...more recent posts
Up early this morning. I made MB breakfast because I feel bad about how hard she is working on the new restaurant. I worked hard yesterday too, but it's different. We had a great dinner at Bond St. last night where I talked maybe too loudly about the dangers of "property rights fundamentalism" (as Lessig recently turned the phrase.) Actually I kept trying to drop the whole thing, but nonetheless conversation continued to circle back. All I was saying was that no sort of content protection will ever work as long as people have access to general purpose computers. But apparently that led me into some sort of dystopian fantasyland. Still, I'm not sure I'm so far off. There is a lot of content, and a lot of powerful people who own that content and want it to be secured. And if it's true (trust me, it's true) that there is no way to secure it while people have access to general purpose computers, then it stands to reason that those same powerful forces will try to go the legislative route and outlaw general purpose computers. My guess is they probably won't win, but I think it's pretty clear they are going to give it a shot. Notice that Valenti recently called people sharing (pirated) video content "terrorists" (last week in the NY Times, but I don't have a link.) That seems pretty calculated to me.
Maybe this stuff is already in the Patriot Act, I don't think anybody has even read that whole thing yet. We'll see.
Hopefully I can get another long day in today. I have to make some important structural decisions. This is where having been through the problem a few times before really helps. It sharpens your intuition. Or let's hope...
More mozilla strangeness: I can't set a cookie for mozilla 0.9.7 (OS X) from my local server (127.0.0.1)
IE 5 has no problem.
Getting some good work done today (finally!)
My friend J. convinced me that rewriting my code base wasn't necessarily such a bad idea. Especially if I've done it less than three times. Indeed, this will be the third time, so let's see if it's a charm like he suggests.
I'm not doing a complete from scratch rewrite. But I am going through every line of every script. Plus I have changed the database structure slightly to get rid of the scaling problem that threaded comments was going to cause.
I'm trying to add lots of documentation in-line this time. And of course clean up all the glaringly crappy code (at least to a regular crappy level.) But the real focus is on making the whole thing much easier to move from machine to machine. That means abstracting all the machine specific information out of the main code into configuration files. I'm also trying to abstract out as much HTML code as possible so that if I ever come to really care about standard compliance I can fix my good-enough HTML without going into every single script.
This new improved code base will be running on my home (production) server. When it stabilizes I will get the new colo server and move this new code to that machine. Then I'll move some other people to that machine and see what happens. Then if everything seems good I'll move digitalmediatree to the new machine and run things in parallel for awhile. Then finally I'll close this account and move digitalmediatree.com to the new server. Probably that is not too close to happening.
I haven't fully figured this out yet, but I will also try along the way to write something that will sync the contents of the production server database with the digitalmediatree database. I've never done anything like that before. I don't think it will be easy, but I think I can do it. If that works then I will provide a local copy of the system to anyone here who is running OS X. That might turn out to be pretty cool.
Christopher Locke is at it again. Burning down the world, that is. Inspirational.