Archive for the 'technology' Category

sidebar photos fixed

Wednesday, November 22nd, 2006

If you don’t just read this site in an aggregator, you may have noticed that a couple of months ago I replaced the “most recent five photos from Flickr” sidebar with one of their Flash widgets. I did this not because I liked the widget better (I didn’t), but because the 5-photo badge had somehow stopped working.

Happily, the badge seems to be working again, so I’ve put it back in the sidebar (click on “Recent Photos” to reveal it).

source: sidebar photos fixed

lost data, courtesy of total choice hosting

Wednesday, October 25th, 2006

For some time now, this site has been hosted by Total Choice Hosting. As soon as I get home from this trip, that’s going to change.

Careful readers will note that a full week’s worth of entries and comments have disappeared from the site. Apparently the server on which mamamusings is hosted had a hard crash—which can happen anywhere, I know.

However, the most recent backup from which they were able to restore was a full week old.

That’s mind-bogglingly irresponsible. Thank god I don’t host any business-critical data on that site, or transaction data. I’ve lost a week of intensive content-creation, however, which is infuriating.

The saving grace? Bloglines still had the posts, and I’ve grabbed them in HTML format and will recreate them tomorrow.

Apologies for the lost comments, or any broken links that may result.

And if you’re using Total Choice, let this be a warning to you to be backing up your own data on a daily basis, since clearly they’re unable to do so. :(

source: lost data, courtesy of total choice hosting

mira remote control software for macs

Wednesday, October 18th, 2006

My new Mac came with a nifty little remote control that works with the Mac’s “FrontRow” software to play DVDs, music, slideshows, etc on the computer. That’s nice for home stuff, but I found myself wishing I could also use the remote for business applications—specifically, for PowerPoint presentations that I use in class and at conferences. I was jealous of people like Larry Lessig and Dick Hardt who didn’t have to hunch over their keyboard while they clicked through lots and lots of one-word slides.

Then last week I saw an article about Mira, a Mac software tool that allows you to use the “Front Row” remote bundled with new Macs for a variety of other applications. For $16, it seemed worth trying, so I bought a copy.

And it works! It adds a little control panel to the system preferences pane, and allows me to configure what each remote control button does for any given application. It comes preinstalled with a huge number of defaults, including some for PowerPoint, so I didn’t actually need to configure a thing…just point and click and it works.

Well worth the price, and it will make it easier for me to do the kind of presentations I’d like to in class and at conferences.

source: mira remote control software for macs

i got my moo minicards!

Tuesday, October 17th, 2006

My Moo “minicards” finally arrived yesterday (I was notified on 9/23 that they’d shipped, but the postmark was 10/13, so something must have gone temporarily awry).

They. Are. Beautiful.

Wow.

I’ll take a picture of them tonight and add it to the entry. I selected ten of my favorite sunset photos for the sample set, figuring that it would give me a good sense of how good the color quality was on the cards. And I was blown away by it. They are really beautiful. The color is perfect—better than any online prints of my photos that I’ve ever ordered. I will definitely be buying more cards. Goodbye standard business cards, hellooooo moo minicards.

(Just realized I could take some screen shots of my WoW avatar in various locations around Azeroth and use them to create special gam3r cards. w00t!)

source: i got my moo minicards!

how do i love flickr? let me count the ways

Sunday, October 1st, 2006

I just renewed my Flickr Pro membership, which got me to thinking about how much I love Flickr.

I first used Flickr when it bore no resemblance to the service it is today—back in those early days, it was focused on real-time photo sharing and chatting in an interactive Flash-based environment. The first photo I uploaded, in December of 2003, is photo number 216 in the system—which makes it, so far as I know, the first photo uploaded by someone who didn’t work for Flickr.

Three years later, I’ve uploaded 2,160 photos, which have garnered (as of a few moments ago) 99,914 views.

Wow.

So, that list…

Flickr revitalized my interest in photography. I take more pictures because I want to share them with others.

I bought my first cameraphone because of Flickr, and now it’s an essential part of my life. I use it—along with Flickr and the marvelous Shozu software—to document day-to-day details of my life. The small events that are under the bloggable radar, but important enough to remember and share.

