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.
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A beautiful e-mail

From Julie:

your laptop is here. love you!

I'm starting to shake with anxiety! Sweet! Today shouldn't be as bad as the day I received my PowerBook. It was January 2002 and there was an Apple conference where Steve Jobs was giving his keynote. I was worried that he would announce new PowerBooks, and I was going to return it if he did. So I had to sit there for hours with the un-opened box saying "OPEN ME". At least today, I'm stuck at work and I've got plans for most of the evening. Then an interview first thing tomorrow morning. The anxiety might be around for quite some time.

Posted in General at Aug 06 2003, 12:54:24 PM MDT Add a Comment

Weekend Update

Julie and Abbie are in San Diego this weekend, visiting Julie's sister (Holly). The new house is great - being so close to everything. Life is good - the new laptop scheduled for delivery (overnight) on Tuesday. Too bad about Mike, I had a heavy heart reading his post - hope everything works out.

Posted in General at Aug 02 2003, 06:23:56 PM MDT Add a Comment

Today is the last day for the old-style VW Beetle

Boy do I love these cars, especially the real old ones (50s and 60s):

old/new bug Some Bugs are hard to kill. After a brief reprieve, the Volkswagen Beetle, the original version, faces extinction today. Volkswagen's plant in Mexico -- the only one in the world that still makes the old-style Beetle -- finishes one last gussied-up retro edition of the plucky, curvacious little car, ending the model's 70-year run. [CNN/Money]

I'd love to get my hands on one of these new/old bugs, but I don't think they're legal (due to emissions standards) in the US. For any Colorado bug fans out there - the Fineline Bug-In is coming to Bandimere Speedway on August 10th. Julie, Abbie and I are going - should be a great time. I almost buy one every year I go - this year I might actually do it. I'd especially like something like this '58 Vert'. I still plan on restoring an old Bug or Bus in the near future.

Posted in General at Jul 30 2003, 10:40:05 AM MDT Add a Comment

The move is almost over

I have half my office setup - in other words, I'm sitting at my desk typing this right now - listening to my hard drive whine. Any ideas why the hard drive that shipped with my Dell Dimension 8100 is so noisy? We still have a few more hours to go, but we should be "settled in" by tonight. It'll take us awhile to go from a 1700 square foot house to a 1000 square foot house, but it's nice having everything so close. There's a Safeway (grocery store) 1 1/2 blocks away! Of course, Julie is more excited about the Starbucks inside it. I'm excited about the liquor store that's on the same block as our house. ;-) It's also nice having a kick-ass Italian Restaurant (Santino's) within 60 feet.

Posted in General at Jul 27 2003, 04:18:26 PM MDT Add a Comment

Hypersonic vs. Alienware

As I mentioned a couple days ago, I'm looking to purchase a new laptop. Why? Because I might get a contract that requires me to provide my own machine. It's happened before, and on this contract my machine sucked when I started. Sure I could use my slow-as-molasses Powerbook (667 MHz, 1 GB RAM), but I'd rather buy a Windows laptop. Besides, it's not about the machine's productivity as much as my productivity on it. I'm faster on Windows, so I should buy a Windows machine to pack to client sites. Mini-Me (the Powerbook) will be adopted by Julie, where I'm sure it will be in good hands. I still plan on using it a fair amount, but she's been known to tell me "Keep your damn hands off my computer!" ;-)

So, to do some more research on the Alienware Area-51m and the Hibersonic Aviator ZX7, I sent each company an e-mail. The e-mail was pretty simple, and I just switched the order of things for each company:

I'm looking to purchase a new laptop and right now I'm down to making a 
decision between your 51m (http://alienware.com/system_pages/area-51m.aspx) 
and Hypersonic's ZX7 (http://hypersonic-pc.com/ZX7).  Can you tell me why 
I should buy your product over Hypersonic's?

About 10 hours later (a little slow, don't you think), I received the first reply - from Hypersonic.

Fair enough, Hypersonic has a Customer Satisfaction rating of 7.79, but less than 20 reviews in the last 6 months. Alienware, on the other hand, has a 7.78 Customer Satisfaction Rating. So they're very close there. However, on the lifetime rating, Alienware is 7.63 (275 reviews) and Hypersonic is 9.17 (48 reviews). When I first started this comparison, I liked the Alienware machine better because it has 802.11g and because I've heard of the company before. I'd never heard of Hypersonic, but the ZX7 did have built-in bluetooth, a 17" monitor and a (supposedly) kick ass sound system. I don't travel, and if I do, it's usually for pleasure and I can always take Mini-Me.

So I replied to the Hypersonic e-mail above.

And I recieved a reply 6 1/2 hours later:

All good answers to my questions. So I'm feeling pretty good about Hypersonic at this point, and still haven't heard from Alienware. And then I got a response from them, almost 30 hours after I sent my original e-mail. It took about 4 sentences for me to realize they were just sending me a standard form-letter, filled with arrogance.

