Professional Ten Pin Bowler

LISP, Emotions, Bowling In one of Paul Graham's essays he mentions that LISP was his secret weapon. LISP allowed Paul to write a language for his domain and not just construct a bunch of co-ordinated "modular" blocks like 99% of software is created. This single idea has changed the way I look at development. In fact, I've spent the last 3 weeks re-working my project, msgpad, because I don't believe the current web application development paradigm is correct. Please understand that I have been very emotionally distraught over my decision! It's very hard to explain how it feels when you leave your job to create a web application, and four months in (without pay) your making major architectural changes for the fifth+ time, on an application that is stretching the bounds of reality. Far out, I only got married four months ago, and I have a beagle to support! A conclusion I came to recently, eased my worries slightly. I figure I'm like a professional ten pin bowler. Have you seen them work? They bowl with a spin on the ball such that they maximize their potential for a strike. The problem is, this requires much more skill, and also increasea the chance of a gutter ball! The "weekend" ten pin bowler will just throw straight down the middle, with as much grunt as he/she can create. There's less risk doing this, but the probability of a strike is not as great. This is the software development world in a nutshell. I'd rather master the art of spinning, then brute forcing my way through with a short term view of the world. Of interest, there's a successful trader called Nassim Taleb. He loses trades often in small amounts, but wins big every so often. This method goes against our emotional grain, as does learning to spin the ball when all you want to do is "win", but it also offers opportunities where others fear to tread. For the technically minded, I've basically cleaved my software in to two parts: server and client. The current server/client web paradigm is tightly coupled and not a lot like what I have in the lab right now. My server is a hand crafted Atom Publishing Protocol+OpenSearch beast, and the client is a lightweight javascript, yahoo user interface weilding juggernaut. It's in a big messy heap right now though. An initial cut of the server is pretty much done, but I need to hook it in with the client. I'll show it to you some day. Really! eBay Oh, I bought an adapter for my mobile today that converts the Sony Ericsson proprietary audio jack to a standard 3.5mm audio jack. It cost me $1, but the shipping was $8! Also, it was way to easy to, "commit to the purchase", as eBay says. A single click was all it took. eBay appear to be on a pretty darn good thing, especially when you consider that they are the overwhelming market leader on the Internet and the Internet is most likely "the future".

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