My Flickr photos led me to long-lost family members in Brazil.

This week I’ll be receiving the ten free cards from Moo that my Flickr Pro account entitled me to. The samples I ordered will include ten different sunset photos I’ve taken. If they’re as good as everyone who’s written about them says, I’m pretty sure I’ll be buying lots more—for myself and as gifts.

Because of Flickr, every day I get visual updates from people I care about. I know that Eric and Nicole dressed as pirates for “Talk Like a Pirate” Day. I know that Stewart is (was?) in Taipei, that Tantek is in Tokyo, and that Jill has a new camera (ooooo….I’m so jealous! a canon digital slr is at the very top of my wish list these days). I know that Weez has the boys this weekend, that Julie took her kids to visit a salmon hatchery, and that Gina went to a wedding. And I know all that not because of lengthy emails or telephone conversations, but from the constant stream of photos from friends that I see in Bloglines.

I know there are more reasons I love Flickr, but it’s lunchtime and I promised to take Alex to Panera.

source: how do i love flickr? let me count the ways

i love my new cingular 3125

Tuesday, September 19th, 2006

There’s nothing like a new toy to cheer me up after a long day. And I’m happy to report that my brand-new Cingular 3125 has not disappointed in any way. It’s beautiful, particularly the lovely analog clock that the external LCD displays when a button is pressed. The keys and the click wheel are a big improvement over my old Audiovox SMT 5600. Reception is surprisingly good, even in our house (typically a cell phone “dead zone”). And it connected flawlessly to RIT’s Exchange server today, which means my phone can once again be my primary tool for checking calendars, emails, and to-do lists. Yay!

Now I just need to acquire a Micro SD card so I can put some of my favorite tunes on the phone (and use them to replace the crappy ringtone selection).

source: i love my new cingular 3125

my mobile number is changing…again

Monday, September 18th, 2006

While we were in Seattle, I got a new cellphone (a smartphone) with a Seattle-based phone number. I don’t remember why, but at the time it made sense to have it on an account separate from our Cingular family plan. Now that we’re back in Rochester, we’ve decided it makes more sense financially to consolidate our cell phone plans, so I’m ditching the Seattle number and will have a brand-new 585 mobile phone number.

Unfortunately, that means friends and family will need to update their address books with my information (again). Sorry, everyone.

I’ll send out email to people who I’m pretty sure call my mobile on a regular basis. But if you don’t get email from me today with that number, drop me a line and I’ll send it along.

show_cingular_3125.jpgGiven that we just upgraded all our phones to new equipment , we’ll be on these phone numbers for at least two years.

Wait, what’s that? You want to know what my new phone looks like? That’s it, over there to the left. I’m getting a new Cingular 3125, aka the HTC “StarTrk”, because my older Audiovox SMT5600 seems to have bit the dust entirely, refusing to boot properly. My friend Lili has been using one for a while now (she had one from overseas, where it’s been available longer), and loves it. I much prefer flip phones to the “candybar” style of the Audiovox. My only concern about the 3125 is whether it will get a decent signal in our house, which is notoriously bad for cell reception. I’ll report back after it arrives tomorrow.

source: my mobile number is changing…again

i give up

Thursday, August 31st, 2006

Today I tried changing the name of the comment script on my site, thinking that might at least slow the barrage of sp*m that took the whole server down this month.

Ha.

Within seconds of changing the script variable in the config file, I had my first new spam message.

I give up.

To comment on the site now, you will have to use a (free) TypeKey ID. Sorry. I hate to do that—nobody needs yet another hoop to jump through or password to remember. But I simply can’t spend any more time trying to safeguard the site. :(

source: i give up

kudos to the rochester apple store

Wednesday, August 30th, 2006

This summer, we promised to buy Lane a new computer. He’s been doing a lot of cool stuff with borrowed time on the family computer, and a barely-hanging-on, nearly six-year-old Powerbook, so we wanted him to have a decent machine he could call his own.

