July 6th, 2007
A week after the iPhone is launched in the states, there is a rumour of an ‘inferior’ clone on its way from china
No, not really, it’s a spoof article. But it raises a couple of interesting objections.
Being involved in a VOIP company, of course, the ones that strike home for me are the lack of voip integration for the phone’s 802.11x connection and the tight control of 3rd party software cripple the phone’s potential somewhat.
I still want one, though.
Posted in Apple Mac, Teh Internets | No Comments »
July 2nd, 2007
Google’s driving direction system’s latest tweak is AMAZING.
Go to google maps. Get some directions. Click on a point on your route and start dragging around.
Now tell me that isn’t something you’ve wanted on any route finding package in existence. Tell me that’s not perfect User Interface design. Google, baby, you’re so good I find myself just not caring about all that data mining.
Posted in Teh Internets | 3 Comments »
June 29th, 2007
less than a month after Microsoft announced Silverlight, an open source linux variant, Moonlight has been announced.
Miguel de Icaza, part of the team who wrote Mono (the linux framework equivalent of .net) announced it earlier on his blog.
I think this is a good thing for Microsoft. Not only will it give market penetration, it will force them to keep a good pace with features and implementation. Whether they see it the same way, I don’t know
Posted in Teh Internets, Microsoft | No Comments »
June 22nd, 2007
you think being the Cop/Janitor/Sewer Worker of the tech revolution is some kind of glamor job?
Don’t get me wrong. I love IT. I love building systems and infrastructures that make the job easier, or better, or both. I get excited by the idea of being involved in innovation. But I’m sick of my job. Why?
Well, reading John C Welch’s post (quoted above) gives you a clue.
Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in Just stuff, Tech, Wageslave | No Comments »
June 21st, 2007
I’ve been looking at changing how I view RSS. Instead, I’ve found a way to integrate my web presence.
At the moment, I use my IM client to also read my RSS feeds. With friends’ blogs, news sites (topical and technical), technical interest groups and forums, there’s quite a few posts bubbling under, and it slows the IM client down a lot. Plus it’s a bit of a pain synchronising feeds at home and at work (OPML files would make it a little easier).
At the same time, there are things I haven’t yet started using RSS for: sites like flickr (and if they ever add syndication, facebook) take up too much of my time to go and read individually.
So, having noticed that iGoogle (google homepages was a better name) would give me better access to some of these features plus my under-used google calender, I decided that perhaps I should have another go at configuring it. Naturally, that let me to google reader.
I’m a fan of gmail, so I can see the interface for skim-reading posts very advantageous, but it doesn’t end there: by aggregating and sharing threads I can collate my activity across those various sites into a single handy feed.
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Posted in Teh Internets | 5 Comments »
June 21st, 2007
Someone’s written a Magic Eye Tetris game…
I don’t have the problems seeing it that some people are reporting, but the control keys are a pain: I found that the numeric keypad (non num-lock) 8 would rotate, and the ‘normal’ non-keypad 4 and 6 would move left and right respectively.
Awkward to play, but still neat.
Posted in Just stuff | No Comments »
June 15th, 2007
How useful are most glossaries in Technical Manuals?
I’ve got a manual here on Open Directory Administration. It’s not the simplest thing in the world to do: you’d expect someone implementing any sort of LDAP or domain to be a relatively experienced system admin. As a techie who’s never administered a domain before, there’s a fair amount of learning curve for me (especially when you consider that what I’m actually trying to do is extend my university’s Novell eDirectory for a suite of macs that will benefit from the extra management capabilities of OS X Server).
So I think it’s kind of funny when the glossary is full of terms like:
- FTP File Transfer Protocol…
- Administrator A user with server or directory domain administration privileges…
- group A collection of users…
- IP Address …!
You might not expect the man on the street to know what those sorts of terms mean, but the idea of someone expecting to be able to set up directory services not knowing them is… well, silly at best and scary at worst. Plus, the definition for ‘administrator’ relies on the use of the noun administration: in other words, it’s recursion rather than definition.
I had to lose four pages for the thermal binding machine to cope with the manual. I don’t think I’ll miss the glossary.
Posted in Just stuff | No Comments »
June 12th, 2007
Just to prove Microsoft can still do some things better.
Does anyone know if there’s any reason why font rendering would be different on different platforms?
–Edit–
Codinghorror seems to be slashdotted or otherwise down. Here’s a graphic from the original post which shows what we’re talking about: the top line is safari, the bottom line is IE with ClearType.
Posted in Apple Mac, Microsoft | 6 Comments »
June 6th, 2007
I need help for an idea for the first picture on the Cardiff Photomarathon I talked about back in April
Looking at the gallery the first picture has traditionally been the entry number - mine is 153.
My first idea was a couple of guys in rugby shirts, shot from the back, with the numbers ‘15′ and ‘3′ on it. Nice tie-in to cardiff, with the Millenium Stadium and all. Except that no-one will admit to owning a numbered shirt.
I did think about setting an analogue clock to seven minutes to two, but I thought that the chances were a) it’s probably been done (almost but not quite in this picture) and b) it’s a bit too obscure to stand out much.
Doing the same thing on a digital clock is almost certainly the most unoriginal thing in the entire world since some cleverdick first made a hyperbolic comparison for effect.
So does anyone have any suggestions?
Posted in Photography | No Comments »
June 5th, 2007
Cool Earth is a new charity aiming at preserving the rainforest by selling it - to you and me.
An Acre is going for around £70-£100.
Interesting - I’m often banging on about wishing to reduce my carbon footprint - I wonder how much that would reduce it by? Nothing at all? A fixed ‘one off’ amount? Or something I can continue to count year by year? Either way, a good idea.
More from an article at The Register or at the Cool Earth Website.
Posted in Just stuff | 4 Comments »