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Quattrone's second trial set for March







Quattrone's second trial set for March

Quattrone's second trial set for March 12/02/2003 01:44 AM

SiliconValley.com Dec 1 2003 5:27PM ET




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  • NY Times: Onet ime Star Investment Banker Is Facing U.S. Sentencing. Mr. Quattrone, 48, who was found guilty in May on obstruction of justice after investigators began looking into his former employer, Credit Suisse First Boston, is the most prominent Wall Street figure to face prison since Michael R. Milken received a 10-year sentence in 1990.
  • What they got him for was relatively minor -- obstructing investigators who were looking into CSFB's rancidly insiderish way of doing business at the height of the technology stock bubble of the 1990s. But they won a conviction with the help of a judge who looked, from here at any rate, to be the epitome of pro-prosecutorial zeal. Is he a surrogate or scapegoat for the rest of the investment banking mob, many of whom are skating away from their equally shady behavior or worse? In a way. As they do in every market boom, the bankers decided they were the fabled masters of the universe, and they acted that way. Quattrone was himself the epitome of the banker crowd that helped tech companies make it in the first place, but he and his peers ran wild with power. Real justice would give him a new trial. It would also put a lot more of his former friends and colleagues in the dock, standing trial themselves.

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    March 25, 2004 04/09/2004 03:56 PM

    Thanks to everyone who came to the open house last night. If you have pictures, send me a link!

    We had an interesting conversation about how the imp edance mismatch between contemporary high-level programming languages (Java, C#, Python, VB) and relational databases. Since a huge percentage of code requires access to databases, the glue (a.k.a. the connecticazoint) between the RDBMS layer and the application code is very important, yet virtually every modern programming language assumes that RDBMS access is something that can be left to libraries. In other words, language designers never bother to put database integration features into their languages. As a tiny example of this, the syntax for "where" clauses is never identical to the syntax for "if" statements. And don't get me started about data type mismatches: just the fact that columns of any type might be "null" leads to an incompatibility between almost every native data type and the database data types.

    The trouble with this is that the libraries (think ADO, DAO, ODBC, JDBC, embedded SQL, and a thousand others) need to be general purpose to be reusable, and yet what you really want is a mapping between a native data structure and a table row or query result row. Inevitably, you have to hand roll this mapping and wire it up manually, which is error prone and frustrating.

    I think this is a fatal flaw in language design, akin to the bad decision by the designers of C++ that it was not necessary to support a native string type. "Let a thousand CString/TString/String/string<char> types flourish," they said, and then spent more than a decade adding new features to the language until it was marginally, but not completely, possible to implement a non-awful string class. And now we have a thousand string types (most large C++ bodies of code I've seen use three or four) and a bunch of really good books by Scott Meyers about why your personal hand-rolled string class is inadequate. It's about time that a language designer admitted that RDBMS access is intrinsic to modern application implementation and supported it in a first-class way syntactically.

    Now for all the disclaimers to prevent "but what about" emails. (1) in functional languages like lisp the syntax layer is so light that you could probably implement very good RDBMS shims in ways that feel almost native. Especially if you have lazy evaluation of function parameters, it's easy to see how you could build a "where" clause generator that used the same syntax as your "if" predicates. (2) Access Basic, later Access VBA, had a couple of features to make database access slicker, specifically the [exp] syntax and the rs!field syntax, but it's really only 10%. There are probably other niche-languages or languages by RDBMS vendors that do a nice job. (3) Attempts to solve this problem in the past have fallen in two broad groups: the people who want to make the embedded SQL programming languages better (PL/SQL, TSQL, et al), and the people who want to persist objects magically using RDBMS backends (OODBMSes and object persistence libraries). Neither one fully bridges the gap: I don't know of anyone who builds user interfaces in SQL or its derivatives, and the object persistence implementations I've seen never have a particularly good implementation of SELECT.


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    March tomorrow in NYC 04/09/2004 04:06 PM

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    March hares 03/06/2004 02:03 AM
    Okay. Why is everyone - and I mean everyone - having a "I am too busy to do anything! Waa!" -day today? The good thing is that I am getting far less personal email today than normally, but then again, I wouldn't have time to reply to it anyway.

    Why is the 1st of March such a special day?

    (And yes, I am taking this time to blog even though I really don't have the time. Just had a two minute breather to make a cup of tea.)


