Showing posts with label Default. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Default. Show all posts

Friday, February 27, 2009

Vertical Tabs in Firefox are the new hotness

If you've got a big enough screen (and big enough for me is 1024x768) you might want to consider "tree style" vertical tabs in Firefox. I don't think it'll fit everyone's taste, but it suits me fine. Opera makes it pretty easy to mess with your browser's UI, but I wanted the power of Firefox[1]; luckily it seems like someone else feels the same way.

So I often have a dozen or more tabs open; having them open at the top of the browser makes them more difficult to navigate. The Tree Style Tab addon will add the tabs to the left side of your browser window in a tree. So if you open a tab from another tab, that tab becomes part of the tree. Pretty awesome.

[caption id="attachment_4216" align="alignnone" width="300" caption="Tabs at the top"]Tabs at the top[/caption]

[caption id="attachment_4215" align="alignnone" width="300" caption="Tabs in a tree"]Tabs in a tree[/caption]

[caption id="attachment_4214" align="alignnone" width="522" caption="The Tree Style Tab addon"]The Tree Style Tab addon[/caption]

Points of Interest

Footnotes
[1] I really like Opera, and it's amazing to use

Sunday, January 18, 2009

WriteRoom for the iPhone quick review #apple

Just a quick update; I recently picked up WriteRoom for the iPhone, since I wanted a really, really, really basic notepad that could transfer notes back and forth between my iPod Touch and my Desktop. Turns out this was a very cool purchase. It's minimal, which I love, but it also has the ability to (among other ways to export) display your documents in a browser on your Desktop. This is by far not the most secure way to share documents, but on my closed little fortress it's no big deal.

So you turn on the temporary share in WriteRoom for the iPhone, you point your browser at the specified address, and you are presented with this..


Picture 1-21


Pretty frickin' suave. It will allow you to read documents and write documents from the browser window, so importing isn't a problem. An improvement (perhaps too much to ask) would be to have a drag and drop interface via a tiny Java applet. That could get complex though. Actually on second thought forget it, I like this app as simple as it is!

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Tuesday, January 6, 2009

RT @guykawasaki Music remixed by fish

No, not a DJ named Fish. Real fish.


Thanks to @guykawasaki for posting to Twitter. Via Make.




Submersed Songs | Canções Submersas from ?LEX on Vimeo.

Monday, January 5, 2009

Twitter attack wave; real site-cracking edition.

The latest round of Twitter attacks took place seemingly last night, and these new ones took advantage of a legitimate site security flaw in Twitter's interface to compromise accounts.


Quoting the Twitter blog:

The issue with these 33 accounts is different from the Phishing scam aimed at Twitter users this weekend. These accounts were compromised by an individual who hacked into some of the tools our support team uses to help people do things like edit the email address associated with their Twitter account when they can't remember or get stuck. We considered this a very serious breach of security and immediately took the support tools offline. We'll put them back only when they're safe and secure.


Blah, that's a pretty gloomy thing to come in to work on a Monday morning. I don't feel for the coders at Twitter...


But this highlights a bunch of points that normal people (non IT people!) don't yet appreciate;



    • Any computer connected to the Internet can be subject to a break in (especially the one you're reading this post from).
      Big brand IT shops with big budgets aren't immune, even if they have been as diligent as they can with security.
      Security is a cat and mouse game. As smart as security people are, the crooks are just as capable.


  • tl;dr .. We're back at That Password Thing... Change your twitter password as soon as you can. I doubt the public outside of Twitter will know how deep these guys got into the system before the compromise was noticed.


    This blog isn't immune by any stretch of the imagination, so I'm not posting this from some mountaintop of smugness. It's only a matter of time before someone finds a hole in Wordpress, or a plugin I'm using, or in the base operating system of my server, and bam I'm pwnd.


    Finally; we, being humans, need to move past our current methods of authentication. Not to some weird draconian Big Brother type system where one central command corporation has the full rights to this data, but an open system based on tried and true methods of cryptography and digital signatures.