Last night we headed out to the Apple Store at Eastview Mall, and headed home with a shiny new MacBook (and iPod Nano, and printer, both of which were free after rebate). We turned it on, and started in on the process of transferring files from the old computer to the new. We watched impatiently as the time remaining dropped from 45 minutes to 30 minutes to 7 minutes…and then stopped. Full stop. No animation on the progress bar, no sign of life whatsoever. We waited. And waited. Finally I tried rebooting…only to be greeted with a flat, grey screen. I tried again. Same thing. I tried putting in the system software DVD and rebooting from that drive, which seemed to work (after a lengthy delay). But two steps into the welcome sequence it froze, and generated a kernel panic screen. I followed the instructions on the Apple web site for what to do if your MacBook won’t start. No luck.

Needless to say, I was not a happy camper. I was quite sure that I’d have to (a) wait forever for a genius bar appointment the next day, and (b) end up having to send the machine back to Apple and wait an indeterminate amount of time for them to return it.

This morning we got to the store right after it opened, and I walked up to the cash register with the machine. I explained briefly what had happened, and the young man at the register quickly called over the manager. The manager listened to my (highly detailed) tale of woe and said “Sounds like you did everything you were supposed to. Let’s get you a new machine.” <blink> So not what I expected to hear.

“But what about the receipt,” I asked. After all, I’d been told quite clearly the night before that all the serial numbers had to match up on the receipt for the Nano and printer rebates to be honored. “Not a problem,” he replied. “We’ll generate brand-new receipts with the new computer’s number on them.”

Ten minutes later, we walked out of the store with a(nother) brand-new MacBook, which started up perfectly and has been making Lane happy all day.

It’s quite amazing how much good customer service can do to turn a bad out-of-box experience into a great one. You can bet I’ll be buying all my equpment there from now on. (They even gave me my faculty discount based on my RIT ID!)

source: kudos to the rochester apple store

spam kills (sites)

Sunday, August 20th, 2006

Saturday morning, I received an email from my hosting company telling me that they had shut down mamamusings.net due to “excessive load” issues, and that I needed to contact the abuse department to get things running again.

The culprit? Comment and trackback spam.

I have it all set to be moderated here, which means you seldom see it, but it’s been increasing at a depressing rate, and it takes a lot of time to clean out the trash sitting in the “unapproved” list every day.

For the time being, they’ve disabled the mt-trackback and mt-comment scripts, so that at least the content of the site is accessible. And I’ll start working on a solution. The easiest option would be to simply restrict commenting to users with TypeKey accounts. I hate to do that, but it may be my best option.

What I may try for the short term is a two-fold approach—renaming the script (so that it’s a little more work for the spambots to find it), and adding a CAPTCHA. Until I get that done, however, you won’t be able to comment here. :(

source: spam kills (sites)

what happens when ze frank inspires mark pilgrim to videoblog?

Tuesday, June 27th, 2006

Why, I actually watch a videoblog for the first time, that’s what. I even downloaded a new video player (VLC) in order to watch it.

Here’s Mark’s introduction to the video: “Welcome to the first annual “dive into mark” show! It’s just like reading my blog, except it takes forever to download, requires an unwieldy array of third-party software, and it’s not accessible to blind people, deaf people, or search engines.”

Also, his response in the comments to his post: “Zefrank was obviously my inspiration to try out video blogging. Of course, Dave Winer was my inspiration to try out text blogging, and we all know how well that turned out. Here’s hoping.”

It was worth watching this one, because I’ve never actually_met_ Mark—we seem not to frequent the same conferences—and I’m a total fangirl of his writing. So I couldn’t pass up the opportunity to get a sense of what he looks and sounds like.

Will I keep watching if he keeps uploading videos? Probably not. For all the reasons he alludes to above. The text of his video is in his blog entry, and it doesn’t require speakers or headphones or adjusting video settings. Plus it’s a lot harder to quote video.

source: what happens when ze frank inspires mark pilgrim to videoblog?

david farkas on “how powerpoint adversely mediates thought”

Wednesday, June 21st, 2006

I’m at an MSR talk by David Farkas from UW entitled “Need: How PowerPoint Adversely Mediates Thought and Possible Remedies.” Since anyone who’s been reading my blog for a while knows how much I dislike most uses of PowerPoint, I’m particularly keen to hear why Farkas thinks Tufte is wrong, and also what he suggests as remediation.

