cheeni: (Default)
I came across this news report, that I quote selectively behind the lj-cut. Talk about a checkered career! A friend from Latin America once told me that he always carried a machine pistol on him when at home since kidnapping was quite common. *shudder*


This reminded me of
Our lady of the assasins (La Virgen de los Sicarios)


Read more... )
cheeni: (Default)
I've been playing with Amazon's webservices since this afternoon, and I've got myself a little plugin to my website that makes me a booklist when I feed a list of ISBNs, my comments and my scores.

I've got a demo app at http://cheeni.net/ws/isbnLookup.php for the curious among you. So much nicer than yesterday, eh?

See screenshot here )

In a way this marks my return to hobby programming after a l-o-o-o-o-o-ng while.

I figured that there must be a lot of killer apps for the web reseller, powered by webservices.

Two examples:

1) A palm devide w/ barcode scanner + camera plugin and a web service app along w/ a data service gets you an on-the-go "pricing + web listing + inventory management" tool. A while back, I read a story about a laid off programmer who now makes a better living selling books on Amazon. Perhaps he uses such a device? See the iPilot scanner

2) A brick n' mortar storekeeper who also syncs his inventory w/ eBay or Amazon using a webservice that removes and relists items as and when the inventory empties and replensihes.

A majority of ideas for webservices seem to be on the reseller end of things. In the userspace I could think of surprisingly few solutions. A price comparison site like http://isbn.nu/ is one of the few end user solutions. eBay has an enterprise API membership that's $5000 a year. There seem to be a lot more people making a living professionally off eBay than I'd expected.

Human beings are forever living between a better future and the good old days!
HENRIK TIKKANEN
cheeni: (Default)

Managing Open Source Projects: A Wiley Tech Brief, Jan Sandred, Wiley Books

My rating: 7/10

A book that claims to marry business and Open Source; I think the author is fairly ambitious. Jan Sandred has a lot of nice inside stories, and has very poignant quotations to boot. I guess I like Open Source literature that reasons that the success of FLOSS has complex underpinnings, and is willing to discuss it.


Rebel Code: Linux and the Open Source Revolution, Glyn Moody, Allen Lane

My rating: 7/10

Glyn Moody has got most of the parts of the revolution surprisingly right. Mostly anecdotal, and is certainly well balanced in acknowledging the contributors. This book has some nice one liners that have now become lore. Sometimes the book cites without attribution.

There, that makes my Open Source reading list so far a nice collection: Read more... )
cheeni: (Default)
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