Blog Entry Index:
- Write the Docs
- Portland Proper Brew
- How to Survive the Zombie Apocalypse with Riak @ Polyglot Conference 2013
I just wrapped up a long weekend of staycation. Monday kicked off Write the Docs this week and today, Tuesday, I’m getting back into the saddle.
Write the Docs
Not only is it about those things it is about how people interact and why documentation is needed in projects. This is one of the things I find interesting, as it seems obvious, but is entirely not obvious because of the battle between good documentation, bad documentation or a complete lack of documentation. The later being the worse situation.
The Bloody War of Documentation!
At this conference it has been identified that the ideal documentation scenario is that building it starts before any software is even built. I do and don’t agree with this, because I know we must avoid BDUF (Big Design Up Front). But we must take this idea, of documentation first, in the appropriate context of how we’re speaking about documentation at the conference. Just as tests & behaviors identified up front, before the creation of the actual implementation is vital to solid, reliable, consistent, testable & high quality production software, good documentation is absolutely necessary.
There are some situations, the exceptions, such as with agencies that create software, in which the software is throwaway. I’m not and don’t think much of the conference is about those types of systems. What we’ve been speaking about at the conference is the systems, or ecosystems, in which software is built, maintained and used for many years. We’re talking about the APIs that are built and then used by dozens, hundreds or thousands of people. Think of Facebook, Github and Twitter. All of these have APIs that thousands upon thousands use everyday. They’re successful in large part, extremely so, because of stellar documentation. In the case of Facebook, there’s some love and hate to go around because they’ve gone between good documentation and bad documentation. However whenever it has been reliable, developers move forward with these APIs and have built billion dollar empires that employ hundreds of people and benefit thousands of people beyond that.
As developers that have been speaking at the conference, and developers in the audience, and this developer too all tend to agree, build that README file before you build a single other thing within the project. Keep that README updated, keep it marked up and easy to read, and make sure people know what your intent is as best you can. Simply put, document!
You might also have snarkily asked, does Write the Docs have docs,why yes, it does:
http://docs.writethedocs.org/ <- Give em’ a read, they’re solid docs.
Portland Proper Brew
Everyday I bike (or ride the train or bus) in to downtown Porltand anywhere from 5-9 kilometers and swing into Barista on 3rd. Barista is one of the finest coffee shops, in Portland & the world. If you don’t believe me, drag your butt up here and check it out. Absolutely stellar baristas, the best coffee (Coava, Ritual, Sightglass, Stumptown & others), and pretty sweet digs to get going in the morning.
Polyglot Conference & the Zombie Apocalypse
Introducing Riak, a database designed to survive the Zombie Plague. Riak Architecture & 5 Minute History of Riak & Zombies.
Architecture deep dive:
- Consistent Hashing, managing to track changes when your kill zone is littered with Zombies.
- Intelligent Replication, managing your data against each of your bunkers.
- Data Re-distribution, sometimes they overtake a bunker, how your data is re-distributed.
- Short Erlang Introduction, a language fit for managing post-civil society.
- Getting Erlang
Installing Riak on…
- Ubuntu, RHEL & the Linux Variety.
- OS-X, the only user centered computers to survive the apocolypse.
- From source, maintained and modernized for humanities survival.
- Upgrading Riak, when a bunker is retaken from the zomibes, it’s time to update your Riak.
- Setting up
Devrel – A developer’s machine w/ Riak – how to manage without zombie bunkers.
- 5 nodes, a basic cluster
- Operating Riak
- Starting, stopping, and restarting
- Scaling up & out
- Managing uptime & data integrity
- Accessing & writing data
Polyglot client libraries
- JavaScript/Node.js & Erlang for the zombie curing mad scientists.
- C#/.NET & Java for the zombie creating corporations.
- Others, for those trying to just survive the zombie apocolypse.
If you haven’t registered for the Polyglot Conference yet, get registered ASAP as it could sell out!
Some of the other tutorials that are happening, that I wish I could clone myself for…
- Angular js and HTML 6! w/ Chris Nicola @lucisferre & Saem @saemg
- Intro to Erlang w/ Yurii Rashkovskii @yrashk
That’s it for updates right now, more code & news later. Cheers!
