May 30

Route.ly - Discover and share the best driving routes around the globeIt all started a couple of months ago. I am a keen biker and on one of the rare sunny weekends the weather god bestows upon England I decided to take my motorbike out for a spin.

The problem is, I’m not English. I didn’t grow up here so I know very few routes outside of London. I didn’t have a specific destination and wasn’t looking for culture. All I wanted was a spectacular windy road with breathtaking views to enjoy myself doing what I like most. Driving.

I quickly fired up a browser and asked Google whether they knew of some good driving roads around me. Needless to say I couldn’t find anything except for some blog post detailing how the writer had a blast that day with their friends.

When I arrived home that evening I decided to build a website to do just that – Discover and share the best driving routes around the globe – and now, after a couple of months of work, Route.ly is here.

No more disappointingly random day trips for me, or any other biker in unknown surroundings all over the world!

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Nov 22

During my short yet intense career I have worked for quite a few startups and small businesses. I want to talk about a phase most startups go through – Our application is crap, lets trash it and rebuild it from scratch.

Hindsight is something few people have and wisdom is just a myth, just a fancy name we have come up with to call our mistakes.
Nevertheless when a company outgrows the chrysalis stage and starts producing revenue and growing accordingly hindsight is one of management’s favorite words. It’s widely abused in every meeting. Who hasn’t heard at least once “With the benefit of hindsight we could have…”.
This special word makes the eager-developers brain click. There’s our chance to build the perfect application. We know what to avoid, we have wasted countless hours solving all the problems we found in our path before and we’re now ready to whip out the ultimate system.

Perhaps with a bit of hindsight, wisdom, or a wee little bit of both, our developers would realize that every time they start developing an application from scratch a whole new bunch of complications will crop up and will have to be solved. While this happens the management team who has promised to deliver in time to the big bosses is obviously breathing heavily down the programmers’ skinny necks.

This happened to me once, although we didn’t go as far as actually begin the development a countless amount of hours was wasted in meetings to trying and figure out what we were going to do and how.
The issue for many startups is that very often the software is developed hastily for lack of funding or time constraints. This generally leads to a structureless applications patched together at the last minute. That’s how it is and always going to be – and in my personal experience it’s definitely better this way than running out of funding because the entire process is managed by a megalomaniac-developer with serious ego-related issues.
Once the application is ready and the product is launched there’s never going to be time to stop. Look back. Amend emissions and non-blocking bugs until it’s too late. That’s just the natural process.

After 1 year of life the initial product will most likely be completely unrecognizable and changed/badly-patched in many of its core components. This will make keeping track of what’s exactly going on inside the software harder.
So now what.
The approach I’ve found most feasible and realistic is to gradually fix and produce documentation as the development progresses. A software, especially a website, will never stop evolving and the amount of feature-requests and bugs to fix will only increase with time, stopping the entire machinery to go back and fix is just not an option. However, whilst new functionalities are being added, they will probably have to be integrated with old ones. This is where wisdom can assist you. It is definitely worth spending a few hours more on each new piece of code to patch up the old part it has to touch. Gradually your development process will fall back on track and there won’t be any more wild panic because of obsolete or faulty routines and functions.

If, on the other hand, your software is rotten to the core and cannot be rescued, well, tough sob, you should probably have thought it through more carefully before putting your hands on the keyboard.

Having said that I’d like to add that rewriting an application is not entirely impossible, but it’s most likely going to be a colossal process which will require large sums of money.

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Nov 18

I recently came across FaveBot. The site aims at aggregating and filtering RSS feeds from the most renowned news sites and blogs all over the internet and has recently received a major update functionality-wise.

The site doesn’t exactly look beautiful but its minimalistic simple interface makes it incredibly easy to use.
Once the really brief signup process is completed you are all set to go. Through the “My Trackings” tab you’ll be able to specify search keywords and the categories of feeds you want the site to search in. Results are immediately accessible from the “MyDiscoveries” section.
The categories currently available on the site are blogs, books, DVDs, events, music, news, photos, podcasts and videos.

Another spiffy functionality is the possibility to upload your iTunes library file and let the site aggregate for you all relevant news about your favorite bands.

The only thing I find quite confusing is the fact that while you’re allowed to create multiple tracking filters the results are then all mashed together. the only way to access the outcome of a single search is to click on the number of results in the Trackings summary page.
The site would, perhaps, grow at a considerably faster pace by letting its users add new fees to its database. At the moment the list of feeds to be spidered seems to be “hard-coded”.

The idea looks solid and fairly useful. With just a few fixes and usability improvements it could probably turn into a profitable business in its niche between Feedburner and Digg.

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