Matt RaibleMatt Raible is a writer with a passion for software. Connect with him on LinkedIn.

The Angular Mini-Book The Angular Mini-Book is a guide to getting started with Angular. You'll learn how to develop a bare-bones application, test it, and deploy it. Then you'll move on to adding Bootstrap, Angular Material, continuous integration, and authentication.

Spring Boot is a popular framework for building REST APIs. You'll learn how to integrate Angular with Spring Boot and use security best practices like HTTPS and a content security policy.

For book updates, follow @angular_book on Twitter.

The JHipster Mini-Book The JHipster Mini-Book is a guide to getting started with hip technologies today: Angular, Bootstrap, and Spring Boot. All of these frameworks are wrapped up in an easy-to-use project called JHipster.

This book shows you how to build an app with JHipster, and guides you through the plethora of tools, techniques and options you can use. Furthermore, it explains the UI and API building blocks so you understand the underpinnings of your great application.

For book updates, follow @jhipster-book on Twitter.

10+ YEARS


Over 10 years ago, I wrote my first blog post. Since then, I've authored books, had kids, traveled the world, found Trish and blogged about it all.

Seeley Lake Fire Update

As reported last week, the town where I went to high school is on fire. Here's an update from my sister's friend, Aliselina Strong:

The Seeley Lake fire is the # 1 priority fire in the nation due to the number of residences threatened and the town itself. Spooky, eerie, yet beautiful too. This is taken from a dock in Seeley Lake, so you can see how close it is. Yesterday was a good day as the fire remained grounded and lines were reinforced, but predicted winds today and continuing and hot weather again as well will not help. It had cooled off into the high 80's for a couple days.

Seeley Lake Fire

Posted in General at Aug 12 2007, 10:02:30 PM MDT Add a Comment

Seeley Lake on Fire

Where's my Mom the "Burn Boss" when you need her? From the Missoulian:

Seeley Lake residents prepare to flee Jocko Lakes fire
In two weekend days, the Jocko Lakes fire exploded across 18,000 acres, destroying one home, damaging several others and threatening this small western Montana town.

In doing so, the wildfire earned itself designation Sunday as the No. 1 priority forest fire in the nation.

After Saturday?s firestorm and flurry of evacuations, Sunday brought minimal winds and gave fire crews a fighting chance to get a handle on the fire, which is just a mile west of Seeley Lake and a mile north of Placid Lake.

Seeley Lake is 25 miles from The Cabin. There's unlikely to be a threat the The Swan (where I grew up). However, Seeley Lake is pretty close to home as I went to high school there and we have a very good family friend living in "Dog Town". Must be exciting times right now.

This fire made me think of this awesome photo from a few years back.

One of my favorite digital photographs

Posted in General at Aug 06 2007, 12:00:56 PM MDT 6 Comments

5 Years

Doh! It looks like I missed my 5-year blogiversary last week. It's hard to believe it's been 5 years since I started this blog on August 1, 2002. A lot has happened since then: Abbie was born, we moved from Morrison to Denver, Jack was born and Julie built a new house. For those that know me personally, a lot has happened this summer too.

Julie and I are getting a divorce.

Our reason is simple - we're not in love with each other like we expect a married couple should be in love. It's going to be a good move for the both of us and while it might be hard to get through the next several months, we'll both be happier in the long run. We still plan on raising a family together, we'll just be doing it from two separate households and living two separate lives. I bought a house a few weeks ago and moved in last week. This past weekend was my first "Daddy's weekend" and the kids and I had a blast.

I realize that divorce is a sensitive subject and it might not be something that folk's think is appropriate for a blog post. I started this blog in order to document my life's history and this seems like a pretty important thing to document. My life has certainly changed a lot in the past couple months and it's likely to change quite a bit more in the future. I realize I haven't been blogging much lately - now you know why. I don't know if I'll return to actively blogging like I once did, but I think I will.

I've turned off comments for this post - I hope you understand. If you'd like to tell me your story about successfully raising children of divorce, I'd love to hear about it.

Update: It figures - my contact form appears to have been broken for the last month or so. If you used it to send me a message, there's a good chance I didn't receive it. Sorry - it should be fixed now.

Posted in General at Aug 06 2007, 10:00:06 AM MDT

DSL at The Cabin

The Cabin Believe it or not, I'm actually writing this entry on a high-speed DSL connection from The Cabin in Montana. The service is provided by Blackfoot and the speeds are quite good (768k/384k). We're "off the grid" as far as power goes, but we're not on the grid for communications. My dad's got a pretty elaborate generator-to-battery system setup up here, so as long as the DSL modem has power - the cabin has broadband!

Posted in General at Jul 03 2007, 11:52:30 PM MDT 3 Comments

Bike to Work Day

Biking in Wash Park Today is Bike to Work Day in Denver. I rode my bike into The Hive this morning. It was a perfect morning for a ride - overcast and cool, with the sun just starting to poke out as I approached downtown. Unfortunately, I didn't realize all the festivities were at Civic Center Park, so I didn't win any prizes, get any breakfast or drink any free coffee. Oh well, maybe they'll have free beer somewhere on the ride home...

