Posted by Geir at September 3rd, 2008
I’ve started a new blog at geirfreysson.com. The posts on the Snailbyte blog have mostly been about technology and business, whereas the new one, modestly called “The Internet Industrialist”, will have a wider angle. Hope you enjoy it.
News and updates about Snailbyte will still be posted here as well.
Posted in Snailbyte News | No Comments »
Posted by Geir at April 20th, 2008
We recently launched a new website, Wajapi, which allows users to discover books through people.
It allows users to
- Discover new books
- Follow what their friends are reading
- Show books on blogs
Wajapi is used to populate the booklist in the sidebar of this blog. The idea is that pasting such a booklist into any blog should be as easy as possible.
Wajapi also has an API interface so anyone who can code can write applications that interface with Wajapi.
Give it a go and tell us what you think: Go to Wajapi!
Posted in wajapi | No Comments »
Posted by Geir at April 11th, 2008
When the Linux kernel developers no longer had free access to BitKeeper, a proprietary version control system, Linus Torvalds couldn’t find a free replacement that met his needs. So he created his own: Git.
Slowly but surely, Git is conquering the world.
Today, a “social network for developers” based on the coolness of Git launched: GitHub.
One of the most impressing features of GitHub is their network visualiser. The visualiser shows open source software development in a whole new light. Very nice.
Once the book on Pragmatic Version Control With Git is out, I’ll have no excuse left not to convert to Git. All the cool kids seem to be using it. Git is in. Git is the new black.
Posted in Books, Linux, Open source, Technology | 1 Comment »
Posted by Geir at March 5th, 2008
Tim Berners-Lee gave a keynote speech at 3GSM last year where he discussed the difference between what he calls a foundation technology and a ceiling technology:
A foundation technology is designed to enable innovation, to be the base which will support other even more powerful things to come. A ceiling technology is not. It is designed to provide a value, and for its provider to cash in and cash out.
He can talk, he developed the most important foundation technology of recent times: The web.
In contrast to the web, instant messaging was largely developed as a ceiling technology. The big players, Microsoft, AOL and Yahoo control more than 90% of the market and all of them rely on a closed technology. The result is that although lots of people use IM, the ecology of companies providing innovative solutions based on IM is tiny.
This is all about to change. XMPP, aka Jabber, is an open source instant messaging technology which had largely been exclusive to geeks until Google decided to base its GTalk client on the technology. Recently, it has been rumoured that AOL and even Microsoft will open up their networks to Jabber based clients.
ReadWriteWeb published an interesting article recently on how XMPP might be the future of cloud computing. Currently, the technology is being used by Tivo, Twitter, Mebo and many others and with the the possibility of other major players opening up their systems, 2008 might be the year when instant messaging evolves from being a ceiling technology to a foundation technology.
Posted in Business, Technology | No Comments »
Posted by Geir at January 31st, 2008
Duncan J. Watts is a physicist turned sociologist and author of the book Six Degrees: The Science of a Connected Age. In a recent interview with Fast Company, Watts disputes Malcolm Gladwell’s tipping point theory which became conventional wisdom when his book became a bestseller.
“It just doesn’t work,” Watts says … “A rare bunch of cool people just don’t have that power. And when you test the way marketers say the world works, it falls apart. There’s no there there.”
It’s difficult to build an argument such as Gladwell’s tipping point without relying on anecdotal rather than empirical evidence. Watts on the other hand bases his theory solely on controlled experiments albeit with computer simulations rather than people.
The debate that is sure to follow will be an interesting one and we can safely recommend both books as highly enjoyable.
Posted in Books, Business, Marketing | No Comments »
Posted by Geir at December 3rd, 2007
Daniel Lucraft recently released Rak, a ruby powered grep replacement.
To install:
gem install rak
Rak is useful for searching Rails code through the console. Search results are displayed with the search terms highlighted, which is very useful.
Go ahead, give it a spin!

Posted in Ruby or Rails | No Comments »