whitehouse.gov + web standards 2

Posted by Sheldon Finlay on January 20, 2009

It’s great to see the new whitehouse.gov web site embracing web standards. This is a trend I noticed with Obama. He hires the best people for the job and makes no exceptions when it comes to web design. His campaign web site was made with web standards, whereas the other top candidates sites looked pretty clunky behind the scenes. Web leadership starts at the top, and well, you can’t get much higher than the POTUS.

The new whitehouse.gov web site is validate xhtml. It takes advantage of jQuery for some smooth user-interface effects. It even has Atom 1.o feeds. I haven’t had a chance to look it over completely, but at first glance I am very impressed. Very nicely done, Mr. President.

Jump Start Credit Card Processing

Posted by Sheldon Finlay on January 20, 2009

Amy Hoy, et. al. have put together a very nice quick guide on getting up to speed with credit card processing based upon their experience with the subject when launching Freckle Time Tracking. It’s a wee bit Rails-centric, but overrall it got plenty of info whether or not your using ActiveMerchant or not.

Command Line Cheatsheets

Posted by Sheldon Finlay on January 19, 2009

Running with the cheatsheet theme, if you are running OS X or any is with a command line, I highly recommend installing the command line cheatsheets from errtheblog.com. They are great when you just need a quick syntax check on how to run a certain MySQL command or work with a particular library.

WordPress Cheatsheet 1

Posted by Sheldon Finlay on January 19, 2009

Here’s a shoutout to the blogging engine I am using for this web site (as of 1/2009, since I might change to something else). The GraphicRating.com blog has a sweet little write-up on some of the elements of WordPress. Check it out.

An Introduction.

Posted by Sheldon Finlay on January 15, 2009

I built my first web page around 1995. I was a second-semester freshman at UMass Amherst and had just bought my first real computer: A Packard-Bell 100Mhz with 8MB of ram. I was the envy of many at the time, both in having Windows 95 and being able to navigate the servers at OIT. My first site was called MURG (named after a friend whom we affectionately called Grum), and was a collection of random, like so many web sites were around that time. I wish I still had a copy of it. The floppy I backed it up to seems to be corrupted and the WayBack Machine doesn’t go that far back. The site was hosted on the Umass OIT-UNIX server, which was my first experience with bash and shell work. Ah, these were the salad days when the web was green and new.

Now, I can trace my technical lineage back further to around the time I was in 5th or 6th grade. Like so many other geeks in my generation, my first computer introduction was a RadioShack TRS-80 and BASIC  programming. I used to stay up all night typing in lines and hoping the program would run. It was a lesson in zen-like detachment, as I had no way to save my work. I later learned how to play music in basic and do graphics rendering. My prowess in BASIC earned my an achievement award in junior high. A little later I got a computer that ran MS-DOS. But even still I used to boot disk to program in BASIC.

Various hand-me-down computers came into my life between junior high and my first real computer in college. I learned a lot about breaking things and getting them to work again. I was a brute force computer user and learned the most from my mistakes.

Today, I am a web designer, web developer, and a server administrator. A sort of interdisciplinary web geek if you will. Along the way I have worked for an ISP, published in computer magazines, started several companies and consulted for numerous others. I am a devoted Mac user as of 2007, having switched after getting into Ruby and Ruby on Rails (more on that later). Although, I still spend a lot of time each day on Windows still. I am very passionate about Ruby as a programming language and Ruby on Rails for application development. I still feel like I am in the honeymoon phase with Ruby on Rails and continue to be amazed by it. Rails has changed the everything about the way I work and how I approach problems. It has been the biggest influence in my professional life apart from the web itself.

I am also a father to Erin and a husband to Amy. My wife runs KnittingHelp.com, one of the most popular knitting sites on the web. I serve as the designer, developer and host and she is the talent. When I am not on a computer I like to do strength training,  eat good food, enjoy beer and wine, take photos, and just enjoy the world around me. I am also a sacred harp singer.

This blog is powered by WordPress. I had a hard time deciding between using a Ruby on Rails blog engine (Mephisto or Typo) or sticking with a PHP blog. Ultimately I choose WordPress, but I still have a pang of regret for not using a Rails blog engine.

On this blog I hope to share some of the things I am passionate about and give back a little of what I have learned over the last decade or so of work with the web.