Thursday, June 22, 2006
Bloglines Advanced Search: this is very cool
Today they announced a new blog search suite, including Bloglines | Advanced Search. The neat part is they've delivered something I once asked Alta Vista to do -- back before there was a Google. The key is constraining search to a trusted subset of sites. If Alta Vista had followed my advice they might been able to fight off Google!
Bloglines offers the option of restricting search to one's blogroll. In other words, instead of searching all blogs, you get to search the blogs you like. No spam blogs of course. This is so valuable I may add back some of the very geeky blogs that I quit a while back. For pre-purchase reviews of technical products, in particular, this may be significantly better than a Google search. I'm going to see if I can embed the search box into my blog pages.
Replacing a defective Tungsten E2 with an old Samsung i500
Reminds me of the Newton users gasping until the Palm arrived. Windows Mobile has always been awful and I don't want anything to do with the "modern" Palm hardware or software. I might try BlackBerry, but in the meantime I've an ancient smartphone (Samsung i500) that runs PalmOS 4.1 (the last good version).
I'm thinking that since DataViz's BeyondContacts will work on a Samsung i500 I'll dump ePocrates and squeeze my data onto that old Smartphone. Then I'll exercise my AMEX extended warranty and get the money back for my Tungsten E2.
Maybe I can limp along with that praying that Apple brings their smartphone to market before 2020, if the Samsung dies I'll just have to survive with a Blackberry.
Embedding a public events calendar in a website
Parallels Desktop and Take Control
Basically anyone who wants to run XP on OS X should buy Parallels and the eBook.
OS X Get Info (cmd-I): summary version and standard version
A great summary of the Get Info command (properties) from Tiger:
Macworld: Mac OS X Hints: The many faces of Get Info.
… In versions of OS X prior to 10.4, if you selected multiple items in the Finder and hit Get Info, you’d get a nice summary window showing the size of the items in the Finder selection. In 10.4, however, that behavior has changed, with (of course) an exception. If you select 10 or fewer items in the Finder and hit Command-I, you’ll get (up to) 10 distinct Get Info windows. This change is a welcome one, for it makes comparing more than one file or folder quite simple.
If you select 11 or more items in the Finder and hit Command-I, you’ll get the 10.3-style Multiple Item Info window—a single window containing summary information for the selected items…
… If you want to see the summary info window for any Finder selection, regardless of the number of items in that selection, hold down the Control key, and then pick File -> Get Summary Info.
Or Control-Command-I.
Monday, June 19, 2006
Did Gmail just remove rich text support for Safari?
Update: I checked the Gmail help forum. I guess Gmail never did support rich text in Safari. Maybe in the alternate universe I existed in yesterday ...
Blogger: How do I loathe you ... Word verification requests require a rapid response
If you are using Google’s Blogger, the world’s most dysfunctional blogging service, you may suddenly find your posts require “word verification”. You have to decipher a graphic and type in the letters.
Beware, if you make too many errors Blogger will decide you are a robot — and your blog will be shut down.
The moment this pestiferous thing you must immediately request a human review of your blog. Trust me, you’ve no time to waste.
Look at your blog in Blogger to figure out the ID number of the blog. Then go to this URL http://www.blogger.com/unlock-blog.g?blogID=123454 where the 123454 should be the ID of your blog. There you will see this page text:
Your blog requires word verification
Blogger's spam-prevention robots have detected that your blog has characteristics of a spam blog. (What's a spam blog?) Since you're an actual person reading this, your blog is probably not a spam blog. Automated spam detection is inherently fuzzy, and we sincerely apologize for this false positive.
Before we can turn off mandatory word verification on your posts we'll need to have a human review your blog and verify that it is not a spam blog. Please fill out the form below to get a review.
Google's splog detection is every bit as awful as their Gmail spam filtering. They miss most of the splogs but this is the 2nd or 3rd time they’ve hit me. Does this look like a splog to you?
I am starting to put Google in the Microsoft class of things …
Update 6/22: It took about 3 days for Google to review the blog and mark it as non-splog.
Update 9/18/06: Now they've marked my special hockey blog as a splog. The above tip no longer works. This tip suggests clicking on the question mark next to the evil word verification captcha:
You can however request Google to turn off mandatory word verification on your posts and have a human review your blog and verify that it is not a spam blog if it is incorrectly classified as spammy. Just click the "?" (question mark) icon next to the word verification on your posting form. That will take you to a page where you can request a review for your blog. A human being at Google will verify that your blog isn't spam, and then whitelist your blog so it no longer has the word verification requirement.I'll try that next time I get the mark of evil notification.
Update 9/19/06: Interesting. As noted yesterday the form seemed not to work because it didn't do anything, but immediately after my submission the CAPTCHA went away. Maybe Google is doing what I'd posted on somewhere, immediately clearing the splog flag on notification pending human review rather than waiting for review before clearing the flag.