The occasional scrivener

Being the thoughts and writings of one Gustaf Erikson; father, homeowner, technologist.

Wednesday, 2024-10-06

EU carriers, wake up!

Russ is giving a talk at Web 2.0. From his post:

Not only are the numbers there (160 million Americans with mobile phones), but every American carrier has reasonably priced unlimited data plans. [...] This gives the U.S. a huge advantage over other markets around the world which continue to charge by the kilobyte.

Right! The Yanks are gonna clean our clocks -- again! Just because the carriers are so short-sighted that they can't see that when it comes to mobile data, cheaper traffic means more traffic! The net is addictive, but right now everyone's scared of the kB charges.

Make a short-term dent in your revenue, reap the benefits later. Otherwise, the US will OWN the mobile data services space.

Update: Frank agrees.

Some more opinion points:

Audio blogs redux

As Matt said, what if audio blogs are the Next Great Thing, and we curmudgeons missed it? So as to be able to snidely comment on this phenomenon from a position of knowledge, I pulled down yesterdays Daily Source Code by Adam Curry, and put it on the taco, my trusty N-Gage.

OK, step one was accomplished, and I didn't need those near-obligatory accessories, a $300 iPod and a $1,500 Mac. That's nice, because I can't afford either.

I started listening on my way home (5 minute walk, 35 minute subway ride, 7 minute walk). The taco is a nice enough mp3-player, but it lacks a fast-forward feature. I pressed pause to avoid looking like a zombie and read a book instead, but when I tried resuming, it started from the beginning. Obviously, an iPod would handle this better, as would any dedicated mp3 player.

Adam is involved in iPodder.org which he intends to turn into a centre for podcasting. Well, that's all well and good, but if he wants creating and listening to podcasts to become mainstream, he'd better get a better, less iPod-specific name. Now you get the impression that it's only for Mac + iPod users. Also, Apple's lawyers may have some things to say to him.

The post itself was entertaining, I'll say that. It sure beats trying to find new music to listen to, and fills a niche that FM radio perhaps can't fill. But still, the Net is about TEXT, goddammit. Audio is all well and good for music and entertainment, but for information, the bandwidth is wasted. I may be able to read articles and blog posts "interstitially" at work, filling those blank pauses when I task-switch from one issue to another, but I can't multitask enough to listen to speech.

Also, the barriers to entry are pretty high, both for producers and consumers. A blog poster needs to be able to handle a web form and a keyboard. An audioblogger needs mics, audio software, BANDWIDTH, and audio nous, not too widely available. Lots more talented writers than talented radio artists, but that may change as podcasting becomes more popular.

Consumers need: a fast net connection, an mp3-player, a modern computer, an intimate knowledge of RSS (version 2.0, no less), and weird and wonderful "iPodder" software, which, despite it's name, is not tied to an iPod. Go figure.

Who's the audience? The web is available to perhaps 20% percent of the planet's population. Of this percentage, maybe 15% wander outside MSN et al. Of these, 10% read blogs. Perhaps 5% of these listen to podcasts. But I bet 99% of these are white, and male, and live in the US and Western Europe.

However, for all its flaws, audio blogging is much much better than that next scourge, videoblogging. That will be scary. Until then, I'll stick to text, thank you very much.

Tuesday, 2024-10-05

Mobile user interface thoughts

Frank and Russell have pointed out some problems with the user interface (UI) on smartphones. Specifically, the Series 60 OS used in most smartphones today.

Background

For the purpose of this post, I define "smartphone" as a mobile phone that has an OS that can accommodate non-trivial extra applications. Examples of smartphones are the Nokia 6600, Siemens SX1 (Series 60), Sony Ericsson P900 (UIQ), Treo 600 (PalmSource), Orange SPV C500 (MS Mobile). "Phone" on this context is a traditional mobile phone. Examples are Sony Ericsson T610, Nokia 6620, Samsung E700.

What does the interface need to handle?

Phones have some core applications. Central ones are making and taking calls, handling addresses, and messaging (SMS, email, IM protocols). Cameras probably also fall into this category. Less central areas are Web browsing, calendars, etc.

Ideally, all phone functions should be accessible using the keypad one-handed. This means using the thumb of one hand. The Sony Ericsson smartphones use a jog wheel under the index finger of the dominant hand (the right one). Relying on this feature for accessing functions excludes all those who prefer to use their left hand.

