
MADCAP FLARE HELP SERIES
If you’re a regular reader of The Times’ TV coverage, you may already be aware that we’re a little obsessed with “Breaking Bad” prequel “Better Call Saul” (AMC), which concluded its sixth and final season Monday with a courtroom scene, and prison visit, for the ages - an ending, as senior writer Greg Braxton put it, that affirmed the series was a tragic love story all along. (Greg Lewis / AMC/Sony Pictures Television ) Matt BrennanĮverything you need to know about the film or TV series everyone’s talking about

Still, in between, it’s mostly a lens flare of good weather, soluble problems and no email. And though it appears, at first, utterly ridiculous in every particular, it ultimately does surprisingly well by both its memories of the first World War and its battle against the rise of fascism.

If you’re already missing your summer break as much as I am, immerse yourself in “Hotel Portofino” (PBS Passport), a series filmed like a tourism advertisement and plotted like a beach read that goes down as easy as s’mores from the fire pit. American nouveau riche posing for gawkers. The working title for the series, created by Estrada with “Corporate” creators Pat Bishop, Jake Weisman and Matt Ingebretson, was “Punk Ass Bitch,” which reflects the way the characters speak to each other, but “This Fool” captures its affectionate spirit. Neither is grown up both are prone to childish power struggles on their way to increased, if not total, mutual understanding. Luis, whom Julio installs at Hugs and Thugs making cupcakes and participating in “group hug” sessions, is stuck in a time that the present keeps reminding him has passed. Julio is relatively upright, and uptight he works at Hugs Not Thugs - “the fifth-largest gang-rehabilitation center in L.A.,” run by a not-unwise old white radical, played by Michael Imperioli - and is in a comically codependent relationship with spunky ex-girlfriend Maggie (Michelle Ortiz, the smartest of them all). Into the household comes Luis ( Frankie Quiñones), an older cousin who has just spent eight years in prison. And if they say they highly value collaboration, I can say that Flare supports that too, though I (and my colleague) haven't used that functionality yet.A sweet, funny, sometimes rowdy comedy set in South L.A., “This Fool” (Hulu) stars comedian Chris Estrada as Julio, 30 (with, as will be noted, the face of a much older man), who lives at home with his mother (Laura Patalano) and grandmother (Julia Vera).

But what word should one use for that?)Īm I risking embarrassment if I simply say that Confluence cannot be used as an end-user help system? That, by its own statement of purpose, it is team collaboration software.

Can it? That is, can Confluence be used to build a system with topics, an index, a search engine, and context sensitivity? Can it be conditionalized? (Aside: Why does "conditionalized" usually get flagged as a misspelling? I see Merriam-Webster doesn't recognize it. I didn't even know Confluence can be a help system that one can hook into the application UI. There seems to be a trend in the Dev departments here toward sharing information via Confluence. Sorry in advance that I haven't made a study of Confluence, but I have a manager asking me to justify why I continue to promote Flare for our help systems.
