Hacknot, the book
16-Nov-2006Mr Ed has been busy taking 46 of his excellent essays on the many aspects of professional software engineering from Hacknot.info into a new book.
I believe I have a short cameo as, ahem, “a creative colleague.” My favourite section heading: “Oral Documentation Is Mostly Laughter.”
You can order these books — freshly hewn from blog and log — in page-turner novel format (I hope it has raised gold lettering!) or ISO-compliant A4. Both formats are $cheap! The book is also available to download for free. All formats of the book are released with a Creative Commons Attribution License.
Go get it!
Model democracies
8-Nov-2006Enormous numbers of unaccounted for firearms, widespread violence, an active campaign to suppress the vote of religious, ethnic and racial groups, threats of arrest, what looks like widespread ballot errors, tampering and chaos — Iraq doesn’t look that far from achieving a model democracy after all.
As Kurt Vonnegut said on his 2005 Daily Show appearance:
I have wanted to give Iraq a lesson in democracy because we’re experienced with it.
[...]
In democracy after 100 years you have let your slaves go, and after 150 years you have to let your women vote, and at the beginning of democracy there is quite a bit of genocide and ethnic cleansing. It’s quite ok and that’s what’s going on right now.
The Book Depository vs Amazon.com
7-Nov-2006The Book Depository online bookstore
The Book Depository is a UK-based on-line book store which (for Australians) offers cheaper, and faster delivery than Amazon or other US-based mail-order bookstores.
I have been ordering books from The Book Depository since Ron at Lavartus Prodeo recommended them highly in June.
Armed with the current exchange rates for British Pounds and US Dollars it is pretty easy to compare whether to get a book from Amazon, Book Depository or any other site.
The clincher for The Book Depository is usually that shipping is “free” and fast. Sites like Amazon.com charge quite steeply for even their most basic Australian delivery methods, and considering the money you pay they’re not that fast. The Book Depository uses UK Royal Mail Airmail exclusively. You can stop laughing now — I have never waited more than 5 business days for a delivery. I ordered a text book and two childrens’ books on Saturday and they arrived today (Tuesday).
If you live in Australia and you don’t want to pay the hilarious local book prices, I recommend them highly.
NB: The format of this post is an experiment with microformats.
My cure for Firefox 2.0 freezing
6-Nov-2006*** Update 2006-11-30: A better solution — disable Google Toolbar. While the Flash reinstall only decreased the frequency of freezing, disabling the Google Toolbar has cleared up the freezing trouble nicely. It may be Google Toolbar’s interaction with something else, but 48 hours of freeze-free browsing is enough for me to leave it turned off until I’m feeling brave enough to try newer versions. ***
In a previous post, I noted that Firefox 2.0 on Windows XP freezes up for me. Every now and then Firefox 2.0 stops responding and has to be killed. The cause seems to be sites using Flash.
While I haven’t isolated the cause beyond reasonable doubt or to a level of detail that would be useful for Flash or Firefox maintainers, I think I have found a cure.
I haven’t had any freezing behaviour on the two PCs I use Firefox 2.0 on since I followed this two step procedure:
Step 1: Uninstall Flash
Step 2: Reinstall Flash
That’s it.
I recommend exiting Firefox 2.0 completely before running Adobe’s Flash Player uninstall utility as I found Flash survived one uninstall when I had the browser open.
To reinstall the Flash Player I went to a Flash site (Google Analytics) and clicked the puzzle piece icon to install the plugin instead of downloading and running the installer exe from Adobe. I’m not sure if that is significant. Another characteristic common to the two PCs I have seen this behaviour on is that they both run XP Professional and they are both Core Duo’s (one Core Duo and one Core 2 Duo). Again, that’s probably not significant.
Tell me in comments if this does/doesn’t work for you.
Six Apart’s Vox
1-Nov-2006I’ve been experimenting with a frivolous blog on Six Apart’s new free blogging service: Vox.

I have never held a MySpace or LiveJournal account, so trying out Vox and quickly picking up a couple of new “neighbors” with histories and identities was pretty novel. I was immediately struck by the social emphasis compared with this blog. Don’t get me wrong, regular readers — I’m talking about comments from random strangers who wash up here after an MSN search gone awry and spammer botnets with their infectious enthusiasm for breast size alteration and pharmacy-related spelling bees.
Through design or accident, Vox seems to be a MySpace for grownups or LiveJournal with more glitz.
The underlying theme of Vox is combining free blogspace with a walled garden of bloggy social interaction. You are coaxed with alluring content and user interface design to explore and link. As Julie the Cruise Director was to The Love Boat, the Vox homepage is to Vox — issuing daily blogging topic suggestions to the listless horde.
Vox defines your relationship to each of your fellow Vox inhabitants as either neighbor, friend, family or no association. Your neighborhood is visible to other people so they can view the kinds (and quantities) of relationships you have.
You can add a relationship between your account and someone else’s with any of these categories. You need to be a neighbor to also be tagged as friend or family. Neighbors, friends and family are similar/identical to Flickr’s simple access levels. You can restrict visibility of information about yourself, posts, music and other media to people with these categorizations.
Adding someone to your neighborhood is a bit of a strange metaphor. In its favour, it doesn’t require you to leap the emotional hurdle of declaring friendship with someone, it’s just an indication (to them) that you are interested in their content. Adding someone to your neighborhood means your default views will begin to show their public post activity.
If you change your mind about Vox, you are free to cancel your account or delete posts and other content. You don’t seem to be able to export your blog content other than through your (atom) feed. I was suspicious that I might have missed a “Vox pwns j00!” clause in the terms of service, but Vox’s Terms of Service clearly indicate that you retain ownership of your content:
CONTENT SUBMITTED
Six Apart does not claim ownership of the Content you place on your Six Apart Blog Site. By submitting Content to Six Apart for inclusion on your Six Apart Blog Site, you grant Six Apart a world-wide, royalty-free, and non-exclusive license to reproduce, modify, adapt and publish the Content solely for the purpose of displaying, distributing and promoting your Blog Site on Six Apart’s Internet properties. This license exists only for as long as you continue to be a Six Apart customer and shall be terminated at the time your Blog Site is terminated.
Vox provides a pretty easy to use WYSIWYG post editor which has a few foibles, but is certainly state of the art for blog editing. You can link to, and embed video, images, music and (links to) books and manage simple databases (collections) of these as well. Your collections and media are usually a part of the visible information about you — providing an on-line version of a vanity mix-tape.
Although Vox seems as though it is marketed as a blogging engine it is not a terribly good choice. For a start, commenting on posts is only open to Vox members and you can only choose your blog’s aesthetics from pre-packaged themes (maybe that’s actually a good thing…). If you want a free no-nonsense blog, WYSIWYG editing and easy-to-use bells and whistles and open access to comments, then use Blogger or a similar service. If you want a fun forum for social interaction with old and new friends — Vox might be the ticket.