An alternative to shoe-horning everything into "thumb-mode" is a two-tiered approach. Basic functions are accesses using a keypad, but an auxiliary keypad or stylus+touchscreen combo is used for more advanced features. But where to draw the line between basic and advanced?

I have had the misfortune to configure email on both a recent Sony Ericsson and a Nokia. Tapping in multiple server names without the benefit of copy and paste sucks. A PC-based app would help here. Another solution is a web interface that sends a SMS with the configuration.

But this begs the question: why do I have to do this? Why can't I buy a phone where the data connections Just Work? Why is MMS and GPRS settings different? Why do I, as a consumer, have to care about whether my phone manufacturer and my service provider has their act together?

Alternatives

Speech recognition holds some promise, but will remain a complement to the keypad.

How about gestural interfaces? I did a bit of research about applications of gestural interfaces in the course of writing my graduate thesis. (For the morbidly interested, you can download it here). An example is scrolling through an image gallery by tilting the phone from side to side. Another is answering a call simply by picking up the phone. My guess is that inertial interfaces will be on par with speech interfaces; a complement to a primary interface which will still be keyboard + screen.

However, the keypad is often woefully underutilised. Usually there's some buttons that are dedicated to navigation, or a joypad. The large 3x5 grid of numerals are used for inputting numbers and text. How about using the '3' and '9' as PageUp and PageDown buttons when browsing sites?

Who will be the mobile Apple?

Who will usher in the Mac Age for mobile phones? Not Apple, they can't cover the mobile space (they outsourced the development of the iPod). Maybe Nokia can rise to the challenge. Another contender is Sony Ericsson, with the Japanese half in charge of making lots of tiny devices easy to handle. Another contender is Microsoft, if they're serious about taking the mobile space to the next level, and not just treat it as an adjunct to the desktop space.

Friday, 2024-09-24

Text, text, beautiful text

news.readfreenews.net is back up! Time to catch up on those 12,984 articles in alt.sysadmin.recovery...

Monday, 2024-09-20

You say "moblog", I say "mo-blog"

Dave Winer has, in his inimitable way, defined moblogging for the rest of us. Oh, Scoble helped out too.

The definition?

Moblogging is any activity that occurs away from your normal blog-writing place whose purpose is to create content for your blog.

Hmm.

This is a bit too inclusive, if you ask me. For example, this blog is hosted on a server in the States somewhere (even Rafe, the guy generously donating space and server resources, isn't sure where -- ain't outsourcing great?). I update it via tramp on emacs, running under screen on a machine in the server closet at work. I just fire up Putty at work, or on the Toshiba in the kitchen, or the Thinkpad while waiting for Viking to sleep, or on the Dell upstairs, or my dad's computer at his place... So I'm basically moblogging all the time according to Winer/Scoble.

FWIW, others agree with me and have drawn the ire of the man himself. He was just being lighthearted, he says now. Just trying to start a discussion.

Far from me to define moblogging, but it seems to me as futile exercise. If I can blog from my mobile phone, I will (and I have); if I can blog from an internet cafe in Katmandu (or Norrt�lje), I will; if I am incarcerated with only a i386 running Windows 3.1 and Trumpet Winsock, I'll blog with that.

In time, the artificial divide between "blogging" and "moblogging" will disappear. Only a few diehards will consider their

desk, fully supported by [their] normal high-speed net connection, laptop, multi-gigabyte external hard disk, second monitor, USB hub, mouse, etc etc.

as a "normal blog-writing place". For the rest of us, the world will be that place.

Update I headed over to Scoble just to see that the link worked, and it turns out he's dumped some guy's feed, because he was fooled by a hoax. Well, so was Rich, and he admits it. Yet he's "dumped". Scoble "can't trust what goes on his blog anymore".

Wow. Talk about taking lessons from the master. No wonder they're defining terms for the edification of the rest of us.

Thursday, 2024-09-16

Yet another reason to visit London

The AAS pub meet! Where you can win a brand new, yet-to-be-released Nokia Communicator 9500!!

How the hell can I persuade the company to send me to London on the 4th October? I could plead the sorry state of the London branch's PCs, but that would mean I would be expected to fix them, and there's not enough time for that...

