…when the lady in the sandwich shop tell you to go get some sun.
If all goes well, I’ll be spending August in Berlin. Tips and tricks and rants and raves are more than welcome.
…when the lady in the sandwich shop tell you to go get some sun.
If all goes well, I’ll be spending August in Berlin. Tips and tricks and rants and raves are more than welcome.
Chris Heathcote of anti-mega has made som really nice geotagging-meets-flick-stuff: flickrcity, tag-based filtering of cities with geoinformation.
Check out Copenhagen.
…and http://anti-mega.com/flickrcity/copenhagen.city?user=pollas
In an ongoing attempt to become a millionare, I thought I’d see if I could get one step ahead all those fancy services out there.
You need: RubyOnRails. A number. A word. (and a good idea, but bear with me).
So I went for http://numberword.com/ which has to be _the_ domain name for any upcoming service. It’s taken, though — and I can’t be arsed to try and buy it off some pirate.
Fuckr.
Stand by. Good stuff coming up. I promise to do a reboot7-writeup and talk about DR doing podcasts…and mention that new iTunes 4.9. I know you can’t wait. Where else would you get that exellent coverage of before-mentioned stuff. But be patient.
From my blogging hiatus, just a quick thought:
Who’s gonna bring a set of identical twins to the Copyshop and make a scene?
Remember to take pictures.
So, we’re in the middle of Codegarden. Good crowd, interesting people asking interesting questions — we’re having a blast.
Finished my presentation on optimizing development with css and decent markup a couple of hours ago. Besides being slightly underprepared (or rather: having changed the focus quite some times during the preparations) and not having slept for two days, a few other things could’ve needed improvement. Take this advice from a powerpoint virgin, doing his first real presentation:
- Screw powerpoint. We said “No powerpoint driven sales talk” — so I, for some reason, made powerpoint driven css talk. The slightest bit of nervousness instantly turns powerpoint into a crutch…which is boring and messes with your flow.
– Do research on your crowd. Not knowing whether people know (in my case) css and/or umbraco makes it hard to settle for the level of abstraction.
– Run through every bit of information you base your presentation on; anything not immediately understood by the audience removes focus from your beatifully thought up, abstract ‘best practices’-type speech.
– Demo. No, really — Demo! Whatever. Typing huge amounts of css (or anything else for that matter) live is definately boring, but showing the end result and the code making it, even if the tweaking-bit isn’t what you really want to focus on, makes it seem a tad boring.
Despite my lack of sleep and lots of other stuff to do (got do get going doing those podcasts), I’ve really got that “damn, I can improve that with all the stuff I just learned so I might as well do it now”-feeling.
Lots of good people are meeting up in Tivoli tomorrow. Reboot–attendees, Building of Basecamp- and Codegarden–people will all be at Cafe Ketchup at 20:00. If you could do with some food and some interesting conversations, leave a comment over at the Umbraco-blog. With a bit of luck, there’ll be fireworks as well. How about that?
Det vidunderlige feed af politiets døgnrapport, byder — sammen med en god opdatering pÃ¥ kriminalitet i dit lokalomrÃ¥de (be afraid, be very afraid — husk det nu — det er oppe i tiden) — pÃ¥ de stressede betjentes forsøg i disciplinen “formuleringer af forskellige lovovertrædelser pÃ¥ tid”.
Men der er guldkorn imellem: Mjølnerparken i stisystemet — “a.e.b.e.d.” Og ja, du gætter helt rigtigt, hvis du tror vi her taler om De Radikales største vælgergruppe. Hvilket selvfølgelig betyder at de straks mÃ¥ fratages retten til at stemme, høre mærkelig musik og pÃ¥ andre mÃ¥der lade sig integrere i det danske samfund. Hvilket man jo kunne gøre til en principiel mÃ¥de at hÃ¥ndtere forskydelser i stemmeafgivelsen pÃ¥. DF fÃ¥r med al sandsynlighed lidt for mange stemmer fra angste mennesker, der aldrig liiige fik læst deres første bog uden billeder. Væk med stemmeretten, ud af landet, særregler for overførselsindkomst, yes yes. Men det er jo en anden og temmelig useriøs snak.
a.e.b.e.d. — husk det nu. Snart i et rim nær dig.
Finally. Since the Tiger upgrade, I haven’t been able to download any podcasts using iPodderX due to soem error. They just released version 3 which offers disk use management, iPhoto integration, playlist creation and more. I’ll have to take a look.
Apart being cut off from the audio part of our beloved interweb (and not having time or energy to find another setup), several things annoyed me about the errors caused by the Tiger-upgrade.
