Tue - December 13, 2005

Moving the site 


Moving to a new platform, new host, new emphasis...go here from now on.

NEW RSS FEED: http://gravitationalpull.net/wp/?feed=rss2 (but it'll be full of old entries migrating for a while) 

Posted at 08:52 AM    

Wed - October 19, 2005

Cleaning up RSS feeds with Shrook 


I continue playing around with Shrook as a possible replacement for Bloglines. This morning, I noticed that I could sort my entire library of feeds in the Shrook desktop reader application by the date that each was last updated. This turned out to be a useful exercise as buried amidst the worthy but infrequent posters like scifi author William Gibson and techno-weenie Dan Bricklin were feeds that had moved and/or died. I deleted the losers and reconnected with the movers as best I could (Wil Wheaton seems to have accidentally torched his normal blog and the temporary blog has no RSS feed I could discovery).

I'm still awaiting some promised enhancements to Shrook's online side. As of now, it's still a long and not terribly organized list of feeds with none of Bloglines niceties.

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Posted at 06:52 AM    

Wed - September 28, 2005

Down goes Palm, yet another notch on Gates' belt 


(Updated 9/28)

The depressing news that a once innovative and leading software company has been vanquished by Microsoft is hardly surprising. Palm, now called PalmSource, revolutionized the "personal digital assistant" by shedding features and focusing on simplicity and a good user experience. Now it lives to see the day that its own hardware unit, called just Palm, dumps its operating system in favor of Microsoft's Windows Mobile 5.0 for an upcoming smart phone. I haven't used the latest version of Windows Mobile but in the past I have found Windows CE to be unwieldy, overly complex and slow (The new version appears to be only a smidge better, so says Rob Pegoraro in the Washington Post). It also doesn't play nice with Macs, though Palm has been up and down on that score since OS X came along.

To a large degree, this week's news was just the icing on the cake -- last year Windows CE devices started outselling Palm-based gear and in the second quarter of 2005, Palm had just a 19% market share, half of its position a year earlier, according to Gartner. It did bring to mind those who were previously overtaken by the Redmond monolith and those who have thus far survived. I don't think there are simple rules to be derived from these two lists. Clearly execution is at least as important as strategy here and underlying market dynamics play a role too. Update: Zdnet's Michael Singer has a cogent piece describing five missteps by Palm.

Surpassed:
Apple (PC OS)
Wordperfect (word processor)
Lotus (spreadsheet)
Novell (networking/servers)
Netscape (browsers)
Borland (programming)
Adobe (fonts)
Palm (PDA OS)
IBM/Lotus (enterprise email)

Hanging on:
Intuit (personal and business finance)
Google and Yahoo (search)
Sony (video games)
Research in Motion (mobile email)
Oracle (enterprise databases)

Any other suggestions or notes from the peanut gallery?

As an aside, while researching this post, I came across a cool slide show by Fortune magazine that displays when Microsoft's market share passed rivals Netscape (1998), Lotus 123 (1992) and Wordperfect (1992).

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Posted at 08:09 AM    

Tue - September 27, 2005

Don Adams, aka Agent 86, rest in peace 



Many were the half hours of my youth wasted away in front of the TV set and many were the laughs I got from Don Adams, secret agent Maxwell Smart. The Mel Brooks comedy "Get Smart" never failed to amuse my pre-adolescent brain and many of the show's regular bits, like the shoe phone and the malfunctioning cone of silence, became staples of our family's humor. So long and thanks for all the fish, Don.

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Posted at 07:55 AM    

Thu - September 22, 2005

Is Shrook the great, hoped-for answer to reading RSS feeds? 


(Updated 9/23)

I've been pretty happy keeping up with Blog RSS feeds using the online Bloglines service. It works from within any browser, updates feeds pretty frequently, lets me publish my subscription list on the web and allows easy export of my list for backup or to pull into another reader. The interface is excellent, allowing feeds to be filed into folders, clearily indicating when unread posts have arrived and so forth. But, you have to be connected to the Internet to read your feeds and that's a drag when you'd like to be able to catch up off-line. So RSS reader Nirvana would be an application that combined an online service with a typical computer application and that automatically synchronized between the two.

Thanks to an article at the excellent tech news site Ars Technica, however, I'm one step closer to the perfect reader. In a review of eight different reader apps, the article mentioned that Shrook combines both a stand-alone reader and a web site with auto-synchronization between the two. I immediately downloaded it. After a few hours of usage, I love the concept but the interface, especially on the web, needs a lot of work. I'm still getting the hang of it, though. More to come...

Update: Developer Graham Parks emailed me to say that the web interface will include folders to match the stand-alone app in a future update. That would be a big improvement. Right now, the web version just lists all of your feeds, noting which have new and unread posts. That's one long list.