Wednesday, 2024-09-15

N-Gage power tips

Steve Litchfield posts some tips for the serious taco user.

Tuesday, 2024-09-14

Disabled comments

My sanguine views about dealing with comment spam have proved to be too rosy. I'm hit bad by idiots posting spam. So I've taken comments offline until I can find an effective way of dealing with this shit.

Summary of the state of play so far.

Monday, 2024-09-13

Google juice

Number 1 for "gustaf erikson".

Number 6 for gustaf.

Nokia Communicator

"Work in progress".

The 9300 is my new lust-thang, and I know my dad's interested in upgrading his Psion to a 9500. This is just a place to store random URLs and info for the time being.

Update 2024-09-30: Al reports from Malaysia that the 9300 keyboard is very small, the 9500 is more like the Psion. On the other hand, Christian reports that the 9300 is the size of a 6110. Yay!

Frank tells me that the list price for the 9300 is €600.

Friday, 2024-09-10

Dead blog walking

Blogs are like tamagotchis -- a fitting metaphor. Incidentally, is our society in deep trouble when tamagotchis are the basis for new metaphors?

Unfortunately, we the Mobitopians have been neglecting our virtual pet. The traffic to the main page is down, and I myself find I've bookmarked the IRC links rather than the front page. Of course, I hang out in the channel all the time, having great fun, but we don't communicate that fun and insight and commentary to visitors to the site.

A quick fix would be to move the IRC links to the front page, perhaps adding a moderation system so that not just anything gets posted. Also, being able to comment on the links would create a kind of Ur-blog (as in the original incarnation, posting interesting URLs), but with multiple commentators.

A way of submitting longer bits of IRC commentary would be nice too, so that visitors get a feel for the vibe of the channel.

Of course, the longer opinion pieces would remain, but they would be relegated from the front page.

Wednesday, 2024-09-01

More on audio blogs

The phenomenon of pointless audio blogs shows no sign of going away. The reaction has set in, however. Hear the manifesto here, or read it here.

I'd be tempted to call audio posts the ultimate ego-stroking, but that's already been appropriated by weblogging itself...

(via Mark.)

Monday, 2024-08-30

Dealing with comment spam

Let's face it: it's a war we can't win. But in the meantime, here's how I handle the (modest, for now) amounts of comment spam on my site.

I've set up wbnotify to mail me when I get a comment. When spam arrives, it's usually consistent in the form of included URLs, i.e. the same link is posted more or less at the same time.

I got a script called blog-grep.pl from somewhere (if someone recognises this as their handiwork, please contact me so that I can attribute this correctly). This script makes it very easy to search your writeback files for the offending string, and to optionally delete them.

This solution is dependent on you having command-line access to the writebacks themselves, but I suppose it can be used "offline" if you download the files via FTP and run the script locally.

Friday, 2024-08-27

Spam with attitude

The usual spam arrives, sneaking past bogofilter with a headline advertising the usual stuff (I don't even know what C1alis is). On a whim I open it. (To set the stage, I should mention I use gnus, a mail and newsreader for emacs that is, of course, text based).

The spam consists, in its visible entirity, of the following:

Your mailer do not support HTML messages. Switch to a better mailer.

Uhm, I'm pretty happy with my present "mailer", thanks.

Thursday, 2024-08-26

The triumphant return of Sony Ericsson

Mobitopia logo

A few years ago, Ericsson was losing it in the mobile handset space.

The phones it produced were technically excellent, but lacked the styling and ease of use of Nokia's handsets. Finally Ericsson faced it's failings and teamed up with Sony to form Sony Ericsson.

One of the first phones was the T68, later upgraded to the T68i. This phone was criticised for being slow, but had excellent Bluetooth support and quickly became a popular business choice. It also had a rudimentary email client.

Early last year, S-E released the T610. This trend-setting cameraphone set the stage for the triumphant return of Sony Ericsson. The combination of camera, large colour screen, snappy styling, email, and polyphonic ringtones made this a very popular phone choice. In Sweden, where I live, it's not unusual to see 12-year olds with T610s.

The T610 was followed by the Z600, the T630, and now the K700, all upgrading the basic concept. Meanwhile, Nokia has stumbled, arguably missing the cameraphone trend and perhaps pushing the smartphone concept a little too hard.