He cites a Microsoft estimate of 30 million powerpoint presentations being given per day. Ouch. I wonder if that’s a verifiable statistic.

(In an aside, Farkas notes that PPT is more constraining than Word, since Word provides more of a blank canvas. Farkas says that Tufte believes Word has no cognitive style, while Farkas says that’s obviously not true—our tools inevitably shape our message. I’d have to agree with that.)

Discusses a critique by Ian Parker called Absolute Powerpoint, as well as Tufte’s The Cognitive Style of Powerpoint.

Where Tufte claims that PPT encourages deep hierarchies (many levels of nested bullets), Farkas argues that the reverse is actually true—there’s an upward vector on content, resulting in a flattening of hierarchies.

Farkas asks us to take a step back and look at the larger picture of presentation contexts—audiences, presentation genres (product rollout vs technical briefing vs slide show). Tufte focuses on technical genres of presentations, whereas many PPT presentations are focused on “light” genres.

He says you can’t assess a PPT deck outside of the context of the presenter’s performance/style. The amount of time spent on each slide, whether or not there’s a handout provided, and other factors can influence the effectiveness of the deck. The audience has to be considered, as well…their information needs, their cognitive styles, all impact the effectiveness of the presentation.

He describes PPT as inherently “topo-centric”—the presentation of each slide is static and fixed, rather than scrolling. This is good because it provides persistent context during the presenter’s discussio of the slide, but bad because it flattens hierarchies.

Print (and HTML), Farkas argues, have a “downward vector and a nesting problem.” Print hierarchies naturally run deeper. (Missed the rest of this because I was briefly distracted…)

“The PowerPoint distortion hypothesis” - It is highly plausible that PPT causes deck authors to distort the visual representation of their logical hierarchies. What, then, are the implications for audiences and presenters?

He uses an example deck to show some of the distortions that can occur, but I’m unable to see anything but the ugliness of this deck. White and yellow Times text, in seemingly random sizes, on a bright purple background. Why does discussion of content always seem to ignore the impact of aesthetics?

Oneof my MSR colleagues questions the underlying assumption that all content is hierarchical. Farkas argues that this is necessarily true, that it’s a function of how we think. I’m not convinced—many of the best powerpoint-supported presentations I’ve seen used no bullet points, and no explicit hierarchies.

When I raise my concerns, he responds by saying he wants to limit his discussion to the genre of presentations that need to present hierarchical content—main ideas, sub ideas, supporting material, etc. I’m still not convinced. One of my frustrations with PowerPoint is that it does in fact push that idea on us—that presentations are and should be made up of hierarchical point/subpoint content. In fact, the people doing the best work with PPT tend to go “beyond bullet points,” and use it as a narrative medium. But that doesn’t prevent them from presenting very detailed and even technical information—it’s just that they’re presenting it in a way that doesn’t fit into this hierachical structure. (For example…Dick Hardt’s identity presentation, or Lawrence Lessig’s inimitable talks.)

Another commenter argues that the slide should be the secondary channel, and the presenter should be the primary channel. I wish more people here thought this way…that’s a big part of what I was critiquing when I wrote about the “culture of the deck” here.

He makes a number of suggestions about how to make it possible to show complex hierarchies more easily in Powerpoint…something that, quite honestly, makes me cringe. I do like his suggestion, however, that you provide breadcrumb-like information at the top of each slide to show where it fits in a hierarchy (if you choose to make your hierarchy explicit).

Suggests some good directions for future research. How do audiences process information in presentations? Can we better udnerstand deck authoring processes? And the last, which I find last compelling, “develop a meaningful taxonomy /vocabulary of deck content and glossing behavior.” I’m not sure we need special language to describe ideas/content in decks as opposed to other text or graphical materials.

An audience member I don’t know points out the extent to which the slides were forcing him as a presenter to stick to a script, and not engage the audience. He notes that Farkas engaged the audience in his presentation exactly 3 times, and never more than for ten seconds at a time.) Is this an effect of the hierarchical structuring of the content?

