Thursday, April 23, 2009

A Little Uncluttering of My Own

Yesterday, I unsubscribed from Unclutterer. Here is why:

  1. I'm subscribed to so many blogs that if I spend two days away from Google Reader I go to over 1000 unread items.
  2. After you've read Unclutterer for a couple years, you find there aren't really that many new ways to reduce clutter.
  3. In addition to the new posts every day, they also put up "A year ago on Unclutterer" posts and I'm "come on, I already read this."
  4. They have a cute feature called "Unitasker Wednesday" where they show a product that is only good for doing something that is not necessary or that you can already do with common tools you own. Unfortunately they start each post with the caveat: "All Unitasker Wednesday posts are jokes — we don’t want you to buy these items, we want you to laugh at their ridiculousness." I get that they want to prevent comments from clueless newcomers who don't get that it's a joke, but those commenters aren't regular readers. The clueless deserve scorn, not a warning that sucks joy from the regulars.

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

IE8 and why I am going back to being a late adopter

When I was growing up, I planned on being an early adopter before the term had been invented. But the reality hasn't panned out that way. Maybe it's because they never came out with the watch phones and jet packs I wanted. Or maybe it's because I'm frugal. In any case, I carry no cell phone, my Windows XP machine is running Microsoft Office 2000 and nothing I own has a GPS in it.

So it was a little odd that last month that I decided to upgrade from Internet Explorer 7 to Internet Explorer 8 without waiting for experts to tell me that the bugs had been worked out.

IE8 has a bunch of new features I like. But...

Until today, for me, and based on my internet searches over the past month, for quite a number of other people, IE8 did not have a "find on this page" feature. You know, the basic crtl-f "find". Like if you're on a complicated page and want to find the link for "contact us", you couldn't do a search for "contact".

I found the answer at The Winhelponline Blog, not at a Microsoft site. Microsoft had me doing a bunch of things that accomplished nothing but waste hours of my time.

So now IE8 is working, but there is still something that bugs me.

I use the security setting that causes IE to tell you when you are on a page that has a mixture of secure and insecure content.

Probably I should find a way to have it not tell me this, because it never tells me that either "nothing on this page is secure" or "everything on this page is secure", only when it's a mixture. If I don't need to know in the all or nothing cases, why do I need to know in the mixed case?

But this is not what's bugging me about IE8. In IE7 and earlier versions, when this situation occurred they said "This page contains both secure and nonsecure items" and and asked "Do you want to display the nonsecure items".

To see everything, you clicked "yes".

In IE8, they ask "Do you want to view only the webpage content that was delivered securely?" And then give an explanation about some content not being delivered by a secure HTTPS connection.

To see everything you click "No".

Now every time the message comes up, I read the question, then the explanation, and then go back to read the question because the explanation made me forget that "No" is the answer I want to give. Maybe this is good exercise for my neural pathways and it's preventing Alzheimers but it makes me cranky.

Eber Irigoyen blogged about this on What do you want to program today? and one of his commenters provided the method for eliminating the message. I'm going to implement it. Then I'm going to submit his post and mine to Seth Godin, the This is Broken guru. And I'm going to go back to waiting until Lifehacker or Windows Secrets tell me it's time to download the new upgrades.

(By the way, I don't care if someone out there likes another browser like Firefox or Chrome more. This is not what this post is about and I may just delete any comments endorsing other browsers.)

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Jennifer Noxon's Necklace

I ran into Jennifer shortly before her opening at Artguise on Friday night. "Are you going to blog it?" she asked me.

"Oh yes," I said.

"Oh good," she said, "then I can link to you."

"And I'll link to you! We'll create a infinite loop on the internet!"

Then I asked her what the story was behind her necklace.

Her first reaction was to say that it had no story. But then she revealed that she put it together from items from her travels and beads made by her inspiring great aunt, Betty Lane.

"I wrote about her on Robert Genn's blog painters keys" said Jenn.

More Links:

Jennifer's paintings will be on display at art guise until May 19. They are being sold for extremely reasonable prices.

Jennifer also has paintings at Cube Gallery until May 17.

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Honesty is the Best Poetry

I was in Toronto last weekend and sppent an hour graffitti shopping on Sunday. Made a bunch of stitched photos using MS ICE.

The stitched photos and others are up on Flickr and here's a widget from closr that lets you pan around in one of the panoramas.