Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage by Haruki Murakami
Reviewed by Linda from Huntingdon, Pennsylvania.
Dilbert readers – Please visit Dilbert.com to read this feature. Due to changes with our feeds, we are now making this RSS feed a link to Dilbert.com.
Paul Jarvis is a best-selling author and designer. He writes weekly for his popular newsletter and runs an online course on becoming a better freelancer. Hiring a Web designer or design company can seem like a daunting task. Too many speak in nerd and the good ones never seem available to take on new work. I realize that maybe your cousin is a Web designer who builds websites on the side. Or your friend’s brother in college once updated your Tumblr in exchange for a case of beer. Or that you can, quite easily, figure out Web design, programming and WordPress yourself,…
This story continues at The Next Web
Danny Groner is the manager of blogger partnerships and outreach for Shutterstock. This post was originally published on the Shutterstock blog and has been reprinted with permission. Did you ever stop to consider how what you hear influences how you spend? That’s a topic that writers Joel Beckerman and Tyler Gray tackle in their new book, The Sonic Boom: How Sound Transforms the Way We Think, Feel, and Buy. Extremely intrigued, we followed up with co-author Gray to talk more about the book, its principles, and what they mean for modern brands, both big and small. Shutterstock: This book promises…
This story continues at The Next Web
Remember nine years ago when I posted about the future of vba? Neither did I, but I just re-read it. I think if we keep talking about how VBA is dead, it might actually die someday. Nah, probably not.
John at Global Electronic Trading has the latest VBA eulogy. He asked several VBA community members (including me) to answer four questions about the future of VBA. Here is my response to what killed VBA
[DK] Time killed it. Nothing last forever. Cobol developers were once in high demand. Now Cobol developers are in very high demand – both of them. Microsoft killed it by not updating the IDE or supporting VBA as a viable development platform. Had they invested in VBA, say by integrating .Net into Office the way they did with VB, then it still may have been a viable platform today. But even if that were true, time would kill it eventually.
The internet killed it by adopting Ajax. A lot of developer resources went to web apps and away from COM based development.Apple killed it by inventing the App Store. None of those developer resources came back to COM, they’re all developing mobile apps now.
So a bunch of stuff killed VBA, but all that means is that evolution killed it. MS evolved their development platform away from VBA just like they evolved away from ANSI C before that.
Go read the rest of the answers. You won’t be surprised by any of the answers, I’ll bet.
I draw two conclusions from this experience:
- I need to proof read my emails before I send them.
- I don’t care if VBA is dead. It still works for me now, I’m very effective with it, and I’m still solving real problems using it every day. If it’s dead, it’s the best damn corpse in the office.