Blog

  • Turned comments off

    Reasons:

    • I don’t control the comments server, so I’ll lose them eventually.
    • The comments server is occasionally slow, which slows the pages.
    • Those reading this site usually know how to email me directly… or you can use the little envelope feature to do so. I like feedback, but prefer well-integrated public feedback or private feedback.
    • I prefer when comments can be read as part of the individual post, on the page itself… more the default Movable Type style.

    I have not had any problem with comments spamming. You have to be a more widely read site, I think, for that kind of ‘excitement.’ Also, I could switch to a new comments server (Radio Userland allows that preference), but I’d rather find a comments package that meets the requirements above that I can run on my own server… but it’s not a priority for me right now. If someone has a package that is not Manila-based that you can run on your own server easily enough, let me know — just not via a public comment. 😉

  • Happy Birthday, Laura & Isabel

    Last night I told the boy that January 22 was your birthday, and that you were both turning 29. He asked “Is that old?” I said it depends. And he went back to drawing.

    Happy birthday to you both. Very happy we’re all connected, even cross-country. Blow out a candle or two (or more).

  • Another thread on Mail.app crashes

    Not sure I found an answer in this post and comments on Andy Budd’s blog, but I’m not alone. [via Google search, first result… didn’t dive any deeper, yet]

  • BottomFeeder: cross-platform, open-source newsreader

    I continue to watch the growth in the newsreader application space. BottomFeeder is a free cross-platform, open-source newsreader, written in SmallTalk. Hard to believe SmallTalk still has devotees, but as long as the application is well done, more power to them for choosing their tools. I’ll grab the MacOS X version and give it a whirl.

    Update: Ack! Run away, run away! Way too hard to use, too cluttered (maybe with great features, but no interest in deciphering the tiny icons), installation and first run was not clear (Read Me file had a .btf extension, so not clear whether it was plain text or not; application opened up Terminal, then opened a Finder window behind where I had to navigate to the BottomFeeder folder (named btfMac-3.3) and find bottomFeeder.im (huh?) to get it to install/run), and it is slow and not responsive to keyboard commands. Yes, it’s free, and maybe it has more features, but I’ll never launch it again. I hate to be so critical, but I was expecting more from a version 3.3 application. I don’t pay attention to whether something is open-source or closed, free or for pay (except that it’s tough to trial the for pay stuff), but I do pay attention to that ‘first run’ experience. To displace NetNewsWire, which I’m quite happy with, you have to do much better.

  • Visualization: making data mean something

    Fast Company runs a short piece on Scott Wattenberg, who tries to turn data into meaningful images. Prior to IBM, he created the Market Map at SmartMoney.com. I’ve been learning to use a new reporting tool at work, and it’s reminding me that data is nothing if it’s not (a) easy to understand and (b) responsive to trial-and-error. That last bit means that you need speedy answers to your questions. If you ask a question and it takes a long time to get an answer, then the next time you’ll hesitate to ask a new question, and potentially draw a new connection. If the system/application/interface is responsive, then experimentation is rewarded, and further usage of the tool is no longer a chore, but a process of discovery. That’s when data is fun. Really. Which brings me back to this essay… I love seeing experiments in this space.

  • Mail.app crashing regularly… any ideas?

    Mail.app v1.3.2 on MacOS X 10.3.2 has been crashing regularly for a few days now on the desktop. I wonder if the seemingly effective tip I tried a few days ago has come to bite me in the a–. The app crashes every single time I try and mark any email as Junk, which is bad enough. Now it’s crashing, erratically, whenever I check email. Obviously, a problem.

    I’ve submitted umpteen bug reports to Apple, but that no longer feels useful/effective. About time to scour the web, but I’ve been tracking Macintouch and TidBITS already, without seeing anything beyond my own selfish problem. Oh well. If the six people reading this have any ideas, let me know.

  • Pixar’s short films are online!

    Maybe you knew this before, but I didn’t. Pixar has its short films online. These are often a treat at any new Pixar full-length release, but I haven’t seen them all before, despite seeing all the Pixar features. All in QuickTime, of course… Steve Jobs doesn’t get nothing out of being CEO of two companies!

  • Now that’s honesty

    FWB Software admitted in a press release that previous announcements of an x86 emulator for MacOS X were vaporware. “I am sorry to have to admit that apparently the company has been a party to vaporware when it comes to the claims regarding RealPC.” [via Wired News seventh annual vaporware awards]

  • Book: The Innovator’s Dilemma

    This is one of those times where I feel waaaayyy behind. Clayton Christensen published the original edition of The Innovator’s Dilemma in 1997, right as the tech/internet boom was in full roar. Of course, his research pre-dated that rush, and his timing just turned out to be wonderful for capturing a lot of attention. There were hundreds of new companies eager to claim the mantle of innovator. Similarly, there were thousands of existing companies struggling with their approach to the internet. I’ll bet various folks held up the arguments in this book — properly or otherwise — as support for their suggested course of action. I wonder how many were appropriate in their use of these thoughts? History has buried much of the evidence, I’m sure.

    Late though I am, I’m glad I read this book. Christensen supports everything he writes, with examples from multiple industries. His deepest research pulls from the accelerated pace of the hard disk-drive manufacturers. I appreciated the technical hook. More important, though, was the careful balance between academic rigor and a reasonable writing style that doesn’t overwhelm the basic points. Even the chaper endnotes have a sentence or two of annotation, so you can judge whether or not you need to go further.

    Best proof point: many of these ideas are mostly common-sense by now, although I hadn’t heard them expressed with such clarity until I read the book. I’m sure others have beaten this book to death via analysis, so I’ll finish by sharing a quote on when a product becomes a commodity. You don’t want to be a commodity!

    A product becomes a commodity within a specific market segment when the repeated changes in the basis of competition, as described above, completely play themselves out, that is, when market needs on each attribute or dimension of performance have been fully satisfied by more than one available product. The performance oversupply framework may help consultants, managers, and researchers to understand the frustrated comments they reguarly hear from salespeople beaten down in price negotiations with customers: “Those stupid guys are just treating our product like it was a commodity. Can’t they see how much better our product is than the competition’s?” It may, in fact, be the case that the product offerings of competitors in a market continue to be differentiated from each other. But differentiation loses its meaning when the features and functionality have exceeded what the market demands. [p. 277, HarperBusiness trade paperback edition, 2003]

    I bought The Innovator’s Solution at the same time, and I’ll get to that one soon enough.

  • Movie: My Big Fat Greek…

    There are some movies I never want to watch. My Big Fat Greek Wedding, when it was in the theaters, is one of them. But it did get various good reviews and a reputation as a fun movie, if not a great movie. So we added it to the Netflix list, and last night, our number came up.

    Turns out my initial instinct was correct.

    You could see the jokes coming a mile away. While this movie-that-should-have-been-a-sitcom-episode occasionally raised a smile, it did not live up to even the reputation of ‘fun,’ at least for me. It was inoffensive, and, as I commented while watching it, at least it never slows down. The movie races through the cliched transformation of the Greek daughter (from frumpiness to (mildly) attractive) and how she marries a a non-Greek, with the resulting family angst. A few laughs, but zero surprises. Why was this movie talked about so much?

    Normally, I would link to the official movie website, but even though this movie is only a couple of years old, the official site at movies.yahoo.com/greekwedding/ is already gone. Just as well… I feel better about not ‘voting’ for this movie with a link. Geek note: I had to delete the http etc. from the beginning of that URL to avoid having Radio render it as a URL. That’s mildly annoying, although I’m sure it’s a feature for most people/uses.