Showing posts with label gogocarl. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gogocarl. Show all posts

Friday, April 8, 2016

Rails Tools: Paperclip and Cloudinary, brought together

Need a low-cost viable solution for storing and serving image file attachments in your Rails application? Read on...

For a number of implementations, I have used thoughtbot's Paperclip gem to manage my Rails models' file attachments. It provides sizing and scaling via Imagemagick and is simple to get up and running quickly. For file storage, I found the paperclip-dropbox gem as an excellent way to hook up a free Dropbox account to store and manage a few files.

Unfortunately, not only is that gem no longer activity maintained (with ominous warnings across the homepage now), but this solution also doesn't work quite so well for images; particularly, serving images to display online. And the jump in price point from Dropbox to AWS or similar wasn't really something I wanted to take on. So, I needed something cost-effective that was good at serving images. For that purpose, I ran across Cloudinary.

Cloudinary is an image and video cloud-based management solution which is very fast, easy to manage, and has a usable free tier. It also has some awesome directives that can be used for on-the-fly image transformation in just about any way you can imagine, such as sizing, scaling, coloring, overlaying, and much more. Not only that, but Cloudinary is also Rails-friendly, coming with a Rails gem as well as a direct integration to CarrierWave, which is essentially an alternative to Paperclip.

Using Cloudinary and CarrierWave together is a great solution for many, and for those happy to do that, Cloudinary provides detailed instructions on getting integrated. However, for me, migrating from my Paperclip/Dropbox solution to CarrierWave/Cloudinary was a task I wasn't too keen on performing. So, I decided to build the missing link, bringing together Paperclip and Cloudinary.


Gem Version


The paperclip-cloudinary gem adds "cloudinary" as a new storage option for Paperclip, and dropping that in as the storage option along with the downloadable configuration file from a Cloudinary account will have your images stored in Cloudinary in minutes. From there, you can use Cloudinary's cool features to further manipulate your images in views. Or not, it's up to you from there.

Bottom line, if you're sticking with Paperclip, but want a better free-to-low-cost alternative to Dropbox for serving images, try paperclip-cloudinary.

--
Carl Scott
Software Developer, Solertium Corporation
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Tuesday, January 12, 2016

How I Log My Time In My Sleep

Photograph by: apops, Fotolia.com
Every day last week, I woke up to see that my development time had been logged.

But I haven't logged in to FreshBooks since 2015.

Like many other development teams, our company uses FreshBooks to track our time and invoice clients.  It's a great tool with all the features we need for day-to-day operations. However, as a programmer, over the years I have failed to use this tool properly, and neglected my time logging duties until it was absolutely necessary. This neglect often required "time logging parties" with other members of my team who had been equally neglectful, which was a kind misnomer for stressful sessions of reading through e-mails, project management tools, git logs, hand-written notes, and anything else to help us remember just how much time we spent working on something.

And, like many other development teams, I work on multiple projects per day -- sometimes per hour!

For me, the most frustrating thing about logging time is essentially having to record my operations so many times. First, when I tell a client what I'm going to do. Again when I code the thing I was supposed to do. Then, I write fairly detailed commit messages describing what I did. Finally, I communicate with the client that the thing was done. And now I have to write all this again in an time tracking tool?! Ugh.

It doesn't often get done. And when it does, it isn't efficient. Time should be logged in-process.

I've tried stopwatch solutions, but they simply don't work when you forget to hit the button. And I'm too busy (forgetful) to hit the button. Or, I get distracted with something else going on, or a client calls, or I need to task switch immediately, etc. etc.

Why can't I just code and have my time tracked as I code?

Well, now I can, thanks to WakaTime.

WakaTime advertises itself as FitBit for programmers, and that's a pretty spot-on description. In the same way that FitBit tracks your statistics just by you doing your everyday tasks, WakaTime tracks your time spent in your IDE of choice (Vim, Eclipse, Android Studio, and many more) and automatically uploads that information to the web. At the end of the day, just by coding, you've got a picture of everything you've worked on for the day. For free.

"Yes!"
To complete the puzzle, though, I needed to get the time out of WakaTime and in to FreshBooks. There wasn't anything out there that did that for me, so I created it:


WakaTimeFreshBooks is a Java command-line client that pulls the time logged for a given day in WakaTime and pushes that information as time entries into FreshBooks. After a couple minutes of setting up my API keys and matching up the WakaTime projects I wanted to log with FreshBooks projects I wanted to send the time to, I was up and running. Simple, yet effective.

On December 28, 2015, I set this to run as a daily cron job, and I haven't logged time since.

