Monday, November 28, 2005

Stamping out brush fires, one by one

An update to Joe's update of  todayThe Patch: Problem identified; it was of course a typo; re-release should go out soon.  Again, what you'll get is exactly what's on beta.journals.aol.com/(screen name)/(journal name) right now, so there should be no more surprises.  Knock on wood.  Character Set:  Problem identified (see below) and we think we have a full fix, which will need a bit of testing, so that should go out a bit after the patch.  Archive Counts: Still working on it.  Ad Banners: We're listening to suggestions and doing some brainstorming; note that whatever we come up with has to pass muster with executives.  I'm  hopeful, though.  Jason Calacanis has a great post about the situation on his blog.  I couldn't agree more, and I know that people at AOL are listening.

OK, so now for the geek update.  The character set encoding issue?  Well, basically, the major technical update  in this release involved moving to a new web server and servlet engine (Tomcat).  Unfortunately, we discovered too late that Tomcat by default decides that HTML form data is encoded in ISO-8859-1.  Also unfortunately, Journals uses UTF-8 throughout. For most common English characters, the two encodings give the same bytes; it's when you start speaking French (or talking about your re'sume') that you run into differences.  So the problem here is we didn't test this enough after the switchover and got caught by surprise.  The solution involves setting the encoding to UTF-8, but doing it in the right place is a bit of a problem -- if you set it AFTER the servlet engine starts reading stuff, it ignores you.  Personally I think it should throw an exception if this happens since encodings are, well, kind of important, as we've demonstrated over the past couple of weeks.  In any case, the solution we're looking involves a servlet filter similar to this one. More generally, we need to figure out how to add this as a general, automatic test so that it's just not possible to skip it -- and so that we'll be alerted within hours if some other configuration change breaks things, hopefully weeks before we make that change to the live production site.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Has anyone suggested making the ad banners optional?  

I'm not sure of the feasibility, but maybe a box to check in the layout when creating a journal if one does not want ads on his journal?

Or something like 'Ad-sense', so we get some kickbacks from having them, though I prefer the first idea, personally.

Just some thoughts.....

Cat

Anonymous said...

When I was in graduate school, working on my thesis, I spent two days trying to figure out why my computer analysis was all messed up.  (Back in the day when the only windows were in buildings, not computers and a mouse was not appreciated anywhere.)  Two days of pulled hair and a few tears, only to find that in one spot I had typed the capital letter O instead of the required 0.  

It's always the tiny things that make the biggest mess.

I'm glad you're hopeful.  It would be nice to know that somewhere people/customers actually count for something besides what's in their wallet.

~~ jennifer

Anonymous said...

Nice to hear that AOL people are listening to Jason.  We very much respected his post.  You give me almost a glimmer of hope I will be able to go back to my AOL journal someday . . . .

Virginia

Anonymous said...

yes.... I don't want a kick-back........ I want my journal back to what it was.  Thanks for the update here. judi

Anonymous said...

It would be nice if the executives were in touch with the actual members of AOL.  In your situation, Joe's and John Scalzi's, you folks actually are touching base with us.  No matter the disclaimer, it's really not enough.  Free AIM Blogs had the ads upon inception; AOL Member Journals didn't.  And, that is how things should be.  
We are NOT happy AOL Members.

Anonymous said...

ya know, you have a very nice straightforward attitude about the whole thing.  i just want to say thanks.  so tired of being stone walled, etc.  

Anonymous said...

I could tolerate the ads if they were much smaller and on the BOTTOM of the page instead of the top. Otherwise I will not blog at AOL Journals, the ads are too UGLY.