Archive for August, 2008
Ecto — My New Favorite Blogging Tool
August 30, 2008 5:18 amI work with several blogs, and I have to tell you that I pretty much hate the native user interface for all of them. I don’t care whether you’re talking about Movable Type, WordPress, or Blogger, the basic UI pretty well reeks.
Under Vista, I had become quite happy with Microsoft’s Live Writer, a solid blogging tool that is especially good at putting images into a blog post and linking to images or video clips in other blogs. My happiness was tempered when one of my blogs changed policies, requiring entries to be edited before they went live. Live Writer couldn’t deal with the blogging platform’s interface in order to post an entry in “draft” mode, so I was back to creating (or at least finalizing) blog posts in the native blog UI.
Since moving to the Macintosh, I’ve discovered Ecto, and it has quickly become one of my favorite programs on the Mac. Not only does it have solid editing tools, it will happily work with the application interface for Movable Type and Wordpress to post in draft mode, set advanced publication times, and insert all sorts of interesting things into a blog post. The user interface is easy, the rich-media features are hardy, and the overall experience is wonderful. I first heard about Ecto, as I hear about so much, from Lifehacker, and their advice has been good on this one.
Now, if I could just figure out a mail program that is as good as Outlook — and far better than Entourage…
Categories: Media, Software
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A First Look at Clouds
August 28, 2008 1:26 pmNo, not the clouds in the sky, but cloud computing. It’s a broad category, with folks meaning everything from Google Mail to widely-distributed applications (think SETI at Home) when they talk about cloud applications. I just wrote a blog entry at InfoWorld on the question of what happens when your cloud fails. I’m going to be looking deeply at cloud computing this fall — you’ll hear more about why in an upcoming post.
Categories: Enterprise, Software
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More Words and Pictures
August 21, 2008 1:33 amAudio slide shows (or SoundSlides) are wonderful ways to tell a story — they are, in fact, one of the best tools I’ve found in the last year in school. At InfoWorld, we’ve put up another SoundSlide on the Pimp Your Datacenter project. This one was a great collaborative effort, with photos from several contributors, narration by Brian Chee, and production, well, by me.
Of course, now I have to go out and buy a new copy of the software for the Mac, but that’s a small price to pay. The functionality of the Sound Slide software is superb and the Mac is the best platform I’ve used in years. The combination — well, I’m looking forward to seeing how much I can do with it this year.
Categories: General computing, Software
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InfoWorld Projects — The last datacenter article
August 11, 2008 9:58 pmOK, so I’ll admit that being able to work in Honolulu is a very cool thing. I’ve been working on reviews and project with Brian Chee, director of the Advanced Network Computing Lab (ANCL) for nearly a decade and I remain in awe of his technical abilities. The fact that he’s also a great friend makes working out here even more productive than normal technology field trips.
On this trip, we’re working on firewalls. When I was here in March, we were finishing the work for the InfoWorld Pimp Your Datacenter article. We took some of the photos and had Brian narrate them into a couple of slide presentations. Here’s the presentation on the air-conditioning installation — I’ll have the electrical installation show up soon.
Blogging in the Dark
August 8, 2008 2:52 amIt’s been a while since I’ve sat in a computer lab well into the night. We’re deep into a big test, things are working as we’d hoped, and very talented engineers are looking deep into data packets in an attempt to coax expensive hardware into doing as its told. My role in all this is peripheral; I take notes, ask questions, and nod thoughtfully at appropriate times. I’m a reasonably knowledgeable guy when it comes to computers and networks, but the folks in the lab tonight are playing well over my head.
I walked outside a little while ago and remembered one of the facts of late-night work: the air feels different in the early morning. Years ago, when I worked the third shift at a steel pipe mill, I enjoyed going out to inspect rail cars at 3:00 AM. No matter how hot the day had been (and Birmingham, Alabama in July can be very hot, indeed), the early-morning air was soft and gently warm against the skin. Walking out in the orange-yellow glow of the sodium lights, I walked through velvet-soft air to the rail cars stacked high with lengths of seamless steel pipe. There’s an excitement to working when most of the world is asleep, and it almost makes working through the night worthwhile.
There’s a considerable difference between the view tonight and the view way back then. The Honolulu skyline is mottled light and dark with offices and apartments occupied and bright, or empty and dark. Thirty years ago, most offices left the lights on all night long; in places like New York City, it was as though no one ever slept. That’s not to say that Honolulu is dark tonight — the light is still well above the baby turtle confusion level, and the city has an energetic hum, but it’s obvious that people have started thinking about turning off lights when the room is empty. It’s a small thing in the overall scheme of things, but it shows that office managers and homeowners are thinking about energy and efficiency at least as much as the high-profile eco-celebrities who are always private-jetting off to lecture the less fortunate on the evils of consumption.
I’m typing this on ecto, and like most of the Mac software I’ve tried, it works. That may seem like damning with faint praise, but after more than a year of wrestling with Vista operational software is a blessing. The nifty design of the Mac hardware, while nice, is not a compelling issue for me. Software that works when I want it to work is. I’m sure I’ll be disappointed down the line, but for now I’m a happy camper. We’ll see if the feeling holds when I come back to the lab in the morning.
Categories: General computing, Hardware
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Back from…wherever I’ve been
August 7, 2008 11:15 pmYou know, I had high hopes for re-building my website and being a dedicated blogger this Summer. Then reality intruded. Suffice it to say that I’ve done little besides work and basic life functions over the last couple of months.
I’m in Honolulu now, working on a huge firewall test for InfoWorld, and it’s interesting thinking about what’s going to be required for the Fall. I’m learning a new computing platform (yes, I’m moving to the Mac), and trying to figure out how to let the computer help me with time management/time tracking functions.
More soon — ecto really is a good blogging tool, and it should make it far easier to keep new material happening here. Thanks for waiting.
Categories: General computing
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