At my workplace, a medium-sized tech company in Stockholm, the T610 "family" of phones is predominant. As a support engineer, I can attest that it fits our profile very well. The email client especially is appreciated by our sales force. And the ability to sync contacts and calender with MS Outlook is also a plus. Bluetooth support is excellent, and infra-red connectivity is included as a matter of course. The UI is colourful and stylish, although texting and text input is still slow.

For us, and for many other people, the latest S-E phones are "smart enough". The additional bulk and complexity of Nokia's Symbian smartphones can't compete with S-E sleek styling.

Smartphones will remain a niche product for a few more years, but eventually, mid-level phones from S-E and others will gradually approach their functionality from below.

Wednesday, 2024-08-11

mOlympics.com

Russ has hacked together mOlympics.com with the help of Erik and Matt.

It's a mobile-ready Olympic news aggregator.

Development time: 1 day. Go Mobitopians!

Tuesday, 2024-08-10

Telia's 3G offer

Telia is offering a 3G deal for businesses. You get a Sony Ericsson Z1010 for 1 SEK (about 10c) if you sign up for a 24 month plan. To sweeten the deal, they offer free data access until the end of the year -- to the tune of 500 MB a month. According to the billboards, this is just "data", but according to the website it's GPRS data. Maybe it is one and the same, but for me, GPRS goes with GSM, while 3G has another sort of data.

However, it's beside the point. The point is that the billboards say that these 500 MB are worth 4,000 SEK (about $535). So if you're hooked with 3G and want to continue your profligate data lifestyle after your free months are up, you can end up with a habit nearly as expensive as illegal drugs.

The interesting thing is the way Telia are pushing this deal. By calling attention to the potentially enormous savings you would make by accepting this offer, they make the deal sound better. But on the other hand, they call attention to the truly bizarre pricing of mobile data at the moment.

Monday, 2024-08-02

New feed URL

The new URL for a feed for this site is http://gustaf.symbiandiaries.com/weblog/index.vrss10. Thanks to Matthias for fixing the rss10 plugin!

Wednesday, 2024-07-14

Mobile blogging for the oldtimers

Dave Winer is covering the Democratic National Convention in Boston, along with some other accredited bloggers. Good for him.

This post confuses me, however. I'm in Europe, and if I was covering this kind of stuff and could afford the GPRS charges, I'd get a laptop and a mobile to use as a mobile. Any half-competent phone manufactured in the last 5 years can do this. Of course, you have to dick around with cables, infrared, or Bluetooth, but it's definitely doable.

Some bloggers say they're the new journalists. I'd love to see a journalist say: "I can't cover that, there's no Wi-Fi there."

Tuesday, 2024-07-13

Audio blogs -- why?

Dave Winer has had blog posts in mp3 format for a while. All I can say is: why?

Listening to a person talk is much less efficient than reading something. You can't skip back and forth, sometimes you miss a word or sentence due to differing accents, and if the speaker is talking in a language you don't understand, you can't babelfish it to get something vaguely understandable.

In Dave's case, it's not always easy to hear what he says. Part of the problem is his American accent. I speak and write English fluently, but I learnt it in British schools. I seldom hear "real" American accents, i.e. not those on TV or movies. This means that I find it hard to understand what Dave says sometimes, even though my English is very good. It must be even harder for someone who is more comfortable reading English than listening to it.

Audio posts are a step back. They don't encourage information exchange, like text does. You can't hyperlink to a specific audio segment. You can't quote it without transcribing it first. The bandwidth requirements are absurdly high for the limited amount of information they contain.

Let's hope the trend doesn't spread.

Friday, 2024-07-09

The worst form of blogging

... is the pointless day-to-day diary of your daily doings.

If you can read Swedish, you can read my form of this sin at huset, my daily recap of my "vacation" working on our house. (I'll leave the fact that it is impossible to afford to pay a professional to do stuff on your house in Sweden for another rant.)

My defence of this practice is that I want to try it out, and also that random thoughts occur to me when I'm sanding a wall or whatever, and I think: "I'm so blogging that". (Of course, by the time I turn on the computer in the evening I've forgotten all about it.) This helps me through the drudgery of manual labour.

Also, I rather like the idea of a free-form database of info like what colours we've used on the walls.