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Posted at 07:30 AM    

Mon - September 19, 2005

Where have you gone Chuckie Weiss - New England turns its lonely eyes to you 




There's a pink elephant in the room, New England Patriots fans, and no one is mentioning it. After two performances that can only be characterized as lackluster or worse, the Pats are sorely missing former offensive coordinator Charlie Weiss, now head coach at Notre Dame.

The evidence is everywhere. Who exactly was calling the plays in Sunday's debacle against the Carolina Panthers? With the opposition defense blitzing everything but the kitchen sink and swarming to attack the line of scrimmage, where were the screen passes, the trick plays, the misdirections for which Master Weiss was so rightly famous? And it used to be the Pats who made smart half time adjustments to get the offense on track. Not this Sunday. In the last 56 odd minutes of the game, the Pats offense scored three points. No running game at all? And unlike the defense, the Pats don't have any player personnel excuses on O. The return of big, fast tight end Ben Watson was supposed to make Tom Brady's life easier. That hasn't happened as Big Ben has a total of 3 catches for 62 yards. Of course, Bill Belichick is a smart guy. Maybe he'll figure all this out -- and quick.

Meanwhile over at Notre Dame, even with Saturday's 3-point overtime loss, Charlie is kicking you know what...

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Posted at 07:30 AM    

Tue - September 13, 2005

The future of Microsoft Office is not pretty 


You almost have to laugh when Microsoft unveils screen shots of its next update in the creaky Office franchise. Just wait, just wait one more year, and we'll make Word really great. Really, really great. We promise. Based on the screen shots, it look more likely to cause head aches than upgrades. Somehow this mishmash of tabs and buttons and tool bars is supposed to be an improvement? What happened to simple and intuitive design? What happened to hiding complexity from the user? This just looks like a confusing mess. At least I don't see Clippy, the annoying talking paper clip from a couple of versions back. Oh, and there's no "classic" mode if you prefer the current incarnation, at least so they say now. Maybe a few of these "features" will be dropped before the final product is ready. I'm willing to learn from those who actually attended this unveiling to some degree, but wow - yuck.




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Posted at 05:48 PM    

Thu - September 8, 2005

Gruber's in rare form on iTunes 5 


John Gruber's on a hilarious, Entourage-inspired rant about the wacky new user interface Apple put on the latest version of iTunes. Make sure your mouth isn't full when you read it.

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Posted at 08:52 PM    

Wed - September 7, 2005

Working with the e815 and photos - oy vey 


After a couple of weeks with my Verizon/Motorola e815, I have a few quirks and quibbles to report. Getting photos off the phone has been a mildly trying exercise since Verizon crippled the Bluetooth profile that would allow one to effortlessly and wirelessly move snapshots into iPhoto. You can upload photos to vzwpix.com, but once there they can be viewed and emailed but not downloaded (dragging and dropping a photo from the web site leaves you with a low resolution version of the image). So, okay, email -- you can email from the phone or the web site a "slide show" containing one to five pictures. I emailed myself a "slideshow" of one picture and was able to save the attached file as a photo and pull it into iPhoto at its full resolution (1280 by 1024 pixels). Given that the phone has no keyboard, typing email addresses is kind of a drag.

So, I bought a 128 mb transflash card for the phone. Actually, I believe it has been officially renamed "microSD." This is a new and teeny-tiny flash memory card format, smaller than your fingernail, that fits in a slot in the top of the e815:



A simple menu setting lets you save photos to the card instead of to the phone's own memory. When you want to move your new masterpieces over to your Mac, turn off the phone, carefully extract the memory card, seat it in its SD card adapter, put the adapter into a card reader, connect to a Mac and - shazam - you can import to iPhoto.

Why so carefully? In my first reaction review of the e815, I wondered why Verizon allowed one to move photos off the phone on a memory card but not with Bluetooth. The answer, it seems, is a warning that accompanies the card -- due to delicate, small form factor the card is not meant to be removed and re-inserted frequently. The manufacturer, SanDisk, refers to the cards as "semi-removable." Makes one wish he had waited for a higher capacity card (transflash cards of 512 mb are listed as "out of stock" at Amazon and other sites). It also makes one wonder how great an MP3 music player the phone would be if you can only change the music on your card infrequently.

Another pet peeve -- while iSync on Tiger will synchronize phone numbers from your address book with the phone, it leaves email addresses off. This is mucho annoying as I just mentioned that typing addresses in with the numerical keypad is a pain. I'll test some of the iSync alternatives and see if any do a better job.


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Posted at 08:40 AM    

Wed - August 31, 2005

Comparing Windows Vista and Mac OS X 


The ever-thoughtful Paul Thurrott has a typically thoughtful and nuanced comparison of Windows Vista Beta 1 and Mac OS X Tiger. I don't agree with everything he says, but it's a useful and informative essay.

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Posted at 11:04 AM    












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