While posting stuff about the upcoming 3.0-release, the guys at iPodderX didn’t want to post about the Tiger-trouble. This could, however, be found at the support forum, which is all nice and fine, but no way am I gonna signup to voice that I — also — have problems. It’s not a tool the same way, say, MovableType or WordPress is a tool. It’s a piece of software that should work. And while I have all kinds of respect for software developers, more than three weeks of non-functioning podcast-downloading is a bit too long for my liking.
I’m not asking much. Just a decent update on what’s going on. Some people had luck doing little tricks found in the forum to get their software to work. For us not that lucky, well…
And don’t get me wrong. I can easily understand why you don’t wanna spend time fixing stuff when you have a new version coming up. But either push the beta to the customers who have trouble or communicate a bit clearer.
And now: Headphones on, podcasts in, iPodderX doing overtime sucking the fat pipe.
Vesterbro Bymuseum har for nylig lanceret Vesterbro Site — seks audiowalks pÃ¥ Vesterbro.
Seks unge forfattere og kunstnere tager publikum med ud på en audiowalk rundt på Vesterbros gader og stræder. Det sker med en MP3-afspiller og et sæt høretelefoner som ledsager.
Personlige guides gennem tider og steder fra en lÃ¥nt MP3-afspiller. Eller: Download filerne selv fra Flamingoeffekten. Jeg sidder i skrivende stund lige over for bymuseet, hvor starten gÃ¥r, sÃ¥ mon ikke man kunne finde plads pÃ¥ sin iPod og gÃ¥ en omvej hjem…
So, GTD — after Dave Allens book — is all the rage, and has been for some time now. It’s the anal, hacking approach to your own life; how to tweak your setup to deal with the flow of stuff, know what to do and not to do, all to make you more productive and relaxed about taking time off. Fitter, happier…
GTD-fans will already know about 43Folders and the 43FoldersWiki (productivity OSX hints, yes yes), To-Done (which at time of writing has some advice on being a more productive blogger, how about that) and several other related sites are starting to shoot up.
In short, GTD is very much about managing incoming stuff; getting it done at once, delegated or put somewhere where you’ll come back and do something about it. Define what’s the next physical action for any given task and you’re good to go. It takes a bit of setup and first of all quite some self-discipline as anything that doesn’t go into the system is pretty much destined to get lost — and thereby not done. It is possible however, to implement some of it without going totally OCD.
Allen’s book, while a little self-help-book-ish (which is even more the rage), offers some decent ideas for managing your flow, but — as it has been critized for elsewhere — somewhat puts ‘online’, ‘at the computer’ etc. in seperate categories from working, not taking fully into consideration that a lot of us basically live out of our laptops, making this way of thinking not quite accurate. Our ‘inbox’ pretty much is our inbox (who needs paper?) in the mail application of choice, ‘online’ equals all working hours just as ‘at the computer’ means ‘when we’re awake’. Most can be applied, though.
With the launch of OS X Tiger, more possibilities have come to play. Spotlight in addition to Quicksilver can do some good things to your setup.
So far, I’ve actually just done what I should have done years ago; getting into the habit of emptying my inbox, keeping proper lists of things to do etc. Don’t underestimate the power of Delete. I have an Archive folder where reference materiale, stuff I might need later on, go and a Current folder for stuff that’s directly linked to next actions in projects. Newsletters (the very few left after the rss-revolution) get routed elsewhere, just as ongoing larger projects with heavy amounts of material have gotten their own folders for easy recovery. Incoming emails are being dealt with one way of the other — or deleted.
For now, I’m trying to use iCal for to-dos; I put in the project name and the next action, additional info goes in the comments. I try not to have more than about 30 things lined up and the latest version lets you drag things which is fine for priority-flagging. Important things go at the top. The list-functionality itself leaves a lot to be desired, but so far I like the fact that it’s bundled with my calendar where Basecamp–milestones are integrated. The latest version of iCal also offers nested calendars so I’ve got lots of color-coded calendars, grouped in biz, personal, pet-project-like groups — the colors improve the readability of the to-do a lot a well.
File-wise I’ve been running a strict setup with regards to the placing of client material. In addition to that I’m trying out Spotlight tags in combination with SmartFolders — it’ll let you tag documents for easy Spotlight-recovery, so you can place your stuff whereever you feel like. Two SmartFolders on my desktop keep track of a specifik project and the latest downloaded pdf (I still have my Stuff-folder though). I need to get into the habit, but it might prove very useful with projects including material from other projects, personal doduments etc.
