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April 18, 2007

This blog has moved to shebanation.com

Administration and spam handling of this blog was taking up too much of my time, so I’ve moved over to a blog hosted at wordpress.com. The transition was very smooth, since both MovableType and WordPress have excellent import/export functionality. All comments have moved as well.

The new URL is http://shebanation.com

You can subscribe to my RSS feed at:

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Also, as a bonus of moving to wordpress, you can subscribe to my comments feed:

Comments Feed

I’ve turned off commenting on all existing posts on this blog, and will not be updating this blog any further.

January 15, 2007

Commenting reopened

On January 9th, I set up my blog to only accept authenticated comments, as described in this blog post.

Unfortunately, the net effect is that the number of comments on my blog has gone down greatly, even though the number of readers has gone up. I'm not happy with that, so I've gone back to moderating comments by hand and manually filtering out the comment spam Movable Type isn't catching.

January 9, 2007

A comment on commenting

I hate to do this, but I've been getting a lot of blog spam, so I've changed my blog to only allow comments from users authenticated by Six Apart's TypeKey system. I apologize for the hassle factor for those who wish to comment. Please keep in mind that this doesn't prevent you from posting without anyone really knowing who you are, in the sense that its pretty easy to set up a TypeKey account that points to a free email account.

December 7, 2006

New blog style

I’ve updated my blog to use a new template, Fleur which I downloaded from the MovableType Style Archive. The actual design is by Jennifer Maloney of freshwear.ca. Thanks for making this cool style available to MovableType users!

Of course, I’m a newbie at this whole MovableType thing, so if things don’t work right, don’t blame Jennifer…

November 13, 2006

Now you've done it...

I'm going to use this blog as a place to discuss a variety of issues. I'll probably spend a fair amount of time discussing Microsoft - my job here at Adobe is to watch what competitors do from a technical point of view and keep people inside the company up to date on the ramifications, and Microsoft is the competitor I spend most of my time on. I should point out that discussing Microsoft as a competitor doesn't mean that I think everything they do is inherently bad or immoral - I also spend a fair amount of my time educating Adobe employees about Microsoft technologies and about the benefits to Adobe of leveraging those technologies in our products. It seems like opening that conversation to the world beyond Adobe could be useful - I get the benefit of other people's comments, and hopefully others see the benefit in the things that I have to say.

That said, I also plan on discussing other technologies and business issues I'm passionate about, including:

  • Dynamic languages - I'm a big Ruby fan, and am very interested in efforts to make dynamic languages like Ruby work on top of runtime environments like the Java VM, .NET, and Adobe's recently open-sourced Tamarin engine.
  • Collaboration - before I came to Adobe, I spent 7 years working at PlaceWare and then Microsoft on the product that eventually became known as Live Meeting. I still believe that the potential of real time collaboration is huge and mostly untapped.
  • User Interface Design - although I've done plenty of server-side programming over the years, I'm a client guy at heart. For better or worse, a lot of the user interface design of the Live Meeting client is my work - when PlaceWare was a startup it was difficult to keep UI designers on staff for financial reasons and thus I took on a lot of the design work myself, with help from Product Marketing folks, graphic designers, and many others.
  • Open Document Formats - although I think open source is incredibly important, I'm personally more interested in making sure all the content everyone creates is reusable and repurposeable. To that end, I don't care for proprietary, undocumented file formats (and yes, I do know that Adobe has a few of those - this is just my personal opinion).
  • Dynamic Media and RIAs -Like collaboration, I think the combination of video and animation with user interface content is an area that is ripe for innovation. Flash, Flex, and Apollo are leading the charge, and Microsoft is trying to join the party with WPF and WPF/E.

There will undoubtedly be other topics that come up over time. If there is anything you would like me to talk about, please comment on this entry or send me an email: my email is shebanow, and the domain is adobe.com.

Oh yes - the title of the blog. Once upon a time, I worked at Apple. I had a pretty acid tongue back then, and as a result earned the nickname of "The Shebanator". The blog title is a play on that nickname, but I don't plan on being quite so mean here - depending on your point of view, time has either smoothed out my rough edges or worn me down.