Archive for the 'Internet' Category
This Podcast Will Rock You
Originally uploaded by rcarver
There is a podcast called You Look Nice Today. It is one of my favorites. It is put out by three guys who found each other through Twitter. Each found the others tweets interesting and more importantly, funny. They got in contact and decided, why not spread our mirth to a wider audience, a listening audience. The world would be a better place after all. Hey, and we all wear glasses, and we could always talk about that, though they never have.
The podcast normally consists of three lads: Merlin Mann, Scott Simpson, and Adam Lisagor. Also pictured here is Jonathan Coulton, you ought to Google him now…his music delights, and a man who we all know and have grown to love, sitting down in front is John Hodgman, but you may know him better as ‘PC’.
Apparently there is a brand-new You Look Nice Today podcast out or coming out soon that features all these fine fellows. I may not be able to sleep.
If you are of the Podcast persuasion, then get on over to iTunes and subscribe to You Look Nice Today…today. You will not be disappointed.
No commentsFinding the Perfect iPhone Todo List - Saga Continues
Today may be a banner day in finding the perfect todo list option for me and my iPhone. Enter Google Chrome. For those of you who haven’t heard, Google has released a browser called Chrome. It is clean, fast, and has some very interesting features that are growing more and more compelling to me all the time.
Google Chrome gives you the option of creating virtual applications out of online applications. In reality, it is pretty simple, Google Chrome will open an online app in its own window that has the forward, back, URL, and other standard browser buttons removed. It makes online apps feel more like apps that live on your harddrive.
Here is how Chrome and Toodledo have collided to give me a more interesting and integrated todo option. Toodledo has a very clean interface for the iPhone but their standard interface leaves a little to be desired. The great thing about Toodledo’s iPhone interface is that you can access it in a standard browser on your PC or Mac. Here is where my head exploded…
I opened the iPhone interface of Toodledo in Google Chrome and turned it into a virtual app. The Chrome virtual apps remember how they were sized and where they were in the window when you last closed them.
Long story short, I now have a todo widget that lives on the far left part of my workspace that stays out of the way that is always synced on my iPhone. In other words, it is possible to use chrome to create iPhone app widgets that have their own window and live on your computer.
6 commentsChrome: This Feature Blew My Mind A Little
So, unless you have been living under a rock, or you haven’t jumped on the Internets for the past 24 hours then you no doubt know about Google Chrome, Google’s brand new browser.
If you are a fan of clean, functional design that gets out of the way of the task at hand then you might have just found your new browser of choice. It has it’s limitations, but man, does it have its strengths. I don’t have the time to do an exhaustive rundown of all it can do, and really, there have been a million stories written on the ‘nets that do that.
I just want to talk about one feature that blew my mind a little. But before that I do want to do just a little background on how Chrome came to be. It is one of those programs that I LOVE, because it is built well after the fact, but profits from its ability to learn from what came before.
God bless the pioneers. They have the toughest life. It is exciting to be the first to survey a new land, but also, unfortunately, as a pioneer one has to address the inevitable questions and issues that arise. With little experience and even less time, new ways to handle problems are devised. Over time, people come to accept those schemas as, well, how they are done.
It is much the same for the person or team charged with creating a new genre of program. This happened with video edting software, something that I deal with on a daily basis. When editing video was first introduced on the computer, computers were woefully underpowered to handle the task. The teams that designed the first editors were very crafty and clever in getting them to work at all. Their craftiness and cleverness along with established workflows in the old-fashioned linear editing world established some schemas that stuck. As computers got faster, the old way of doing video editing persisted which left silly, superfluous steps that slowed down the creative process.
Along comes Sonic Foundry who looked at the whole process of editing video and streamlined the process down to its essentials and thus speeding up the editing process immensely. The product was called Vegas Video. The name later changed to Vegas and then Sonic Foundry’s whole line of products was purchased by Sony, but that is another story.
The same thing has happened here with Chrome. Google had the luxury of being able to soberly assess the successes and failures of browsers as they stand today without the pesky hassle of keeping legacy features that only matter to a few.
Google Chrome from the ground up to function, and function acceptionally well on the Internet as it stands today, an Internet filled with applications. Which, brings me to the function that blew my mind a little and drove me to write this lengthy entry.
