Friday, June 30, 2006

Zend Framework 0.1.4 Released!


Today we published a new preview release of the Zend Framework.
This release comes after a somewhat long pause between releases which was due to many changes in the project. Everything is in place now including significantly better tools to manage the project including integrated bug tracker, milestone management, Wiki, etc... From now on we will be releasing early and releasing often. 0.1.5 with a new RewriteRouter is just around the corner and planning for the release after that has already started.
We've also gotten quite a few interesting proposals from the community as a result of proposal week and within a couple of weeks I believe these will be moving ahead in full steam.

I'd like to thank everyone who's helped get this out the door. The community did a great job helping out with this release including pitching in with the migration to our new project management tools. And of course thanks to the Zend Team for orchestrating the effort!

More details about this release can be found on the Zend Developer Zone.

Wednesday, June 28, 2006

Zend Framework invading Zend?

As many of you have seen a couple of months ago we launched a new and fresher look for the Zend Framework site.
When that went live, all the other Web site owners at Zend became jelous and wanted something just as nice. So it seems that slowly a lot of Zend's Web sites will start adopting this look&feel. The first in line was the Zend/PHP Conference Web site which just finished it's redesign and is a hell of a lot better than the 1990s look we had previously (no offense to its previous designers :) Anyway, I hear next in line is Zend Developer Zone, so stay tuned! We're finally going start getting rid of those nasty designs! :)

Thursday, June 22, 2006

The End of an Era - Migration from Eudora to Outlook

Warning: This is a *very* long entry so skip if it doesn't sound like a subject that is of interest to you :)

When I first started using the Internet, Eudora was the thing. In addition to Trumpet Winsock, for getting Windows 3.1 online, Eudora was there side by side with Netscape Navigator, pioneering the way people communicated and shared information.

From those days onwards, Eudora has always been my preferred Windows-based email client and pine is what I use when I'm in a UNIX shell.
I had absolutely no problem shelling out the money for Eudora Pro because it was just far more powerful than any other mail client I had used.
I think due to the nature of my open-source involvement the amount of emails I've been getting over the years has always been ridiculous, so I would definitely consider myself an email power user. My needs probably don't match everyone's out there.


Some of the most important features to me in Eudora where:

a) Extremely powerful filters. In the early days it could filter by arbritary header (e.g. Delivered-To:) when Outlook and other mail readers couldn't.

b) Eudora folders that receive new email will popup and tile on the screen. This makes it easier to keep track of which one of the dozens of folders actually
has new email. In Outlook you don't really know if you have unread messages lingering which is often the case with me.

c) The search is probably the best part of Eudora. It is unbelievably convenient and even with the improvements in Outlook 2003, the usability and strength
of Eudora's search leaves it in the dust.

d) You can Ctrl-left-click on any subject and it will group all the emails in the selected thread for convenient reading. The same also works on people's emails
if you are looking for prior emails from the person who's email address you are clicking on. This is extremely convenient and doesn't require you to sort
all the emails in the mailbox.

So why did I end up leaving Eudora? Well, over the years I had all sorts of issues. The issues always made me keep a close look out for other solutions, and specifically Outlook which I had been used to using in parallel for years in a corporate environment.

What were some of the issues I encountered:

a) Attachments, attachments, attachments. This was probably my #1 problem. Eudora decided to keep all attachments outside the mailboxes. Initially this sounds great. Attachments are accessible through Windows Explorer and mailboxes are smaller and more compact. This caused huge problems though. All these mails were kept in the same directory and every few months, the directory became so huge that it was slowing things down significantly.
What I had to do was empty the attachments directory by moving all attachments to a backup directory. This caused problems because when I wanted to actually open an old attachment, I'd have to find it in Eudora, and then as it had moved, I would have to go and find it manually in one of the backup directories. With 5 years of emails and over 4 gigabytes of attachments this meant numerous backup directories and was just a huge PITA.

b) The Search was definitely a huge advantage, however I was always hoping for Google Desktop Search to support Eudora so that I'd finally enjoy blazing fast search.
Last year this wish almost came true, when Eudora OEMed a search engine and provided fast indexed search. The excitement soon turned into dissapointement because this search was constantly out of sync and I had to resync it manually from time to time. It became so annoying that at some point I just turned it off and went back to the older slower but more reliable search.

