Tuesday, November 22, 2005
An OS X application that can import MacDraw and similar vector graphic images
EazyDraw "is a vector-based drawing application for technical drawings, illustrations, icons, logos, and similar graphics, with support for Claris Draw, MacDraw, and MacDraw II formats including conservation of all vector information. This release adds a new tape measuring tool, smart guidelines, an interactive cursor, expanded support for multi-layer drawings, cloaking of full layers, an Align to Grid palette, new Enabled Actions for layers, and more. EazyDraw is $115 ($95 download) for Mac OS X 10.2 and through 10.4. (Macintouch)"
Sunday, November 20, 2005
Firefox Bug: rendering page incorrectly
Saturday, November 19, 2005
Disposable Email Address Services - a review
An good survey of Disposable Email Address Services. They may be used for good or evil.
The sad state of web site authoring on OS X -- and XP
I recently came across a set of enthusiastic announcments about RapidWeaver. I tried it in demo mode.
Simple, yes. Useful? Minimally. By comparison to FrontPage 98 it's a toy. (FrontPage after 1998 went into a downwards death spiral comparable to the post 1997 collapse of Microsoft Word.)
So then I tried NVU, an open source Java app. It's a partial clone of FrontPage 2000 (shame they didn't clone FP 98!!). It's far beyond RapidWeaver, but one of the first things I did was create an anchor on a page, then create a link on the same page to that anchor. The HTML was well formed, but the GUI didn't create a viewable link. Ooookaaay, so much for NVU.
Well, there's always the ghost of Mozilla composer, though it's very much a page rather than site oriented application. Then there's Dreamweaver, with its increasingly feeble OS X support. I suppose there a bunch of other page oriented solutions.
Here's Faughnan's test for a serious web authoring tool. I don't think any OS X app can pass this test today -- FrontPage 98 did it well:
Simple, yes. Useful? Minimally. By comparison to FrontPage 98 it's a toy. (FrontPage after 1998 went into a downwards death spiral comparable to the post 1997 collapse of Microsoft Word.)
So then I tried NVU, an open source Java app. It's a partial clone of FrontPage 2000 (shame they didn't clone FP 98!!). It's far beyond RapidWeaver, but one of the first things I did was create an anchor on a page, then create a link on the same page to that anchor. The HTML was well formed, but the GUI didn't create a viewable link. Ooookaaay, so much for NVU.
Well, there's always the ghost of Mozilla composer, though it's very much a page rather than site oriented application. Then there's Dreamweaver, with its increasingly feeble OS X support. I suppose there a bunch of other page oriented solutions.
Here's Faughnan's test for a serious web authoring tool. I don't think any OS X app can pass this test today -- FrontPage 98 did it well:
- View a web site as a file hierarchy or a directed graph of links.
- Click on page icon see metadata, drag and drop into a page to create a link with text taken from target page title.
- Create an anchor on a page. Drag and drop to create a link to anchor. Drag anchor to another page to create a link.
- Change the physical location or file name of a page. Have all links in web site update to reflect this change.
- Blogger with TextArea support for Firefox/IE (but not Safari)
- Slightly more sophisticated blogger solutions
- Various page oriented solutions (wordprocessor save as HTML)
- Toy site management tools like RapidWeaver
- The missing domain once inhabited by FrontPage
- The missing domain once inhabited by Dreamweaver
- Industrial content management solutions that aren't particularly author-friendly and cost thousands of dollars.
Friday, November 18, 2005
Canon lenses: a nice review
I'm nerving myself to buy a Digital Rebel XT for myself for "christmas". This is neat review: Photo.net: Review of lenses for the Canon EOS 300D and EOS 10D. The one I really like is the f1.8 50mm for $70. The XT sensor is smaller than the 10D so this would be 'zoomy', but it's a pro lens for an amazing price. The key reason I want the XT is to be able to do available light photography, and the equivalent of a 60-70mm 35mm lens would be not bad at all.
Thursday, November 17, 2005
Wednesday, November 16, 2005
iPod over all -- 10/10 on Amazon
Amazon.com: Early Adopters - computers list has an iPod in each of the top 10 slots. That's astonishing.
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