iPod is Cool
I finally gave in an bought a 40GB iPod this afternoon. I intend to use it as much as a hard drive as an mp3 player though I’m already addicted to having music follow me everywhere, so it may wind up changing the way I listen to music – we’ll see how that pans out.
Where it will be useful (and has already been) is when the band is learning a new cover song and we need to find a copy of the song to refresh the memories of how it goes and work out the details etc. Previously I’d have to go home, burn a CD and remember to bring it with me to the next rehearsal whereas now I can just plug the iPod into the PA and hear the song. That alone will be worth the money over time and it only works if you can store your entire music collection on the player, easily carry it in your pocket (my hands are full carrying instruments and assorted paraphernalia) and most importantly, be able to navigate the songs quickly and easily. I don’t know of anything other than the iPod that meets those requirements. The fact that all my music is already stored, sorted and correctly tagged in iTunes (it’s only taken about 4 years to get there) is a major bonus.
Tweaking SpamAssassin Works
A while back I mentioned that spamassassin wasn’t filtering my spam too well anymore and that I suspected it might be because the bayesian filter had been neutered. Apparently I was right. Since I upped the score for BAYES_99 the amount of spam reaching my inbox has dramatically reduced. I’m back down to one or two spam messages getting through per week instead of four or five a day.
Very happy.
One Up For Technorati
Technorati seem to have worked out much better ways for claiming your blog in their listings than Feedster – particularly the new auto-claim mechanism (of course you need to trust them a fair bit to use that). With Feedster I have to paste this stupid link in a blog entry and annoy anyone subscribed to my feed or any of the planets that aggregate my feed with a pointless entry. So Feedster, when are we going to get a less annoying method?
Playing With Technorati and PubSub
I previously mentioned that I don’t get Technorati. In response to that I got a bunch of good responses so I thought I should play with it more in light of those comments. It seems that Technorati is best used for tracking news as it happens, so the release of the Mac Mini was the perfect test case. To add to the fun I also ran the same search on PubSub to compare the results.
I Don’t Get Technorati
I’ve been reading Scoble a lot lately and he’s so excitable about blogging and related technologies that I figured it was worth checking out some of them. So I started playing with Technorati and so far I’m just not getting it. It’s a far worse search engine than Google, it doesn’t pick up on changes to content particularly well, it requires people to go to a fair bit of effort to ensure that they do wind up in the index and most of it’s search results just point to stupid people ranting on their blogs (you know, like I’m doing now).
When The Going Gets Tough The Press Get All Whiney
Robert Scoble points to an open letter from Jason McCabe Calacanis to Steve Jobs about Apple suing Think Secret. It comes across to me as the epitome of childishness. The key to it all comes down to this point:
If you want to sue someone sue your employees who send us the leaks, or your partners who tip us off. They are the ones who sign agreements with you not to talk—not us!
SpamAssassin Defaults
I think I’ve discovered the reason that SpamAssassin has been letting a lot of spam through – the bayesian filter is effectively neutered if you have the net checks on. Now I’m sure the SpamAssassin team has a bunch of statistics why this is good in the most common case, it’s not working out so well for me.
I live with my spam filters set to throw anything scoring 3 or higher into the spam bucket (I think SpamAssassin’s default is 10) so I’m ruthless with spam and it tends to classify forwarded jokes as spam which isn’t such a loss (it also classifies emails containing flight details from QANTAS as spam which isn’t so good but QANTAS emails look more like spam than the real thing so what can you do?). Anyway, from what I can tell, SpamAssassin will be a lot more effective for me if I add the following to my user_prefs file:
The Courts Should Not Enforce Open Standards
A while back this article came through the Reuters RSS feed about someone bringing an antitrust case against Apple because he was “forced” to buy an iPod. Now while my non-laywer opinion is that he has no chance of actually winning (hint: there’s a thriving competitive environment for online music with a wide range of viable alternatives that he could have gone to instead of the iTunes store), it does concern me that people think the courts should be used to enforce open standards. Doing so would be hugely detrimental to the software world and harm consumers more than it helps them.
It’s a Small World Afterall
Currently stuck in my head:
It’s a world of laughter a world of tears,
It’s a world of hope and a world of fears….
And thus Ken Coar must be made to pay:
It’s just the song that has currently commandeered too many of my little grey cells. It’s a different one each morning. So far I’ve been spared it being, “It’s a Small World,” at least.
Thanks Ken…
Hunka Hunka Burnin’ Office (Again)
There was another fire in the building on Christmas apparently. Power is now back on in the office but there’s no air conditioning. Since my house mate was kind enough to install an air conditioner at our place, the engineers are coming to my place for the week. On the downside, sourcing enough desks for everyone will be a bit of fun.
Mobile Phone Content Definitely Taking Off
It’s interesting to see the predictions that mobile phone content will take off really starting to come true in a big way. The television is inundated with ads for all sorts of stupid gimmicks that can be sent to your mobile phone. Want to know how to be a good kisser? SMS this word to that number and the nice robot on the other end will give all the tips you need. The ringtone craze has been going on for a while of course and there seems to be a subscription service being promoted for ringtones these days. I haven’t seen an ad for mobile phone games yet so Mr Schwartz’s predictions still seem to be waiting in the wings a little (though mobile phone games are definitely pretty big business so I’d expect them to start showing up in TV ads here soon).
Why OS X Doesn’t Provide An Advantage In Enterprise
David Jericho revisits his complaints about the airport express and ends with the comment:
To that end, try as I might, from borrowing and using my sisters 1.2GHz iBook for a month, to using Kirsten’s G4 machines at home exclusively I remain unconvinced. I fail to see a use for the hardware (and the price tag – although the laptops have come down), and I just can’t see what benefits the software offers anyone in an enterprise.