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The Economist: Invading Iraq was not a mistake. Although the intelligence about Saddam's weapons of mass destruction has been shown to have been flimsy and, with hindsight, wrong [ . . . ] But changing the regime so incompetently was a huge mistake. By having far too few soldiers to provide security and by failing to pay Saddam's remnant army, a task that was always going to be long and hard has been made much, much harder. Such incompetence is no mere detail: thousands of Iraqis have died as a result and hundreds of American soldiers. The eventual success of the mission, while still possible, has been put in unnecessary jeopardy. So has America's reputation in the Islamic world, both for effectiveness and for moral probity.
Scott McConnell, American Conservative magazine: The record, from published administration memoirs and in-depth reporting, is one of an administration with a very small group of six or eight real decision-makers, who were set on war from the beginning and who took great pains to shut out arguments from professionals in the CIA and State Department and the U.S. armed forces that contradicted their rosy scenarios about easy victory.
Andrew Sullivan writing in New Republic magazine: The lack of stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq remains one of the biggest blows to America's international credibility in a generation. The failure to anticipate an insurgency against the coalition remains one of the biggest military miscalculations since Vietnam. And the refusal to send more troops both at the beginning and throughout the occupation remains one of the most pig-headed acts of hubris since the McNamara era. I'm amazed that more war advocates aren't incensed by this mishandling of such critical matters. But even a Bush-supporter, like my friend, Christopher Hitchens, has termed it "near-impeachable" incompetence.And carefully consider this list of Republicans for Kerry in 2004 And this blog which documents Republican Swtichers which includes 42 newspapers (compared to 6 that switched the other way) And this collection of video ads featuring Real People who voted for George Bush in 2000, but will be voting for Kerry in 2004
More news from the blog your build department from Lasse Koskela who has added MetaWeblog API support to his Cruise Control WeblogPublisher.
Finally!
Roller 1.0 RC1 is available for testing. Read all about it on the Roller Project Blog.
Wiki hype soon to eclipse Blog hype?
Today Simon Brown pointed out a brief but interesting article he wrote called Blog Your Build. Simon wrote a couple of very cool little Ant tasks that make it possible for a build script to blog - to post messages to a weblog. Sounds crazy, but it is a really cool idea.
Build system blogging, newsfeed aggregators, newsfeed enabled source code control servers, newsfeed enabled issue trackers, blogs, and wikis make it possible to build a powerful dashboard website - a dashblog if you will - for a software development project.
I imagine a development dashblog as a portal like site that looks a lot like Javablogs.com. The dashblog aggregates all of the project developer's blogs together into a project blog. Like Javablogs.com does, a dashblog might allow each reader to choose favorite blogs to be highlighted and those to be excluded from the main page. In the sidebars of the dashblog are displayed newsfeeds from the projects issue tracking system, the automatically generated build blog, the recent changes of the project's wiki, recent checkins to the projects source code control system, and news from other team's dashblogs.Does your team already have a development dashblog?
Update: Hey, that's kind like this: Wordpress RSS Aggregator (found via del.icio.us)
To set the Roller 1.0 release apart I created a new color scheme, new banner, and a new badge.
You can see the new color scheme and banner on the main page of
this site.
I created a branch for Roller 1.0 and we are now working towards a Roller 1.0RC1 release this week. Before the RC1 release, I hope to update the Installation Guide and to write up a summary of the many changes that we've made since the last release - which was 0.9.8.3. After the RC1 release, I will work on testing, updating the User Guide, and creating a HSQLDB-based standalone demo release. Once we're happy with a Roller 1.0 RC on blogs.sun.com (and jroller.com), we'll release Roller 1.0.
Roller 1.0 is essentially same code base that is currently running on jroller.com, plus security, spam control, and user admin features needed for blogs.sun.com. Roller 1.0 has not yet been deployed either jroller.com or blogs.sun.com, but I hope to upgrade both sites before the final 1.0 release.
I met my stretch goal last week, which was to implement metaWeblog.newMediaObject. NewMediaObject makes it easy to upload images from a blog client such as Ecto or MarsEdit (and I've tested it with both).
Another stretch goal was to upgrade Roller's experimental Atom feed support to support Atom 0.3, which is the version of Atom currently supported by the feedvalidator. As you can see by clicking on the Atom badge above, I now have a valid Atom 0.3 newsfeed.MacCentral: Sun Java Studio Creator supports Mac OS X: "Sun Microsystems Inc. on Wednesday announced the release of Sun Java Studio Creator for Mac OS X and Solaris (x86 Platform Edition) operating systems. It's also now available in Japanese and simplified Chinese languages. Java Studio Creator lets Java developers create business applications"
In other Netbeans related news: Netbeans 4.1 Early Access release is available. Netbeans 4.1 EA includes "over 15 new modules for developing J2EE 1.4 applications" including support for J2ME, EJB, Web services, and the Sun Java Application Server 8.1.Via Cory Doctorow. Jonathan Schwartz critizes HP in his blog, HP lawyers demand that Schwartz removes the criticism, and Sun fires right back:
Once again, in certain of the places this is a statement of opinion by Jonathan Schwartz. His opinion is based on his good faith assessment of the current climate of HP. Alternatively, however, Sun will also stand behind this as a statement of fact that is true and accurate based on the above substantiation. As detailed by the above facts, we have seen signs that HP is abandoning HP/UX. Jonathan Schwartz's opinions and even his vigorous debate on this subject as well as Sun's product comparisons and dialog on these commercial matters are inherent in Sun's competition with HP and are part of the free market system in which our companies operate. For our statements of fact, Sun has valid, objective and verifiable evidence. Accordingly, and based on the above, Sun affirmatively stands by its claims regarding HP/UX and will not agree to cease making such truthful and/or subjective claims.Hmm.. good point(s). HP, here's what you should do: upgrade your internal Roller blog system to Roller 1.0, make it external, and get blogging!
Joe Gregorio:This is just like WinFS.
Except that it is shipping today.
And it just works.
And it doesn't require an upgrade to your operating system.
I took a trip up to Baltimore and back today to meet with a very important customer. It seems like a waste to fly to attend only a 2 hour meeting, but the trip was interesting and well worth the cost. As an added bonus, I remembered a trip of similar duration and a story I like to call the longest trip to the bathroom ever. I will now inflict that > 10 year old story upon you.
One day I boarded a direct flight from Raleigh to New York's Laguardia airport. I arrived at Laguardia, walked outside and met a man holding high a sign that read "David Johnson." I stepped into the man's black limo for a 45 minute drive up to White Plains, NY. In White Plains, the man droppped me off at a non-descript three story office building and I went inside to sit down in a waiting room. After 10 minutes, a nurse called my name, handed me a small cup, and directed me to a bathroom. I closed the door, urinated in the cup, opened the door, and carefully handed the cup back to her. I walked outside, I met the man in the limo, we drove back to Laguardia, and I boarded a direct flight back to Raleigh.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Copyright 2002-2007, David M Johnson (dave.johnson at rollerweblogger.org)
This is a personal weblog, I do not speak for my employer.

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