In addition to iCal, I keep the Tickler-file as suggested by Allen; it lives out of my usual hierachy of files but is easy accessible via Quicksilver. You can append text to any file without opening it which is perfect for tickling; you just wanna get the idea out of your head and into the computer. The trick is to actually review the various files you create this way. I still need to adjust to this.
As far as paperbased material go, I’m still a slug. If you’re into stationary, there are lot of productivity porn tricks out there and honestly: Who can resist the smooth surface of a manilla-envelope? It just breathes controlled, organized well-being… Thing is, though, the whole ‘living-out-of-a-laptop’-deal makes me wanna get everything into digital form which is fine for bills that need to be payed; a simple to-do-entry and you’re good to go. It’s much worse with various printed matters that need reviewing, signing or whatever. A stack of paper trays will do for now, but I have a feeling that the multiple stacks of…stuff…that’s sitting on my desks could be dealt with more effectively.
For project outlining, there’s Instiki running locally, Basecamp takes care of the most important (client) to-dos and deadlines, integrated into iCal, I track my hours directly in my online economic system which makes billing a breeze (and also means I never have to meet with my accountant — that’s productivity). I’m not hooked on reminders, if I end up that way, I guess my phone or iCal can handle that.
I’m sure there’s something I missed — and other things I should just start doing.
Update: Juri takes it one step further.
Digital Web Magazine: End of the Agency
Of the 100 some companies and web agencies (companies that build web sites, if you don’t like the term ‘agency’) I know, I’d say about 1/2 of them are really just groups of freelancers working together to produce beautiful inspiring designs with innovative functionality. The age of the web agency is ending.
Yup, that’s how it is. It’s all about staying flexible — with regards to cutomers and with regards to yourself having fun with your work.
From the Free Floating Faculty:
PIRACY!
Under the theme PIRACY! We will discuss filesharing as a form of knowledge exchange and production. We will discuss the term piracy, not as in taking to claim, but as in taking to share and distribute as talk about pirate media on the basis of the historical example of the pirate radio Radio Mercur. We also invite the activist network Piratgruppen to talk about their work and their fights with an out-datet legislation and to take part in a discussion on filesharing as a democratic tool.
We will screen the movies Skibet er ladet Med…, a Danish comedy from the 1950ties about a pirate radio station assembling Radio Mercur, as well as the classic Captain Blood, starring Errol Flynn.
We are working on producing PIRADIO at the Free Floating Faculty in Christianshavn.
For this workshop we will also use the venue Stubnitz.
May 17th: We board the boat Stubnitz to discuss filesharing and piracy…
Place: between “Langebro” and “Den Sorte Diamant”.
Time: 15.00 to 19.00
The Huffington Post on the iTMS and format trouble:
If he isn’t careful Bill Gates might just Betamax him while the crowds cheer him on.
Post summary: iTMS is just as evil as everyone else, gets credit for getting the ball rolling.
Jailed for a Song, skipping commercials should be considered stealing. What a beautiful idea. It’s not just the usual “we’re afraid of being robbed now that we’re sitting with our last century business model and waiting to understand what’s going on out on the interweb”. It’s a lot worse. It’s bullying people into consuming your product as is. Can’t offer a reasonably priced product without commercials? Fine, figure something else out. Insist on commercials? Fine, make them interesting and we’ll all still watch. But cut the legal crap, mkay? [via Keld Bach]
Ah, damnit. I’m never gonna keep my overdraft down… iTMS has launched. Insert usual yada-yada on the strange indie/electronica selection available. On the positive side: Found a band called Gearwhore. I have no idea what it is — but I’m thinking of adopting it as a title..
Indrømmet, jeg er en kende skuffet over ikke at finde ‘ræv’ som en produktserie hos Oticon.
Good friend and leather artist (how’s that for a title) Iben Friis of SilleKnotte fame recently started making leather purses for the iPod.
They come with a slightly modified Apple apple as standard, but I couldn’t resist asking for a custom made Geezer version, featuring my logo dog with the Elizabethan collar. Rule of thumb: Don’t lick your balls.
It’s toploading with no additional openings which actually make it a quite good companion to my iSkin as it’s a lot easier getting the iPod out for docking etc. With the remote, it’s pure pleasure.
Parsley Chives come as extra.
So last week my harddrive suddenly crashed. Ironically, just as I was going to do a backup before upgrading to OS X 10.3.9. Of course, this was a major showstopper, but as it turned out the process of getting my precious fixed wasn’t that bad.
