Archive for July, 2006

OpenDocument wins more fans–when will Pages come around?

OpenDocument Format (ODF), the open file format for office documents, is continuing to gather support from local and national governments.

When will iWork start supporting OpenDocument Formats? I think the time is, umm, now-ish. As Apple launches into their all so familiar task to bring switchers to OS X, they really need to support the formats that governments and loads of corporations are going to begin using. Microsoft is releasing their Open XML Translator for handling these problems, and I am guessing a witty Mac user could come up with a way to bring these things into iWork. But I don’t think the solution should be left to the user, it should be brought by Apple. iWork ‘07, please support ODF.

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Moving on up.

Lately, I’ve been doing a lot of stuff. A lot of stuff. I have started doing a lot more work with my band, working on science papers and other things related to formal education and all that nonsense, and eating a lot of ice cream. A lot of ice cream. But probably the most important thing I have been doing is working on my blog, where you have found yourself. I am starting to get more and more hits, and I am seeing more and more of the potential of posting all sorts of things on my blog, and blogging in general. And as I see all of these things I look at WordPress.com at dismay. Don’t get me wrong. I don’t look at other blogs with jealousy, I just look at the potential of running WordPress on a prive server and having my own domain. And the happiness of being able to pick and choose my own theme, and maybe even change it up more than usual. And then be able to run WP plugins…the excitement is getting to me.

Another thing I really would love to have is a wiki. And I would like to do Google Adsense somewhere on my page. (But I would be damned if I am going to have it running everywhere like Mel Gibson at AA meeting). All of these things greatly excite me and make me just want to blog until I can’t blog anymore–which I more or less have been doing on WP.com. But WordPress.com can’t handle a lot of these things for security reasons, and that’s understandable. If I were to complain and drone on about this things to my friend Commonsense Suzy, she would reply, “Just host the blog and all the other stupid shit you want on your own server, and just run WordPress on it. “Oh but Suzy”, I would reply, “I have been down that road more than enough times. Buy the domain, buy the hosting, then from that point on watch it sit there and charge my credit card every month. Oh no, I am not going down that path”. Suzy realizes my dilemma and then proclaims “Just build the damn site before you buy the domain and hosting, dumb ass.” Suzy is right.

You probably won’t hear about it for a little while, but I am going to spend a lot of time working on building a complete site. I am thinking of even maybe getting a free subdomain and hosting for a little while from my computer so readers can check it out. Then buy the domain and get hosting (probably from Dreamhost). The new site will have a new theme, something based around Hemingway, a wiki, all sorts of Google and Flickr plugins, and best of all–all the posts from the blog you are reading. I am getting shivers just thinking about it.

Get the new Feedburner feed!

I am now using Feedburner for the blog’s RSS feed, so please update your subscriptions! I changed the buttons on the sidebar to link to the new feed, but I haven’t figured out how to cancel or change the WordPress default feed so the blue button in Safari still links to the old one. I’ll be working on it, until then grab the new feed at http://feeds.feedburner.com/jonfaulkenberry. Thanks!

A Review of Sherlock: An Old Friend

This is probably the most outdated post I will write in a very long time, but this is an issue that makes me very sad: Sherlock. Old Sherlock is an old friend of mine, and the veteran Mac user. Sherlock was the Spotlight of OS 8.5 (straight 1999, fool), and is still included on your Mac even though the average person either ignores it, deletes it, or laughs at it. But Sherlock kicks ass. Sherlock is seriously Apple’s way of doing a lot of basic internet tasks, such as finding movie times, checking stock prices, reading the news (okay even I have switched to RSS for this one, but Sherlock is second-best), looking at AppleCare documents, and last but not least, doing eBay. Apple has since given us plenty of replacements for the old chap: Dashboard, a built-in dictionary, RSS in Safari, etcetera. Third-party developers fill in the gaps with apps such as iSale. But some things just can’t beat a tested, proven solution. I am unsure of what I believe Apple will do with Sherlock in the coming months, with Leopard and Intel on everyone’s mind. I am almost positive Sherlock is a Carbon application, which makes it considerably more difficult to port to an Universal binary than if it were a Cocoa app. However, if Apple does decide to abandon the aged gentleman, I am pretty sure they will do it quietly and put him to rest with the rest of the PowerPC golden boys. But onto the issue at hand, my love and review of Apple’s Sherlock 3. (3.6.1, if you’re that picky).

The best way I could think of doing this review is to give examples. I have chosen three tasks that I use Sherlock for constantly, and I have found its competitors (inside Apple and out). This will give you three good reasons to try out Sherlock, and three good reasons to mourn it’s loss if the day comes.

