Nick Sieger: Tag minneapolis http://blog.nicksieger.com/articles/tag/minneapolis?tag=minneapolis en-us 40 do what you love Ruby in the Twin Cities in 2006 <p>Mirroring the wider <a href="http://www.tiobe.com/tpci.htm">global trend</a>, Ruby has seen a big uptick of growth in my hometown of Minneapolis over the past year.</p> <p>A little over one year ago, the very first meeting of the <a href="http://ruby.mn/">Ruby Users of Minnesota</a> (affectionately known as &#8220;Java Programmers Anonymous&#8221;) was held. I was not in attendance (until the second meeting in late December), but by the January/February timeframe we had a surprisingly good showing of 15-20 people. We&#8217;ve sustained or exceeded that number since, packing our group in the back of a <a href="http://www.loringpark-mpls.dunnbros.com/">Dunn Brothers Coffee on Loring Park</a> the last Tuesday of every month.</p> <p>More interesting a metric is how the number of people doing Ruby full-time has progressed. Somewhere around spring-time, guys were starting to itch for work. By summer time, <a href="http://www.slantwisedesign.com/">Slantwise Design</a>, formerly a mostly-web-design shop had been hired to do its first Rails contract, for what would turn out to be <a href="http://www.sayswap.com/">Sayswap</a>. Slantwise is a Rails-exclusive shop now.</p> <p><a href="http://www.railsday2006.com/">Rails Day</a> had an entry from Bruno Bornsztein and Ben Moore, <a href="http://www.sneakology.com/site/about">Sneakology</a>. This prolific duo would go on to contract on <a href="http://www.yfly.com/">YFly</a>, and play around with a local one-page news aggregator at <a href="http://acu.mn/">Acu.mn</a>. Almost two months ago, they went live with their new startup, <a href="http://www.curbly.com/">Curbly</a>, a social-networking DIY design community.</p> <p>We&#8217;re also happy to lay claim to RUM regulars <a href="http://headius.blogspot.com/">Charles Oliver Nutter</a> and <a href="http://www.bloglines.com/blog/ThomasEEnebo">Thomas Enebo</a>, the two lead JRuby developers, who tirelessly give monthly updates on the lightning progress that JRuby is undergoing.</p> <p>All in all, there are at least 20 full-time Rubyists in the Twin Cities, and the number is going up week by week.</p> <p>Yours truly has been doing Ruby mostly-full-time for my current employer <a href="http://www.digitalriver.com/">Digital River</a>, where I&#8217;m proud to have sneaked Ruby into the system. There are at least two other programmers writing Ruby code at DR, and hopefully we&#8217;ll be hiring more in 2007. If you&#8217;re looking for work or interested in what we&#8217;re doing with Ruby, drop me a line!</p> <p>So what happened this year in other user groups around the world?</p> Fri, 22 Dec 2006 05:17:30 +0000 urn:uuid:186cc2f4-2e99-4475-81b1-c542a22d91cb Nick Sieger http://blog.nicksieger.com/articles/2006/12/22/ruby-in-the-twin-cities-in-2006 ruby usergroup minneapolis stpaul http://blog.nicksieger.com/articles/trackback/175 Alley Liberties <p>And now, a break from the tech- and ruby-related tidbits to add some color to a local issue.</p> <p>Today a <a href="http://www.startribune.com/462/story/463664.html">news story</a> of seemingly minor consequence passed through the local news outlets on a proposal for a possible new Minneapolis city ordinance:</p> <blockquote> <p>The proposal would prohibit anyone from walking in an alley who doesn&#8217;t live on that block or who isn&#8217;t a guest of someone who does. Police, paramedics and firefighters would be exempt, as would garbage haulers, meter readers, code inspectors and others whose jobs take them there.</p> </blockquote> <p>Before you call your councilperson and complain that your tax dollars will be wasted, or you call the ACLU and complain that your civil liberties will be infringed, consider this.</p> <p>It strikes me as no small coincidence that my next-door neighbor was shot at point-blank range last night by an assailant who was attempting to car-jack him. He&#8217;s doing fine now, fortunately he had his wits about him and the bullet only grazed his midsection before he retreated back into his garage until the authorities arrived.</p> <p>Would the ordinance have helped my neighbor in this case? Probably not. But what it will do is give the police a legal reason to patrol alleys and question conspicuous behavior. Fast-forward to a time in the future where the ordinance has been in effect for a while and has made Minneapolis neighborhoods safer, and maybe the environment for the crime doesn&#8217;t even exist anymore.</p> <p>One legitimate question is whether an ordinance like this would give police more power to abuse and make it easier to profile and harass people with no other probable cause.</p> <p>For now, given my personal experience, I&#8217;ll gladly give up my right to walk in other alleys in exchange for safety. Why would you want to be back there anyway?</p> Thu, 01 Jun 2006 03:54:00 +0000 urn:uuid:d98c8dc5-b636-4444-80be-242db7b72448 Nick Sieger http://blog.nicksieger.com/articles/2006/06/01/alley-liberties random minneapolis crime http://blog.nicksieger.com/articles/trackback/19