Chrome for Linux
May 30, 2010 at 09:22 PM | categories: home, XQuery, MarkLogic | View Comments
I'm giving Chrome 5.0.375.55 a chance to take over from Firefox 3.6. Here are my thoughts so far:
The minimalist windows take some getting used to, but I do enjoy the extra pixels. I turned off the bookmark toolbar, of course. The speed is nice, and I'll be interested to see if battery life is significantly better or worse than with Firefox 3.6.
I was pleasantly surprised to find that my bookmark keywords and bookmarklets imported without a hitch. Most of the keyboard shortcuts seem to match with Firefox. I have already installed a few extensions: here is a list. I'm still using privoxy to handle most web annoyances, so I don't care about AdBlock. So far my biggest problem is cq. I have a fix for the keyboard shortcuts, but I can't get XML-Tree to pick up the results frame as XML. I can see the Content-Type header is text/xml for the results frame, but I think perhaps XML-Test doesn't handle this situation. I may need to dust off the older idea of having the browser evaluate an XSLT to display the tree - perhaps with Chrome it will be fast enough to be a worthwhile solution.
I would also like to get emacsclient working. I know about Edit with Emacs, but I'm not yet convinced that I want to run a second micro-server inside emacs.
It annoys me that Type-ahead-find doesn't work on chrome:// pages. Of course this is a security precaution, but it also points out why keyboard access should be well thought-out as part of the user experience. Supplementing an incomplete keyboard experience with extensions dooms keyboard users to an incomplete experience.
The minimalist windows take some getting used to, but I do enjoy the extra pixels. I turned off the bookmark toolbar, of course. The speed is nice, and I'll be interested to see if battery life is significantly better or worse than with Firefox 3.6.
I was pleasantly surprised to find that my bookmark keywords and bookmarklets imported without a hitch. Most of the keyboard shortcuts seem to match with Firefox. I have already installed a few extensions: here is a list. I'm still using privoxy to handle most web annoyances, so I don't care about AdBlock. So far my biggest problem is cq. I have a fix for the keyboard shortcuts, but I can't get XML-Tree to pick up the results frame as XML. I can see the Content-Type header is text/xml for the results frame, but I think perhaps XML-Test doesn't handle this situation. I may need to dust off the older idea of having the browser evaluate an XSLT to display the tree - perhaps with Chrome it will be fast enough to be a worthwhile solution.
I would also like to get emacsclient working. I know about Edit with Emacs, but I'm not yet convinced that I want to run a second micro-server inside emacs.
It annoys me that Type-ahead-find doesn't work on chrome:// pages. Of course this is a security precaution, but it also points out why keyboard access should be well thought-out as part of the user experience. Supplementing an incomplete keyboard experience with extensions dooms keyboard users to an incomplete experience.
MarkLogic CODiE
May 14, 2010 at 06:46 AM | categories: XQuery, MarkLogic | View Comments
MarkLogic Server 4.1 won a CODiE this week, for "Best Database Management Solution". That goes up next to past awards from 2009, 2006, and 2005.
I wonder what they will think of 4.2?
I wonder what they will think of 4.2?
MarkLogic User Conference 2010
May 03, 2010 at 09:07 AM | categories: XQuery, MarkLogic | View Comments
The conference starts tomorrow. I'll be speaking twice: once on high availability, and once on semantic storage and queries. I hope to see you there.
http://www.marklogic.com/UserConference2010/agenda.html
http://www.marklogic.com/UserConference2010/agenda.html
MarkLogic Server 4.1-1
June 25, 2009 at 04:49 PM | categories: home, XQuery, MarkLogic | View CommentsMarkLogic User Conference 2009
April 21, 2009 at 04:49 PM | categories: MarkLogic | View Comments
Just a quick plug for the MarkLogic User Conference 2009, coming up on 12-14 May. I'm presenting a half-day architecture session before the conference, plus conference sessions on high availability and scalability. As usual there will be customer presentations and opportunities to hear about new product features directly from our engineers.