# Thursday, October 20, 2005

Excellent

Mark this one on your calendars:

The adventures of Curious George, a very inquisitive monkey, and his best friend, the Man in the Yellow Hat.

[ Curious George Movie Info - Yahoo! Movies ]

Opens February 10th, 2006.

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# Monday, October 17, 2005

Marketing 101

I'm no Seth Godin, but it seems to me that you can't go wrong with a statement like this:

To fight Superman, you can't send an ordinary ape — you need Hanuman," he says, invoking the name of the monkey-god hero of Hindu mythology. "And Banrie is Hanuman."

TIME Europe ]

I'm rather sure I overheard a very similar statement in a meeting the other day...

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Another goody for my new phone

Still don't have the phone, but I have a list of goodies to install, including this:

As the name suggests is does conversions - it supports four types of conversions, each with up to 10 categories. Currency Measures - 1 inch = 2.5 Centimetres etc Temperature - Celsius <-> Fahrenheit

[ "Convert It" for your Smartphone ]

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# Sunday, October 16, 2005

LDAP URLs

Numerous times over the years I stumble across something that requires the use of LDAP. In the past I've tried to locate a program to assist me in exploring LDAP from the perspective of the program that will be doing the same thing. I found a weak one developed by whichever University used to be so very involved with LDAP, but it still confused me to no end.

Once again I have come across LDAP. This time, however, I found the program that I wanted all along. And it's free:

LDAP Browser is a lightweight version of LDAP Administrator with limited functionality.

[ Softerra LDAP Administrator/Browser ]

Do I understand LDAP any more than before? Not really. Does this tool help me to stave off that requirement? It seems to. I can continue along in my bliss, not truly knowing what LDAP is, all because the LDAP browser can easily show me the info that I need, and provide me with URLs that correspond to branches on a directory tree.

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CodeSmith 2.6, I presume?

For those interested in the freeware version of CodeSmith, the 2.6 freeware version will continue to be available here.

[ CodeSmith Tools: CodeSmith 2.6 Freeware ]

The reports of your death were greatly exaggerated.

3.0 may be "all that", but until I can tell how 2.6 differs from 3.0 and 3.0 from 3.0 pro, I'll be continuing to sponge off of the good nature of Eric J. Smith and his fine free code generator.

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# Saturday, October 15, 2005

Their Data, Their Interface

John Dowdell has posted a bit of a rant about web interfaces and "his" data. He laments that every site has a different interface, different user flow, and different set of hurdles for him to work around:

Each of these sites had their own interface conventions, their own unique way they wanted to expose their range of services to the world. This site pushes links through JavaScript so I can't keep tabbed windows open. That site uses session IDs so I can only work in a single window. This third site wants me to choose a number of stops before I can see any offering. One requires a flight before you can see hotels. Some list hotels by which they'd like to sell most, others list them by distance, another lets you choose ranking. Each site had its own unique interface for me to come to grips with before I could use their service.

I will have to agree with the frustration. I would love interfaces to be more similar, and I would love to have my favorite bits from each site available on the others. However he then cries a rallying cry:

It's my data -- I want my record under my physical control as much as possible. I don't want to spend more time decrypting your interface than I do in determining what I want. The website/webapp paradigm failed me this week.

[ JD on MX: My data! My interfaces! ]

But, JD, don't you see that it is their data, and they have full control over their data. He is the one who wants that data. That puts them in full control. His interface solution would either require him to code 1/2 of the cool features that he wants (which the average person isn't going to do) or require the purchase of someone else's software (and then software assurance to keep up with changing web services). In addition, the other 1/2 of the cool features will then be available or not across dozens of web services that all work extremely different. This shift in paradigm hasn't relieved the inconsistency, only pushed it to a different layer.

And the data? The data about what a flight costs, the data about what deals are going around, the data about who's interested in what, all of this data is very important to the business that have them, and only on a need to know basis. Why not share all of the data for free? Because not only can JD share it, so can their competitors. I can set up a site where I ensure that my prices are always $5 cheaper than my competitors. I can then guarantee the lowest price. These are the sorts of things that businesses spend a lot of time determining, and have been long before computers, but why spend money to help your competition get the leg up on you? And at the same time ensure less to differentiate yourself from others? No matter what the technology, or how much people want their "web 2.0", business will drive those sorts of changes, and business has little to no incentive to deliver Mr. Dowdell his vision of the future.

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# Friday, October 14, 2005

Why isn't this part of the OS?

I'm constantly Synchronizing things, and I think I've finally found a tool that will help with a large part of that chore:

SyncToy is a free PowerToy for Microsoft Windows XP that provides is an easy to use, highly customizable program that helps users to do the heavy lifting involved with the copying, moving, and synchronization of different directories.

[ SyncToy for Windows XP ]

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Do you 'bou?

The first challenge for Caribou will be overcoming its Minnesota-ness. Caribou's coffeehouses (in Minnesota) account for about half of the company's stores and sales, and those stores have consistently been more profitable than coffeehouses outside the state.

