Wednesday, May 18, 2005

Point One of Most Holy Order of Emacs

Master Emacs Masons may have already dealt with this, but Wiseman's build of a Carbon/Aqua Emacs (which was more or less done straight from CVS) is broken on Mac OS X 10.4.1. To remedy the situation, we give you a new Emacs, one made for and built on 10.4.1. Please download and give it a whirl.


I'm particularly interested in making sure it works on 10.4, that is, "Standard Tiger", so if you haven't yet updated, please also download it, fire it up, and let me know what happens.


This Emacs will not work on 10.4, only 10.4.1, so work progresses on making a build that will work on both. Several people were kind enough to send me their logs from CrashReporter, which helps. If any of you are willing to hold back on upgrading to 10.4.1 in order to test some builds which might work on both 10.4 and 10.4.1, send me email.


One reader asked how to change fonts. The font menu will not work, you'll need to do it in Emacs Lisp. I recommend adding something like the following to your .emacs file:


(setq default-frame-alist (cons '(font . "-apple-monaco-*-10-*-mac-roman") default-frame-alist))

Saturday, May 07, 2005

Molson: Canadian for Crap

I don't think there's anything else to say about this other than NOOOOOOOOOOOOO!. My Canadian friend and fellow beer pal Chris reports:

Creemore no more?:

Ok, maybe that's a bit hyperbolic but Molson just bought one of the finest small Ontario breweries and I can't help but feel that it ultimately might not be good for the taste that is Creemore: Molson buys Creemore Springs Brewery:




The company said it will look at expanding Creemore sales to other parts of Canada, as well as increasing the Ontario-based craft brewer's marketing spending.

Molson said the acquisition would give it a position in the growing domestic super-premium segment, adding that the Creemore brand image and brewing craft will remain unchanged.



"Molson's intention is for Creemore to continue operating as a distinct organization benefiting from its own people, knowledge, recipes and marketing methods," said Kevin Boyce, the president and CEO of Molson Canada.



I still fondly remember the place I had my first pint of Creemore, at the Absinthe Pub at York U in 1991. Here's hoping....



Thursday, May 05, 2005

Do Gnus Moo or Roar?

I didn't make it to Paul Graham's talk in Palo Alto tonight, but as a consolation prize, Wiseman hooked me up with his native Aqua build of GNU Emacs for Tiger. A reader over at Forwarding Address: OS X correctly pointed out that GNU Emacs ships with OS X as a terminal application, which I forgot to point out.







Because I'm a nice guy, and I like to share the love/hate relationship that is Emacs (misery loves company), you can download it from me. Don't blame John or I for your inevitable destruction at your own hand though. Just bunzip2, untar, and drop in Applications.

Monday, May 02, 2005

Blogging Is Probably Not Obsolete

Paul Graham spoke at Soda Hall today. I just got out of his talk "Hiring is Obsolete". I have plans with Wiseman to go see Graham's other talk this Wednesday at PARC as a for-pay ($25) SDForum thing, but cubes (he wants me to add, parenthetically, that he's better known as "Daniel C. Silverstein") was nice enough to let me know he was also speaking today at U.C. Berkeley for free.



The talk was pretty good. I've heard Graham speak before, but not in person, rather via a recording of a talk he gave at the 2004 O'Reilly Open Source Convention. Seeing him in the flesh was different. His speaking style isn't fumbling as it initially came off sounding in the recording. He actually does stand up in front of people with a sheaf of paper, presumably his essay, and reads from it. He takes occasional glances, and otherwise looks at and engages the audience. It explains what I found odd about his meter when I was listening to the OSCON talk.



"Hiring is Obsolete" was mostly a plea and a justification for young people, especially students about to graduate from college, to start start-up companies. I arrived a little late, but got most of it. Thanks to AirBears, I wasn't able to blog live from the talk, but that's okay, since typing can be annoying when someone is speaking and people are listening quietly.



A summary of Graham's points might be the following: Young people (i.e. students) are ideal to start start-up companies. They are young and as such can afford to take on a lot of risk, and you should always take on as much risk as you can afford. Even if they fail, young people do not have much at stake to lose, and indeed much to gain, at least in terms of experience, by having what is likely to be a failure, since at least nine out of ten startups do in fact fail. Graham had gone around to several large tech companies (Google, Yahoo!, Microsoft, etc.) and asked them "if you could hire someone who had tried and failed to launch a start-up company, or someone who had graduated college and went to go work as a developer at a big company (e.g. Microsoft), which would you prefer?" According to him, every single company responded that they would be more interested in the candidate who had tried and failed at a start-up; he included a verbatim quote from the person he talked to at Yahoo! who said he could quote him.



The Q&A part of the talk was also good. One attendee asked what he prefaced was "a nasty question: how this would talk be different had you given it five years ago?" Graham laughed and said that he probably would have been way more negative and cautious in 2000, at the height of the bubble. "Everyone thinks you can just go out and do this, and it's not that easy!"



There were at least a couple Lisp celeb sightings: Franz's Dr. Sheng-Chuan Wu asked what I think was the last question: "when are you going to reprint On Lisp?", which Graham good-naturedly refused to answer, and replied with "you're a plant! You're sitting too close!". I also saw JP Massar walk out of the hall after the talk.



The other Bay Area tech celeb I sighted was HOT or NOT's James Hong, who was sitting against the wall directly across the room from me.



Someone tell Zach Beane that the blog lives anew! I miss my time on Planet Lisp!