Another questioner asks about ways that we can support more creative presentation styles and more creative presenters. The research question here is “are there ways to identify, incorporate and disseminate best practices in presentation methods?”

There’s some discussion about the prevalence (seen as both inevitable and necessary) of PPT decks as standalone documents as opposed to presentation aids. Also some discussion about the ways that the “Notes” section can be used in that context.

(It’s amazing to be in a room full of not just smart researchers, but also the people who actually build these tools…several PowerPoint team members are here, responding directly on the intended use of specific features. I will so miss this about MSR talks.)

Farkas slams Atkinson’s “Beyond Bullet Points,” describing it as destructive rather than helpful. It’s a terrible direction, he says, to throw out bullet points entirely. It’s throwing out the baby with the bathwater.

There’s some discussion then about Atkinson’s argument, which Farkas says is based on Richard Mayer’s work, but is a distortion of it. (Just looked at Mayer’s web site, and his work looks fascinating. Note to self: bookmark that for summer reading.) Is it a problem if you’ve got material on the screen that’s unrelated to what you’re talking about?

All in all, I’m left with more questions than answers (which isn’t necessarily a bad thing), and a sense that there needs to be a great deal more research into the underlying assumptions on presentation methods and materials.

Bonus links to PPTs I’ve seen and loved:

source: david farkas on “how powerpoint adversely mediates thought”

time is money, friend

Sunday, April 2nd, 2006

Here’s what the iTunes music store gets right: they make it faster and easier to get what you want, and they do it at a price point that doesn’t make you feel like you’re being gouged.

That was clear to me last night, when I realized that I wanted to watch the first few episodes of Battlestar Galactica while flying from Seattle to Philly (en route to Durham, for an NSF PI meeting). I had the episodes on NetFlix, but didn’t want to (a) bring the DVDs with me because it’s too easy for them to get broken or lost, or (b) use up precious working battery power on my laptop when I could watch the episodes on my video iPod. So I started to rip the episodes onto my hard drive (and yes, fair use zealots, I had every intention of deleting them after I’d watched them, since they were rentals). An hour later, with only one episode onto my hard drive, with mediocre video quality, I realized this was not time well spent. A quick look at iTMS showed me that I could buy all of season 2 (20 episodes) for about $25—and that I could start the downloading before I went to bed and have all the episodes not just on my computer but automatically transferred to my iPod before I had to leave. It was worth every penny to not have to laboriously go through disc after disc identifying, ripping, and transferring individual episodes.

I watch very little TV these days (with WoW to play, who has time?), and what little I do watch is typically on the video iPod while at the gym. Other than Lost, however, I haven’t had many shows I’ve even wanted to watch there. BSG has changed that. For those of you who haven’t watched the series, it’s spectacular. And it’s nice to find a show that I really like that hasn’t already been cancelled (like Firefly, for instance). The writing, editing, and acting are all superb. Highly recommended.

(Fellow WoW addicts will probably recognize the game reference in the title of this post…it really needs to be said with the right goblin accent for full effect, though.)

Currently playing in iTunes: Tocceilidh from the album “Re: Bach” by Lara St. John

source: time is money, friend

conference registration software?

Wednesday, February 15th, 2006

Does anyone know of a good, free, lightweight, event registration software system that I could install on a unix-based web server?

I’m running an event that will have ~90 people at it, and I want an easy way for them to be able to register for the event, and submit basic bios (and photos, ideally, but I can live without that). No money collection, no complex program management. And it would be nice to be able to have basic functionality built in to generate a list of participants, and even nametags.

Yes, I know this is buildable, probably with relatively little effort. But I have zero free time and zero dev resources to devote to this, so would much rather avoid reinventing the wheel if the wheel already exists.

source: conference registration software?

powerbook wifi woes

Saturday, December 24th, 2005

My son’s aging Powerbook G4 (an original TiBook) has been having problems with wifi connectivity over the past several months. He gets only an intermittent signal from our Airport Express. I’ve isolated the problem to his machine—other laptops in the same place at the same time have no connectivity problems.

I’ve opened the machine and reseated the Airport card, and checked the antenna cable—I don’t see any obvious cable problems, or oxidation, but there may well be problems with the cables going from the card up into the antennas in the screen.

