Sunday, July 25, 2010

Fogcutter update for 07-25-2010

So, what's new since last time? Well, not everything one might have hoped for, but a few Neddick bugs have been fixed at least, and progress continues on. We still hope to have Neddick TPR2 out by the end of August, and maybe a solid start on Heceta.

Specifically regarding Neddick, since last time, the bugs that have been resolved are:

Bug #12 - Make "tag" box work when pressing ENTER] - FIXED

Bug #8 - Get arrows for up/down vote links - FIXED

Bug #25 - Create scheduler mechanism for asynchronous updates - FIXED

Bug #35 - Need scheduled job to rebuild entrycache on some periodic basis - FIXED

The scheduled task stuff turned out to be pretty simple, thanks for the excellent Quartz Plugin for Grails. Now the EntryCache gets refreshed once a minute. Additionally, even though it wasn't in the bug list as a discrete bug, a problem with recalculating the score of an entry - after an upvote was removed - has been fixed.

As to what's coming next... mainly work on the next Neddick TPR, so see the Roadmap for details. The bugs on the roadmap page are now sorted (more or less) by the order in which we intend to attack them, so it should be pretty easy to tell where things are going.

And that's a wrap, for this week.

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

What's new with Fogcutter?

Since the last post, all sorts of stuff has gone on! Things are progressing nicely, especially with Neddick. Since last time we've registered each of the Fogcutter subprojects with sited dedicated to F/OSS, such as Ohloh.net, Advogato.org, and Freshmeat.net. Source code has been pushed to GitHub and the Google Code SVN repository. We've gotten Bugzilla and IceScrum installed and configured, and we have a live Neddick demo site up and running. Additionally, documentation has been written on our development process, and some roadmap documentation has been put together. We've also put together a site at Fogbeam.org dedicated to Fogbeam's open source activities.

Not a bad week's work, eh?

So, for your browsing convenience, here are links to all the new hotness:

Neddick demo site

http://www.fogbeam.org/
http://dev.fogbeam.org/
Bugzilla
IceScrum

Development Process Doc
Neddick Roadmap


Neddick on GitHub
Quoddy on GitHub
Heceta on GitHub

Neddick on Freshmeat
Quoddy on Freshmeat
Heceta on Freshmeat

Neddick on Advogato.org
Quoddy on Advogato.org
Heceta on Advogato.org

Neddick on Ohloh.net
Quoddy on Ohloh.net
Heceta on Ohloh.net

I think that's about it. Whew...

Anyway, what's coming next? Well, all of the stuff from the Neddick roadmap, and we also need to get a proper Ant build setup, some tests written, and Hudson installed and configured to do continuous integration and automated testing.

The Neddick screencast should also be forthcoming shortly, which should be fairly enlightening.

And that's about it. Any questions, just leave a comment here, or join the fogcutter-dev or fogcutter-discuss Google Group and post there.

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Welcome to Fogcutter

Welcome! Some of you may have known this project under its old name OpenQabal. We've recently decided to rename the project amidst some other dramatic changes, and this new blog is now the home for news and updates about the project.

If you made it here by accident, or don't know exactly what Fogcutter is, let us explain:

What is it?



Fogcutter is an umbrella project, sponsored by Fogbeam Labs, which is building a suite of powerful, open-source tools for knowledge management and collaboration. ScrewPile was formerly known as OpenQabal but has been renamed, as part of an effort to develop a consistent naming pattern for related projects.

Why "Fogcutter?"



Fogbeam'ers like light and things related to light... our projects are about, as we like to say, "cutting through the information fog." We like to build tools to help people find, share, reuse and create knowledge out of the raw data and unstructured information they have in their organizations. So "fogcutter" gets to the core of what we are all about. And it sounds cool to boot.

Tell Me More



The 65,000 foot overview description would go something like this:


"Fogcutter is an open-source suite of APIs, components and applications - driven by the principles of federation, composition, open protocols, and open standards - for building and enabling intelligent enterprise applications for collaboration, social-networking, knowledge management and discovery, organizational learning, Information Retrieval and decision support."


Fogcutter proper, then, is an "umbrella project" or over-arching structure for sub-projects that handle different parts of this vision. Think of how Glassfish has become an "umbrella" project for a series of related projects: OpenMQ, OpenESB, SailFin, Portal Server, etc.

With ScrewPile as the overall encompassing framework, sub-projects will deal with provide various APIs and/or applications / subsystems that are part of this overall "intelligent application" vision.

Subprojects will deal with things like: an API / system for managing tags, recommendations engine, mechanism for dealing with voting/ranking things, something for managing a social graph and allowing queries against it, etc.

Of course, as before, in a lot of areas existing open-source code exists to do these things. In that case, we may (within the letter and spirit of the respective licenses) just "borrow" existing code, possibly wrapping or modifying it to fit the model of what we're doing here. Other bits will have to be written entirely from scratch, and that's OK.

Tell Me About These Subprojects



Well, here's what we think we know about them so far:


  • Neddick - An interface that builds on the APIs for tagging, ranking and recommending items, to provide a platform for sharing and discovering useful links, documents, people, etc. What we have right now is pretty simplistic, but there's a LOT of room for growth in this.


  • Quoddy - a sort of "mini Facebook" like social-networking interface. Builds on the APIs for social-graph management, activity-stream, activity profiling, tagging, etc. Provides the front-end for managing connections and for letting users provide information about themselves, their interests, etc. But unlike Facebook, no silly Pirates vs. Ninjas or Farmville stuff.

  • Heceta - This may not actually come into existence as a standalone project; but the general vision is a search engine that leverages all of the various bits of information from Neddick, Quoddy, and "TBD" to provide better / deeper / more insightful search results than you can get from simple document content analysis. Intranet search in the Enterprise usually sucks, largely because page-rank type algorithms don't work well due to the lack of links between documents. But by supplementing the content analysis with scoring based on tags, social graph connections, activity-stream information, etc., it should be possible to do a much better job. This is not, by the way, a totally novel idea. It's something people are referring to as Social Search.

  • GraphEngine - as before, an API for storing and managing the "social graph stuff." Doing this on a large scale is still a problem, and I'm intrigued by the idea of using an incremental evaluation system approach for this, but haven't done much on this yet.

  • ProfileEngine - name says it all, really.

  • RecommenderEngine

  • ActivityEngine

  • TagEngine

  • Etc.



Of course since this is all intended for an enterprise setting, a big focus will be on integrating with other systems (see the point about "open protocols" and "open standards" above).

Previous discussion of Neddick (formerly code-named "Project Shelley") mentions discovering documents and people, despite the screen shots only showing stuff about links so far. That's where integration comes into play... part of the vision is to integrate with, for example, a document management system like Alfresco, a forum system like JForum, a groupware / calendar system, a HRM system like OrangeHRM and/or a social-networking application like Quoddy (formerly code-named "Project Poe").

That, of course, also plays into the vision for Heceta, which is all about searching across all the different domains, and using the knowledge aggregated across all of them, to enhance our search capability.

Get involved by visiting the project page on Google Code.