Monthly Archive for March, 2008

Alfresco Mail Attach Action

I am proud to announce the immediate availability of the Alfresco Mail Attach Action, a custom action for Alfresco ECM that allows sending documents as email attachments.

sourcesense-logo.gifThis is my first contribution to the Alfresco Forge and it’s a very small thing, but hopefully the first of many more to come. As you might know, Alfresco is the leading provider of open source Enterprise Content Management systems and my employer, Sourcesense, is an Alfresco Gold Partner. Alfresco being an open source product meant that we were able to quickly and easily extend the existing Mail Action without having to reverse-engineer it. Try doing this with Sharepoint!

The Alfresco Mail Attach Action is distributed under the GNU Public License v2.

Back from Morocco




Sunset in the desert

Originally uploaded by Ugo Cei.

We just got back home from Morocco, where we had a wonderful time and saw some truly incredible places. The eyes are still brimming with the colors of a magic country (you can see some of them here).

I also managed to survive driving through the traffic of Marrakesh, which is quite a feat in itself.

Firing up my email reader yesterday night I was greeted by a slew of work-related news, about which I’ll probably write later, but not now.

Hippo acquires Bluesunrise

Honestly, this it not even in the same league as Springsource acquiring Covalent, Sun buying MySQL, or Nokia getting their greedy, little hands ;) on Trolltech, and I had never heard of Bluesunrise before, but still:

Bluesunrise becomes Hippo – Hippo Open Source Enterprise Content Management: “We are pleased to announce that Hippo, Dutch supplier of open source enterprise content management and portal software, has taken over all Bluesunrise activities. We may have a new name, but the core BlueSunrise team is intact and happy to continue providing the quality service you have come to expect. Being a part of Hippo means greater resources to better our service and create new and productive software.”

After all, the Hippo guys are our partners and, more important, they are good friends, so I cherish this acquisition and wish the best of luck to Hippo.

I have no idea how much they payed for Bluesunrise, but with the current valuation of the US dollar, it’s got to be peanuts ;) . And to think that I’m still agonizing over which camera to buy!.

Does Your Camera Really Matter?

There’s a pretty harsh debate going on these days between Michael Reichmann of Luminous Landscape and Ken Rockwell. This started with a rebuttal, titled Your Camera Does Matter, written by Reichman in response to Rockwell’s Your Camera Doesn’t Matter article.

This is an old and tired debate and, when it starts up again with words like “clowns of cliche”, it doesn’t look like it is going very far this time either. Still I cannot resist throwing in my two cents of an opinion, which is that Ken is basically right and Michael, while not being totally wrong, is at least misrepresenting Ken’s position.

Michael is not wrong because, obviously, it would be foolish to say that the quality of the equipment you are using is not going to influence the quality of the product. But that’s not what Ken is saying. What Ken is saying, and what I agree with is that you will not get better pictures simply by using better equipment, unless you define “better” as sharper, cleaner, bigger, with more dynamic range or all these things together. Photography is art (well, at least we like to think that it is) and those qualities do not make a picture artistically worthier than a small, noisy, fuzzy, distorted Holga picture.

Spanish Steps

When Michael writes:

Discussing the merits of one tool over another is relevant. Some lenses, cameras and other photographic tools are better than others. In some cases they are objectively better, while in others their degree of betterness will be subjetive and will depend on the specific needs of a particular photographer.

It appears as he hasn’t ever read Ken’s website, because if he had he would have seen tens of articles discussing the merits of cameras and lenses.

So isn’t Ken a bit hypocritical by saying that cameras don’t matter and, on the same website, extolling the virtues of the latest Nikon offerings, like the D300 which he nominates “the world’s best amateur camera”?

And what to make of this?

4×5″ Cameras Still Rule the Roost: For serious photographers who need quality, versatility and convenience, 4×5″ has been the king for decades. I often point out that while Outdoor Photographer magazine does almost nothing but push the new digital products of its advertisers, their showcase and cover shots are usually made on 4×5″ cameras.

Well, what I think Ken is getting at (and I hope he is reading this and feels like commenting, in case I missed the point) is that a particular kind of camera, with particular qualities, will let you make a particular kind of picture, which you will not be able to do with an inferior camera. It’s true that you cannot shoot a great landscape picture with a pinhole camera, but it might as well be that the low-quality street scene shot with the pinhole camera is better (according to some subjective but shared by a sufficiently large number of people) than the perfectly sharp landscape. And it is not only possible, but highly probable, that millions of people will buy an expensive camera and hope to replicate an Ansel Adams masterpiece. They will usually fail and blame the camera for their failure. What they don’t realize is that their camera truly does not matter.

Ostatic

Ostatic logoOstatic is a new website which aims “to be the most comprehensive web destination for information and insight on open source software and services.” I remember at least two other services with a similar aim, here and here, but they didn’t go anywhere, even if the latter was part of the O’Reilly juggernaut.

On the other hand, Ostatic is part of the GigaOM network and this fact, far from being a guarantee of success, might however help if they don’t just let it die on the vine, like O’Reilly did with CodeZoo. I sincerely hope so, since it’s my opinion that we need a site like this, to supplement the venerable Freshmeat.net.

For now I have subscribed to the blog and am hoping for the best.

Nikon D60 in stock at online stores

Nikon D60Apparently some online stores have started advertising the new Nikon D60 as “in stock”. You can find it at one of Amazon.com’s affiliated stores or pre-order it on Amazon.com itself and wait “1 to 2 months” (though I expect it to be available sooner than that).

Personally I’m not convinced the D60 is worth the extra $250 over a D40. I would just get the D40 with a 55-200mm VR lens and still have money to spare. But in any case I’m waiting for the D40 to decrease a bit in price before ordering it myself.