Mr. Hartnett up in trendy, swanky Palm Beach Co. gets the nod for finding this interview with David Milliron of Caspio.
Now I'm not as anti-Caspio as a lot of some people, who are way smarter than me. We've seen the blowups between Milliron and various bloggers.
In fact, for full disclosure, I pushed for my current employer to get involved with Caspio when I started back in October.
I think Caspio is absolutely, positively great for allowing reporters to put up searchable tools. Especially if a reporter has pieced together a small database on their own and needs a way to get it out there. But I don't think it's the ultimate solution, either.
But Milliron's quote here really gets me:
"Publishers are looking for tools that do not require huge upfront costs. More and more publishers are outsourcing the creation and maintenance of their database applications. A relative low entry point with a high return on investment is the mantra for today’s online database publishing world."
With all due respect, that's because newspaper owners are dumb. And their schemes, cheap ways and monopolistic haughtiness is what got our industry into the situation we face today.
We need research and development. We need investment in new ways of providing content. And that's not a one-size-fits-all application like Caspio.
Again, I think it serves its role well. But in the end, we need imaginative, new research and development that keeps readers reading our papers and Web sites. Please, no more schemes.
Showing posts with label ruby on rails. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ruby on rails. Show all posts
Wednesday, June 18, 2008
Caspio and frameworks...
Labels:
caspio,
data,
django,
frameworks,
internet,
ruby on rails,
sun-sentinel,
web
Wednesday, June 11, 2008
Kind of weird situation....
So I get back from IRE all fired up. Especially after the Django boot camp, which gets a big thumbs up from me to all the people who worked so hard to put it on.
But at the same time, the Tribune stuff is no secret. Now I know how the French aristocracy must've felt when the Bastille was stormed. It's a little weird when you know there's an ax waiting to fall, you just don't know when or where.
That being said, I'm still excited about the future of journalism, thanks to great speeches by the legendary Phil Meyer and people like Aron Pilhofer.
Aron left us with what I think is the quote of the conference:
"You can't outsource the future."
So what did I like most? It'd have to be the Django boot camp. Maybe that's because I'm a sucker for anything hands-on.
First great revelation about Django (or Ruby on Rails) for me is this: It really forces you to think about relationships and good database design.
As a user of Caspio, a lot of times you want to take the easy way and just create a single table. Yes, I know you can use views and lookups and all that jazz, but it's kind of a pain in the tail for me.
A frameworks like Rails or Django forces you to think about not only what you want now, but what you might want in the future. That's a good thing.
Again, more to come.
But at the same time, the Tribune stuff is no secret. Now I know how the French aristocracy must've felt when the Bastille was stormed. It's a little weird when you know there's an ax waiting to fall, you just don't know when or where.
That being said, I'm still excited about the future of journalism, thanks to great speeches by the legendary Phil Meyer and people like Aron Pilhofer.
Aron left us with what I think is the quote of the conference:
"You can't outsource the future."
So what did I like most? It'd have to be the Django boot camp. Maybe that's because I'm a sucker for anything hands-on.
First great revelation about Django (or Ruby on Rails) for me is this: It really forces you to think about relationships and good database design.
As a user of Caspio, a lot of times you want to take the easy way and just create a single table. Yes, I know you can use views and lookups and all that jazz, but it's kind of a pain in the tail for me.
A frameworks like Rails or Django forces you to think about not only what you want now, but what you might want in the future. That's a good thing.
Again, more to come.
Labels:
caspio,
django,
frameworks,
ire,
ruby on rails,
sam zell,
tribune
Tuesday, May 13, 2008
Ruby
So while taking Aron Pilhofer to the airport on Sunday, he gave me a nice rundown on Ruby on Rails (and, as a sidebar, Ruby itself). It was interesting enough to convince me to give it a look.
If you're even remotely interested, do yourself a favor and check this out. It kind of gives you a nice little overview of Ruby.
In other news, I got a new Django book in the mail last week. Was intending to mess with it today, but had to take the wife to the hospital when she sliced her paw open while using scissors on flowers at work.
If you're even remotely interested, do yourself a favor and check this out. It kind of gives you a nice little overview of Ruby.
In other news, I got a new Django book in the mail last week. Was intending to mess with it today, but had to take the wife to the hospital when she sliced her paw open while using scissors on flowers at work.

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