To my own surprise it turned out, that it was still under warranty (which means i’ve been a switcher for less than a year) which money-wise was nice, but probably meant that it had to be examined, a new piece of hardware had to be ordered — and I could sit on my hands waiting. I bought the Powerbook from Officeline which I later learned had a pretty strange way of handling faulty hardware, so basically I expected the worst. I had pretty decent backups across two external firewire drives made with the wonderful SuperDuper, so data loss wasn’t my biggest concern; I just wanted to get up and running again as soon as possible — and felt sorry for myself as a crash a week later would’ve meant the easiest Tiger upgrade imaginable.
But, to the good stuff: At the store I was told an examination of my machinery could take up to three weeks, but that I could pay a “look at it — now!” fee of DKR 800,-. I would have loved an iPod Shuffle instead, but with potential loss of productivity in mind, I paid up. Still, “right now” meant the next day — and another day for transportation back from the repair shop, not counting the possible wait for a new harddrive. But as I had a borrowed car, I suggested taking the Powerbook to the repair shop 30km away the same day. They agreed, and upon arrival I was offered to hang around Allerød to wait and see if they could find out what’s wrong. That way, I ended up finishing Helle Helle’s Rødby-Puttgarden on a bench in the sun, sitting under a huge banner advertising the play Forstad with my belly full of bad hotdogs. Oh, the irony. An hour and a half later, the repair guy came to the same conclusion as I had; the harddrive needed replacing — Apple could have a new one at the scene about three days later. Not good enough. So I bought a new (100GB) from them, had them put it in for free (warranty repair) and made arrangements to pick up the replacement 80GB at the Copenhagen store the following week.
All in all, it ended up costing me some dough and some time and some driving. And without a car and the comfort of a borrowed Mac Mini where I could’ve booted from my backup had they kept my machine, the story — though I paid the “gogogo”-fee — would have ended with at least 5 working days woithout a laptop. But luckily I ended up up and running within 24 hours of the crash, lost very little data (insert bad backup joke here), and felt very well treated by the Officeline crew who stretched quite a bit to solve my problem.
So in conclusion: If you experience harddisk failure, make sure you have some spare cash, friends abroad who leave you their Mac Mini, a friend in the hospital with a broken leg so you get to keep their car, bootable firewire backups and a bit of patience. As a reward you’ll get your laptop back pretty damn quick, a spare 2.5″ harddrive you can use when you upgrade to Tiger (which you might as well do sooner rather than later before you fiddle with all of your prefs anyway) — in my case I even had the pleasure of being reckognized as a blogger by the guy in the shop because of the name on my invoice.
While busy bashing unborn babies, Jacob alerted me, that comments on this site seem to be broken. I haven’t found out exactly what’s wrong but have somewhat fixed it; the required fields (name, email) missing up until now are back and I have narrowed the error down to some simple ‘values aren’t gettting posted properly’ php function fun, but haven’t got the time to nail it properly. So for now, you’re free to post, your url won’t get published, though.
Lots of stuff to blog (how to fix a crashed powerbook hard drive in less than 24 hours, getting spotted as a blogger in a Mac shop, book reviews, audio workshop joy and the usual rants — and way too little time. On the bright side: I’m not reading blogs either — my aggregator died on me and just as I found time to set a new one up, my laptop died. Ah well…
Indrømmet, jeg er en mavsesur republikaner, der netop var kommet mig over mÃ¥neders prinsebryllupshysteri, men afstemningen pÃ¥ dr.dk tager prisen for nævenyttigt, royalt “jeg følger lige lidt med og glemmer jeg ikke har noget liv og dem jeg kigger pÃ¥ er født til mere end mig”: Man kan stemme, ikke pÃ¥, hvad man tror barnets køn bliver, men hvad man helst vil have
. WTF?! Og tænk sig, befolkningen er delt nogenlunde ligeligt mellem, dreng, pige og ved ikke. Så fik vi det på plads.
Og så lige en rettelse:
*Et rigtig stort tillykke til jer begge to !!=)) WEE tror at jeg taler på alles vegne når jeg siger vi glæder os rigtig meget!! Vil også bare lige sige, at hvis det bliver en pige behøves I ikke kalde hende Magrthe.hihi
Anne=) — Apr 25, 2005 15:53:10 (send en hilsen til mary og frederik)
Anne, du taler ikke på alles vegne.
TUAW:
Trent Reznor just did one of the coolest things an artist could do, and he did so in a specifically Apple-centric way. He released Nine Inch Nails’ new single, The Hand That Feeds, as a 70MB stuffed DMG file containing the entire song in Garageband format with a note from Trent himself.
Pretty damn cool. Me like Nine Inch Nails. Me like files to download.
Tanke: Ville det have gjort en forskel, hvis Frank Jensen havde været “Gucci-Frank”?