Browsing ‘Digital artists’ articles
DQ Books
DQ Books is an online publishing project that has produced a series of collaborations between illustrators and photographers.
Posted on January 12th, 2008.
DQ Books is an online publishing project that has produced a series of collaborations between illustrators and photographers.
Posted on January 12th, 2008.
I am a London-based digital veteran who has spent the last fifteen-odd years leading development across start-ups, digital agencies and corporates. I am currently Head of Architecture at Experian QAS, focusing on the development of high-availability data quality platforms. It's all about the big data these days. Opinions expressed are my own and not endorsed by my employer, naturally.
Contact me by email. Follow me via Twitter. Check me out via Linkedin.
Developers and architects like to build things, so their initial impulse is often to flatten the place, lay some stronger foundations and build something impressive. It can be difficult to get them excited about incremental innovation, even when this is generally the most sensible approach from both a technical and commercial perspective.
Despite all the best intentions, software reuse tends to be confined to third party frameworks and tools rather than being an integral part of the development process. Are we expecting too much from software reuse and should we learn to set our sights a little lower?
EPiServer and Sitecore are direct competitors in the middle-tier CMS market and on the surface they appear to do pretty much the same thing. You need to dig quite deep to draw out a useful comparison.
Many web content management systems are seeking to become all-encompassing “platforms” that can manage a rich and interactive user experience across multiple channels. Is this ambition realistic or even desirable?
The Entity Framework has come a long way since its earliest incarnations prompted a vote of no confidence from the development community. However, like any data access technology, there are still a number of traps for the unwary – particularly if you’re using it in a tiered application.
Everybody would agree that quality is an important part of the software development process. However, the complexity involved in delivering quality is often poorly understood and the amount of effort it requires tends to be underestimated.
A man is being taken to court by his ex-employers in America for keeping the Twitter followers that he accumulated while working for them. This is not the first time that arguments over the ownership of social media contacts have ended up in the courts.
It seems that Umbraco are finally dropping XSLT on the next release of their CMS. About time too – it’s been a while since you could really justify using it to build web interfaces.
Not quite sure how Truffler = #BigData, but it's still a pretty smart acquisition for #EPiServer http://t.co/nPHpHUMd (3 days ago)
#Diablo3 looks great but the point-and-click action feels a tad dated. It plays like an iPad game. (3 days ago)
#Apple finally drop the "4G" claim on the new #iPad. It's "Wifi + Cellular" now... http://t.co/OZFTD8m9 (4 days ago)
Amazon introduce billing alerts for AWS. That's kind of been a long time coming... http://t.co/hzjHaMLW #cloud (7 days ago)
RT @RGA: Seems like "hackathon" is being used more and more to describe something that's really just a long meeting. (7 days ago)