    Making it easy and portable to prove who you are is the next leap in online communications. Literally establishing trust relationships with real people using digital keys to solidify the trust of others in what is being posted.

    Monday, December 22, 2008

    Reuserism: My "new" Thinkpad 600E and my 2009 experiment

    122220081051

    About two months ago the hard-drive in my Powerbook finally died, after 3+ years of my constant abuse. It was a trooper. The post-recall battery has been dead for at least a year, so the hard-drive was the final straw.

    I haven't gotten a replacement hard-drive for it yet because I managed to near-flawlessly re-create my environment using Time Machine. Restoring to an Intel based iMac.

    So just in case you're wondering, you can take a Time Machine snapshot from a PowerPC Mac, and Time Machine will re-create it on an Intel Mac without much drama. The problems I did have were very trivial (some screen-savers didn't work anymore... but, er... now they do, somehow. Without any intervention from myself. MatrixGL for example). That's a major architecture jump, so I'm happy it went well and was really easy; +1 for Apple.

    This still left me without a portable computer. Rather than go the easy route and get a new hard-drive for my Powerbook, I decided to refurbish an IBM Thinkpad 600E I had sitting in the junk pile. It needed a battery, a charger, a hard-drive and some sort of networking device.

    This move was more about getting a portable that I didn't have to worry about as much, rather than trying to save money on refurbishing the Powerbook back to tip-top shape (which would cost about $200 or so). I was eyeballing a Netbook, but they are too small for me and they're still more than I wanted to spend for a laptop that I was going to bike around with on my back.

    I picked up a power cord off of eBay for $5, and a Netgear 802.11N card for $20. I was already in possession of a 30GB laptop drive that I had pulled out of my Clamshell iBook. The most expensive part was the battery, which was $50 from a local reseller.

    Once we were up and running, I installed Ubuntu 8.04 with encryption, and it works great.

    So my portable is $75, with a pretty smooth encrypted operating system; not bad. I can ride around the city with that and not worry that if I take a tumble I'm out $2500. And I can take it to the Reference Library or a coffee shop without sweating that it'll take a walk on me. Actually in that scenario I'd be more upset about losing my bag.

    The 2009 Experiment: Reuserism

    Inspired by how well this refurbishing went, I am going to try and not buy anything new in 2009. I won't create more waste. I'll save some money. I'll add some additional value to an item that's already made and is most likely perfectly usable. Reuserism rather than consumerism. So as an avid Reuser, I will keep the Re-user economy alive and kicking during this carefully crafted "economic downturn".

    Points of Interest

  • I used these instructions to disassemble my Powerbook. There are actually slight differences in my Powerbook compared to Stefan Horn's, seemingly. He posted this article in 2003, and my Powerbook was circa 2005, one of the last PowerPC books. Mostly screw placement. But it's about 80% accurate between the two models.
  • The Abide Sticker came from lebowskifest.com.. so that's one new thing. But it's not 2009 yet ;)

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  • Friday, April 11, 2008

    blogging from the ipod touch

    No ground breaking feats of technological might here. Just thought I'd try out blogging from my wife's ipod touch. God I wish they had iPhones available in Canada...

    Eww, I'm greasing it all up.

    Friday, September 14, 2007

    Monday, June 11, 2007

    SCUD Vblog

    Indy-comic booky-hit Scud the Disposable Assassin returns in an omnibus of all 20 issues plus the long-awaited finale.



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    Wednesday, June 6, 2007

    Cool Business card Design (via Digg)

    AMAZING Business card Design:

    "Check out this lovely design for a business card that sprouts a miniature garden when you dip it in water. The result was a business card that worked like a miniature house-plant, growing alfalfa or cress when dipped in water."


    Interesting.

    Monday, May 21, 2007

    Transmetropolitan OSX Icon

    Picture 1-17

    Quickie: I just created a Transmetropolitan Mac OS X icon based off of a wallpaper created by Jake Thuecks.