I really don’t want to put a lot of money into this machine, so I’m trying to figure out how to easily put a wired connection in his room. What’s the easiest, cheapest way to do that? It seems like there must be something that will pick up the wifi signal from our network and send it over an ethernet cable to his computer—but I don’t know what they’d be called, and thus can’t search for them effectively.

(Oh…and merry christmas to all of you, especially those who, like me, serve as family sysadmin over the holidays!)

source: powerbook wifi woes

switching to dynamic publishing

Wednesday, November 23rd, 2005

Ever since I upgraded to Movable Type 3.2, rebuilding has been much slower on my current host. That’s caused two problems, one just annoying and the other more serious. The annoying part is that marking comments as junk (an all-too-frequent need) forces a rebuild, which is painfully slow and often times out on the intranet at work. The serious part is that most incoming trackbacks are failing, probably due to timeout issues.

So tonight I’m going to try switching from static to dynamic publishing—for the non-geek readers out there, it means that most pages on the site won’t be saved as individual static documents, but instead will be generated on-the-fly when you request them.

If the site breaks in the process, don’t panic—it’s all backed up. Worst case I’ll revert back to original settings and live with the problems. Best case it’ll be working perfectly in a few minutes, and trackbacks will start working as they should again.

Update: It worked. Only two real problems, which were relatively easy to fix. The first problem was that I use mt-textile and smartypants for text formatting on the blog (the former lets me use things like underscores to create italicized text, or asterixes to generated bulleted ists; the latter handles typographic niceties like em dashes, curly quotes, and true ellipses). Those text processors don’t work properly with dynamic publishing, but I found this post on Movalog with information on how to fix that. The second problem involved the fact that I had some custom PHP code in my templates that used movable type tag variables—apparently since the dynamic templates are PHP based, this causes some problems. There are apparently ways to call the variables, but I didn’t feel like mucking with them, so I just changed the few instances to non-variable code (using http://mamamusings.net/ rather than the BlogURL variable, etc). Not the most elegant fix, but it was expedient, and now it all works. And since I’m planning on a site redesign over the holidays, it wasn’t worth spending too long on the template code.

The good news is that the trackback problem does appear to be fixed—a number of new trackbacks have appeared over the past few days, after a long dry spell that I suspect was technological (especially since I saw several inbound links on other sites that hadn’t registered here). Mission accomplished!

source: switching to dynamic publishing

google and anonymity

Monday, November 21st, 2005

I’m a big fan of Google’s search engine, and use it regularly. I also use GMail, and Google Groups, and Google Maps, among other services. But recently I’ve been thinking about just how much information Google has about me based on my use of those services.

Most of us assume that when we do a search on Google that it’s essentially anonymous. But in fact, most people have a small file sitting on their hard drive (a “cookie”) that Google uses to uniquely identify them—not just when they’re logged in to a Google services like GMail, but all the time. And personally, that creeps me out. The fact that every aspect of my information seeking behavior is being recorded, and that use of that data isn’t really restricted by any laws or policies (other than the amorphous “do no evil” mantra) feels…well…icky.

So today I did some poking around, and found a very nice little bookmarklet (basically an “active” bookmark that takes an action rather than simply loading a page) called GoogleAnon that I’ve added to all of my browsers (with three computers that I use regularly, and at least two browsers running on each, that’s a lot of browsers…). The web site explains it in detail, but in a nutshell what it does is replace the unique identifier in your Google cookie with a zeroed-out version. You can still use all the services you’d normally use, but it will no longer associate those with the identifier on your computer.

Installing the bookmarklet is quite simple—just follow the instructions on the GoogleAnon page.

