Big Nerd Ruby Ranch

Big Nerd Ranch, which became well known on the strengths of Aaron Hillegass’s Cocoa training and writing, has a new offering in their “bootcamp” series: Ruby on Rails Bootcamp. It’s taught by Marcel Molina Jr., a longtime Rails contributor. Most of the stuff Big Nerd Ranch teaches has been around in one form or another for ten years or more; it says something that they are tackling something so relatively new. Another jump in mindshare for Rails.

Apple Store using Ajax

Sometime in recent weeks, store.apple.com picked up some Ajax. If you didn’t know this either, go play with the online configurator. Notice that as you make changes via the pop-up menus, updates to the “Summary” box in the upper right are made without a page load. The items that are added or altered by your selection are briefly highlighted in blue, which then fades out.

Examining the source reveals certain telltale signs as well.

Unix for Mac OS X Tiger

Matisse Enzer’s Unix for Mac OS X Tiger is on its way to bookshelves near you. This is a complete overhaul of the previous edition, which covered 10.3. For the GUI-centric Mac user curious about the command line, this is a great book to own. Matisse is another Well denizen, and I’ve followed his progress on the book with interest. Also see his blog entry on the book’s release.

Is eBay doing all it can to fight phishing?

A lot of eBay phishing scams take you to websites that not only mimic the look of the site they’re impersonating, but actually contain live links to that site and even use images hosted there.

I just got one today: an email with the ironic subject line of “eBay Fraud Mediation Request.” I always take a look at these to see if the scammers have any new tricks. I even click on the links (being a Mac user emboldens me there). This one took me to a site called www.signin-e-bay.com (I’m omitting the full link that takes you to the scam pages). The page was full of links to real eBay pages and used images hosted on eBay servers.