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    March 23, 2005 03/23/2005 03:24 PM

    Hiring

    Until now we've been hiring rarely and quietly, but lately our sales are so strong we can't quite keep up.

    My old theory of hiring was to post a job listing on Monster or Craigslist and then sort through the massive pile of unqualified applicants in hopes of finding the needle in the haystack.

    That hasn't worked so well. In the future I'm going to try putting up semi-permanent job listings for all the kinds of people we might hire on the Fog Creek website and see if that gets us a slower trickle of more qualified job applicants.

    Filmmaker Wanted

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    March 28, 2005 03/28/2005 01:37 PM

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    FogBugz 4.0

    Today, in The Road To FogBugz 4.0 Part I, I'll talk about a couple of major features we added after listening to customer feedback, and why our mantra is to listen to our customers and ignore our competitors.


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    March 14, 2003 03/14/2003 06:10 PM

    AngryCoder: “FogBUGZ is very well designed, and virtually bug free. Frankly, if you are in the market for a defect tracking solution, you can’t do much better than FogBUGZ. It is by far the best solution on the market right now, and is also very attractively priced.” Thanks!

    Joseph Jones, who wrote the review, didn’t like the perceived lack of customizability in FogBUGZ. I hear ya. This was one of those agonizing decisions for us. It’s a tradeoff between implementing features that make the sale, versus implementing features that, we think, will make people who use our software love it, which helps in the long term. At the time it was discussed in depth here on Joel on Software.

    Take, for example, a typical report a bug tracking package gives you that shows you the number of bugs generated per day per programmer. Typical bad managers will use that tool to punish programmers with high bug counts or reward programmers with low bug counts. As a result, every time a tester tries to enter a bug, the programmer will argue about it. “That's not really a bug.” “Please don't enter it, I'll fix it on the side for you.” Eventually the bug tracking system subverts itself. That's not FogBUGZ's fault, but there you have it. Nobody wants to use it, they never upgrade, they don't buy more licenses when they get more programmers, and we lose the potential word of mouth.

    The current system, in which we expect FogBUGZ users to have enlightened development processes, makes us miss out on initial sales but it makes our existing customers happier. And they tell friends, and they buy more and more licences, and all is good. We've found that anyone who has been using FogBUGZ and moves on to a new job that doesn't have bug tracking will recommend FogBUGZ at their new job, which is one reason our sales are up by about 200% since last year.

    But this is all, to some extent, speculation. I can't prove anything here. Design decisions are hard that way.


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    March 30, 2005 03/30/2005 11:20 AM
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    March 29, 2005 03/29/2005 11:33 AM

    We use FogBugz extensively internally to handle company email, and the process of using FogBugz ourselves ("eating our own dogfood") motivated us to add Bayesian spam filtering, and a "snippets" feature to make it easy to enter common phrases and even entire messages in replies to frequently-asked questions.

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    Fog Creek
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    535 8th Ave. (bet. 36th and 37th), 18th Floor, New York


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    March 09, 2005


    March 09, 2005 03/14/2005 05:44 PM
    I was quoted in an eWeek story about the VB6 petition today: “And this is how Microsoft will lose their desktop monopoly: because some bright bulb at Microsoft thought Boolean operations should really short-circuit, no matter what millions of BASIC developers had been doing since the 1960s.”

    Correction! This is a bad example, since the boolean operators I was thinking of (And and Or) were not changed to short circuit in VB.Net. I have no idea why I've been thinking that they were for so long. There are other, real examples of incompatibilities between VB and VB.NET, but short circuiting was not one of them.

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    March 14, 2005


    March 14, 2005 03/14/2005 05:44 PM

    Apparently, the reason I was misinformed about And and Or shortcircuiting is that it was changed during the beta after a lot of people screamed.

    A better example would have been the elimination of Set and default properties.

    Understand, please, that it's not that people mind the changes.

    Change is good.

    Nobody thinks the Set statement was a good thing.

    I once spent a whole day in Mark Igra's office (in 1992 Mark was the program manager for Object Basic which became VBA) begging him to get rid of default properties and the Set statement, kicking and screaming and using every rhetorical device at my disposal, but the Basic team absolutely refused to do anything that would break working code, and in those days, there was a tiny amount of working code from Access 1.0 that already used default properties and the Set statement, and it could not be broken. Mark was right and I was wrong and Set remained. By the way, I'm pretty sure default properties were Adam Bosworth's fault; I'll have to ask him this week at the O'Reilly conference. Adam was the designer of Access 1.0. They wanted to be able to say recordset("fieldname") to get the value out of a column, not recordset("fieldname").value.