Even if you don’t install the bookmarklet, or clear out your Google cookie, it’s worth reading through the whole site, and thinking about the issues of search and privacy. There’s always a balance to be struck between the convenience and the risk of personalization, and I think we should all be making informed choices about that balance.

source: google and anonymity

hooked on blummy

Friday, November 4th, 2005

Like many of the enthusiastic early technology adopters (a nice way of saying “obsessive geeks”) I know, my browser’s bookmark toolbar (the bookmarks that are ever-present along the top of my Firefox window) is overflowing with special-purpose “bookmarklets”—special-purpose bookmarks that actually run a javascript to accomplish a task. One of them, for example, lets me add a page to my del.icio.us bookmarks. Another converts an Amazon item page URL to a version that includes my Amazon Associates ID so that I can get a small % of the profits when someone buys an item because I linked to it. Two others do a searches for the page I’m looking at in del.icio.us or Technorati, so I can see who’s linking to or writing about the site.

The problem is that they’re overflowing the bookmark bar now, so I have to give them short, cryptic names to fit them all in. And that makes them hard to find.

The solution? A nifty little too called “Blummy,” which lets me consolidate them all into one. The web-based interface on the Blummy site lets you configure the size and contents of your bookmarklet collection. When you’re done configuring the tool, you simply put the Blummly bookmarklet link in your toolbar in place of the many links it contains. Clicking on the Blummly link displays a nice little CSS div on your screen that contains all of the blummlets you’ve specificied.

They’ve got a quite a few “standard issue” bookmarklets on there for people who are looking to add some functionality. But more importantly, for me, they offer the ability for you to build your own “blummlet,” thereby allowing me to replicate all the bookmarklets that were cluttering up my toolbar.

So, what’s in my Blummly box? Right now, I’ve got 7 blummlets:

  1. post to del.icio.us (explained above)
  2. del.icio.us lookup (list of del.icio.us users who’ve linked to the page I’m currently viewing)
  3. Technorati Cosmos (list of weblogs linking to the page I’m currently viewing)
  4. CiteUlike (post to the academic equivalent of del.icio.us)
  5. Wikipedia Lookup (look up the selected/highlighted text on the page in Wikipedia)
  6. Amazon Associates link-maker (explained above)
  7. King County Library System lookup (Jon Udell’s “library lookup” tool—looks up a book in the library catalog of your choice)

Most people won’t ever have a need for this…but for those of us who tend to collect these special-purpose bookmarks, Blummly is a great tool.

source: hooked on blummy

audiovox dumbphone

Sunday, August 28th, 2005

A couple of weeks ago I received a hand-me-down Audiovox SMT 5600 “smartphone” from Marc Smith (my manager at Microsoft), so that I could start to test out the various mobile apps that the research and product groups are developing. (I’m paying for my own service, though, in case you’re wondering.) It took quite some time to get service set up on the phone, due to the overall stupidity of Cingular and its handling of the AT&T merger. The short version is I can’t use a Cingular SIM in the card, because Cingular won’t unlock it for me to use with their service; instead, I have to use an AT&T SIM, with an AT&T billing plan, even though Cingular took over AT&T. Silliness.

Marc gave me the phone and a USB cable for it—and when I also asked for an AC charger, he told me the USB cable could be used to charge the phone. Good enough, I thought. One less cable to use. Until this Friday, when I plugged my low-on-power phone into my laptop and went to bed. My laptop sensibly turned itself off not long after that, since I’d forgotten to override the power settings. And the phone ran completely out of power and went dead.

In the morning, I turned the computer on, figuring I could recharge the phone before we headed out for the day…but the amber charging light didn’t come on. I tried it on another USB port, and then on another computer. Still no luck. I spent some time poking around online, and discovered that the SMT5600 will only charge over USB if the ActiveSync software has established a connection. And if the phone is dead, obviously the connection can’t be established. That’s not a smart phone—it’s a really, really dumb phone.

We tried five different stores yesterday looking for an AC (or auto) charger—Cingular sells the phone, but the store didn’t have a charger. Neither did Best Buy. Or Fry’s. Or Car Toys. Or Radio Shack. Feh. Then I had a brainstorm—we now live 1.1 miles from Robert Scoble, who I know has the same phone. So I called Robert, only to find that his AC charger was at the office rather than at home. He pointed out that I could use my magical blue employee badge to get into his building and retrieve it from his office (non-managerial offices at Microsoft seem not to have locks for the most part). Then this morning I remembered that one of my colleagues has a whole pile of iMates (rebranded SMT5600s, basically), and that the chances were good there was a spare charger there. So this morning I headed over to campus with the kids, and found a whole pile of chargers in my colleague’s office. I borrowed one, which I’ll return tomorrow morning—I felt a little awkward “stealing” it like that, but it clearly wasn’t being used today, and it was out in plain sight. :/

