Brian began developing applications for the Internet in 1995, and has continued to architect, design and develop Internet software for the last 11 years, including projects for IHG, IBM, Brighthouse, and Cox Target Media (Valpak).

Here he shares his thoughts and opinions on Internet Software Architecture and Development, chronicles his current projects and areas of research, and give tips and tricks he discovers along the way.

April 2008


Everything Changes

I’m about a month overdue on this, but I have to take a moment and outline the many changes I’ve made in the last month. First, I changed jobs. For the last two years I worked with Jeevan Nomula over at GCA in New Tampa, FL. We were a group of about 10 contractors working for Intercontinental Hotels based out of Atlanta. I served as a Team Lead and Designer for a Java ESB for the company’s reservation and availability apis. It was a great team to work with and Jeevan was a fantastic boss. But as you may know from following my blog, I have really fallen in love with Rails over the last year, and I really wanted to spend some time working in that full time, so I took a new position with Interactive Media Marketing. They are based five minutes from my house and develop Miley Cyrus’s official web site and fan club.

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Automating Rails Site Creation

If you create a lot of Rails sites like I do, for odds and ends information tracking, or to try out new ideas, setting up your Rails application each time can be a pain, as Nicolas points out in his post, Creating a new rails app shouldn’t be boring. Though I would point out that its only boring because as Rails developers we expect to get so much done so quickly. Eventually, Rails developers want to automate everything, because we know we can, and we expect to never have to do by hand anything redundant anymore.

So creating your Rails app, configuring it and installing your favorite plugins is no exception. Nicolas shows his solution to creating a script to build his Rails apps skeletons. I plan on doing this as soon as I have some free time. I love the idea of running one script and having a skeleton app checked into source control and deployed out on to my slice in minutes. No overhead. Have an idea and five minutes later I’m coding.

Is Anyone Using Ruby on Rails?

In case anyone is still wondering if Rails will catch on. Check out Obie’s list of Big Name Companies Using Ruby on Rails.

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