Now eventually, I'll have to edit my time sheets to include useful notes for invoices. And I still need to log out-of-band communications, as well as testing and video conferences (although, WakaTime is working on solutions for those things!). But, for now, I know that my coding time has been submitted, and that it's fairly accurate, which is much more than I could say merely a few weeks ago.

And I didn't have to do anything but code.

--
Carl Scott
Software Developer, Solertium Corporation
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Thursday, March 5, 2015

Give Your App A Voice With Appygram4J

Communication is key in any relationship, and if you're a software developer, that includes the relationship between you, your customer, and your software.  What are your users saying about your app and their experience? What statistics can you collect from your app to provide a better experience?  And, most importantly, how can you ensure that the right people are getting the necessary information to help?

Enter Appygram.

Appygram, simply put, is a message routing service that directs all types of communication from your application or service to the right people and/or places.  Appygram allows you to manage this routing through a web interface, so you can make changes on the fly without requiring end-user updates.  The types of communication captured are entirely up to the developer, so anything from feedback messages, user polls, questionnaires, application exceptions, notifications, and all in between can be captured and routed using Appygram.

If you're a Java or Android developer and eager to integrate this service in your software, I have released a connector library, Appygram4J 1.0, available on Github.  To start, this library provides objects and simple calls you can use to send messages from your software to Appygram, and all you need to begin is an Appygram API key.

If you haven't already, you can start using Appygram today with prices starting from free at http://appygram.com, then you can grab Appygram4J here:

https://github.com/GoGoCarl/appygram4j/releases/tag/v1.0.1

If you're using other languages, such as Ruby or Node, you can also grab those connector libraries for Appygram as well.

Here's to better communication!  Have you tried Appygram or Appygram4J already?  What do you use it for?  Feel free to comment below with questions, comments, or suggestions.

--
Carl Scott
Software Developer, Solertium Corporation
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Monday, September 21, 2009

Yay or Nay: URL Shortening

Coincidence or not, it seems in this new and brave Twitter-powered world (which deserves its own yay or nay blog but I'll save it for later), the prevalence of minimalist ... well, everything, have become popular. Half-size soda cans and water bottles, miniature laptops, and these tinyurl, bit.ly (and ju.mp) URLs. Of course, the question is...

Yay or nay?

You may have already sniffed out which way I'm leaning, but I'll start with an objective look at the positives. A number of services (including Google Groups) don't take too kindly to very long URLs. With websites becoming more powerful by the day with amazing technologies backing them, more and more information is being handled by web services, and ultimately passed via URL. Additionally, shorter URLs are "cute" and they can also be more easily read aloud. Finally, some of the more advanced shortening services offer cool tracking features, which are nice when you are into those sort of stats.

So, negatives. Aside from the fact that the last time I typed in a URL or read a URL to someone to type in was April 1997 (as an April Fool's joke), I find myself incredibly suspicious and uncomfortable with clicking a link with an obfuscated mystery destination. And unfortunately (or fortunately, depending how you look at it), I (like so many others) am not on a Mac, so viruses are a concern. To me, URL shortening is essentially a rod and bait for phishing techniques. Yahoo and Myspace apparently agree, as they have banned URL shortening from some of their services.

So, the verdict...

Despite the features and "cute" factor that URL shortening provide, they also open doors to spam, phishing, and other dimly lit alleys that I don't want to venture down. Outside of services like Twitter that just don't allow enough characters to have a full URL and descriptive text, I find URL shortening to be useless. 98% of websites I visit are via a search or a clicked hyperlink ... and if I'm clicking a link, who cares if it's 20 characters or 200 characters?

Mind you, I have a clear bias as I am working with professional services most of the time and am used to seeing complete URLs (and do not click otherwise); however, in general, I think it's undesirable to be magically transported from one URL domain to another, just for the sake of cuteness.

Now, if there was a means of shortening a URL from something like mydomain.com/anextremelylongurlthathasmanymanycharacters to mydomain.com/short, that is more acceptable. Having a shortened URL within a domain is fine and useful given the same positives that you find with URL shortening, but without the obvious negatives as listed.

All in all, though, I like to know where I'm going before I get there. So, URL shortening get the Nay.

Thoughts are welcome, as always.

--
Carl Scott
Software Developer, Solertium Corporation
View Carl Scott's profile on LinkedIn View Carl Scott's ohloh profile

Monday, April 13, 2009

Google Charts for GWT

For anyone interested, I have begun developing a GWT implementation of the latest Google Charts API.

While there are a number of useful GWT-based chart implementations, many of them are based in Flash or are otherwise a bit heavyweight. Although there are some that work really well and are very nice (there's a really cool-looking one for Ext GWT), sometimes you just want a simple chart without any external dependencies.

