Wednesday, January 21, 2009
Time Capsule reviewed
Sunday, January 18, 2009
How many browsers really work with Google? Fewer than you might think.
Fewer than most people imagine.
Consider this acid test suite of Google web applications that I routinely use:
- Gmail with Google Video Chat
- Google Apps: Documents, Spreadsheet
- Blogger and BlotThis!
- Google Sites
- Google Calendar
- Google Page Creator*
- Firefox (XP and OS X)
- Safari (OS X)
- Camino (OS X)
- Chrome (XP)
Just Firefox. Even today's Chrome has obvious bugs, such as omitting the final character from a link created against an existing text string.
I assume IE 7 works pretty well too, but I can't speak to that. I'm surprised Chrome still doesn't work as well as FF against Google's own properties.
It's still incredibly hard to deliver full function "web 2.0" apps against more than one browser.
* On death row and supposedly due for replacement by Google Sites, but that seems to be on hold.
** I use IE 7 regularly against Sharepoint at work, but nowhere else
Wednesday, January 14, 2009
Tasks and calendar items - what I'd like
You could think of it as a task that has a date, time and span. Or you could think of it as an appointment that shows up on a task list and has a priority/urgency attribute.
The idea is that I'd schedule it as an appointment and it would show up in my task list. If I deleted the appointment I'd have the option of deleting the task, or just editing the task. If I deleted the task then I'd delete the appointment. Completing the task would leave the appointment untouched.
If I see anything like that I'll attach a note here.
Google Video Chat – suddenly unstable
Ahh, the perils of life on the cutting edge. I gave Google Video Chat a grade of B- a week or so ago, but now it’s as unstable on XP as it’s always been on OS X. Sessions dropping at 10-20 minutes, problems starting up, etc.
I am very fond of my Logitech Vision Pro webcam though. It’s marketed for OS X, but it’s the best thing going on XP. There are no thrice-damned drivers to load, so it’s easier on the CPU and I don’t have to live with the horrible quality of modern device drivers (which are routinely outsourced to the lowest bidder).
Nothing to do to wait for a fix from Google. There are SO many things that can go wrong with these solutions …
Corporate iPhone: WLAN connection and Outlook web
The iPhone is a lousy business phone. Of course the BlackBerry ain’t so great either – the key difference is that the BB usually comes with a pass to the corporate exchange server. That’s a big deal though.
On the other hand, I’ve made some progress.
Briefly:
- The iPhone’s support for WPA Enterprise let me connect quickly to our corporate LAN. It was a lot easier than connecting my XP laptop, but I’m not sure I have all privileges the laptop has – even though I’m authenticating the same way.
- With the iPhone I can use the web interface to Exchange server. It’s hardlyl mobile friendly, but it runs on Safari/iPhone.
Connecting directly to Exchange server is another matter.
Even if it were officially supported, an Exchange connection would wipe my personal iPhone calendaring and contact information. The only way I know of to have both corporate and personal data on an iPhone is to sync corporate data with Exchange and Personal data with MobileMe. The latter, of course, is remarkably inadequate.
For now the Exchange connection isn’t available, but if it were it would be exquisitely painful to give up the power of Google Calendar in favor of MobileMe Calendar. I really do need a miraculous improvement in MobileMe …
Monday, January 12, 2009
iTunes iPhone Applications menu grayed out?
It would update existing apps during a sync when something else was going to the phone (like music or videos), but if no other sync was occurring apps wouldn't update.
I couldn't tweak any of the settings that limit which apps went to that iPhone.
Our other iPhone was fine.
The answer was here: Apple - Support - Discussions - "Sync Applications" grayed out in iTunes ...
I'd enabled 'Restrictions' on this particular phone, which is now used as an iTouch. I was trying to keep the kids out of trouble. I bet I'd restricted application installation.
Removing restrictions fixed the problem.
This may not be so much a bug as a usability problem. I think iTunes should display a message in addition to graying out the Applications tab.
Sunday, January 11, 2009
Reading netbook news - translated from German
The Feed wasn't hard to find, in part because German is relatively close to English. I added it to Google Reader, then chose the Feed Setting option to "translate into my own language".
Here's an example of the result:
Netbooks with VIA Nano CPU finally come and not too tight! Tim Brown explains you in this short video, what we should see how the strategy of VIA looks and there ever been a rudimentary preview on ARM / VIA systems, and easily so sauklein ne animal and battery life are:It's not exactly lyrical, but it's not bad either.
Ahh, but but most of the posts don't include the full content.
Here's where Google struts its stuff.
When I click on the link from Google Reader, Google sends me to a feedburner hosted translated page version!
Translated version of http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/AsusEeePcNews/~3/509222929/Reason*, but we live in interesting times.
So now I'm following my first foreign language blog.
Now I'm looking for a Korean blog on netbooks ...
*God just doesn't work for me.
Update 1/14/09: There are a few rough edges ...
- Because the link out from the foreign language post goes to a proxy translator corporate webwasher blocks access.
- The auto-translation feature only works when you view the blog in isolation, if you click on Google Groups folder and view it in the company of other posts you get the original language.
- A link from a translated post always uses the proxy translator -- even when it's a link to an English source.