Archive for May, 2007

Sitting on top of the world

Saturday, May 19th, 2007

The world looks a lot different from the other side of the clouds, and I’m kicking myself that it took me until age 30 to actually get on an airplane and see it from this perspective — a real flight of real distance and consequence, not a five minute teaser in a Cesna like I’ve had once before.

In flight….

Rivers and lakes pop through the holes in the cloud cover, and I’m shocked by their numbers and their sizes. Lakes of not just water, but fog as well, pooling in mountain valleys as we cross the Appalachians. I’m snapping photos like their going out of style and I have this big grin on my face. I’m a giant kid doing something exhilarating, and just a tad risky — a roller coaster with fewer dives and loops, just gentle turns and the occasion drop in the bottom of my stomach to remind me just how far from the ground we really are.

The pilot chimes in to notify us that our 737 has reached its cruising altitude — I’m 40,000 feet from the ground, and higher than I’ve ever been in my life. My friend erin sits next to me, trying to grab a few extra winks of sleep — she’s old hat at this. I type this diatribe with Rana playing in my ears while the attendants hand out oatmeal raisin bars.

Chicago is our destination — Midway airport. I’ve always wanted to see the city, but until my friend Karina moved out there last winter, I really had no good excuse for the trip. But the plans are for me to cram as much of it into one weekend as possible. I’m excited to see the Sears Tower, Lake Michigan, the art museum — to Ferris Bueller it up. But I’m most excited to see my friend.

My existence has gained a new perspective, and if I’m lucky it’ll gain a few more before I head back to New York and my everyday routine.

(Written at 7:30 am, somewhere over Pennsylvania, or Ohio — I think)

Counting those who make web sites

Thursday, May 17th, 2007

I took the survey!Unlike the time-wasting quiz I spoke of in the previous post, the Web Design Survey that A List Apart is conducting was time well spent.

They close the survey on May 22nd, so if you’re any kind of web professional, I recommend you get yourself over there now and get yourself counted. I’m kind of curious to see the results….

How my geekish self-image was destoryed and restored by a simple, silly quiz

Thursday, May 17th, 2007

Last night among all the writing and coding I found myself doing, I also found time to browse through some of the blogs my friends write, and noticed that good friend Betsy had taken some time from her busy schedule to take a few of those personality-type quizzes. Now seeing as how Betsy is a real smart cookie, I assumed that she wouldn’t waste her time on frivolous and fruitless acts, so I followed suit, though taking such quizzes is usually against my character. What can I say? When you’re in desperate need of blog content, you’re willing to try anything.

The test I took asked a very simple question: Nerd? Geek? or Dork? Sixty questions later and I had a very unexpected answer: none of the above — “Joe Average”, as they had termed it.

Now it took me a long time to come to grips with it, but I had proudly considered myself a geek. Now I had fallen back into the mob of the average? This knocked me for a loop (though a rather small one, I should state). But I was too tired to finish my write-up, so I copied and pasted the results, made a few witty notes and saved the draft to finish up tonight.

When I tried to load the draft over my lunch break, I found the quirky post title, but nothing else remained. My average test results were gone — lost to the digital ether. Now had I any real sense, I would have just dropped the subject and moved onto another topic worth writing about, but that quiz stuck in my craw to the point where I wasted another five minutes answering questions, all in an attempt to duplicate my results. But the law of averages held, and there was no way my answers were going to be exactly the same. So without any malice on my part, my re-tested results:

43 % Nerd, 52% Geek, 21% Dork

This makes me a “Pure Geek”, as the test results claim. My geekdom is restored! But Wouldn’t I need to take the test a third time to get a statistically stable sampling? Well, I spent at least 10 minutes taking the same test twice, and at least 20 minutes over two evenings writing about the process. By my admittedly poor math, that’s 30 minutes of my life that could have been spent on much nobler endeavors that I’m never getting back. If that doesn’t reinforce my status as a geek, nothing will.

And that’s how I learned to never take another time-wasting personality quiz again.

The latest and greatest in life-changing software

Wednesday, May 16th, 2007

If there’s one common thread I’ve noticed about software I deem “good”, it’s that it changes the way I use my computer; sometimes subtly, and sometimes profoundly. I’ve been meaning to put together this list of recent habit changers for a while:

NetNewsWireNetNewsWire 3.0

This update to my favorite RSS Feed reader is not even up to beta level yet, but the layout redesign has had a profound change on how I read things on the web. The last version had embedded a web browser with tabbed viewing, but I never made use of it until the UI was tweaked. With the addition of a visual tab bar — filled with thumbnails of the loaded pages — my whole outlook on how I see the web changed, and that’s only one of the changes under the hood.

MacFusionMacFusion

This is a front end for MacFUSE, which allows you to mount different file systems onto your computer. Before MacFusion, I couldn’t find a good reason to pull it into daily use. With MacFusion, I can now easily mount my web sites using SSH or FTP just like they were another hard drive — a real godsend for a web designer who needs easy access to his code. What’s more, it goes great with….

TextMateTextMate

A clean, fast text editor that handles HTML and CSS like nobody’s business — especially if those files live locally on your computer. It’s only downside was the way it interacted with my FTP program of choice, Transmit — one document per window. When you’re trying to make changes to an entire site, that’s a real deal breaker. Now in unison with MacFusion, I’m in coding heaven.

TwitterrifficTwitterriffic

One of the biggest additions to my site this year — not to mention my online life — has been the use of twitter. This little light-weight program makes posting updates and keeping up with your friends’ Twitters drop-dead simple.

iScroll2iScroll2

Those of you with newer Apple laptops already have two-finger scrolling support built in, but for those of us with slightly older (read: most 2003 to 2004) PowerBooks and iBooks, this little software patch adds in that same feature for us. Seriously, it’s a wonder I was able to get along for so long without the simple two-finger solution to page scrolling.

Plumbing work

Wednesday, May 16th, 2007

There’s a nice benefit to working on a new blog for work; that being that it’s forcing me to get reacquainted with the guts of WordPress and by extension leading to some long overdue work on this site.  It’s ugly work so far, but at least it’s progressing.  Seriously, it’s embarrassing in this day and age for a blog to have been without a master Archive index for as long as mine has.

While it won’t always be outwardly visible, expect me to use this site as a test bed for things I’m doing for the office, and visa versa.