Posted in General at Jun 27 2007, 09:38:04 AM MDT 2 Comments

New Bike - Gary Fisher HiFi Plus

New Bike - Gary Fisher Hifi Plus It's been a little over 2 years since my mountain bike got stolen. I bought a new bike a few weeks later, but it's a commuter, not a mountain bike. Today, I finally bought myself a new mountain bike and took it straight to 3 Sisters for a nice ride. My last bike was a Gary Fisher Sugar 3, and this one is a Gary Fisher HiFi Plus. It's awesome to ride and I can't wait to take it some more of the front range trails. Denver has some incredible trails in the foothills. They're not easy, but they sure are fun. This week, I hope to ride Apex, Deer Creek Canyon and White Ranch.

Posted in General at Jun 23 2007, 06:27:51 PM MDT 1 Comment

The Perfect Summer Vacation?

OSCON is July 23-27. The Oregon Brewers Festival is July 26-29. If you combine those two with a night at McMenamins Kennedy School, it sounds like the perfect summer vacation to me. ;-)

Oregon Brewers Festival

Posted in General at Jun 20 2007, 09:22:16 PM MDT 3 Comments

Proof that Abbie is growing up fast

Abbie Loo There's been a couple of significant events in Abbie's (and our) lives in the last couple of weeks. First of all, Julie and the kids spent two weeks down in Florida at the beginning of May. Julie's mom has a pool, so the kids enjoyed swimming in it almost every day. They've both been taking swimming lessons, but they certainly couldn't swim by themselves. Julie taught Abbie to do an underwater breaststroke rather than doggie paddling after the first few days. By the time I arrived (a week after their arrival), Abbie could swim all by herself, underwater. By the end of the week, she could swim from one end of the pool to the other. Pretty impressive I must say.

The 2nd event I learned about on Friday night. Sometime last week, Julie decided to start giving Abbie money to do chores around the house. She can only earn a maximum of $1 per day, but she's super pumped about it and is always asking if she can do stuff. Her room is usually spotless now. With her new found wealth, she needed something to store it in - so Julie bought them piggy banks over the weekend. Who knows how long their enthusiasm will last, but I think it's important to teach them how much things cost and how they can save money to get things they want. When I was a kid, I had a lot of chores and earned something like $5/week. While I didn't like the chores, I loved the allowance. It's good to see inflation hasn't influenced allowances too much. ;-)

Posted in General at May 21 2007, 08:31:16 AM MDT 1 Comment

A Story about My Mom

Beautiful Water My Mom is one of the coolest people I've ever met. She was born in Billings, Montana on January 4, 1950. That makes her a Montana Native. She grew up in the city, but moved to The Cabin in her 20s. Life at the cabin wasn't easy. My parents were pretty darn poor the entire time we lived there. To help reduce the cost of living, we raised a lot of animals. We had chickens for eggs, goats for milk, rabbits to eat and every so often, we'd get a couple of pigs to raise for food.

The pigs presented an interesting problem: bears. Bears love pigs. I can remember a couple of times where bears would sneak in and run off with one of the pigs for dinner. Bears were dangerous and my parents didn't like them - both for fear they'd harm one of us, but more because they'd harm the animals and our food supply. Bears were also good eatin', so if there was one hanging around, my parents didn't hesitate to try and shoot it.

When I was 2 years old, I got a puppy for my birthday. We named him "Woofer". He grew into a big ol' Hound Dog and turned out to be great at treeing bears. He had a very deep bark that would apparently scare them into climbing trees, making them easy targets.

The story I'd like to tell about my Mom happened when I was a kid. I don't know how old I was - but I was young enough that I don't remember the story. My dad was out of town, and a bear had been hanging around. My Mom was not happy and set out one day with the rifle and Woofer. They ended up getting the bear up a tree and my Mom shot him down. Apparently, she was pretty mad at the bear for threatening her children and all. She hauled him back to the "skinning tree", which was next to our house. I can see her now, yelling at the bear, telling him he deserved it and what a cocksucker he was. Foaming at the mouth, she whipped out her hunting knife, grabbed him by the balls, and sliced them right off. Still swearing at him, she grabbed a hammer and nail, and angrily nailed his nuts to a tree. "Serves you right you motherfucker", she probably muttered to herself.

To this day, that nail is still here and a small tuft of hair hangs from it. I apologize for the swearing in this story, but my Mom has always cussed like a sailor. ;-)

I'd like to take this opportunity to thank my Mom for all she's taught me. One of the things I've always admired about her is how happy she is all the time. She's a true optimist and enjoys almost everything she does, from being a "Burn Boss" to running in marathons. She's an incredible lady and I'm very proud to call her my Mom. Happy Mother's Day Mom!

Posted in General at May 13 2007, 09:58:54 AM MDT 9 Comments

Off to Florida

While I've been trouncing around the globe with my Dad, Julie and the kids have been splashing around Julie's mom's pool in Florida. Tonight I'll be joining them via a Frontier red eye. I'm not looking forward to the flight, but it'll be great to see everyone. Hopefully by this time tomorrow, I'll be sipping on a cold Corona and sitting by the pool. I like the idea of going on vacation a lot better than attending the JavaOne festivities. ;-)

Sunset in West Palm

Cheers!

Posted in General at May 08 2007, 08:02:25 PM MDT 3 Comments