But I'm painfully aware of the blog-wankery involved ... we'll see if I'll keep it up.

Monday, 2024-07-05

Below average

According to Engadget, Sweden has more mobile lines than people.

In our family, we're five. One is 2 and a half, he hasn't got a mobile.

Between us, we have eight working phones.

We have four active SIMs, which gives the Erikson-West household a mobile penetration of 80%. Below average for Sweden.

Sunday, 2024-07-04

Migrating from Movable Type to Blosxom

This is how I moved my blog from MT to Blosxom. The process is very specific for my case -- you mileage will definitely vary.

Pre-requisites

I had the following pre-requisites:

I installed Blosxom on my test system and played around with CSS and flavours until I was happy with the look of the site.

Exporting from MT

Searching Google led me to this post. It concerned moving from MT to Drupal, but mentioned an important thing: the default MT export format is hard to parse. The method used instead was to export to XML, and parse that.

I downloaded the XML export template and the Perl file used to parse it, and modified them for my needs. They are available below:

The changes to the XML template are fairly minor. I added a new Index Template in MT and called it "Export XML". The output file was set to "export.xml".

The convert.pl script was modified in the following ways:

After I had debugged these changes, I ran the script on an export downloaded from MT.

Importing to Blosxom

After I had this running, it was a simple matter of taring the files and moving them to the target server. After changing the relevant paths, I was up and running.

A friendly sysadmin installed a redirect at my old blog which pointed to the new one. The original MT archive posts were left alone to cater to old bookmarks, but I'm working on redirecting those too.

Saturday, 2024-07-03

It's official, I'm an anti-Microsoft fanatic

Sometimes (not often enough, if you ask me) msmobiles.com goes off on a tangent and rants about how the world is unfairly hindering the progress of Microsoft in the handheld market. It's the only reason I have them in my aggregator.

Of course, I want to share these gems with the gang at #mobitopia, but we don't want to increase the ranking of these pages -- the author (or authors) are not above dirty tricks themselves, so why should they get Google juice from us, the Symbian Mafia?

Enter evilurl.com. This works just like tinyurl.com, but the generated URLs are ... well, evil. This is now the preferred way to link to msmobiles.com among the members of the Mafia. What goes around, comes around.

I wasn't the one who suggested using evilurl.com (I think it was Jim), but I was the first who used it in the channel. Now they've noticed, and I'm officially an "anti-Microsoft fanatic". I've kind of had that feeling. It's nice to get it in writing.

Wednesday, 2024-06-30

Moved (again)

Welcome to my new weblog!

I've given Movable Type a try, and as I've recounted here and here, it's been a mixed experience.

MT is a very polished product. But I'm a command-line kind of guy, and web applications really don't appeal to me. Give me an ssh connection and a remote server anyday. Blosxom is a better match for my style of work.

I have a TODO list up, and will be working on this when I have time from renovating my house. Watch this space.

Text mode RSS reader

I've been looking for a textmode syndication aggregator for a while. I tried Raggle but it just core dumped on my platform. Rawdog seems promising, but just didn't seem to fit my needs.

I came upon Snownews via Rootprompt and so far it looks promising. No native support for atom feeds but that's (supposedly) handled by extensions.

So now I can read my feeds from within screen, as Ghod intended.

Update: I've since installed rawdog and must say it's a very good piece of software. Have a look at my feed here.

Monday, 2024-06-28

Blosxom vs. MT

Back to Basics

I'm hoping to go to basics soon. Right, Rafe?

Sunday, 2024-06-27

The value of forgetfulness

Love and Hate: Internet Communities

Thursday, 2024-06-17

3G services

In this week’s Ny Teknik, Hans Strandberg wrote an editorial about the need of Sweden’s 3G providers need to look up from building the infrastructure and to start selling/distributing content.

He’s concerned that the enormous amount of money spent on 3G in Sweden will be squandered on providing “3G”: Games, Gambling, and Girls. The first provider who sends video from a local council meeting will get a gold star for “kaxighet” (Swedish for chutzpah).

Is that the future we are facing? “Free enterprise” selling crap, or the “worthies”, Sweden’s politicians and authorities providing dull information?

I don’t think so. On my short ride to work today, on bus and subway, I came up with four possible mobile data services.

