# Monday, June 05, 2006

Did that suck, or what? It took two years to get another season out… and it came in with a bang and went out with a whimper. I know they’re doing another “mini-season” next year (already shot… but we still have to wait a year), but I’m not sure how much I care.

Honestly, for a show that started off so strong, the creative team and/or HBO is sure doing a good job of marginalizing it.

posted on Monday, June 05, 2006 9:55 AM Mountain Daylight Time  #    Comments [2]
# Friday, May 19, 2006

Assuming this goes through and shows up without a hitch, the server migration is done. The Server Intellect folks were great when I had questions about control panel issues or moving mailboxes during DNS propagation.

 

posted on Friday, May 19, 2006 9:55 AM Mountain Daylight Time  #    Comments [0]
# Friday, May 12, 2006

The kind folks at Server Intellect (my hosting provider) are adding some newer, beefed-up servers to their data center… so it’s time to migrate everything over. I always feel like I’m missing something when I’ve done this in the past, but this time I’m feeling good. They have a really good setup and migration plan in place, so as the DNS updates there should be little, if any, downtime.

Crossing fingers…

posted on Friday, May 12, 2006 7:32 AM Mountain Daylight Time  #    Comments [0]
# Thursday, May 11, 2006

Google announced a number of new products/tools yesterday, but the one I find the most interesting is “Google Trends” (also found under the “Labs” section).

It basically lets you see the history of a search term’s use over time… and if the search term appears in Google News as well, you see that along with regular web searches. Just as with Google Finance, there are links along the chart to news items that occurred at that point in time. A search for ‘tivo’ yields:

Gtrends_tivo

You can also view the popularity of a search term by city, region, and language.

Even cooler is that you can supply multiple search terms and compare them all on the same chart. This lets you do things similar to what the “Google Fight” site has done for a while (by running both searches and scraping the count of items found). Here’s a comparison between the phrases “playstation 3” and “xbox 360”:

Grends_console

I’m not sure how current these search results are, but with E3 happening this week and a bunch of PS3 announcements, I’d expect to see a spike there pretty quick (for both, though probably with PS3 searches surpassing 360 searches for a time).

Also interesting with this search is how Seattle appears in the searches-by-city result… among the lowest in searches for “Playstation 3” and the highest of all with searches for “xbox 360”. Wonder why.

Gtrends_seattle

 

posted on Thursday, May 11, 2006 8:04 AM Mountain Daylight Time  #    Comments [0]
# Tuesday, April 25, 2006

I just tried this little sneak/workaround from LifeHacker to see if it would convert my Yahoo Mail account over to the new beta… sure enough, it worked!

I like the look and functionality, but it definitely “feels” slower. Thankfully, I use the Yahoo account primarily for minor registrations (forums, news sites, etc), so it’s not something I have to spend a great deal of time with. Still, if they can get it sped up a bit, it’s a great UI.

posted on Tuesday, April 25, 2006 12:20 PM Mountain Daylight Time  #    Comments [0]
# Thursday, April 06, 2006

The New York Times had an article yesterday entitled “Software Out There,” which discussed the whole “programmable web” movement that’s sprung up over the last couple of years. The author says that the internet is entering its “Lego” era.

It was actually a semi-interesting article, but I wish I could read an article in a major paper just once without cringing at the leaps of faith and hyperbole made by the author. Is it so hard to get an expert to look over an article before publication? The key example from this NYT article is this section (mid-way through Page 2):

Mr. Ozzie, who used the Firefox browser (an open-source rival to Internet Explorer) during his demonstration, said, "I'm pretty pumped up with the potential for R.S.S. to be the DNA for wiring the Web."

He was referring to Really Simple Syndication, an increasingly popular, free standard used for Internet publishing. Mr. Ozzie's statement was remarkable for a chief technical officer whose company has just spent years and hundreds of millions of dollars investing in a proprietary alternative referred to as .Net.

At what point did .NET become a “proprietary alternative” to RSS or any other “standard for internet publishing”? Or vice versa?

But hey, why pass up the opportunity to put out something that seems semi-scandalous (“Imagine, a CTO for Microsoft using Firefox! Suggesting RSS as an alternative to .NET!”).

posted on Thursday, April 06, 2006 8:02 AM Mountain Daylight Time  #    Comments [0]
# Monday, April 03, 2006

Nothing better than waiting all winter for your team to start their new season. Some questionable trades get made, but you try to stay optimistic.

And then… the season opens.  Ouch.

posted on Monday, April 03, 2006 11:23 PM Mountain Daylight Time  #    Comments [0]

Amazon_placeholder_goofThis has been reported on and blogged about in numerous places today, but when it shows up in your Inbox, it’s just too good to pass up.

An email message with the subject “[placeholder for winning team] Wins the NCAA Tournament!” arrived this morning. The [placeholder] goof is repeated in the body, but the best part is that they actually included a “UCLA Wins!” graphic. A mistake made even funnier by tonight’s result.

Someone at Amazon.com has some ‘splaining to do.

posted on Monday, April 03, 2006 11:16 PM Mountain Daylight Time  #    Comments [0]
# Monday, March 27, 2006

The NewsGator world is really evolving quickly. I’ve followed the company since it was just Greg Reinacker writing the NewsGator Outlook add-in… reading feeds in Outlook wasn’t my preferred style of working and I ended up going with FeedDemon very early in its life. Still, Greg’s company is here in the Denver area and they’re a .NET shop so it’s always been interesting to follow. Things got pretty exciting when Brad Feld’s Mobius Venture (also local) invested and then NewsGator acquired FeedDemon and brought in its author, Nick Bradbury.

Over the weekend, Nick announced that they’ve hit the 2.0 milestone with FeedDemon. It’s a major update and congratulations to Nick on getting through it… I’ve been testing the FD pre-releases on a secondary home machine since the original 1.6 process started and it’s improved substantially over time. It’s been a long process, but I think the results are worth it. The new treeview for feeds is great, but the most welcome feature will definitely be synchronization with NewsGator Online. I was skeptical at first whether or not this would be something I’d use, especially early on when it was “subscription service or nothing”. But I said then that “I’ll give this stuff a try” and I have. Now, after working with it for a while and “finally seeing the light”, I’m happy to say that I’m hooked. With this feature, I’ll have full synchronization between my home/weekend machine and my machine in the office. When I’m not at either machine, I’ve got the NewsGator web-based reader as well (which, btw, has improved quite a bit since that skeptical blog post last year).

To improve things even more, NewsGator recently acquired the SmartRead application and brought in its developer, Kevin Cawley. Kevin and I have actually worked together in the past and he’s an all-star mobile developer. He really “gets” the mobile/handheld form factor and I’m certain he’ll do great things under the NewsGator banner. I’m pretty amped about having that “full synchronization” extend right out to my phone, so he’d better do great things! ;-)

Anyway, congrats to everyone at NewsGator for the exciting steps they’re taking.

posted on Monday, March 27, 2006 12:11 PM Mountain Daylight Time  #    Comments [0]