I got a call from a Bell telemarketer offering me
double the speeds at around the same price. Sounded a
little too good to be true, but why not... Then as he
started going through the conditions and the cap word
appeared, alarm bells went crazy. He tried to comfort
me by saying that I could buy "insurance" to get an
extra 30GB for an additional ten bucks. Once I realized
that this deal was a wolf in sheep's clothing, I nixed
it right away.
It might be time to revisit the Canadian ISP directory again and
see what other options there are.
If you're a Mac user who wants to stream media to your
PS3, you don't really have too many options. I like
MediaLink because it's inexpensive, and for the most
part, works well.
It still doesn't support transcoding like TVersity for Windows does, but
since I bought my copy, they've released a nice
little stream of upgrades. I would really
like to see Nullriver set up a public discussion
forum for support, but I guess I'll have to wait
on that one.
Ars has a bit on Punakea, a new app
that lets you tag files in Leopard. It's a little
early in the dev cycle, but it is showing
potential.
I'm a big fan of tagging - I use Yep to tag my scanned documents and
PDFs. Speaking of Yep, the boys at Ironic Software
have their own tagging software for OSX called
Leap.
I haven't had a chance to try either, but being an
existing Yep customer, I will probably look at
investing in Leap as well.
Scott Stevenson wrote a nice little article on how to write copy for a product
page. While it is Mac oriented, the advice, in
my opinion, is universal.
It's basically YouTube for documents. You can render a
word document, PDF or PowerPoint on a web page with a
flash object instead of a more resource heavy viewer.
Jonathan
Coulton, who I never heard of until he was on TWiT
a couple of weeks ago, sings some pretty catchy songs.
My personal favorite is Code Monkey, which has been
transformed into several home-grown music videos on
YouTube.
Anyways, you can preview the music on Coulton's web site. Also
recommended: the song from the game Portal, and a
great cover of Baby Got Back.
There's a difference in terms of how the Mac and
Windows antialias text with subpixel rendering, etc.
Cleartype on Windows is a pretty cool technology, but
there's a vast differential in the approach taken by
both operating systems. This is clearly visible when
viewing this very web page across two different
operating systems.
Click on the image below to see a zoomed in comparison
of the differences I'm talking about.
You'll notice that on the top half of the image, that a
Mac rendering of a page resembles something more akin
to what you would see on a printed piece of paper. On
the bottom half, you'll notice that the page still
looks... "computery".
I won't get into the argument over which one is more
readable... People who use one platform get used to the
rendering on that platform, so it isn't even really a
matter of taste.
What is more interesting — and I don't have a screen
cap to show it — is that Safari on Windows renders its
pages just as they are on the Mac.
So what's the point of all this? It appears that this
site is best viewed on a Mac (any browser), and Safari
on Windows. It will look fine in IE and Firefox, but
the text won't render quite so nicely as in Safari for
Windows.
I haven't had the chance to test the page on the Wii or
PS3 yet, but for the time being, that can wait.
I was trolling the Internet Wayback Machine to see
what remnants of my older blogs were indexed
(unfortunately, only stuff from 2001 forward), and
I saw a blast from the past in my links. Sam
Brown's Exploding Dog used to be one of my
favorite sites when I started blogging around 8
years ago. The stick men and robot drawings made
to match submitted captions were really quite
endearing.
Thankfully, the site is still kicking around, and
they've got a nice little rss feed going too. It's worth a
look, you might even end up with a grin on your
face.
Mastercard now has a version that you can use at Tim
Hortons and Loblaws. These new credit cards have also
brought on more lax rules. If your purchase is below a
certain amount, they don't even require a signature any
more. I'm not too sure I'm comfortable with that.
With only an $8 device bought off eBay and a laptop
computer (nice to know that the Macbook Air's
stealthiness can come in handy for something), the
"futurist" was able to get all relevant info by passing
the reader near an unsuspecting mark's butt.
They did show one defence - a steel-lined wallet. Not
sure if that's a solution for everyone, but it's a good
start.
More Rock Band stuff... Jayfng has posted a positive
review of the Rock Band mega pedal.
The pedal, which is sold by area51moto, should help alleviate
any fears of snapping the plastic pedal that comes
with Rock Band.
It looks pretty snappy, and can be assembled in about
30 minutes. I gotta get me one!
If you're a Rock Band freak, and would like a solution
to tone down the sounds of beating on the drums, then
you should consider Drumshhh pads.