Existing communities

In the same paper there was a small article on how Lunarstorm, Sweden’s largest commnunity for young people, has a 3G service. People can chat with their friends, update their profiles, play games… just like on the web. Only now they can do it in the classroom, which will probably lead to 3G phones being banned in schools soon.

Traffic information

Scenario: I ride more or less the same route to work every day. I got SL’s site and set my preferences for that journey. Every weekday between 08:30 and 09:15 I can see any scheduled or unscheduled outages. I can also see when the next bus/subway will arrive, so I can decide whether to run or just take the next one. Same thing for the return trip.

The same principle can be applied to commuters in cars. Video feeds can show congestion, flash messages can warn of big accidents, a reminder can be sent when the roads are icy.

Videotext

Sveriges Television has a videotext service. Making this service available to 3G handsets is such a no-brainer that I’m suprised no-one’s done it yet. For that added pizazz, a link to a video feed can easily be added.

Location-based games

Another article in Ny Teknik described a virtual treasure hunt in Tokyo, played with GPS-enhanced mobiles. Not really a 3G application, but one that can be enhanced by a video feed showing the target location and if anyone is nearing it.

Conclusion

The thread tying these services together is that they are evolutionary, not revolutionary. They are web services that can be simply adapted to mobile data terminals. No need for gimmicks, just try to deliver information and services that are useful and simple to use.

Wednesday, 2024-06-16

Backups, backups, backups

This story is a good summary of the recent brouhaha over Dave Winer’s shutdown of weblogs.com.

From the Wired article:

“People have been really afraid to discuss this,” said a New York blogger who asked that his name be withheld. “There’s a lot of concern that any nasty comments will result in Dave not getting around to making a copy of your blog. I think a lot of the politeness and ‘We love you, Dave!’ sentiments that you’re seeing in some Web posts is just pure paranoia.”

That’s it. I now have a cron job running that’ll take an XML dump of this blog every night. Who knows, maybe Ewan will crack from England winning Euro2024 and delete everything around him…

Monday, 2024-06-14

Charlie is ugly

Mobitopia logo

The Nokia 6630 (aka. “Charlie”) is a UMTS (3G) phone with Series 60. I’ve been holding off switching to 3G from GSM due to the lack of good phones. Series 60 is the operating system used in smartphones such as the Nokia 6600, the Siemens SX1 and the N-gage. There are lots of apps available for this platform, and the integrated planning tools and email reader are good enough for me.

But I won’t buy the 6630. Why? Because it’s ugly.

The 6630 combines the pear-shaped, bottom heavy look of the 3660 with the faux-metal shine of the Siemens ST55, a desperate attempt from Siemens to cash in on the cameraphone trend.

Nokia can do better than this. The 7610 may have an unusable keypad, but it looks good. The original N-gage, aka. the Taco, packs lots of features into a package that can be described as “interesting”, even if it makes the the user look ridiculous.

Let’s hope that Nokia will re-discover its design edge and give a 3G smartphone with looks and content.

Friday, 2024-06-11

Not a whole lotta bloggin' goin' on

In this post, I promised to hang in on Movable Type and not move to another tool.

Well, I’ve changed my mind.

Why? Simply because MT is too limiting for me. I edit my posts in Emacs, run them through SmartyPants and Markdown to get nice formatting, then paste the result into MT’s edit window on the site.

When using Windows, this works — kinda. But when I’m at home, I use an old laptop running OpenBSD. Running Firebird on that machine is slooow. So I’ve got this multi-step barrier in front of my text and my weblog.

I’ve been playing with Blosxom on a spare unix server. It’s everything MT isn’t: small, spare, configurable — if you know Perl. Also I like the semi-dynamic notion of timestamp-based sorting. Certain posts, such as my reading list are updated often. Under MT, you can’t see this. If you subscribe to my RSS feed, you can see that the post has been updated, but not otherwise.

Also, it’s insanely fun to be hacking with Blosxom. Turn-around time for site changes are instant, CSS changes are fast — all because I’m working directly in Emacs, not in bog-slow Firebird.

So as soon as I get stuff in order on Symbiandiaries I’m outta MT. They can take their bloated “CMS” and sell it to someone else. I’m sticking with the tools I know and trust.

