Another week is over. Only three weeks left at Lenco Software now.
It will be nice to move on, at the same time I am sad to leave.
Ulf started his holiday today, and I will work with him again.
The big, happy family (Kari&Espen, Kath&Tormod, Heidi&Kasper, Martin, Lise and me) will go canooing tomorrow. I'm looking forward to it, even if the weather could have been better.
Johan Seland - Life, Work, Play
This blog is about me. What I do in my daily life, and my thougts on the pitfalls of life itself. Much of what I write will probably be about computers since that is my proffession. Hopefully there will also be posts about friends and outdoor activities.
Friday, June 25, 2004
Tuesday, June 22, 2004
First day of any real programming after having had RSI for a few weeks.
Hope I can avoid getting it back.
It was however very nice to be able to program again! I am quite happy with my profession thank you!
Monday, June 21, 2004
Wow.
Quite a long time since I created this blog. I have to admit I just checked back since I heard all blogger.commers could get Gmail account.
However, I do believe blogging is a good idea, and something I should try to do frequently.
I have also been thinking a bit about the toolchain I will set up for my PhD. Tor Dokken strongly recommends me to start writing as soon as possible, and I do intend to follow that advice.
However, that brings me to the big questing, what tool should one use for writing a thesis in year 2004-2007? Since I will be at CMA, my platform will probably be Linux.
LaTeX is tried and tested. But I do think it is getting a bit dated. After my Cand. Scient. thesis I told myself never to use it again. I don't know how mature LyX etc. has become. I will definitly not use Emacs as my editor. This is after all 2004, we have to come up with something better than a text only interface! Scientific Workingplace could be the frontend I am looking for, sadly there is no Linux port.
Mathematica is an interesting option. But documentation for how to use it mainly as a structured document editor is sparse.
XML based (DocBook, tbook etc.) Like LaTeX they lack and good WYSIWYM (What you see is what you mean) frontend.
OpenOffice I am afraid it does not scale well enough, beside I doubt the quality of the bibliography database. (This is where BibTex really shines.)
MS Office No Linux version, UiO provides office by the use of Tarantella or something. I am definitly not ruling this option out, but I would prefer an open format.