When you are using an online app such as Gmail, or Google Docs, click the button near the top right side of the Chrome window that looks like a sheet of paper. That opens a menu where you can create an application shortcut. It is pretty simple actually. All it does is hide all the browser buttons and makes the online app more like an app that is native to your hard drive. Not only that, it also creates a shortcut that will open that online app directly, thus eliminating the multi-step process of opening the browser, clicking in the address bar, typing an address, and then finally arriving at the online app. Now, click one shortcut and boom…done!
Simple I know, but my mind was blown a little. Cloud computing became a little more real for me today.
5 commentsWordPress - Now with Turbo
Turbo = Super Fast Blogging…Maybe
Wordpress has an update today that adds a new feature called Turbo. Turbo is Wordpress’ brand name for its Google Gears integration. I just updated my software and noticed the new link in the top right-hand corner of my screen. When you click on Turbo, it opens a window that lets you know that you will need Google Gears in order to enable Turbo. I downloaded Gears and then enabled it.
The popup window also touted a speed increase after enabling Turbo. So far, I haven’t really noticed a speed increase, but to be fair I have only been using it for a few minutes.
Google Gears is Google’s app that allows users to take their computer offline and still be able to use their online apps. In other words, you can still get to your Gmail when you take your lappy on a plane with no wi-fi. Google Gears works in the background saving the necessary files to enable offline functionality.
Obviously, if a large portion of your page is pre-downloaded, you should see a speed boost. Again, so far… not so much, but it is still early.
Other Additions
A welcome addition to Wordpress is the ability to see all the revisions that have been made to an entry. This is particularly handy if you share a blog with someone and you want to see what they have added to you entry.
Also, just under the Save and Publish buttons there is a new Word count feature that will let you know if you need to spend a little more time on your entry in order for it to get to an impressive, unreadable length that will convince your readers to skip your blog. Handy.
It is now possible to add a caption to images. This is an incredibly handy thing. Now if you have a somewhat cryptic image that needs a little explanation, you are in luck. Now you can put a caption at the bottom of the image and your readers will never be confused ever again…ever.
Another new feature of Wordpress in 2.6 is a little, red speech bubble that now lives above the link to Plugins letting you know how many plugins you have installed. I have 13. Super.
It doesn’t just stop there, if you go into the plugins management area, it is now a lot easier to manage your plugins. The interface is now a lot more ajaxy and draggy and droppy which makes it much easier to manage the plugins that make your blog so special.
Since draggy and droppy is so cool, Wordpress has updated its media gallery to allow drag and drop functionality allowing you to better manage the content uploaded to your blog.
And finally, keeping with the drag and drop theme I’ve got going, the Press it linklet has been updated to make quoting blogs and other websites much easier.
All in all, it isn’t quite the continental shift type of change that we saw with the release of 2.5, but this update does bring a lot of good functionality that will make your blogging a little easier.
No commentsPosting From My Phone On Wordpress 2.5
The good news for me is that now it is a ton easier to post to my blog using my Samsung Blackjack. Wordpress 2.5 has redesigned the blog entry screen so that it is much easier to get to typing posts. Before Wordpress 2.5, I had to scroll past an extremely long list of Categories to get to the part of the page where you type your entry. Normally, when I log into my site I am on a full-sized computer that displays webpages correctly. On a big computer, my extraordinarily long list of Categories are hidden in a pull down menu. My phone’s browser isn’t powerful enough to display my dashboard correctly and just stacks each Category one on top of the other.
“What’s a Category?” Great question. If you look just under the title of each blog entry you will see some blue words that categorize that story. Wordpress doesn’t limit how many categories I use and obediently remembers every one I have ever used. The list is crazy long.
Now, I don’t have to deal with that list when posting from my phone. Upgrade!
Now if I could just figure out how to type faster on this tiny keyboard…
– Update–
I am on my laptop now so I am kind of cheating, but I had to give a quick update about completing my entry. After I typed up my blog entry, I clicked done which launched me back to my dashboard window. I still had to scroll past the some 150+ categories except now it is not as bad because I am now seeing all these categories after I typed the entry. With the blog article still fresh on my mind, I can categorize it more effectively. So, I still have to scroll a lot, only now it is more profitable.