Tuesday, 2024-06-08

Pictures at Mr. X

MrX Photographers is a site devoted to digital photography. Terje, the guy behind the site, is a Mobitopian and all around nice guy.

Monday, 2024-06-07

Blogging hiatus

Symbiandiaries.com is back online after a longer hiatus. The problem lay in the management interface, not the serving of pages. For once, Movable Type's use of static pages paid off.

I've been chafing under the enforced silence, not realizing until now how much I appreciate the chance of self-expression. I really regret the chance to publish this post (now backdated). Oh well.

I've offered my services to Rafe of AAS fame as ronin sysadmin, so perhaps we can recover faster next time the site goes down.

Sunday, 2024-06-06

Nigritude Ultramarine

Amusing

Friday, 2024-05-21

blogging tools and productivity -- a personal take

I really enjoy weblogging. I didn't think I would, but I do. It's the return to the personal web circa 1994, when everybody with a web page put up their hobbies, reading lists, collectors items etc. for all the other people out there to discover.

Now, after nearly a decade, we're back where we started, but with better tools. You don't need a unix account anymore, and you don't need to grok HTML. Anyone can update a web page, a.k.a. a weblog nowadays.

Every day makes me a day older, and even though I find it hard to believe, it's now seven years since I first installed Linux on a 386 by floppy. Now I'm using a IBM Thinkpad running OpenBSD to access mail and IRC on a UltraSparc 5, also running OpenBSD. The company I work for uses Linux on Intel for nearly all its infrastructure. I spend nearly all my days in two or three terminal windows. I read mail with emacs.

So I'm a unix kind of guy. I'd rather write a 20-line perl program to do some data munging than fire up Excel. My windows are handled by screen. I browse the web with links and w3m (lynx is sooo 1998). I believe an app should do one thing, and do it well.

Yet I'm using Movable Type, the CGI version of Word, a bloated, opaque web application that definitely puts style over substance, a blogging tool for Mac users and other artistic types. It straddles uneasily across the Unix/Perl world, with its (nowadays) strong open-source bias, and the corporate make-a-buck world of proprietary source code and expensive licensing.

Well, I've grown to know a lot of people on the mobitopia channel, and one of them, Ewan Spence has a site called Symbian Diaries where just about anyone can get a blog. His installation has a lot of authors, a lot of blogs, and would probably cost $1,200 to license from Movable Type... but that's another story.

Don't get me wrong -- MT is fine for anyone comfortable with web based tools like Yahoo Mail and Google. However, I don't feel comfortable with it. I would rather have a system like blosxom or even my own crude perl hack.

But the central question is: would I post more entries? Would new software make me more productive?

I don't think so. So even if I would have a lot of fun migrating to another system, and even if I can do that while keeping the symbiandiaries.com address, I think I'll stick around MT for now. I'll try to kvetch less, and write more.

And be more interesting.

Sunday, 2024-05-02

yet another reason mark is my hero

Essentials [dive into mark]

Wednesday, 2024-04-28

more on dave's trip

Here's another strange thing about David Winer's trip to Europe -- he's started a temporary weblog for the trip.

Why can't he update his regular blog, the one read by millions each day? He seems to have a laptop, and connects through internet cafés. So he should be able to update a server somewhere.

I don't get it. I can update this blog from a web interface or from Emacs on a remote box. I'm nobody. Dave Winer is a respected internet personality. Go figure.

chutzpah

David Winer has some strange idea on how SMS works. So the gang at #mobitopia discusses a little, and David writes a post about it.

But how do we let Dave know about it. He's travelling in Europe right now. With a mobile phone.

So now he has an SMS on it from yours truly. Hope he can read it.

Tuesday, 2024-04-27

linklove

Well, this should help my PageRank. Thanks, Jim!

Friday, 2024-04-23

weblogging

Somehow it's difficult for me to write on this blog sometimes. Part of the problem is lack of time. I have a family and a full time job. I usually compose rather nice entries when walking to the subway in the mornings, but they vanish when I arrive at work and a terminal.

Of course, I could become a T9 god and tap out screeds on my taco, but I prefer reading and listening to music when riding to work. If I've forgotten reading matter, I'm usually too pissed off about that to be able to write anything good anyway.

Work provides almost no convenient times for advanced composition. What free time I doi have is spent reading other peoples weblogs, which are much better than anything I could produce. So that too is a barrier.

