geocoder rich gibson geo::coder::us services: xmlrpc, rest, somethingelse web service to turn gps breadcrumbs into animation on top of map very cool human creativity project julian cash a long time ago i took pictures at oscon [ shows a book of oscon people studio photos ] no more photography around ? at the end: someone asks "so what IS it?" I can't figure out what to write down as the answer. svk autrijus you hate cvs? it hates you too bitkeeper is great. but proprietary perforce. used by perl: fast, brilliant, proprietary svn. great, slow, bloated svn always slow and going down too many repos to update from can't do incremental merge lots of projects keep using cvs .svn directories are annoying HELP svk uses svn fs lots of nifty features atomic commits rename/version directories distributed branches do everything offline commit/log/etc offline "I can no longer suffer perforce now that I've switched" can use svk to work with cvs, svn, or p4, and maybe VSS installing svk is easy; it's on CVS you can even commit to your local repo if you're not a commiter to the master repository merge smart merge cherry picking can use external conflict resolution tools patch management apis create/apply patch tools aegis schwern i love the aegis workflow i hate aegis declaring changes before making them means you can declare ALL possible changes, then let them sit there like a task list I didn't take notes. Sorry. :( It was cool. pVoice jouke dynamic click-to-speech replaces static devices like this pick category pick words have it talk pOtherStuff libs to write other apps pluggable article on perl.com jouke wants help! [ed: I think pVoice is fantastic] Join Phalanx andy lester phalanx is about improving module tests write more tests for modules if key modules (DBI, TT, Mason) don't work on Ponie, it's dead bundle-phalanx coverage test shows what isn't tested well we tried having people pick things to test, but that didn't work well so we'll try gang-testing groups pick stuff to work on and do so together my secret software sean burke crontab2english -- explains what your crontab REALLY says lns -- stops you from doing stupid things with ln -s unidecode -- turn unicode into 8- or 7-bit characters, works like cat