You know it’s holiday time…

…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.

Misc.
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Flickrcity Copenhagen

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

Tech
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Numberword.com

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.

Misc.
2 Comments

¸dby-Puttgarden

Googleearth-Rp

Uncategorized
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Blogging ahead

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.

Blogging
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Copyshop riot

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.

Misc.
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Memoires of a powerpoint virgin

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.

Web Development
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Blogger dinner

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?

Misc.
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[DK] a.e.b.e.d.

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. ¦k 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.

Misc.
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iPodderX 3.0

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.

Tech
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[DK] Vesterbro Site: audiowalks

Vester­bro Bymu­seum har for nylig lanceret Vester­bro Site — seks audiowalks pÃ¥ Vesterbro.

Seks unge for­fat­tere og kun­st­nere tager pub­likum med ud pÃ¥ en audiowalk rundt pÃ¥ 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…

Culture
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Getting Things Done, one way of doing it…

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.

Misc.
1 Comment

The end of the agency

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.

Web Development
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PIRACY!

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

Culture
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Don’t get Betamaxed, Jobs

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.

Culture
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Don’t like our product? We’ll make you like it…

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]

Misc.
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iTMS in Denmark

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..

Misc.
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I’m black. I’m female. And I like CSS too, bitches!

I’m black. I’m female. And I like CSS too, bitches!

Remaindered
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[DK] ¸reapparater og dyr

Indrømmet, jeg er en kende skuf­fet over ikke at finde ‘ræv’ som en pro­duk­t­serie hos Oti­con.

Misc.
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iPod accessory: Podposen

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.

SilleKnotte: podpose
SilleKnotte: podpose

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.

Stuff
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Powerbook HD crash

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 ¸dby-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.

Uncategorized
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Comment trouble

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…

Pollas.dk
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[DK] Kvinde i fødealderen gravid

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. ¥ fik vi det pÃ¥ 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 pÃ¥ alles vegne.

Misc.
7 Comments

Trent Reznor releases Garageband track

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.

Culture, Tech
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[DK] Efter formandsvalget

Tanke: Ville det have gjort en forskel, hvis Frank Jensen havde været “Gucci-Frank”?

Misc.
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