Movies: Finding good films, show times, and theatres
A great medal on Sherlock’s coat is it’s movie channel, which is designed very intelligently for its time. In this example, I have chosen the movie Clerks II, out of movies available in theatres within miles and miles of my city. I can then pick the theatre, and the time. I can read a review and watch the trailer, as well as find out how long it is and look at how super hot Rosario Dawson is on the poster. Kick ass, if you ask me. Of course you can do this on a ton of sites, and Google can even find times for you. But it’s just not the same. These sites just aren’t designed as elegantly as Sherlock is, and they sure don’t have the speed. Sherlock has most of this information cached I think, and updates when you select the Movies channel. To find times with Google, you must know the specific movie you want to see. Sherlock lets me browse and pick a great movie out of every one available to me. In a nutshell, the design and ease-of-use beats the rest.
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And this design isn’t going anywhere. Sherlock’s movie channel is probably years in age. Let’s look at Blockbuster’s as-of-yet unreleased, “new” Blockbuster Online design. Look familiar?
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eBaying away, the Apple way
Dude, Sherlock owns when it comes to searching and tracking auctions on eBay. I use this thing constantly. I have never really looked at the competition for this, because I have never had any problems. I can’t imagine anything that could top Sherlock’s method of doing eBay as it’s just so much easier than going to eBay.com to look for items. eBay is pretty slow for me, everything just seems so “clunky”. Sherlock condenses each auction down to it’s plain text title so it can display so many more auctions, and when clicked you get all the photos and auction details just as you would in eBay.com. Sherlock can’t sell things on eBay though, for that you go to iSale.
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Translating for homework
Dashboard had this feature from the beginning, but myself and plenty others found it to be so slow. I realize translating phrases is a complicated process, but it doesn’t take that long. Sherlock does exactly what the Dashboard clone does, but it does better, faster, and in my cases more accurately. Websites like Babel offer solutions for translation as well, but I have never found them as quickly accessible as good ole’ Sherlock.
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Admittingly, this review doesn’t take into consideration the fact that with Sherlock’s age, there comes a lack of support. Anyone can make a Sherlock channel, and plenty of people used to. However, with the days of widgetry and RSS, there doesn’t seem to be much of a demand. Slowly over time I forsee Sherlock’s usefulness to me to decline, as the web evolves into 2.0, but until then Sherlock is a necessity for me as a Mac and internet user. It has helped me throughout the years with buying, learning, and enjoying life, and I desperately wish to see a Sherlock 4 in Mac OS 10.5. But I am more than ready, and expecting, to see Sherlock fade away with Classic support and IBM processors. So while you still can, bust Sherlock out and try it out.

Six Incredibly Useful Safari Shortcuts

1. Command + Shift + D Adds a page to the bookmarks menu, without asking a million and one damn questions.
2. Command + Option + F Automatically selects the Google search bar, so one doesn’t have to use all his energy moving the mouse.
3. Command + Shift + [ and Command + Shift + ] Moves from tab to tab–this one isn’t that comfortable of a shortcut.
4. Command + Click a link Opens a link in a new tab
5. Shift + Space bar Takes you to the top of the screen
6. Option + Tab close button Closes all the tabs except the one you clicked (how ironic, don’t you think?)

Au Revoir Dot Mac!

In my last few blog entries one might find my ramblings about moving away from .Mac, and using Web 2.0-based alternatives, and all that nonsense. But until now, I have made no decisions to not renew my .Mac account. And as the phrase “But until now” would imply, I will not be a .Mac member starting December 26, 2006. I really don’t think its necessary to reiterate all the reasons I have mashed together throughout the last few days in several entries, so I will kindly redirect those who are interested there :) . But one thing that is worth reiterating is my utter dependence on .Mac. Everything related to my life on the internet and my Mac is on my iDisk. Emails, papers, presentations, backups, contacts, calendars…A lot of stuff, my friends. The biggest thing I am worried about is my email. The second my 365 days is up, my wonderful IMAP-based email becomes nonfunctional, and bounces everything back to the sender. There’s no way to get things forwarded or keep the same email unless I pay another $99.

Q: If my .Mac trial, full or sub-account expires, what happens to my data?
If your .Mac trial, full or sub-account expires, any web pages, files you have backed up to or stored in iDisk, messages left on the email server, contact information stored in Address Book, and websites saved in Bookmarks will be removed. Emails sent to your .Mac Mail address will bounce back to the sender. If you are the owner of any .Mac groups, group pages will no longer be accessible or visible to group members, and messages sent to the group email address will bounce back to the sender.

So for email, I will turn to my college to which I am applying in a few weeks. I think they should turn on my email accounts fairly early, hopefully before December. That way I can just move all my stuff there–they seem pretty dumb when it comes to space limits, too. So I should have a pretty good amount (even though I don’t use that much anyway). If it does take longer than I expect I will just move back to my old Gmail account, and wait it out. For calendars and contacts, I will use whatever email I am using at the time. Although HipCal looks pretty awesome. I don’t use .Mac for social networking on anything like that, so that isn’t any issue. And for Web space–you’re looking at it. Clearly the only thing I am going to have problems with is moving email addresses. Just think of all the different accounts, newsletters, contacts, and God knows what else I am going to have to update. But I guess we will cross that bridge when we come to it. All I can do now is tell .Mac not to automatically renew and say goodbye to Steve’s solution.

In other news, Thom Yorke’s new cd rocks.