I got a set (the Bullseye pattern shown above) at the
beginning of the year, and they basically worked as
advertised. They definitely cut down the noise
generated by the drum kit. My wife wasn't big on the
dampened sound (she liked the bashing noise), but I'm
plenty thankful that my eardrums get to hear the actual
music from the game over the drums now.
There's not much to say about them - they are peel and
stick, and are made of industrial quality felt. And
they work.
I've been listening to a lot of Internet Radio lately.
More specifically, I've been listening to C9 radio, a pop station from
France.
You can listen over the web, or in iTunes (it's in the
default list under Pop). It's commercial free,
interspersed with some chatter in French, but most of
the music is in English, with the bulk of the playlist
being American music.
While I was editing my new web site template, I used a
tool for the Mac from Cultured Code called Xyle Scope.
It's a pretty nifty little (and fairly inexpensive)
tool for looking at CSS code rendered in web pages.
You'll easily find that you can find out how objects on
your page map to your CSS styles. This little app can
be a major time saver if you're doing a lot of web
development. I've been using it under the 10 day eval
period, and I think it's good enough to buy.
So I finally got around to editing the RapidWeaver template for my site.
No more "Alpha" for me.
Goodbye Alpha Theme:
Hello Custom Theme:
One of the most annoying aspects of creating your own
template in RapidWeaver is that everything is in
packages. The templates are buried deep in the
RapidWeaver application package, and then each of the
actual templates are packages themselves. Fortunately
you can use Coda to remember the location of
the project files, which makes editing much
simpler.
A big gotcha is that you need to back up your template
file from the RapidWeaver bundle, otherwise you'll
easily forget about it and lose it when disaster
strikes.
It would be nicer if you could have a little more
granular control over how content is embedded in the
divs, but when you're using an inexpensive tool like
RapidWeaver, you get what you pay for. As it stands,
RapidWeaver is a pretty good deal, and it does give you
a little more flexibility than iWeb. I'm looking
forward to big things in version 4.0.
Update: I just realized that the old,
out of the box "Alpha" theme in RapidWeaver didn't
render nicely in IE. Naughty, naughty, Realmac! Can't blame them, I
guess... I mean, seriously, who can even stand
using IE these days?
Don't you just hate that clear, hard packaging that
encloses just about everything these days? I sure do...
and I have the scars to prove it.
The Gadgeteer has a review of
Zibra's Open It! cutters. Once you
get past the irony that the cutters come in the
very package you're supposed to hate, you'll love
how easy it will become to unbox your favorite
gadgets.
Apparently Guitar Hero is infringing on a Gibson
patent. Interestingly enough, they still
licensed the guitars for use with Guitar Hero when
it got released. Sounds like a cash grab.
Of course, if it were not for Activision's previous bad behaviour
with guitar compatibility with the PS3 version of
Rock Band, I'd actually feel bad for them.
Well, I don't need to tell you what karma can be, do I?
ThinkGeek is selling a device called the Phantom Keystroker, which basically
sends random keystrokes and mouse movements to a
computer.
Plug this device into a non-technical colleague's
computer and watch him (or her) freak! The best marks
for such a prank are probably the ones with the
shortest tempers. Just don't do it to someone with the
power to fire you.
Now that I've had the chance to spend about a week or
so on CodeIgniter, I really have to say
that it's a marvelous MVC framework for PHP.
There are a few things that I'm finding that really
make it stand out:
Lightweight and flexible - you have a lot of
control over what code is loaded, and what is not.
Extending the code library is incredibly easy.
Solid base libraries - most of the libraries you
would need to start a web app are already available
as libraries, helpers and plugins. No reinventing the
wheel here.
Stellar documentation - the documentation is
outstanding as far as open source projects go.
Install and Go - starting is a matter of dropping
a folder into your web server, and you can start
writing code within minutes. You don't have to sit
with the documentation for hours before starting.
I know that CakePHP is probably way more
popular right now, but CodeIgniter is nothing to
sneeze at. Choosing a framework can be a very
personal thing, because everyone has a different
way of programming. The thing that I like about
CodeIgniter is that it's designed the way I would
probably design a framework... if I was crazy
enough to do such a thing.
Are you a road warrior? Belkin has a nifty little
surge protector with USB ports as well. Now you can
be in an airport or coffee shop and charge your laptop
and portable devices as well.