard to describe the shift. Is Ruby better? Easier? More efficient? Quicker development?

Rob Connery said it this way: http://wekeroad.tumblr.com/post/814375320/when-code-isnt-enough

All in all, the app is the end result, not what language it was written in. As long as it works well, meets the needs, and can be maintained it doesn’t matter if it was written in C#, BASIC, Ruby, Java, Python, etc. The idea has to be the champion. The question is how quickly can the idea become reality. I think RoR has some power and advantage here. The tooling is a lot different than most C# developers will be used to, but once you get a handle on the tooling the power is evident.

So far the only ones who have really said that language matters is Apple in the iPhone developer agreement. And I still think they are wrong too. (I get they want you to use their API and more power to them for that, but naming the languages you have to code in is a bit extreme.)

Anyway, just a thought out there. I’m not giving up ASP.NET MVC and C# too much out there already and I do like the framework and love the C# language. I like the backing of the .NET Framework. But I am leaning more on Ruby on Rails now. You don’t have to abandon one to have the other.

Anybody else out there switched from ASP.NET MVC to RoR? Anyone switched from RoR to ASP.NET MVC?

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http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/114648/me.png http://posterous.com/users/4aG8WhhQ2CxX Rob Sutherland Rob Rob Sutherland