No commentsWordpress 2.5
I just uploaded the backend of my blog to Wordpress 2.5. It is a lot cleaner and makes writing posts easier by hiding a lot of the more technical stuff you don’t use often a little deeper in the site. I realize that this is a little inside baseball for most people who read this blog, but hey I can geek out a little every once in a while.
The interface is a lot cleaner and uses different shades of light blue for the different sections of the page. It is actually quite pleasant to look at. Obviously this is the first time I have used it so I can’t give a real review, but on first blush it is nice. I likes it a lot.
On another note, I am always a little scared when I upload a new version of Wordpress to my server. You see, I no longer use a hosted blog service like blogger. If you use blogger, it is up to them to keep the backend working. If it screws up, you can relax knowing that there are Google engineers pulling their hair out trying to get everything fixed.
Now that I run my own blog software, if everything blows up, it is on me. To be honest it is kind of exhilarating, but it’s also scary. I have a lot of content that I have uploaded and written over the past 5 years. I would hate to lose it. Maybe I should back up more.
Cool New Features
One of the coolest new features is how this new version automates the updating of plugins. In Wordpress, you can augment the functionality of your blog by installing plugins. I use one called Twitter Tools to post my tweets right here on my blog. I have a ton of other plugins that I use to make it easier on me to use Wordpress. In this version of Wordpress, updating out of date plugins is as simple as hitting a link on the dashboard. Awesome. To make it work, you have to put your FTP settings in a form that pops up the first time you click the update link. After that it works. Click the update link under the out of date plugin, then click the ‘Proceed’ button and boom it just works. ROCK AND ROLL… I love it.
Bug Fixes?
There is one bug that annoys me and it hasn’t been addressed by Wordpress. When you embed a video from Youtube or other video site, it works fine the first time you publish the post. If you go back to your post later and then republish, Wordpress messes up the html and makes the video malfunction. I am about to test this new version of Wordpress to see if it fixes that problem. I know I can’t be the only person to have experienced this problem.
—-Update—-
Hooray. It now works. The video embed bug is now dead! Hooray. Embed videos to your hearts content!!!
2 commentsHappy Hulu Day
Hulu is officially open to the public. What does that mean? It means that you can watch all most of the shows from 2 of the 4 major television networks, Fox and NBC, and some movies from certain movie studios.
Most importantly, we have another compelling time sink to keep us from doing work while at work. Or, if you are like me and you grew up in an era when the tv was always on, here is a great way to get your noise on. I seem to work better in a noisy environment anyway.
No commentsSync Your Outlook and Google Calendar
Finally there is a way to keep your online and offline calendar in sync. This is a big deal if you are like me and have had to enter calendar items manually in two places. What a drag. Google announced today that it has released a little tool that will check your Outlook calendar and synchronize it with your Google calendar. Hip hip hooray!
UPDATE:———————-
I just downloaded the Google Caledar updating tool, and it works great! It is extremely simple. You download it and it ends up in your system tray. Once it is there you can right-click on the icon and go into the options and specify how often you want it to check for updates.
I have been waiting a long time for this. I have a smart phone that doesn’t sync to Google, but I want to use Google calendar and now I can. Thank you Google!
No commentsGoogle Apps on my Domain
I have started using the new service from Google that allows you to “host” Google Apps on your domain. I started the process of getting it all hooked up on Thursday of this week and so far it has been pretty cool. It was pretty simple. I went to the Google Apps page and signed up. I filled out the online form and that was pretty much it. I had to post some HTML in a specific folder on my site, but doing that was trivially easy. The HTML let Google know with certainty that I was the owner of the domain.
The Killer Apps
Once you have Google Apps set up on your domain,iIt allows you to share a family calendar, or a shared calendar with all those using your domain which, right now, seems like the killer app. Keeping up with all the things your family is up to is a real chore, and having a simple powerful calendar that everyone shares for free is incredibly handy.
I set Megan up with an account, and she immediately filled the calendar up with all our family’s upcoming plans. Super handy.
In addition to a family calendar Google Apps also gives you Google docs. I haven’t found a killer use for this yet, but it allows you to create documents that are available for everyone in your family. I can see where this could be very handy for a business domain, but in the family world, it seems to be fairly limited in usefulness.