In the end, both still sound good, but I like the Bluetooth, 17" screen and sound system on the Hypersonic. I decided last night that I should probably buy this now, instead of waiting for a new contract. I want one too bad to pass up the opportunity (and it's a business write-off). At the new house, Raible Designs' HQ will be in the basement, so we'll be relying on our 802.11b network to surf the web, check e-mail, etc. from upstairs. I moved to two computers years ago because Julie and I would fight over one. It's bound to happen again unless we have two wireless laptops. How's that for justification?! I'm saving our marriage! what a good husband

Posted in General at Jul 25 2003, 08:53:20 AM MDT 4 Comments

Out with the old, in with the older

We (finally) sold our house today. We've been waiting for an appraisal for the last couple of weeks - the appraiser did his work and went on vacation for two weeks - and everything got finalized today. We close on our old house on Tuesday, which means we have to move to the new one (which is actually 60 years older) this weekend. Aaahhhh, moving, how I missed it. It's been 4 years since the last move, which was from our one-bedroom apartment into our first house. This weekend will likely be a reminder of how much shit I can accumulate in a few short years. Julie will try to throw most of it away, and I will fight to keep a bunch of worthless junk. Should be a fun weekend! Here's the old and the new - old is on top.

Xenophon House

Marion (DU) House

Posted in General at Jul 23 2003, 03:07:08 PM MDT 1 Comment

Weekend with Dad

My pappy is flying in this afternoon, and it's looking to be a great weekend. Julie and Abbie headed to Florida yesterday for a friend's baby shower, so it's a "guys weekend." For Father's Day this year, I got us tickets to the Mile High Nationals (top fuel dragsters) on Sunday. It's a nice WT event, and being from Montana - we'll fit right in! ;-)

I'm picking him up from the airport this afternoon, and we're heading for the hills shortly after. We'll be camping and fishing tonight and tomorrow and I can't friggen wait. Like Dave and his Dad, both my dad and I can sit in front of our laptops for hours on end - so we're leaving them behind and getting out of dodge. Don't expect any updates until Sunday or Monday.

Posted in General at Jul 18 2003, 08:43:59 AM MDT Add a Comment

Good Presos from TSS Symposium

I found a few good presentations in my Inbox today. I read them. Usually I don't. I enjoyed them, especially Mike's. I think WW2 looks promising, and I expect that I will try it soon. I predict that I will like it and I will be enthusiastic about it. Many hours will be lost exploring it's codebase and questioning it's authors. Julie will long for me to come to bed, but I will stay up and educate myself. This doesn't sound like any fun at the moment. So I will control my curiousity for another day. Hopefully I can control it for another month or year.

Posted in Java at Jul 08 2003, 04:20:44 PM MDT 3 Comments

The Cabin, Part II

"Maattttt... it's time to get up!" My mom sings from the kitchen on this early December morning. I slowly open my eyes, having just had my blissful dream snapped, I'm a little annoyed. My bed is incredibly warm with the goose-down comforter that Mom made me for Christmas. She made one for both Kalin and I that year - to this day one of the best presents I've ever received. "Kaaaallllinnnn... get up - you've got to get ready for school!" I groggily put on my clothes - a t-shirt, jeans, socks and tennis shoes - and make my way downstairs. I have to duck as I leave my room because the ceiling is low, and the door to my room (added by my Dad so I could get more privacy from my "pesky sister") is only ~3 1/2 feet tall. The stairs to the main floor of the cabin are very steep, but I've been trouncing down them for 9 years now, so I'm pretty good at it. Matt in front of the horse's pen

The warm glow of the kerosene lamps in the kitchen greet me as I sheepishly transcend the stairs. "Heeyyy Matti," my dad says as I enter the room. "Morning pops," I say. He is sitting on the oven door of our antique wood stove - possibly one of the best spots in the house and definitely the warmest. My mom asks, "Do you want huckleberry pancakes for breakfast this morning?" "Heck yeah!" I say enthusiastically (huckleberry pancakes are my favorite - and always will be). "Well, we need some more firewood then" she says.

Reluctantly, I say "OK" and get ready to go fill the woodbox. I put on my winter coat and a stocking cap, along with my mittens. As I step out onto the front porch, I am greeted with a full moon casting its beauty on the freshly fallen 6 inches of snow. It's about 10 degrees out and the world is sparkling in the early morning darkness. Everything looks frozen in time, and it's very quite. Our horse, Babs, snorts from inside her pen, which is next to the woodshed in the back of the house. I say "don't worry, Kalin will be out to feed you soon." I pet her on the nose and tromp through the snow another 10 feet to the woodshed. There, I put a flashlight in my mouth and begin chopping wood for the cookstove. The wood is dry since it's been in the woodshed since August, and the cold Winter morning makes it that much easier. After splitting 5 or 6 logs into cookstove-sized pieces (using my left hand to steady, right hand to swing), I gather it all up. Rather than attempting a reasonable load, I get it all. It's stacked so high, I can't even see the path I walked in on. Still holding the flashlight in my mouth, I lean back, stand up, and shuffle my way back to the cabin. I yell, "OPEN UP!!" as I get near the front door. My dad gets up from the best seat in the house and lets me in. "Jeeze - didja get enough?!" he exclaims and I (breathing heavily) stumble into the kitchen as pieces of wood are starting to fall from my arms. I make a final lunge and barely make the woodbox, filling it up with no room to spare.