So why have a blog then? Egoboost of course. And sometimes you write something or think about something that's worth communicating.

Friday, 2024-04-02

thoughts on gmail

Gmail is a meme spread by Google to help improve their search algorithms.

By tracking references to this enticing service, they can see which news sources and weblogs are influential. By launching on April 1, they can also track arguments against the belief that the service actually exists.

Thursday, 2024-03-25

heroes and villians

I'm pretty new to weblogging. I guess what I did in 1997 was weblogging, but that was what everything was doing then.

"Returning" to personal publishing, then, is entering a world where people feel strongly about things. Issues that outsiders such as I find arcane, like syndication formats, escalate quite quickly into religious wars.

In these wars, two protagonists stand out. They are Dave Winer, the grand old man of weblogging, and Mark Pilgrim. I haven't really found out what they stand for, weblog-politically. But they are antagonists.

When I enter a community, I instinctively choose sides. I don't know why I've chosen the side of Mark. Maybe he represents the young Turk side of the debate. Maybe Dave's ego is just that much bigger. But there it is.

Wednesday, 2024-03-24

adding links to category archives in entries

Thanks to Gadget17 I've got links to the category to which the entry belongs working. See below, to the right of the permalink.

The vodoo code needed is this: <a href="<MTEntryCategories glue=","><$MTCategoryArchiveLink$></MTEntryCategories>"><$MTEntryCategory$></a>

The first triplet of MT tags (within the HREF attribute) construct a hyperlink to the relevant category archive. The <$MTEntryCategory$> tag shows the name of the category to which the entry belongs.

Tuesday, 2024-03-23

Microsoft and mobile phones

I think MS is making a strategic mistake in focusing on "corporate" phones. They bet that if you use a MS phone to sync to Exchange at work you'll do that at home too. The strong focus that Microsoft has on mobile developers is part of this too -- it's going to be easy to create vertical applications and enterprise-specific solutions.

So corporate users of phones will influence other buyers, and MS smartphones will slowly but surely infiltrate the mobile space.

But I'm not sure that the average phone customer has quite the good picture of Microsoft's products that MS seems to think.

Having a monopoly on desktops doesn't mean that your users like you. In fact, Microsoft is shielded from normal market pressures in the desktop space.

In the phone space, there is still competition. Nokia has a very strong brand and a product line that spans from simple black-and-white phones to communicators. This is true for Sony Ericsson, Motorola, and Samsung too.

Microsoft phones have a minimum spec -- there has to be enough oomph in the phone to run Pocket Explorer etc. Soon enough Moore's Law will ensure that every phone will be able to do just that (but the power supplies may not follow the same development). The question is: do people want a PC in their phone?

I don't think so.

Monday, 2024-03-22

moved

So now I'm on a Moveable Type weblog, just like everybody else on the planet...

I'm running around looking at all the options, and I'm really happy I didn't do that before I decided to write my own home-grown blog. I wouldn't even have started.

When I first started writing my old blog, I rediscovered the feeling that I had when I first made a homepage back in 1997. The wonderful feeling of seeing your words out there for anyone to read. That feeling was behind many people's websites. Then the web got really big, and the small people got lost.

Now we have Google and easy-to-use publishing software. So now there's less of a barrier to just write something, and your words will perhaps be noticed.

We'll see if mine are.

Monday, 2024-03-15

the phone as a business tool

The taco earned it's stripes today as a business phone. When I answered a job call at home (for the first, and I hope the last, time), I needed to login to the firewall. No probs, I used the handsfree set. Until Viking decided he wanted to play with that.

Hmm. The taco is impossible to hold between the cheek and the shoulder like a normal phone. But it does have a loudspeaker. Presto, I could check logs, talk, and hang out in IRC at the same time.

The only thing left to use is the games in a boring meeting.

Friday, 2024-02-13

software wishlist

From now on, my Nokia N-Gage will be referred to as the "taco".

I've looked around a bit, and while there is a lot of software available for Series 60 phones, I still miss some simple things.

Most of these things would be easy to do if the following conditions were met:

  1. I would learn Python
  2. Nokia would release Python for Series 60 with hooks for Contacts, Calendar, SIM-card etc.

This is what I would do if that were the case:

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