If that weren’t enough, it also includes a built in start page based on iGoogle. It lets you set up a personal start page with a ton of different widgets that connect you to the information you need. I don’t use a start page much now that I have started using Google reader to keep up with the news that I am interested in, but I still like it. All the users on your domain that you set up with Google Apps also get a start page of their own.
I was hoping that there would be the option of having a common iGoogle start page that everyone on the domain could use. It could be a great place to communicate, but so far I haven’t found that option if it exists.
My Email Dilemma
It also comes with integrated email which means that my MurDog.com email addresses can go through Google’s Gmail interface which is incredibly handy. Right now however, I can’t get that running. In order for it to work, you have to update the MX records on the DNS server to point towards Google’s mail servers. I know that is pretty technical, but it should be a pretty simple thing if you can get access to it. The Google site has great instructions that make it pretty simple to make the changes.
I have a problem. My hosting service provider, www.thehostgroup.com doesn’t give me access to the MX settings. Or, if it does, I can’t find them. It is enough for me to start thinking about finding better hosting for this site. Having a personal email address that leverages the power of Gmail is an exciting prospect. I have sent a message to my provider in hopes of getting this resolved, but so far I haven’t heard anything from them.
One of the bad parts of having a personal email address that I have to manage is spam. It is a huge problem. I turned off my personal email address years ago because of spam. If I could get this Google apps thing to work then I would have Google’s horsepower behind spam control. It would be a huge help.
If I can’t get the email thing resolved, I might have to look at another provider for my web site hosting.
MurDog.com is just a personal site, and I don’t get any revenue from it so low-cost hosting is a necessity. If I can find a provider that is inexpensive, and allows me to host this WordPress blog I might be interested in switching.
For now, I will wait and see what The Host Group does.
Other than that, it is a pretty cool option from Google that should only get better.
No commentsWhen Did PayPal (and Facebook) Become Evil?
I have heard two stories lately that have really made me start to reconsider a company that I used to have very positive thoughts towards. On a recent Security Now podcast with Leo LaPorte and Steve Gibson Steve spent the better part of the show talking about an alarming trend. Paypal, on some of the links on its page, routes users through an ad service called Double Click and then back to its site without the user knowing it. You need to listen to the podcast for a full explanation as to why this is very, very disturbing, but the short version is, it allows for Double Click to place third-party cookies on your system. This is a problem because it allows a third-party, a website that you aren’t expressly visiting to track you as you move from site to site. PayPal is allowing this in a transparent way that doesn’t alert you as the user of the site that it is happening. This is quite disturbing and as of yet, PayPal hasn’t given any explanation as to why they are doing it. Evil.
Next, I just read on Seth Godin’s Blog about his recent experience with PayPal where they sent him on a galactic goose chase when they inadvertently flagged his account for suspicious activity. Seth wanted to rectify the situation because the recent activity was all on the up-and-up but couldn’t when he found it impossible to get a hold of someone with the power to fix the problem.
PayPal used to be a glowing example of a trustworthy site that endeared itself to its users. Now, there is story after story of PayPal plunging down a black hole of bad service and mistreatment of its customers. Bad show PayPal, it is time to shape up, or another service will come around and turn your world upside down. In this post-industrial world where service is your only point of differentiation, you are jeopardizing your future for some short-term gains.
Another good company gone bad story is brewing over at Facebook. Recently Facebook released its new plan for monetizing its growing market share in the social-networking world. Supposedly, their new service was an opt-in ad service where your purchasing habits were automatically put into your activity stream. In other words, when you bought something online, Facebook would tell your friends about it if you said it was ok. That is all fine and good if indeed it was an opt-in service, but according to today’s Buzz Out Loud Podcast, it has come to light that the service was opt-out by default. That meant that Facebook and its partners tracked your online purchasing habits without your express permission. This is a huge mistake.
Facebook is in an industry where they could be supplanted very easily if its users became disenchanted. There are a number of other social-networking sites out there that are simply waiting for the next grand exodus to happen. If you don’t believe that it could happen, its happened before. Friendster was the first uber-popular social-networking site. It was supplanted by Myspace who was in turn supplanted by Facebook.
Facebook is the current Web 2.0 darling, but if the winds change they could very well be tomorrows Myspace. I expected more. Hmmm, maybe that was a mistake.
——–This Just In———
As I was scanning my feeds, I found this. Apparently Robert Scoble feels the same way about Facebook that I do.
No comments