    So there are levels of stacked copyright infringement here but I don't think anyone will mind. Jake's rendering of the Transient movement's logo is really good and made a perfect icon.

    Picture 2-6


    transmetropolitan.rsrc.zip
    Click on the link above to download the icon.

  • Transmetropolitan at Wikipedia.
  • If you're new to Transmetropolitan, here is issue one direct from DC Comics! Awesome.
  • Also, how to create a Mac OS X icon from a PNG file.

    [posted with ecto]


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  • Friday, March 2, 2007

    Just for looks.

    This is the bag I have my eye on; X-Small Timbuk2 Courier, custom.

    Picture 4-2

    Picture 1-16

    Picture 3-4

    Picture 2-5

    The old Timbuk2 for reference; Medium Courier.

    Picture 5

    Thursday, February 8, 2007

    Video: iPhone vs. Windows Mobile

    For those who have wanted to know how Windows Mobile stacked up to the iPhone’s interface, check out this interesting comparison.

    read more | digg story

    Wednesday, January 17, 2007

    WiiSaber Makes your WiiMote into a Lightsaber

    So Evan just got a Wii with accompanying Wiimote. We were wondering if the Bluetooth capabilities of the Wiimote would work with the Mac... well guess what...

    Just grab your WiiMote, turn on your Mac's bluetooth, and run WiiSaber to link the two for a motion-sensor based Lightsaber sound effect battle royale.

    read more | digg story

    Tuesday, October 24, 2006

    Saturday, October 21, 2006

    Lifehacker Storm!

    Much like my post at Devlab, I have a whack of bookmarks from Lifehacker that I'm clearing out from my "Stuff!" folder.

  • Ask the Readers: Why aren't more of us telecommuting? Which leads to The Telework Manifesto.
  • Set yourself up for healthy computing.
  • Geek to Live: Ten Must-Have Bookmarklets. This is an awesome post..
  • "Stop procrastinating" top habit goal. Featuring one of the funniest graphics I've seen in some time (below)

    Procrastination1

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  • Wikipedia Storm!

    So I have all these links I've saved to Wikipedia articles. I thought they were significant enough at the time to drag into my "Stuff!" folder.

    Since I can't figure out why I dragged most of these links into my "Stuff!" folder in the first place other than that they caught my interest, I am posting them here.


  • Bicycle messenger.
  • Robarts Library
  • Loose Change.
  • Ludwig Mies van der Rohe.
  • Trackback.
  • Alan Watts.
  • The Grand Theft Auto series.
  • A list of big-bust models and performers (no, really)
  • Free Jazz


  • Update:

    And there's more...

  • Tao
  • Capital
  • Marvel Zombies
  • Le Corbusier
  • Lemmy Kilmister
  • Leo Strauss
  • Just-world phenomenon
  • Comparative religion
  • EVE Online
  • Final Fantasy
  • Klaatu barada nikto
  • Friday, October 20, 2006

    Colbert Posts eBay Auction For His Fireplace Portrait

    Colbert Posts eBay Auction For His Fireplace Portrait:

    In celebration of his show's first anniversary, Stephen Colbert is auctioning off his highly valuable, extremely realistic portrait that currently hangs above the fireplace on the set of Comedy Central's "The Colbert Report."

    Wednesday, October 11, 2006

    kGTD tutorials: Projects and actions, Timed actions

    KGTD Tutorials at the 43 Folders Wiki, and awesome source of organizational information.

    read more | digg story

    Wednesday, October 4, 2006

    Robert Anton Wilson needs our help

    "Author of the famous counterculture tome "The Illuminatus Trilogy" is in trouble with his life, home and his finances. Robert is dying at his home from post polio syndrome. He has enough money for next months rent and after that, will be unable to pay. We appeal to you to help financially for the next few months to let him die at his home in peace.

    I just purchased the Illuminatus Trilogy today online before I had even heard of Robert Anton Wilson's plight. I wish him well (and I hope I enjoy these mind bending books!)



    read more | digg story