The Google Charts API allows you to create charts on the fly via a URL-based API. It returns a static generated image of your chart. This makes for a powerful, yet extremely lightweight tool. While this API is clearly exposed on their site, there does not seem to exist, essentially, a standardized wrapper for this that caters to GWT.

My implementation of Google Charts for GWT simply provides that wrapper. Certainly, if you want something flashy and dynamic, this tool is not for you, you want the heavier tools I alluded to earlier.  But for a quick, lightweight tool with a number of customizable features, give this a whirl.

It is currently in the alpha stages, meaning that it is functional but is not completely documented and may contain some weird behavior. I would like to test the implementation more aggressively and finish off the full API feature set. Right now, though, you can create Bar, Line, Pie, and Scatter Charts, complete with features for Chart Legends, Shape Markers, custom colors and chart axes, multiple data sets, and more.

Check out my Google Charts for GWT samples here (with example source code):
http://www.solertium.com/samples/charts/index.html

Download the source code and samples from:
http://code.google.com/p/gogoego/source/checkout
https://github.com/GoGoCarl/google-charts-gwt

The project you're looking for is located in trunk/modules/com.solertium.util.gwt.charts

Hopefully this is useful. I'm very open to criticism and suggestions going into further development of this project.

--
Carl Scott
Software Developer, Solertium Corporation
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Wednesday, April 8, 2009

OSGi and Eclipse Make Me Smile

So, I finally did it.  After some preliminary research and a bit of procrastinating, I went all in and began to adopt the newfangled OSGi approach.  Er, maybe not so new, but new to me.

Surprisingly, everything now seems to just ... work.  After months of toiling with Eclipse trying to ensure that my classpath settings were right, and dreading every completely updating as I knew my classpath would be shredded to bits by a co-worker, the combination of some built-in plug-in development tools from Eclipse and some knowledge of OSGi have brought me to tears ... of joy.  

Anyway, a while back, somewhere between the research and procrastination, I came across a very helpful presentation that got my feet wet, and I'd recommend as a nice starting point for newcomers:


The conversion of my projects from the traditional monolithic project to the multiple modules approach was not initially fun.  I'd actually compare it to the transition from creating verb-based Web Services to RESTful Web Services, to a degree.  The presenation below goes into more detail on things related to that.


So, tying this all into Eclipse: if you've got a fresh version, a lot of the work is done for you via the Plug-in Development Tools!  Simply take the time to appropriately fill out your Manifest information for your bundles (er, plug-in projects), create an Application using said bundles (again, it's built-in), and you're off to the races!  And one thing you've got to appreciate is work already done for you!

:)

Anyway, you can of course find Eclipse-related resources on their site, which has treated me pretty well in regard to finding information I'm looking for.  But the links above were particularly helpful for me to start from scratch and sink my teeth into OSGi.  Hope you find them useful, and feel free to submit your own references!

--
Carl Scott
Software Developer, Solertium Corporation
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Friday, July 25, 2008

RESTful Client-Side tools for GWT

I guess this is more of an announcement than a blog, but I just wanted to do a quick follow up to my last blog to mention some new developments pertaining to using a RESTful approach to GWT.

In my last blog, I spoke of RestLet, a server-side Java framework for REST. When I first learned of this technology, my cronies at Solertium Corporation and I fully embraced the concept, even doing some development on the open-source tool. Between then and now, I have been experimenting with client-side tools that provide reliable API through GWT to a RESTful server.

I first found GWT-REST, which if you saw my comments, I found to be pretty usable. Like the original developers of RestLet, though, I found it to have almost too much going on to make it work for me at the time. In addition, since, at the time, I have a strong code pattern that worked, it didn't make me want to go through the trouble of refactoring. After speaking with their development team, though, it looks to be strong in the future.
http://code.google.com/p/gwt-rest/

Since then, the RestLet guys have announced the release of a Restlet-GWT module, a port of RestLet to GWT, supported by the release of GWT 1.5. You can check out the official announcement here:
http://blog.noelios.com/2008/07/25/restlet-ported-to-gwt/

I am interested in seeing the differences between this and GWT-REST, but from my initial reading it seems that the RestLet version is an attempt at a direct port as opposed to something customized to have client-side conveniences implemented -- which I feel has strong and weak points, but the good should outweigh the bad here. I'm excited to see the implementation details, though! If you want a quick overview, the RestLet wiki provides pretty pictures and diagrams:
http://wiki.restlet.org/docs_1.1/g1/43-restlet/144-restlet.html

Again, I want to express that the RESTful method is more of an alternative to RPC than a replacement, both having benefits and drawbacks. The main drawback to RPC that has turned me to this approach is the tight client-server coupling issues and the limitations it enforces on your back-end server technologies.

