23 August 2014

HarperCollins OpenBook API

HarperCollins have been focusing more recently on ebooks. And, as a next pivotal step they have unleashed the OpenBooks API to provide access for everyone to take ownership in creativity to author their own books as well as build interesting mashups. Although, still in beta it is provided as both Data API and Content API making it very much a flexible in the scope of future functionality. Perhaps, an added bonus here could be the use of OData services as well as Semantic Web. Maybe, even exposing metadata annotations and linking through more articulated eReaders. There is even scope here for providing a JSONLD format for graphical linked data of concepts and relations of stories. Another, creative step the project could take, is towards building out a collaboration platform for shared story creation as an access point for editors, writers, readers, and publishers. An intelligent editor assistant would be quite valuable in this respect to guide writers into specific story structure, plot lines, appropriate character building, and even creative endings. In such manner, the intelligent assistant could be taught to learn the patterns of successful stories and guide the proliferation of new story structures with adaptive editing. Often, the start to a story could involve a deep brainstorming session itself for which intelligent agents could provide much guided support. Collaborative filtering for recommendations could be yet another way for which writers, readers and publishers could endeavor towards successful story development. Publishing companies also can benefit from sentiment analysis in understanding the moving trends of reader interests over the web but also to understand reader opinions on their products as well as brands. Such analysis could also help for market engagement towards connecting more socially with the reading community to not only increase interest in books but also to provide a point of knowledge about consumer intents. Furthermore, the web in all its social forms could provide for a focal view for predictive analytics on the success of a particular book.

Stirfry

Stirfry can be the most appetizing meal. It is also one type of meal that provides for an unlimited variety for creativity and flavors all wrapped into one. It is also a very healthy and easy to make. For many, the increasingly time and budget constraints as well as the health conscious consumer, a stirfry could be an ideal meal for a mouth watering mix of tasty flavors and something that is fresh as well as can be topped with a nice bottle of wine. Such meals also are flexible and adaptable for singles, small to large families with children, as well as party friendly. The appetizing meal can go down well with any dessert and even a side starter. All one really needs is a mixed set of ingredients, the thrill of using a wok, and a mouthful of taste buds to satisfy.

18 August 2014

Azure

Microsoft have never been all that great with internet. And, with their leap into big data and platform as a service cloud, they have tried to embark on yet another ambitious feat. However, the Azure platform leaves one desiring more and yet not getting enough of the basics. The fundamentals are lacking especially the aspects that are supposed to make platform as services seamless. One not only has to find their way around the maze of user interface iconic interactions, but also to keep playing around with access logins. The credential side of it alone should make one wonder off back to the AWS for good. One also is expected to utilize the ugly looking PowerShell. Not to mention it would be quite laughable if they were running Big Data services on Windows based commodity hardware. Windows is a guarantee show stopper for most cloud based services. Especially, Semantic Web and Linked Data services will be dragging in performance if run in such a manner. For many, Linux and Unix are the default standard to have on the Cloud environment. Azure attempts to provide support for Linux, Python, and even Java. However, to what degree are we going to see their support team keep doing their salesman pitch at customers every time they decide to opt out of the .Net environment. Also, giving up on Windows in the cloud would imply Microsoft have finally accepted defeat that the OS is inferior to Linux and Unix. For all intents and purposes, Azure is really only good for the .Net based developers and businesses. One will often find Heroku, Google, and even Amazon open for comparison with Azure. However, one often finds an Azure support team totally besides themselves, often bewildered, and perplexed over why a customer would even dare mention these other cloud providers. There is a rare level of arrogance that behooves the Microsoft brand and all the products that come with it. Yet, over time they are failing by miles to play catch up with the likes of Apple, Google, Amazon, and even Oracle.

16 August 2014

Semantic Web For DevOps

Semantic Web can unleash a whole spectrum of insights for devops teams from rich semantics in real-time monitoring to even connected architectures. It can provide an entire new dimensional view of the enterprise system and a way to organize events, logs, and even jobs. It could even provide a new outlook of linked automations for the cloud. And, even management of deployments and libraries could be unleashed with semantics. It seems organizations still hold back on the new ways of doing things and seem to stick with the usual ways of approaching their architectural complexities. Overtime, organizations that take on Semantic Web, as part of their architecture, will be ready for the future. There is much to be gained when businesses actively control costs in the cloud and where mission critical aspects are often the order of the day. Web 3.0 is getting closer and closer to reality in many domains. And, as projects converge we are bound to see a breaking point of when such approaches become the standard and not just the perennial for research.

Rest.li

Rest.li is yet another Restful approach to development which provides a holistic view to an entire end-to-end architecture. It has been developed by the Linkedin engineering team. The features are so rich that even a directed link to their site can provide an entire informational spectrum of documentation.

Awesome Libraries

Each programming language has its on flavor and community for which a diverse set of libraries emerge. Libraries are useful for developers as they provide for reuse for solving specific implementation needs as well as a way of building on the shoulders of giants through a more stable solution. At times, hunting through the web in search of good libraries can be quite problematic and time consuming. One wants a way of amalgamating all the libraries and frameworks associated to a particular language in one place for easy access which can also be regularly updated. Although, such lists may not be fully exhaustive. The following is a shared list of curated open source libraries specific to a programming language.

awesome-python
awesome-java
awesome-scala
awesome-javascript
awesome-groovy
awesome-kotlin

awesome-awesomeness

RESTX

RESTX is a relatively new and interesting approach to Restful API. It up scales on performance by utilizing a custom built dependency injection container. It also provides a feature rich as well as modular approach to pluggable development for meeting the flexibility needs of any business domain requirements. There is even a useful API docs built in, as well as developer friendly testing and an admin console. There is also a very unique integration with MongoDB. Although, it does not limit one to a specific backend. 

2 August 2014

Organizational Ethics

It is time that organizations had a separate department to study the moral and ethical dilemmas of employees and their employers as well as the business practices. Such departments could be spin-off from compliance and even their governance services. We live in a growing capitalist economy where businesses are dictated with shareholder value without the forethought or care for either employees or customers for that matter. We need to strive for more ethically run businesses that have their own internal audit department for which scrutiny for compliance can be provided in a fair manner and with an established code of conduct. Also, such departments can track employee ethics both internally and externally to combat discrimination in the workplace but also to protect the reputation of the business as a whole. Such departments could also act as third-party mediators that can handle a whole suite of investigation for which the manager or a human resources time may be wasted. While formal and publicly run organizations for such may not be an answer, more thorough approaches need to be taken to protect the rights of employees as well as employers in the workplace. A linked data approach to integrated ethical boundaries could also be a stepping stone in a more interconnected direction. Reducing staff as a way of cutting back on cost of businesses seems to be an almost typical answer from management who may ultimately be the real culprit to bare the blame for the missed performance. It seems for many businesses, fairness goes out the door soon as it starts losing money on the balance sheets. However, it is usually such practices that not only lead to more mistakes and dire performance consequences but also distaste from current as well as former employees. Institutional discrimination in the workplace is also a big dilemma that is often overlooked. Also, another aspect crucial to businesses is whether 'something is the right thing to do given the current circumstances' is also an ethical aspect that many organizations lack in their internal processes as well as part of their strategy. Perhaps, it is time in civilized societies we started caring more for our environment, our employees, and not just for shareholder value. This will not only help businesses take responsibility for their actions but also be held accountable both to their employees, customers, as well as within the global space of things for their cumulative effects to an economy.