Ian McFarland's blog
We have a winner in the Pivotal Tracker GoRuCo Haiku Contest.
Collin Miller submitted the winning entry:
Rivers of Action
Clearly Sculpt a Way Forward
My Path is Now Clear
We thank everyone for participating. There were a number of great entries, but this piece really stood out.
Collin, come on down tomorrow and say hi. I'll be there all day enjoying the conference with some other folks from Pivotal Labs and demoing Pivotal Tracker for anyone who doesn't know it already. Congratulations on your win!
One day only... We're giving away one ticket to GoRuCo, the Gotham Ruby Conference happening here in New York tomorrow, Saturday, May 30th.
Rules: Submit your Pivotal Tracker-related Haiku to tracker-haiku-contest@pivotallabs.com by 5pm ET tonight, May 29th.
We'll pick one winner, at our sole discretion, to be announced here. All submissions are licensed to Pivotal Labs to use however we see fit, and you retain the ability to use them as you see fit, under the Creative Commons commercial attribution share alike license. The winner will be granted one ticket to GoRuCo, to be used tomorrow.
Valid entries must include name, telephone, and email. Name will be used in attribution, but neither the telephone number or email will be made public.
So have at it! Give us your Tracker haikus. Don't know Tracker yet? Check it out!
On Wednesday night we hosted our first San Francisco Tracker Users Group (SF.TUG)
It was a great opportunity to meet more of our users, and hear directly from them about how they're using the product, and share with them some of the philosophy behind it.
We're excited by your enthusiasm and we will definitely make the TUG a regular event here in San Francisco, and we are planning to start one in our New York City offices soon. Please visit the Meetup group to join the discussion, and for more information and the schedule for future meetups.
I had a great conversation with Darryl Taft at eWeek last Friday about our experience developing for webOS. Much of of our conversation is in his article: Why Some Developers Think the Palm Pre Could Upstage the iPhone.