My suggestion -- give Restlet's GWT module a shot. Like I said, it's an alternative, and it works right alongside RPC so it's not an either-or situation. We all have our own ways of getting the job done, but I'm always excited to hear of new developments and try them out, especially ones like these which make my job that much easier!

Thanks for your time in reading this. Feel free to comment with opinions for or against REST in GWT as I'd love to hear both sides. Also, if you'd recommend any technologies, again, feel free.

--
Carl Scott
Software Developer, Solertium Corporation
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References:

Monday, April 28, 2008

The Internet: An Alternative to GWT's RPC

This blog is aimed at software developers currently or considering using Google Web Toolkit (GWT), and assumes you have some prior knowledge/background. I do not aim to be technical in this blog, but rather, simply expose the idea and provide insight to those loathing particular programming paradigms.

Google's Google Web Toolkit (GWT) has make remarkable breakthroughs in allowing Java developers to easily create websites and web-based applications with little concern about cross-browser issues. As a software developer fitting this niche, I must say I am more than happy with what GWT provides.

That said, one of the biggest complaints about GWT is it's Remote Procedure Calls (RPC). In a nutshell, your client calls a function through an interface which the server interprets, executes, and returns a Java representation of results. The actual process is somewhat annoying to implement, can be somewhat clunky, and can have the speed of the DMV lines at the end of the month. Ok, so I'm exaggerating a bit, but it's nuiances were enough to me to choose to never go back to RPC. In addition, I don't think my server should be returning me a Java Object. If I wanted to access this outside the context of my GWT application (hey, these "crazy" things may happen), I know Internet Explorer probably can't render it too well -- it has a hard enough time with HTML (zing!).

Allow me to re-introduce the concept of REST.

Representational State Transfer (REST) is an architecture style that, well, kinda does what it says. In the context of Web Apps, it defines how we define, locate, and access resources. If you want the whole scoop, I've got reference links at the bottom. For this exercise, you just need to understand resources and representations.

A resource is the conceptual target of a reference (the reference being, generally, a URL). A file, for example, could be considered a resource. The file's representation can be a number of things, but examples are HTML, XML, GIF image, basically what the user sees. In short, it represents a resource in some meaningful way. For this exercise, let's go with XML as our default representation (it will become painfully apparent why soon).

With RPC, using a method to retrieve some data (a Representation, perhaps) is the standard means. There is a RESTful way to do this a well, and here's the kicker: it's a basic building block of the Internet! The standard CRUD (Create, Read, Update, Delete) operations are already represented as HTTP PUT, GET, POST, and DELETE, respectively. I'd argue that just about anything you'll need to do with a web application can be covered by one or a combination of these functions. I'm not going to get technical today but take my word for it.

Enter RestLet. A lightweight, open-source Java API that acts as a catalyst in developing Web Services in Java to handle ANY general HTTP request. A request from, say, our Web-based GWT application! RestLet employs the principles of REST, transferring representations from the server to the client upon request. Assuming we use XML Represenations, we already have a means of parsing and interpreting these representations client-side ... AJAX, which is at it's core, GWT.

Now, we have a generalized API to program to and access data from. We can use GWT to make requests, but now JSNI, JSP, PHP, even standard HTTP requests are respected. We have a portable server to interpret our requests and the responses (XML representations) are immediately parsable, even by IE (zing!).

In short, employing the principles of REST to ANY web app is incredibly beneficial for a number of reasons that I'll leave to the avid reader to convince themselves of. Roy Fielding has spent plently of time stating things and I don't need to use more. RestLet, an open-source project provides a well-thought out means of utilizing this architecture. And with this, you can finally give that RPC code a REST.

I wanted to use this blog to simply introduce the concept of REST within the context of GWT, how it can be leveraged by AJAX, and how it can be used as an alternative to RPC. If there's any interest, I'll do a follow-up blog or blogs that will delve into the following topics:

  • Current Open-Source Applications using REST/RestLet and GWT.
  • Open-Source Solutions made to speed up XML processing and leverage REST.
  • Creating a RESTful Web Server
  • RESTful References and Why They're Essential

This is all information you can dig up yourself, but I'm happy to share. REST and RestLet, of course, aren't the only way to get outside the RPC box, but, from my experience, it works efficiently, encourages robust code, and, most importantly for me, let me say bye-bye to RPC.

To close, I want to say that I don't profess to be a definitive authority on this, and I'm still learning new things everyday. I look forward to any feedback on this you may have, and any other out-the-box ideas.

--
Carl Scott
Software Developer, Solertium Corporation
View Carl Scott's profile on LinkedIn View Carl Scott's ohloh profile

References: