Category Archives: Techie

Contest Winner/Participant

Congratulations to the winner (and sole participant) in my Gmail Essay Contest: ***Simon Miner|http://www.simonminer.com/***!

Simon is one of my co-workers at ***Christianbook.com|http://www.christianbook.com/***. He has been interested in receiving a Gmail account for a while, so I was happy to set him up with one.

Simon has granted me permission to display his winning essay on our blog, so here it is!

qqq|If you have ever checked a dog for ticks, you know what a painstaking experience it can be. The procedure basically goes like this. Using your fingers or a fine-toothed comb, you sift through the dog’s fur, feeling for the tiny parasites entangled in the animal’s coat or attached to its skin. Once you find a tick, you must either pull it from its hairy hideaway or extract it from the dog’s hide. The latter can be accomplished by pinching the buried head of the insect and yanking it loose. This task is particularly messy if the tick is engorged from feeding on the blood of its host.

Tick checking used to be one of the most unpleasant aspects of caring for our dog, until we decided to have her groomed.

The grooming package we selected for our dog included a haircut. Our dog, a Cairn terrier, had never had her hair trimmed before, so we chose to style her fur with a standard terrier cut. This type of cut shaves the fur on the dog’s back and flanks very short, but leaves the hair on her belly longer to hang freely.

Little did we know how such a simple choice would revolutionize the tick checking process. Now, scanning our dog for the pests is much easier. With the advent of our dog’s haircut, ticks have much less overgrown real-estate in which to conceal themselves. Furthermore, the short and evenly cut fur on most of our dog’s body makes it difficult for the insects to burrow into her skin. A tick’s only haven is the animal’s belly, which is a small area that is only partially covered with fur. This vicinity can be completely scanned with just a few quick strokes.

A Gmail account offers all the advantages of a dog with a fresh terrier cut. Other email services require you to waste valuable time sorting and sifting through your mail to locate an elusive message. But like ticks on a groomed dog’s belly, Gmail exposes the message you want with a quick and easy search. Gmail offers the ability to categorize a message in multiple ways, a feature which stands in stark contrast to the hairy and tangled single folder filing system imposed by other email providers, which often causes important messages to be overlooked and forgotten. A free email account hosted elsewhere can quickly become engorged with messages due to restrictive quotas on mailbox space. Gmail’s 1 gigabyte accounts ensure that there is always room for more mail.|qqq

DashFabulator

One of the “new” features Apple is introducing in Tiger is ***”Dashboard”|http://www.apple.com/macosx/tiger/dashboard.html***. Dashboard allows the user to display “widgets” on their screen, which contain information like weather reports, stock quotes, the current time, the current track in iTunes, etc. Sounds good, right?

Well, in case you haven’t noticed, Dashboard is, shall we say, remarkably similar to an existing product: ***Konfabulator|http://www.konfabulator.com/***. The Konfabullator makers have noticed this, and have posted their feelings ***in their blog|http://www2.konfabulator.com/journal/index.php?start=68&show=1***.

This is remarkably similar to Apple’s behavior when redesigning their Sherlock web services software. Find a really cool, useful program (***Watson|http://www.karelia.com/watson/***), then take its functionality and integrate it (poorly) into the Mac OS, without giving any credit for the idea to the people who actually came up with it. In Watson’s case, Apple still hasn’t done much to improve Sherlock, and it is definitely not up to par with Watson in terms of usefulness. In the latest chapter, Konfabulator is far ahead of Dashboard, and my guess is that it still will be once Tiger is released 9 to 12 months from now.

Well, I suppose not everyone can have their greatest ideas come to them as if in a dream.

Contest Extended

Well, nobody entered my contest to receive a Gmail account by today’s 8 a.m. EDT deadline. So, I’ll extend the contest. You now have up until Wednesday at 8 a.m. EDT to submit your essay. Refer to the ***previous entry|http://prwdot.org/?p=archives/001852*** if you need the full details.

I realize that many of my regular blog readers already have Gmail accounts, so I can understand that you’re not interested. And perhaps some people have no idea what Gmail is. For those people, here’s a quick run-down:

* ***Gmail|https://gmail.google.com/*** is a free, web-based email service which is currently in the testing stages. It is provided by ***Google|http://www.google.com/***, and has many groundbreaking features such as 1000 megabytes of email storage space, built-in searching, a fast, minimalistic interface, unobtrusive context-sensitive advertisements, and automatic grouping of email “conversations”.
* There is currently no way to directly “sign up” for a Gmail account. Google initially processed requests to sign up as a tester, but did not immediately grant those requests. Google also provided Gmail accounts to many users of their ***Blogger|http://www.blogger.com/*** service. There is now a growing number of testers, who occasionally receive “invitations” to give out to others. I received my Gmail account by way of an invitation, and I have been granted one such invitation to give out.
* If your primary email address ends in “@yahoo.com” or “@hotmail.com”, or you are not happy with your current email provider, you are a prime candidate for a Gmail account.
* If you would like to find out more about Gmail, visit the ***Gmail page|https://gmail.google.com/***.

Weekend Gmail Competition

I have one Gmail invitation to give out.

If you are interested, please compose an essay of no more than 500 words describing why you are the most worthy to receive a Gmail account, and send it via email to:

peter [at] prwdot [dot] org

(where the words in brackets would be substituted by their symbolic equivalents)

I would suggest you include in the essay a description of what exactly you would be using the Gmail account for, why you feel Gmail is better than any other free alternative, and any other personal reasons that you feel qualify you for receipt of such an account. Bribery probably wouldn’t hurt, either.

The deadline for receiving submissions is Monday, June 28, at 8 a.m. EDT

Good luck!

“What is this? A center for ants?”

The subject of my post today comes from a movie Becky and I recently watched on TBS, ***Zoolander|http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0196229/***. A decidedly goofy movie starring the goofy Ben Stiller, the story revolves around a past-his-prime male model being brainwashed by a clothing designer and used to assassinate the prime minister of Malaysia, who is planning to introduce sweeping changes in child labor laws which would aversely impact the revenues of clothiers worldwide. If you like bizarre humor and can stand Ben Stiller, it’s a good laugh.

Becky and I also recently saw ***Shrek 2|http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0298148/***, a very funny computer-animated movie which relies on a different genre of humor. In Shrek 2, the pop culture references and satire are fast and furious, and I’d say they make up about half of the movie’s laugh quotient. The other half is covered mainly by the hilarious personalities crafted by the movie’s leading men: Mike Myers, Eddie Murphy, and Antonio Banderas. If you liked Shrek, you’ll certainly enjoy Shrek 2.

In other news, my 1994 Toyota Camry just rolled over 193,000 miles this week. That’s almost 20,000 miles per year – well above the national average of 15,000 miles. It is starting to show its age. Last week, I attempted to roll down the driver’s side window. There was some ker-chunking, and the window ground about halfway down and then started slowly sliding down the rest of its way on its own. Now, that doesn’t stop me from driving the car, but it’s certainly annoying to drive in the rain with a window down.

So I took my car in to the local Toyota dealer to have them look at the window. They said it needed a new window motor and regulator assembly, and the cost was a bit more than I was hoping to pay, so I had them just put the window back together in the “up” position. This way, as long as I don’t hit the window button, the window will stay up and protect me from the elements. It is annoying at toolbooths and drive-throughs, but there are at least work-arounds. However, the Toyota dealer also indicated that there were some other problems with my car that should be fixed – CV-Boots and wheel bearings should be replaced, and the front and rear brakes both need some work.

I wanted to get a second opinion, so I decided to take my car to a local shop which Becky has used before, ***Auto-Dyne|http://www.auto-dyne.com/***. The nice thing about Auto-Dyne is that they are located directly next to our apartment building, so we can actually walk right from our parking lot into theirs. 🙂 They checked my car out this morning, and did agree with the dealership that the brake job was an immediate necessity, but gave me a much lower estimate for the parts and labor. They disagreed, that the CV-Boots and wheel bearings were in urgent need or repair. So right now they’re putting on new pads and rotors in front, and new shoes in back, and I hope to have it back by the end of the day.

The window problem I’m just going to live with for now. Like I said, there are work-arounds and I just can’t justify paying a lot of money for something that isn’t essential to the operation of the car. For example, the front left speaker doesn’t work, the back right window doesn’t go up or down, the dashboard lights for the heating/cooling system don’t work, and half of the driver’s door handle is broken off. All annoying, to be sure, but just not worth my time and money to get them repaired. As long as the car goes when I tell it to go, stops when I tell it to stop, and doesn’t go exploding on me, I’m happy.

I expect the car to perform just fine when, in a little over two weeks, Becky and I drive out to Ohio. We are looking forward to our time out there, seeing my family and having a nice relaxing time in the heartland. We are also going to be stopping in ***Niagara Falls|http://www.infoniagara.com/*** on the way back, which should be fun.

In still other news, Microsoft announced today that they will be upping the storage limit on their free Hotmail webmail accounts to ***250 megabytes|http://zdnet.com.com/2100-1104_2-5245523.html***. They join ***Yahoo!|http://mail.yahoo.com/*** and ***Google|http://gmail.com/*** in the ongoing webmail wars to bring more resources to users.

Speaking of which, I was recently the recipient of a Gmail account invitation. Sadly, it did not come from any of our faithful blog readers, but rather from my pal ***rjackson|http://www.broadbandreports.com/useremail/u/610601*** over at ***BBR|http://www.broadbandreports.com/***, who may or may not regularly read my blog. Anyway, I have to say that Gmail is certainly the most responsive and least intrusive of the free webmail services that I’ve tried. As I mentioned in a ***previous post|http://prwdot.org/?p=archives/001837***, their 1 GB mail limit isn’t particularly compelling, but their Javascript-based interface and innovative conversation-style message grouping deserves some credit. If, for some reason, you’d like to email me at Gmail, my address is peter.r.wood at gmail dot com. On the whole, though, I’m still happy using ***IMP|http://www.horde.org/imp/*** to read my email via the web when necessary, and Mozilla’s excellent ***Thunderbird|http://www.mozilla.org/projects/thunderbird/*** mail client to read my email when I’m at work or at home.

I could probably write more, but this entry has grown quite long and unruly… the end!

Big Box Brouhaha

All of this recent chatter about ***Gmail|http://gmail.google.com/gmail/help/about.html*** and ***Yahoo! Mail|http://promotions.yahoo.com/new_mail*** has got me thinking about my own email storage situation. Rather than re-post my thoughts here, I’ll just point you to my recent comment on Slashdot’s article about Yahoo! Mail’s new 100 MB email storage limit:

***”Why do you have so much email?”|http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=111126&cid=9429218***

It’s got a moderation score of +3 (+1 of those being my own Karma bonus), so I think it’s worth reading. 🙂

More Movable Type License Changes

Six Apart has once again altered their Movable Type pricing and licensing schemes: Six Log: Announcing Pricing & Licensing Changes to Movable Type

I think the changes may appease some people, for whom the Personal Edition may not have been quite worth the price. These people were willing and able to pay $69.95-$99.95 to run a Movable Type installation, but didn’t feel that they were getting enough for their money. Now, for $69.95, you can run a blog with up to five authors and unlimited weblogs. For thirty dollars more, you can have unlimited authors.

I think it may be a good deal for some, but not for me. Here is what I would get if I paid for a license:

  1. The ability to upgrade to the latest version of Movable Type, version 3.0
  2. The ability to have up to five weblog authors, and unlimited weblogs
  3. Official technical support from Six Apart
  4. Extra online resources and help documentation
  5. Optional weblog promotion
  6. Access to custom consulting services
  7. Discounts on future upgrades

Only benefits 1 and 2 would be of any use to me. The rest are unnecessary in my case. I can understand the need to charge for those additional services. But I think Six Apart should separate the first two logically from the rest of the benefits – we should be able to download the software, install it, and run it for free, with as many authors and weblogs as we want. But Six Apart is a business, and they care about their bottom line. While there is no logical reason for them to roll benefits 1 and 2 in with the rest (you can debate whether loss of “potential” profit is a logical reason), doing so will undoubtedly increase their profits and help improve their business by banking on the fact that many users will pay for 1 and 2, even if they don’t need the rest. But I would argue that their business model wouldn’t suffer too much if they restructured pricing to a simple paid support model, which companies like Sun and Oracle use for their software.

In the end, I will still be sticking with our current Movable Type 2.661 installation until such time as I have a reason to switch to something else. It’s working well for us now, and Six Apart is not forcing us to switch, so it’s really up to me as to when and if we will upgrade.

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Firefox 0.9

This is day-old news, but I wanted to give it a mention here: Mozilla Firefox 0.9 Released.

Firefox is a great alternative to Internet Explorer. I have been following the various Mozilla-based browsers for a few years now, and Firefox has made great strides in cross-platform standardization, speed and efficiency, and features. If you’re sick of Internet Explorer, or just want to try something new for a change, give ***Firefox|http://www.mozilla.org/products/firefox/*** a try. Loads of people are already in love with its speed, tabbed browsing, small memory footprint, and standards-compliant rendering.

I use Firefox as my main browser at work on Windows XP Professional, and only test on Internet Explorer before launching major changes. At home, I use a mix of Apple’s ***Safari|http://www.apple.com/safari/*** and Firefox.

WorldWideWoodWiki

I’ve been fascinated with a technology known as ***Wiki|http://c2.com/cgi-bin/wiki?WikiHistory*** since last summer when I was at the O’Reilly Open Source Conference. Conference attendees created a ***sort of unofficial website|http://oscon.kwiki.org/***, where they exchanged all sorts of information, from reviews of local restaurants to job postings to requests for roommates to personal biographies to notes on tutorial sessions. I maintained my own ***personal page|http://oscon.kwiki.org/index.cgi?PeterWood*** on that site. It was a lot of fun and very, very helpful.

Put simply, a Wiki is a website that everyone contributes to. Anyone can view the pages, anyone can edit the pages. Yes, that’s right… anyone. You don’t need a username or password. You just edit the page. Hard to believe, but true.

One of the coolest pieces of Wiki technology, which I use on a daily basis, is the ***Wikipedia|http://www.wikipedia.org/***. It’s an evolving, growing, free Wiki-based encyclopedia, with articles on everything from ***Oak Bluffs|http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oak_Bluffs%2C_Massachusetts*** to ***Star Trek|http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Star_trek***.

I’ve set up a Wiki for the World Wide Wood website. ***Take a look|http://prwdot.org/wiki/*** at it, play around with it, contribute to it. I’ll be playing around with it too, so keep an eye out for changes. If you’re the RSS type, there’s an RSS feed of ***recent major changes|http://prwdot.org/wiki/index.php/RecentChanges?format=rss*** to the Wiki. For more granularity, there’s an RSS feed of ***all recent major and minor edits|http://prwdot.org/wiki/index.php/RecentEdits?format=rss*** to the Wiki.

Enjoy!

Articles

In the left hand side of the page, I’ve added a new section of my ‘articles’. These are full-length discussions of various technology issues. At the moment, there is the “Photo Shootout,” a review I conducted of six online photo printing services, and “Blogging With The Mac,” which I presented last week at the ***MacWoburn|http://www.macwoburn.org/*** meeting.

Check them out, and if you feel so inclined you can discuss them on the ***World Wide Wood discussion forums|http://prwdot.org/bb/***.