The phone’s charging now, and I’ll be careful not to let it get to the danger level again until I have my own AC charger.

why i want msn to succeed

Monday, August 8th, 2005

No, it’s not because the evil empire is paying me enough to shift my priorities. It’s the same reason that I agreed to be a part of MSN’s Search Champs program when they invited me last year—having Google as the gatekeeper to all online information is something that scares the crap out of me.

I don’t think Google is evil. But I know that they’re capable of making mistakes. And when they’re thought of by much of the world as the authoritative online source, their mistakes take on more magnitude than they might in a more balanced and competitive context.

I’ve had a great reminder of this over the past week, as I’ve struggled to find out from Google why the pagerank for my blog URL (mamamusings.net) has suddenly dropped to zero. For over a year it’s been solidly at 6 every time I’ve checked (which wasn’t often, since the Google toolbar didn’t work on my mac, so I had to go to an external site to check it). But last week I installed the Google toolbar for Firefox, and loaded up my blog. I was shocked to see that it didn’t register at all.

I checked a couple of things before I contacted Google. First, I checked an external pagerank monitoring site to confirm the result. Then I searched for my first name in Google…as before, mamamusings.net came up as the third result in the set, which seems to indicate that the site still retains some importance in the index—that didn’t seem to match the zero pagerank number. Then I did a link: search on mamamusings.net on Google, and found that the number of results had dropped dramatically. Note the following:

link: mamamusings.net (Google) : 897
link:mamamusings.net (MSN): 25,811
link: mamamusings.net (Yahoo): 103,000

Huh?

So I emailed Google’s customer support, explaining the details of the situation, particularly the precipitous drop combined with the continuing high results for a first name search. I received a response from the “Google Team” (no names, of course) with a very simplistic response:

Hi Liz,

Thank you for your note. Please be assured that your site is not currently penalized by Google.

A page may be assigned a rank of zero if Google crawls very few sites that link to it. Additionally, pages recently added to the Google index may also show a PageRank score of zero because they haven’t been crawled by Googlebot yet and haven’t been ranked. A page’s PageRank score may increase naturally with subsequent crawls, so this shouldn’t be a cause for concern. To learn more about PageRank, please see http://www.google.com/technology/

Regards,
The Google Team

Well, that was helpful. (Not.)

So I replied to “The Google Team,” explaining that I was fully aware of how pagerank worked, and that I continued to feel that the precipitous drop indicated a “cause for concern.”

I got another reply from “The Google Team,” this time telling me that they’d discovered a mirror site (mamamusings.com) that had a higher pagerank (I automatically mirror the .net site on .com because so many people tend to assume the .com domain, but the number of actual links to that page is quite low), and that if I was to redirect from the .com to the .net with a 301 message that the problem would probably be resolved.

Well, maybe that would increase pagerank a bit. But it still doesn’t explain why my site went from a rank of 6 to one of 0.

In response to my providing them with the same URLs referenced above, they said only that:

Also, we’d like to reiterate that our link search does not return a comprehensive set of results. We recommend selecting the “Find web pages that contain the term” link for a more comprehensive list of the links that point to your page.

Lastly, please note that we can’t comment on other search engines’ results.

So at the end of the day, they (a) won’t explain why or how my pagerank could have dropped so quickly and completely, and (b) won’t explain why so many links to my site have apparently disappeared from their index.

It’s a damn good thing that I’m not running a commercial site where pagerank is more of an issue. As it is, for me this is just an annoyance. But for many others, it would be far more problematic.

What this underscores to me is how dangerous Google’s current dominance in search engine mindshare is, particularly when combined with their lack of incentive to be accountable to siteowners. Monopolies of any kind make me nervous. Monopolies on information make me particuarly nervous. I’m very glad that Yahoo and MSN are making credible efforts to make search a more competitive space, and I’m also quite glad to be involved with Microsoft’s efforts to do so.