    But here's the thing. If you have a million line code base that's mission critical, as many companies do, and VB suddenly changes, as it did, you have a choice: keep using VB 6 or spend a lot of time (=money) upgrading to VB.NET. If you keep using VB 6, eventually new things will come out that will not be supported  from VB 6, and you'll be stuck using the yucky old VB 6 IDE until the end of time. Already most of the big component vendors are doing all the new components as .NET components, not OCXes.

    If you spend the money to upgrade to VB.NET, well, you just spent a lot of money to stand still. And companies don't like to spend a lot of money to stand still, so while you're spending the money, it probably makes sense to consider the alternatives that you can port to that won't put you at the mercy of a single vendor and won't be as likely to change arbitrarily in the future. So as soon as people with large code bases start hearing that they're going to have to work to port their apps from VB to VB.NET with WinForms, and then they start hearing that WinForms isn't really the future, the future is really this Avalon thing nobody has yet, they start wondering whether it isn't time to find another development platform.

    I'm heading off to California now. Remember, pizza and beer reception on March 18th from 6:00 to 7:30 pm in Berkeley, at the Studio Rasa Gallery, 933 Parker Street.


    PSP May Not Make March


    PSP May Not Make March 01/06/2005 02:56 PM

    pspmarch.jpg
    A day after Sony said that they would probably launch the Playstation Portable in March, an analyst tells Kotaku that he still thinks it is 50/50. PJ McNealy says that a lack of stock and problems getting the necessary semiconductor parts could push the handheld back to a June launch. I'm sure Nintendo's sad.

    PSP Might Not Make March [Kotaku]


    PS3 due in March 2006


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    March 17, 2005


    March 17, 2005 03/19/2005 02:54 AM

    First of all, congratulations to the whole FogBugz team on winning the Jolt Award in the category of Defect Tracking Tools for FogBugz 3.1.

    Also I'm honored that my book Joel on Software won the Productivity Award.

     


    March 08, 2005


    March 08, 2005 03/14/2005 05:44 PM

    Free Beer!

    But first: if you're going the O'Reilly Emerging Technology Conference in San Diego, I'll be there on March 16th giving a speech. Now, the official topic of the speech is something about building communities with software, which is a good topic, but it's not going to be the actual topic of the speech. I am gaining something of a reputation for giving speeches which are not precisely on topic. Oh well. The actual topic of the speech is too hard to pin down. We'll look at pictures, I'll tell some jokes, and if the A/V works right there will be music too.

    Next, if Southwest Airlines manages to actually deliver me on time, on March 17th I'll be in Silicon Valley at Software Development West where Software Development Editor in Chief Alexandra Weber Morales will interview me in a "fireside chat" format. I don't know if they are actually going to have a fireplace; we might have to burn twigs and promotional literature on stage. If you want to attend the fireside chat all you have to do is register for an "Expo Pass" which is free online until 3/10; onsite or after 3/10 it's $50.

    And last but not least, Apress will host a pizza and beer reception on March 18th from 6:00 to 7:30 pm in Berkeley, at the Studio Rasa Gallery, 933 Parker Street.


    March 02, 2005


    March 02, 2005 03/14/2005 05:44 PM

    Snow!Gadzooks, we've been busier than ever here at Fog Creek World HQ. For some reason I thought it would be a good idea to sell Mike Gunderloy's (excellent) FogBugz book alongside FogBugz itself, but since we've never shipped any physical products before, that meant a whole lot of new code in the online store for package tracking, shipping addresses, choose a shipping method, inventory stuff, etc. etc., and I'm now spending too much time trying to figure out shipping and debugging the packing slip code... the joke is on us, because the reason we wrote our own store code in the first place was because all of the off-the-shelf ecommerce packages were too focused on physical delivery and didn't have any kind of mechanism for selling downloads and licenses.

    It's ok. I complain a lot but what I love about a software startup is that when you're bored writing code, you can fool around with stuff like the USPS web site and ordering padded envelopes.

    Watch this site for a new five-part series on the process of creating FogBugz 4.0, coming soon!

    On the right, the result of yesterday's snowstorm as seen from my living room.


    The march towards next generation Net


    The march towards next generation Net 09/13/2004 08:29 PM
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