So much for Ajax
A little thing happened on the way to Ajax on Rails this weekend. So, I will have to spend some time over the next couple weeks on it. (Have to pull myself away for BF2 first :))
Matt Secoske’s intermittent ramblings on software and life
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A little thing happened on the way to Ajax on Rails this weekend. So, I will have to spend some time over the next couple weeks on it. (Have to pull myself away for BF2 first :))
Here is a quote: ” In fact, Rails makes Ajax so easy that for typical cases it’s no harder to use Ajax than it is not to!”
Thats just sexy!
Well, I know what I’m gonna be doing tonight. ;D
I read Inventing a Nation, by Gore Vidal this weekend. This book was given to me as Christmas present a couple of years ago by my Mother-in-law. I had always intended to read it, but for one reason or another I have not gotten to it until now.
It is an easy read, and is very interesting in the context of just finishing up the Signature Series at Bellevue. This book walks through the formative years of our country, from 1775 to 1800, and describes the attitudes and thoughts of some of the most important people in the history of the US: Washington, Adams, Jefferson. It also sheds light on other illuminaries: Franklin, Hamilton, and Madison.
Some things that struck me (not being as well versed in our history as I should):
I guess I should not be suprised by this, but I (and many, many other Americans, I presume) have always thought that our forefathers were somehow over all of that BS. But apparently not. They were as deep in the muck as today. In some senses that is a little reassuring. If we have been able to get through 200+ years of this type of politics, maybe we can go longer?
One thingI didn’t know before: apparently Jefferson wanted to “throw out” the constitution every 20 years or so, and write a new one that pertained to the current environment. I think this would have been suicide for the nation a long time ago, especially with the new light that I have seen of our forefathers. However, it still intrigues me, as it seems to me that Jefferson’s intent was to “steer the car” (to use a Kent Beck metaphor), and keep it on the center line. Jefferson the first XP practitionor?
I wish that people (in general) could be capable of being the ideal that Jefferson obviously would have needed to make that concept work for the betterment of all.
Anyway, it was a good read.