Another way to promote CB that I just thought of, why not get an
article in The Perl Review? I know it's not a huge audience, but I
do know chromatic usually lists what's in the latest issue when he
puts out the O'Reilly Perl newsletter.
I just thought of something else too, maybe an
Sherm Pendley wrote:
On May 7, 2007, at 11:44 AM, Chris Nandor wrote:
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Sherm Pendley) wrote:
I need donations to CamelBones. Or web hosting customers. Or
consulting clients. Or a plain old-fashioned job. Or something - and
I need it soon.
Sun, May 06, 2007 at 05:07:46PM -0400: Sherm Pendley mangled some bits into
this alignment:
On May 6, 2007, at 3:25 PM, Alex Robinson wrote:
I wish even more that Apple had picked you up and made CamelBones a
first class citizen.
Good news: That may still happen.
Good news indeed.
Tue, May 08, 2007 at 05:25:35PM -0400: Sherm Pendley mangled some bits into
this alignment:
On May 7, 2007, at 6:23 AM, David Cantrell wrote:
On Sun, May 06, 2007 at 08:25:49PM +0100, Alex Robinson wrote:
Why did the OS X loving bit of
the perl
Hi all,
I have blogged a bit about Camel Bones here on O'Reilly. Please comment if you
would so that the python person who commented is not the sole comment. Nothing
personal against python but it sucks.
http://www.oreillynet.com/mac/blog/2007/05/developing_with_camel_bones_pe_1.html
On 5/8/07, at 5:25 PM -0400, Sherm Pendley wrote:
It's not just in Mac circles either - there's a very widespread
misconception that Perl is useful for system admins, web developers,
and little else. One thing I find personally frustrating is the
corollary, that Perl *programmers* must
On 5/9/07 Jeremiah Foster wrote:
I have blogged a bit about Camel Bones here on O'Reilly. Please
comment if you would so that the python person who commented is not
the sole comment. Nothing personal against python but it sucks.
But let's not turn this into a battle in the best language wars.
Wed, May 09, 2007 at 08:55:54AM -0700: Bruce Van Allen mangled some bits into
this alignment:
On 5/9/07 Jeremiah Foster wrote:
I have blogged a bit about Camel Bones here on O'Reilly. Please
comment if you would so that the python person who commented is not
the sole comment. Nothing
On 5/9/07 Jeremiah Foster wrote:
Wed, May 09, 2007 at 08:55:54AM -0700: Bruce Van Allen mangled some
bits into this alignment:
On 5/9/07 Jeremiah Foster wrote:
I have blogged a bit about Camel Bones here on O'Reilly. Please
comment if you would so that the python person who commented is not
On May 9, 2007, at 11:55 AM, Bruce Van Allen wrote:
On 5/9/07 Jeremiah Foster wrote:
I have blogged a bit about Camel Bones here on O'Reilly. Please
comment if you would so that the python person who commented is not
the sole comment. Nothing personal against python but it sucks.
But let's
On May 9, 2007, at 11:51 AM, Vic Norton wrote:
On 5/8/07, at 5:25 PM -0400, Sherm Pendley wrote:
It's not just in Mac circles either - there's a very widespread
misconception that Perl is useful for system admins, web developers,
and little else. One thing I find personally frustrating is the
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Just figured out that this only went to Jeremiah.
Begin forwarded message:
From: Tom Yarrish [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: May 9, 2007 9:11:08 AM CDT
To: Jeremiah Foster [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: CamelBones: Will hack for food!
-BEGIN PGP
On Wed, May 9, 2007 3:50 pm, Sherm Pendley said:
So, the next version - 1.2 release, preceded by 1.1.x betas - will
also be licensed under the same terms: GPL or Artistic, your choice.
I wouldn't have had a problem with a commercial program using CB
anyway, even before the license change -
On 5/9/07 Peter N Lewis wrote:
Perhaps folks have some ideas for apps that could be written in
CamelBones? Something that would presumably use some of the vast CPAN
facilities to make something cool with minimal programming effort.
Mine would not be as flashy as games, but I'm working toward
On May 9, 2007, at 4:32 PM, Daniel T. Staal wrote:
Macs desperately _need_ a an app to manage third-party software
updates.
Something that you could run periodically to keep software up to date,
avoiding having every seprate program connect to the internet on
startup
and check for itself.
On May 7, 2007, at 11:44 AM, Chris Nandor wrote:
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Sherm Pendley) wrote:
I need donations to CamelBones. Or web hosting customers. Or
consulting clients. Or a plain old-fashioned job. Or something - and
I need it soon.
Have you considered a
On May 7, 2007, at 6:23 AM, David Cantrell wrote:
On Sun, May 06, 2007 at 08:25:49PM +0100, Alex Robinson wrote:
Why did the OS X loving bit of
the perl community sit by and let PyObjC become the default bridge.
Because the vast majority of perl people
Sherm et al.,
I know that a great deal of Bioinformatics people also use Perl ...
and Macs! If some of the framework could be shown how it would be
good for these people to use Camelbones, maybe that would help with
takeup. I tend to just use the Tk library for all my UI stuff (or web
At 5:25 PM -0400 5/8/07, Sherm Pendley wrote:
there's a very widespread misconception that Perl is useful for
system admins, web developers, and little else. One thing I find
personally frustrating is the corollary, that Perl *programmers*
must be admins or web devs. I find that frustrating
I need donations to CamelBones. Or web hosting customers. Or consulting
clients. Or a plain old-fashioned job. Or something - and I need it soon.
Good luck Sherm. I wish I had work I could punt your way. I wish even
more that Apple had picked you up and made CamelBones a first class
citizen.
On Sun, May 06, 2007 at 08:25:49PM +0100, Alex Robinson wrote:
Why did the OS X loving bit of
the perl community sit by and let PyObjC become the default bridge.
Because the vast majority of perl people who moved to OS X did so
because it was Unix That
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Sherm Pendley) wrote:
I need donations to CamelBones. Or web hosting customers. Or
consulting clients. Or a plain old-fashioned job. Or something - and
I need it soon.
Have you considered a Perl Foundation Grant? Surely this is more
I need donations to CamelBones. Or web hosting customers. Or
consulting clients. Or a plain old-fashioned job. Or something - and
I need it soon.
Hi Sherm,
I have some work for you. I use ruby and the mechanize object to
pull down pages off the web and parse them. There is a lot of
On May 6, 2007, at 3:25 PM, Alex Robinson wrote:
I wish even more that Apple had picked you up and made CamelBones a
first class citizen.
Good news: That may still happen.
So, why has Apple ignored CamelBones?
They asked around internally for sponsor engineers to accept the
job of
Okay, the subject is sensationalistic - I'm not in danger of
starving, and neither are my cats.
But, I am less than two weeks away from losing my internet connection
and web server. I'm broke and unemployed, or whatever the term is for
owning a business that has zero paying customers. I
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