My sister, Kalin, is slowly making her way downstairs now. My dad yells "Kaaarrrrrrrllliiiiiiinnnnn" as she enters the room with a look that could kill. My dad says, "it's Medusa!" and he has a good point. Her long blonde hair is out of control and she has glaring looks to support the wildness of her hair. "Good morning darling," my Mom says. "Hi mom" says Kalin. "As soon as you guys are done with your chores, we'll have breakfast" says the cookstove queen. Front Road in snow - this is taken when we're teenagers.  You can tell since there's snowmobile tracks, which we didn't have until we were in high school

This is the worst part of the morning - leaving the warm, comforting cabin (where my parents are drinking coffee and warming themselves by the cookstove) to go feed the animals. My chores are feeding the dogs, ducks, geese, pigs and chickens, while Kalin has to feed the horse, the rabbits and the goats. In the spring, when the goats have kids, Kalin (or my mom) has to milk the goats. I trudge across the frozen tundra to get slimed by the pigs, get hissed at by the geese, and to gather eggs from the hungry chickens. I have a teapot full of hot water to poor into their water dishes, since they're all frozen. The alternative is to bring the water dishes into the cabin and thaw them on the heatstove, but the teapot is the faster, more efficient way.

Finally, after a 1/2 hour of doing chores, both Kalin and I are done and able to sit down for the awesome "huckleberry pancake" breakfast. My Dad asks us what we're going to learn that day, and Kalin says "division" - which is quickly followed by a short quiz. Neither of us are interested, but he's got a grin from ear-to-ear as he asks us what 63 divided by 7 is.

And so begins one of the best parts of the day - where my mom walks with us 1 1/2 miles to the bus stop. Today is December though, and with the fresh snow, this means we get to ski! This is probably better since I refuse to wear boots, even in the dead of winter. Tennis shoes or a hissy fit - that's what you get from little Matt. The morning ski is awesome, especially on a day like today. The snow is soft, and there's a nice base underneath from the daily commute to the bus stop (also where we keep the cars in the winter). As the sun brims the mountain peaks, we're off! It's a fast and fun journey today, and there's laughter and smiles the whole way. The single-track trail through the forest encourages us the whole way with its forests and (mostly) downhill journey.

July 2003: We're leaving for the cabin tomorrow night, and I get emotional just thinking about it. The cabin is by far my favorite place in the entire world. It's a huge part of my family and you can feel its love as soon as you set eyes on it driving up the front road. I first took Julie there in 1998, the year we met, and she moved to Denver shortly after that trip. I have a friend, Jarvis, who moved to Montana for 5 years after visiting the cabin one summer. This is the first time that Abbie will visit the cabin, and I've never been more excited to go. My parents are already there, Jarvis will be there, and another best friend from college is joining us. Jarvis is traveling all the way from Brazil (where he is a teacher) and the other is driving from Mammoth Lakes, California. It's going to be awesome. Huckleberries are just started to ripen, the wildflowers are out, and the cabin is waiting. Not to mention that Montana is, by far, the best place to be in the summer.

The cabin today

To learn more about the Cabin, and how it all began, read The Cabin, Part I.

Posted in General at Jul 01 2003, 05:29:26 AM MDT 1 Comment

Digital Music: Things I want

I've come up with a few product ideas. I think these are awesome ideas, and hopefully someone has already come up with them. I doubt I'm the first one to think of these, but if I am, let's hope I get credit. ;-)

1. I want an MP3 Server in my car. Similar to the iPod, in the sense that I can sync from a PC or a Mac while my car sits within 50 feet of my house. How slick would that be to pick your playlist for your roadtrip while you're cutting a new release! It'd have to be fairly inexpensive (~$200) to be profitable I think. Competitors: XM Radio.

2. I want to hook my MP3 collection up to my home stereo. I believe this is already possible, but I want more. I want to be able to sit on my patio and control my home stereo with my iPod. iPod = remote control. Of course, we don't have a home stereo, nor a patio - but I do plan to purchase these luxuries someday, and I'd love to switch from Bare Naked Ladies to Jimmy Buffett when Julie goes to change a diaper. ;-D

Posted in Mac OS X at Jun 30 2003, 07:13:05 AM MDT 4 Comments