Official Google Data APIs Blog: Upload your old email with the Google Email Uploader open source toolSo I could put my old Eudora archives online, then use IMAP to bring them to my local Mac ...
...We're now happy to share the Google Email Uploader with you. It's both a .NET reference implementation of an Email Migration API client, as well as an Apache 2.0 licensed open source project to be extended to upload any type of email archive you have lying around. The Google Email Uploader is available for Google Apps Premier and Education edition users."
Thursday, February 14, 2008
Google desktop email uploader
A fix to the application dictionary problem and a word annoyance
I know Word 2003 as only a charter member of the death-to-Word club can. Even so, I was reminded to change two things when reading O'Reilly Media's Word Annoyances (ends at Word 2003).
First I removed the default Word custom.dic file and created my own (jfaughnan.dic) file in a folder I backup and control. So no more lost dictionary when I change machines. I then created a Google Apps document [1][2] to hold a copy of the dictionary. I will periodically merge [4] that with my other application specific dictionaries -- which are particularly important on handheld devices [3]. Imperfect, but good enough.
Then I finally paid attention to the Word settings for "smart" [5] Edit and cut/paste, turning off most of the default behaviors.
So I recommend the book (though it doesn't include Word 2007), but I don't agree with their recommendation to use Styles for everything. That's what every book on Word says, and they're all wrong. Styles are too broken to seriously contemplate unless you're a technical writer [6] [7].
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[1] Incredibly annoying pink color scheme today. I wish Google spent less time being cute and more time fixing their #@$!$ buggy products (such as their custom search widget, which is broken as of this morning).
[2] Ironically Google Docs has its OWN dictionary, so the text file shows a spelling error indicator for every entry! There's no way to edit that dictionary. One day perhaps.
[3] In the long forgotten glory days Palm had a great auto-complete tool with a custom dictionary. Emily's BlackBerry has one too - very important for word completion.
[4] Copy/paste to TextPad, sort and delete dupes, copy/paste back.
[5] aka "Stupid"
[6] Most of them hate Word even more than I do.
[7] Word 2007 includes a complete do-over of Styles but it requires a (funny that) new file format that's incompatible with everything in the megaverse.
Aperture 2: the missing Help items and Apple's manual site
One of the oddities of the demo version of Aperture 2 is the Help menu is empty. I assume this will be fixed soon and that the shipping version will have the same PDF set Aperture 1 had. (It's another question why Aperture doesn't use Apple's Help system. Sometimes I think it's not really an Apple product at all.)
In the meantime an Apple Discussion Group post pointed me to a site I didn't know about: the Apple Manual page. Every Apple product manual shows up there, sorted by publication date. It's a great resource and I'm going to add it to my custom OS X Search widget.
There's also a "page" (query) for Aperture manuals only, but as of today it only has Aperture 1.x manuals. I assume that's a metadata error and we'll soon see the manuals there.
Wednesday, February 13, 2008
Aperture 2: Yes, it's much faster.
Tuesday, February 12, 2008
Aperture 2: you can edit the dates now
Gordon's Tech: Will Apple abandon Aperture?So version 2.0 is out and, yes, you can edit the dates. I don't see any batch editing but I'm not an Aperture expert. At least there's something. The product is not dead yet.
... You can't edit date metadata, you've never been able to edit dates, this hasn't been fixed despite several major updates...
Still no Apple Help file. They must have a pretty limited development budget.
Once I figure out a solution to the .Mac bug I'll start using it over the next two weeks. The date issue was my primary objection to moving to Aperture -- it gave me a worrisome impression of the product manager.
PS. Surprise! Academic licenses cannot upgrade. Going forward the academic discount isn't worth it with the new pricing.)
Update: You can AppleScript date modifications, so there's no problem with batch updating!
Adjust date and time of version/masterThe “adjust date” verb has been added to the AppleScript Dictionary, allowing you to modify the EXIF date of images through a scripted workflow.
Aperture 2: There was a problem connecting to .Mac
That's a new record!
If you have a .Mac record in your keychain Aperture tries to connect to it -- even if the account is long defunct.
When that happens it displays an alert "There was a problem connecting to .Mac". You can't get the alert to go away, in fact I now have multiple floating dialogs telling me of this problem.
I'm going to try pulling my network cable next time I restart.
They ought to be ashamed, but as far as I can tell Apple is shameless.
Update: I quit, pulled the network cable, and restarted. It hung on start but after a minute or so something timed out and it did run correctly. I then restarted with the network cable and got the looping error message. I'll probably have to locate the .mac entry in my keychain and remove it.
Saturday, February 09, 2008
Google now supporting Safari?
Gmail RTF was supported. Google Docs no longer warns of an unsupported browser.