c) I started getting a lot of crashes in Eudora's internal viewer, mainly when viewing certain spam mail. I was pretty convinced that moving to the Word viewer would resolve this problem as Outlook uses the same engine. However, for some weird reason I just couldn't get it to work. It would always show a blank page. After opening a support ticket, I was told that starting over with a new Eudora.ini file should solve the problem. I tried it and it worked, but I just couldn't be bothered to reconfigure everything so I stuck to the internal viewer and became more careful with spam mail.

The actual migration wasn't too painful although it took me a few days until I was absolutely comfortable in making the move. I started with a pilot migration, did some testing of the filters and the imported messages (remember this is about 6 gig of email all in all), and when I felt as comfortable as I could get, I repeated the process as I had recorded it.

A few annoying things popped up during the migration process:

a) For some stupid reason MS Outlook isn't good at importing Eudora. It apparently looses the message dates, so the recommended way is to import to Outlook Express, and then important that into MS Outlook. Does that makes sense? Definitely not, but every place I found on the Internet, recommended that, so I didn't take any risks. Microsoft - Fix your MS Outlook import and and let the world know you did!

b) Apparently I was still on the "old" PST file format which blew up on me when I reached 2gig of capacity. It took me a while to fix it because it didn't allow me to erase messages (I guess there wasn't enough room to do the operation), and that was even without moving stuff to the Recycle bin. At the end I found some tiny messages which I could erase, and then quickly things started moving.

c) When I added the new kind of PST folder to Outlook, I erased the old one, and renamed the new one. For that point on I was constantly getting the error message "The operation failed. An object could not be found.". Well that's just great. Maybe if I'm not supposed to rename a folder then I shouldn't be allowed to do so via Folder->Properties... I finally found KB 312354 (http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;312354) which has instructions on how to solve the problen.

I've been on Outlook for a few days already and there are various pros and cons to the move.

Here are a few early thoughs:

a) I already mentioned earlier, that when new email comes in, there's no way of knowing which mailboxes have that new email (if you tend to have unread email in those mailboxes.)

b) We use procmail Sanitizer at Zend which renames attachments so that they can't just be opened (renames THISISAWORM.TXT.EXE to THISISAWORM.TXT.12345DEFANGED-EXE). This becomes extremely annoying to open (You need to save and rename the files). Eudora in one of its latest versions added some magic where it was actually possible to click on those links and the right app would launch. Unfortunately in Outlook that isn't the case. However, the cool thing about Outlook is VBA and the ability to write
scripts that manipulate your messages. I actually wrote a script that goes over all my 6 gig of messages and renamed the attachments to get rid of the DEFANGED portion of the name.
I will write about that in a separate blog entry as I believe it will be useful to many. It's probably the biggest reason why the move worked out to be the right thing to do.

c) Auto-complete of email address is by far better in Outlook than Eudora. In Eudora it would constantly screw up by saving invalid address which were mistyped at some point, but it seems that Outlook actually parses them and doesn't save invalid email addresses(e.g. "Andi - note the missing "). This led to a lot of frustration with Eudora.

d) I prefer to use an English locale on my machine and not Hebrew. Eudora couldn't show Hebrew due to this, and I do get Hebrew messages from time to time. To workaround the issues I'd open the message in the Web browser. In Outlook it just magically works.
e) While you can mark messages for follow-up in Eudora, it isn't quite as nice as the support in Outlook, where you can mark messages for follow-up, and then they appear in a separate view folder. Very convenient.

Well if you've gotten this far you are probably thinking of migrating too. I hope this info helps you. I felt it was important to blog about it because it was a big step for me and I thought that if others are looking into it, some of this info would help. I'm sure I'll discover more pros/cons in the coming weeks, and I'll definitely miss Eudora's search capabilities, but for now, especially after having been able to get rid of a few years worth of DEFANGED attachments, it does seem I made the right choice.

Eudora, I'll always remember you though!

Andi