New Digital Camera

So today, I went into my local Wal-Mart–which I realize is definitely not the best place to buy anything to do with electronics–with high hopes of getting a nice digital camera to be friends with my new Flickr account. I immediantly saw the Philips PT44434, and thought it would do the job. Dude, I have never been more wrong in my entire life. This camera BLOOOOWS! So, the thing is made out of straight action figure plastic, but I figured for $90, what should I expect? The picture quality didn’t look too great as me and my brother played with it gleefully in the car on the ride home. I figured it would look better on my computer, though. Okay, I was really wrong about this one. The camera apparently puts things in RAW format, and since no one in God’s green earth owns a turd as a camera, it wasn’t supported by iPhoto. So back to Wal-Mart I went…

As a bit of a sidenote, the damn boxing blows. It had this one little cardboard flap that just stuck out. I have no idea how it was supposed to fit in there. Plus, the whole package smelled of kerosene and illegal laboring.

So back at Wal-Mart, I brought my crappy-ass product to the customer service person–whom acted like she didn’t know whether she was talking out of her ass or her face. After about 5 minutes of explaining to her that what I held was “cam-er-a” that I use on a “com-put-er”, I got my $95 back in my hands. Back to the camera section I go. So there is a new associate, as Wal-Mart calls them, back there. She was younger, and I hoped would know what she was talking about. So I explained to her my situation, about how the camera sucked, and how it wasn’t Mac-compatible. So then she rambled on about how none of the cameras were Mac-compatible. Naturally, I recogized this statement as sheer ignorance. So I went off on my own once more, and looked at several cameras. Finally, I found a HP Photosmart E327. I have had great experiences with HP in the past (I have a HP printer and scanner, and at one time a HP computer), so I knew their Mac-friendliness. Plus, it was a much better camera. It ran me $120. (A $30 increase for those keeping count). I took a few pictures in the car and they looked awesome, but now it was time for the real test.

So I take it home. Take it out the box. And plug it in.
my-hp-camera-works-with-iphoto.png

Kudos to you Hewlett-Packard. A great camera, great support, great quality. All I asked for to begin with. So if you, dear reader, take anything from the story you were just told take this: Fuck Philips. Now we will have some serious Flickr fun!

The Flash OS X!

Cult of Mac recently ran an article reviewing two Flash-based simulations of OS X. I’m not a Flash guru so I was impressed and fascinated.

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To Keep .Mac? Pt. 2 (My New Flickr)

The Value of .Mac

Apparently, a hero of mine (one of the founders of Panic Software) doesn’t think .Mac is worth the cash with all kinds of much better, cheaper options out there. And I am slowly turning towards his opinion. Especially after yesterday, when I became a full-fledged Flickr Pro. Fuck yeah! 2GB of upload a month, with unlimited bandwidth and storage. Well worth the cash, I do believe. It’s really cool, because now I have an email set up to where I can just send one email with a photo from my RAZR phone and it automatically gets tagged and put on Flickr and automatically posted on this here blog. Neat! I have also been using Shadows.com a lot lately for keeping track of bookmarks. I am liking it a LOT better than del.icio.us. As for email, I am still undecided. I just don’t know how I am going to change every account I have’s email address; that seems like it will take a fucking year. Maybe there are solutions to that though.

In other news, I bought a PUR water filter yesterday at Wal-Mart. It kicks ass. Now I won’t die from disease and lead poisoning from my city’s crappy-ass water. By the way, I wrote and posted this entry with Flock, and I fucking love it.

Flock: Insanely Great

A few months ago, my local newspaper tech section feautred the web browser Flock. Obviously the author had very little experience with “Web 2.0″–Flickr, del.icio.us, blogging, etcetera. So he gave it a mediocre review, only reviewing it as a browser and not the new product that it really was. So I gave it a try, and it wasn’t for me.

Fast forward to today, after browsing through some pictures on Flickr, I saw Flock’s official pics. Some crazy stuff, if you haven’t seen it. It brought back the fond memories of Flock, and then reminded me of how far I had come in terms of new ways of using the web. So I gave it another download. In general, Flock is looking great. Very great. As God (aka Steven Paul Jobs) would put it: “insanely great”. It still has quirks, but they usually are related to the fact that it is based on Mozilla. (For some reason Mozilla has really long initial launch times on my machine, but who knows?) The new photos and news thing is great. And since now I have a great little blog, I can use Flock for that too. I am glad to see it supports multiple sites now (del.icio.us and Shadows.com for bookmarks, and Photobucket and Flickr for pictures, and a slew of blogging sites). I have tried everything but the blogging tool since I have become very comfortable in blogging from within WordPress’ Dashboard. The UI is getting better than before, and so is the overall stability–I remember having a few crashes back in the day. Flock is just getting better overall, and I love it.

Now this doesn’t mean that it will replace Safari as my main browser, Steve has let his opinion be known as to which browser is best and I listen. But I wouldn’t be suprised to see Flock being used a lot as I do my Flickr and del.icio.us. It’s a pretty cool browser, with some pretty cool guys working on it. If you haven’t seen their Flickr account yet, you can find it here. You can also get a free download of the browser here

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