Kent Beck is closing up shop on his JUnit Max. I don't need real time test running, so I am not a customer. It is too hard core for my needs. However I totally agree with this sentiment:
One thing I learned is that I love being involved in the entire business. There were days in the middle where I felt fully engaged, fully alive. I'd like more of that in my life.
I felt the same way when I was running my software consulting business. It is a shame that being economically independent is so difficult and perilous, in terms of life affirmation it is unbeatable.
This is a wonderful idea
from Kent Beck that leads to automating the steps in a production push very quickly:
Get the whole team in a conference room Monday morning. Choose a feature you are going to add. Have one person come up to the one machine in the room. Write one line of code. Deploy. ... Once the deployment is done, write another line of code. Deploy.
And so on, adding unit tests, functional tests along the way so that confidence in each deployment is high. The kicker though;
About this time some of the rest of the team is going to be bored watching all the manual steps in the deployment. Have them go off and automate the most tedious, boring, or error-prone step. Bring the automation back to the conference room and start using it.
Manual deployments are error prone and they rely on institutional knowledge rather than a reliable, replicable process. Having manual deployments adds overhead as new departments and positions spring up to make sure the code being deployed is the code that people think is being deployed. A script that takes the code from a release branch and then deploys it is far more reliable and efficient, not just in time, but in people and positions that have to manage production pushes.
Most Popular on South Sea Republic
The articles that have been viewed the most:
Most Popular Restaurants in Phoenix
Phoenix Eats Out is the restaurant review site for
Phoenix,
Scottsdale and
Old Town Scottsdale which lists the modernist and contemporary restaurants, taverns and bars in the greater Phoenix area.
This is the list of the most popular restaurants pages from phoenixeatsout.com that have been viewed the most;
My personal favourite restaurants in Phoenix are
AZ88,
Postinos,
Bomberos with
Grazie,
Humble Pie,
Orange Table,
The Vig,
Fez and others coming close behind. View the complete list with the photo-journalistic style images on
phoenixeatsout.com
Most Popular Hikes in Arizona
Arizona is an outdoor state and has lots of hiking in the city and around the state. Phoenix is unusual for most cities in having several large mountains in the center of the city with great hiking. Anyone who comes to Phoenix has to do the
Echo Canyon trail on Camelback and the
Summit Hike on Squaw Peak or Piesta Peak. The views of the city, suburbs and surrounding mountains are wonderful from Camelback and Piesta Peak.
For more experienced hikers there is the McDowell Mountains in North Scottsdale that has several difficult and strenuous hikes in
Tom's Thumb and
Bell Pass. Alternatively, you can hike the highest mountain in Arizona. At 12,600 feet
Humphrey's Peak is a long and difficult hike.
Alternate Australian Constitutions
Between 2004 and 2009 this site,
southsearepublic.org, was a constitutional blog based on scoop which focused on Australian and global constitutional issues.
One of the strongest aspects of it was the development of constitutions by those involved in the blog. These constitutions are the outcome:
The constitutions were built using principles from Montesquieu's separation of powers, the enlightnment's universal political rights and the ancient Athenian technology of sortition and choice by lot.
Archives For South Sea Republic
South Sea Republic started in 2004 as an Australian constitutional blog in 2004 based on scoop software. It was an immigrative outgrowth of Kuro5hin. The archives for each year since then;
The articles are ordered by views.
Who Is Cam Riley

I am an Australian living in the United States as a permanent resident.
I am a software developer by trade and mostly work in Java and jump between middleware and front end.
I originally worked in the New York area of the United States in telecommunications before moving to Washington DC and
working in a mix of telecommunications, energy and ITS. I started my own software company before heading out to
Arizona and working with Shutterfly. Since then I have joined a startup in the Phoenix area and am thoroughly enjoying myself.
I do a lot of photography which I post on this website, but also on flickr. I have a photo-journalistic website which lists
the modernist and contemporary restaurants in phoenix. I have a site on the
Australian Flying Corps [AFC] which has been around since the 1990s and which I unfortunately
lost the .org URL to during a life event; however, it is under the
www.australianflyingcorps.com URL now.
The AFC website has gone through several iterations since the 90s and the two most recent are
Australian Flying Corps Archives(2004-2002) and
Australian Flying Corps Archives(2002-1999) which are good places to start.
Websites Worth Reading
Websites of friends, colleagues and of interest;