[ Caribou Coffee off to bitter start ]

Let me say, as far as I am concerned, Caribou is just plain better than Starbucks. Sure, I like the 'bucks, but Caribou's drinks are much more reasonably priced. Caribou also has better drip, especially decaf, since they don't burn their beans like the Starbucks House Blend.

Interestingly, Caribou ends up even being a company I could invest in, as I am a bit strict about my investments:

Besides improving operations, Coles has his hands full addressing the public relations problems related to the 60 percent stake in Caribou owned by Bahrain-based Arcapita Bank, which was formerly known as First Islamic Investment Bank.

Arcapita ... operates the business in accordance with a body of Islamic principles known as Shariah.

Sure, we don't have Peet's in the DC area, so the only two national chains I am aware of are Starbucks and Caribou, but generally I prefer to do the 'bou.

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# Wednesday, October 12, 2005

I love the Starbucks DoubleShot, but Japan gets even more options

monkcoffee.gifFrappuccinos are too syrupy and fake, but DoubleShots seems nice. You can never seem to find them when you want them, however, which is always disappointing to me. Perhaps I need to move to Japan.

The launch of Starbucks Discoveries represents Starbucks first entry into the chilled cup coffee segment anywhere in the world. The Company took more than a year to create a superpremium ready-to-drink coffee designed to appeal to the local taste preferences in Asia, using the same high-quality coffee found in all Starbucks retail stores and coffee-based products worldwide.

[ Starbucks Launches New Ready-To-Drink Coffee Beverage in Japan and Taiwan ]

I was too busy trying other odd beverages and enjoying green tea in a bottle to try Georgia Coffee (by Coke) but the Starbucks foray into the Japanese market looks yummy. Better be too, as the Japanese market seems rather full.

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# Tuesday, October 11, 2005

Java++

What does coffee need that has been lacking in it so far? Oh yeah, more caffeine!

Today, Burger King will officially launch its BK Joe - brewed 100% from premium arabica beans. Sold in decaf, regular and "turbo strength" (extra caffeine), the coffee will be in all of Burger King's more than 7,000 U.S. stores by the end of November.

[ Yahoo! Finance ]

In response to other outfits improving the quality of their bean juice, BK has decided to enter the fray with better beans, and fortification! BK Joe could be the start of a new line of beverages for people too hit to drink Red Bull, but still cool enough to want a good ole cup of joe.

Props to Ken Harris.

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I Love Egg!

[Episode Icon]I love egg, do you? New episodes! New to me, at least. Don't know what you think about I Love Egg? Then set aside some time to fully experience the I Love Egg phenomenon.

I know what your are saying, another flash-based series of adventures of eggs and a catchy soundtrack to go along. But it's really more than that. There's a whole accompanying site in Korean with pictures of giant coffee cups. There's my original post with the I Love Egg theme song. There's the UK based shop of goods with no way to buy anything. They even have wallpapers.

By this time next year, I think that the whole world will Love Egg, but you'll be able to say you heard it here first.

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.js != .cs

And I think Mak wants them to be more similar. One item in particular that c# has is the ability to have multiple events fire off of a single event through delegates. While javascript will never be c#, recent additions to javascript get it a bit closer with addEventListener. Unfortunately we live in a world where people aren't all using cutting edge browsers, and it will take time for that language improvement to be supported by all. In the mean time? Borrow good hack techniques like this one from Simon Willison (via Joe Grossberg).

For a script ... to be properly reusable, it needs to behave nicely in the presence of other scripts. This means that assigning a callback function directly to the window.onload handler is out of the question as doing so will over-ride previously assigned callbacks from other scripts. The correct way of adding a handler to an event without over-riding other handlers is to use modern event attachment method, which sadly differ between IE/Windows and other browsers. Scott Andrew's addEvent function handles the differences for you but comes with one major and rarely discussed drawback: it fails silently in IE5/Mac. If you care about the many Mac users still on OS9, you need to support that browser.

[ Simon Willison: Executing JavaScript on page load ]

I like this code snippet. I've used this technique before, but never as a generic function that could be reused. With a bit of tweaking this could easily be extended to handle other events (though the window's onload is usually the only one that everyone's fighting for) or allow the ability to specify if the added event comes before or after all current events (just in case you need to jack something in as the #1 thing to do).

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# Monday, October 10, 2005

Software Assurance is about to get better

Employees can get a licensed copy of Microsoft Office desktop applications, such as Microsoft Office Professional, Microsoft Project, and Microsoft Visio Professional, to install and use on a home computer.

[ Home Use Program ]

However you have to wait until March of 2006 before these bennies go into affect.

Props to mssmallbiz

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# Sunday, October 09, 2005

No gvim, but some goodies to check out

I already use a few of these, but many look like products or sites that I won't know how I did without once I start doing with...

Everyone collects utilities, and most folks have a list of a few that they feel are indispensable. Here's mine. Each has a distinct purpose, and I probably touch each at least a few times a week. For me, util means utilitarian and it means don't clutter my tray. If it saves me time, and seamlessly integrates with my life, it's the bomb.

[ Scott Hanselman's 2005 Ultimate Developer and Power Users Tool List ]

The few that I don't see:

The last one mostly for WindowBlinds, because I like my Windows to constantly look new, but it actually has quite a few handy tools that come with it:

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