This post originated from an RSS feed registered with Ruby Buzz
by Andrew Johnson.
Original Post: Welcome to Siaris.net
Feed Title: Simple things ...
Feed URL: http://www.siaris.net/index.cgi/index.rss
Feed Description: On programming, problem solving, and communication.
Siaris.net is the public face of Siaris: Andrew
Johnson’s software development, training, writing, and consulting
activities. Utilizing a common weblog format, I will publish short and
medium length articles on a variety of topics including: general
programming and problem solving, object oriented programming, programming
languages, teaching, and communication. Longer writings will be available
under the Articles link in the navigation bar.
Siaris.net is not my personal blog (I may add one of those eventually), but
a way to gather and make available both my older writings, and to add new
articles. With that in mind, I’ve already converted 50 (of 89) short
Perl articles (orignally published by ItWorld). Some writings are less
suitable for blog publication for a variety of reasons — the
Articles link in the navigation bar connect you other writings (a
smallish regex tutorial for some of Perl’s additional RE features,
and a link to the regex chapter of my book for starters).
Within the blog, the News category will relate information about
various goings on at Siaris.net. The LanguageBits category will
hold interesting bits on various languages (including how-to’s and
small code examples). I expect to be adding other categories as this site
evolves.
There is no feedback mechanism for articles at this time, but I am
considering setting up either a comment forum or a wiki for such a purpose
— possibly requiring login to discourage comment/content spamming. In
the meantime, comments about this site, or any particular article can be
sent directly to me via email (andrew@siaris.net). I hope you find this
site useful and enjoy visiting from time to time.
Best regards,
Andrew L Johnson
The Map
Once I would go to the edge
of the map. To the empty, white space.
To where there
be dragons and perils unknown. One could fall off edges of
worlds.
Now would I go to the edge of the map. To the
swirling black hole.
Forever uncharted to those left
behind. One could fall off edges of Time.