Dion Almaer joining Palm?

If you’ve been around for a while you’ve most likely come across Dion Almaer’s name, from either his involvement with TheServerSide.com and The Middleware Company (the founders of TheServerSide.com), and more recently one of the co-founders of Ajaxian.com

A few days back Dion announced that he’s joining Palm to work on their WebOS platform for the Pre, along with ajaxian.com co-founder Ben Galbraith. This is an interesting move, and I wish these guys all the best, and I hope to see some great things coming from Palm with WebOS in the near future!

Incidentally, I’ve read a few things about Dion’s work at Mozilla with the Bespin collaborative development platform and I’ve been meaning to take a look, so while this is fresh in my mind I think I’ll head over there to take a look.

Coding blind == Google Coders == Lazy Programmers?

A couple of years back (2006) I made an observation that it was becoming increasingly popular for new developers to rely on materials online instead of at least having a copy of the JDK JavaDocs downloaded for reference – at the time I called this ‘Coding Blind’. This article today caught my eye and gave developers who overly rely on Google to find snippets of code the name ‘Google Programmers’. I guess it’s not just me who has noticed this trend.

Windows Mobile store launches with … 34 apps

Wow, if I hadn’t replaced my Windows Mobile phone with an Android myTouch 3G I would be having a great time right now looking through the immense catalog of … 34 … applications in the newly launched Windows Mobile store.

34? Come on Ballmer, get it together. Is this supposed to be impressive in some way? Did you code these apps yourself in your spare time? Surely you could have got some of your Windows 7 developers to code up a few Windows Mobile apps when they weren’t working on Windows 7, cause after all, we all know Windows 7 is just Vista with new marketing, so exactly what have the Windows development team been working on recently? Not coding Windows Mobile apps, obviously.

Ballmer’s three Windows 7 versions: Starter, Home, Professional, Enterprise, Ultimate

In a recent interview with Steve Ballmer, cnet.com asked about the confusion over the different available versions of Windows 7. Ballmer replied “There’s really three versions” and then went on to describe each of the versions: Starter, Home, Professional, Enterprise, Ultimate.

I don’t know about you but if I was a Microsoft stockholder I would be extremely worried with this guy in charge of one of the largest technology companies in the world. It seems to me Ballmer is doing his best, most likely unintentionally, to steer the company off of a cliff.