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Montreal’s new geek police

25 Jul

Just took this picture this morning of Montreal’s new geek police. The perfect occasion to make use of my new iPhone 3G and upload to Facebook.

Montreal Geek Police

Let me tell you that I wasn’t the only person taking pictures of the policeman. I wonder, as a friend asked: “Are these made by Segway”? Another friend thought that if he would get arrested by this policeman, he would be laughing and searching for the hidden cameras.

Anyway, if you are looking for the chic geek look, you surely can’t go wrong with this contraption.

Thinking of using Graffiti CMS

28 Jun

I am looking to refresh my company’s Web site, ParadiVision, which has not been updated in quite a while. It does not showcase what I really have been working in for the last two years.

Yesterday, I discovered Grafitti CMS and it looks like just what I need:

  • SEO optimized
  • Dead simple
  • Easy to customize the design
  • Easy to add plug-ins for
  • .Net engine

Since most of the content is outdated and I want the new Web site to be dead simple, I will probably start from scratch with new content. Since we have our own servers on W2K 2003 and IIS and that I’m fluent with C# and .Net, the new engine will be easy to expand or write widget for if the need arise.

For the transition, I will also be using ISAPI_Rewrite, which is an Apache mod_rewrite compatible ISAPI module for IIS. I will use it to do redirects for outdated URLs. Also, I will take the time to make sure all variant of the fully qualified domain name will be properly redirected.

Status of my wife’s migration to OS X and a question

29 May

Since a week or so, Kim Vallée, my wife is now the happy owner of a MacBook Pro. She used to be on Windows XP and I’m happy to report that she made the transition to OS X without too much problem. The fact that her new laptop is a lot more powerful that her previous one might have helped a bit.

Granted, since her primary occupation is writing, specially for her blog At Home with Kim Vallée, her computing and software needs are not really constrained by the operating system.

Software

1) HyperSnap DX

On Windows, Kim loved HyperSnap (v.3), swore it was the best and she was afraid of not finding a snapshot software on par with it. Well, she now swears by OS X’s integrating snapshot keyboard shortcuts which are as capable for her need… plus you don’t have to start a snapshot software, it’s always available.

2) Microsoft Office 2008 & others

Between Pages and Word, she came back to Word. She liked Pages, but I suppose she prefers Word. In any case, the transition from Windows to Mac is not really a problem when you are using the pretty much the same software. The same goes for other applications available on both operation systems. Bonus to Microsoft for having the Home and Students edition, which makes the repurchase very affordable.

3)  Windows Live Writer

Kim’s killer application for blogging is Windows Live Writer. It makes writing posts a breeze, it supports almost any blogging platform and allows you to write offline and publish when you want. She hasn’t found an acceptable software alternative yet for her Mac. During dinner yesterday evening, our friend Jon Husband pointed us to Qumana. It almost can do the job perfectly for Kim, but she depends on Live Writer’s automatic photo-paper effect that get applied to pictures that get uploaded in preview and higher resolution mode.

4) VMware Fusion

To support Windows Live Writer, I installed VMware Fusion on her MacBook. It is quite impressive how well Windows runs on it. It also supports drag-and-drop and copy-and-paste to and from OS X. As a bonus, she’ll probably use it to connect to our remote VPN when she needs to modify her blog’s design. Windows Live Writer installation solved!

Hardware

On the hardware side, the MacBook Pro’s is fast, the DVD drive is silent enough, the battery life is acceptable, the keyboard is incredibly comfortable and silent and the Multi-Touch trackpad is quite responsive and useful.

The only few gripes are due to Apple’s obsession with minimalism. The Delete key, in reality, is a backspace and there’s no delete key. You also notice that you depend a lot on the mouse’s right button which is absent. Both problems a remedied quickly enough with the use of the function key and you get used to it quickly enough. For the mouse, you can always plug an external mouse too.

Getting used to OS X

Overall, OS X is a great operating system.

However, there’s a single thing I really do not like on OS X and its applications menu. This is more my opinion than Kim’s because she does not depend that much on application menus.

Having the applications’ menus always at the top of the screen is quite inefficient, and, in my opinion archaic. It dates back to the first Mac and was never changed. I could see the rationale this design choice when all we had were tiny Mac monitors. But with higher resolutions and secondary monitors, it becomes an annoyance. When you add an external monitor, the menu still stays at the top of the primary screen so if you drag an application on the second monitor, you have to navigate your mouse back and forth from one monitor to the other to get to the menu bar and back to the application. On Windows, menus follow your applications’ windows. It is much more practical and ergonomic.

Copy-and-paste Problem – Call to help

There’s only one thing that’s still nagging Kim and disrupting her workflow. It’s funny how, without realizing it, you get used to tiny details.

In Windows, if you highlight some hyperlinked text from a Web page in any Web browser and then copy and paste this in Microsoft Word, it copies the text and the hyperlink at the same time. So the work flow is:

  1. Highlight hyperlinked text in browser
  2. Copy
  3. Switch to Word
  4. Paste

In Mac OS X, doing the same thing from Firefox or Safari results in only the selected text being copied in Word (or Pages). Since Kim first writes her article in Word and includes a lot of hyperlinks in her posts, the workflow becomes:

  1. Highlight hyperlinked text in browser
  2. Copy
  3. Switch to Word
  4. Paste
  5. Switch to browser
  6. Right-click on highlighted text – Copy URL
  7. Switch to Word
  8. Select text
  9. Open hyperlink window
  10. Paste URL
  11. Close hyperlink window

So, Mac professionals or enthusiasts, is there a solution?

Is there a way, a configuration, a hack, anything, that can enable Kim to copy-and-paste both the text and the hyperlink at the same time when highlighting text with an hyperlink on a Web page?

UPDATE: On Twitter, Nini, suggested to click-drag the hyperlink into Word. This drags the URL only. If you highlight the hyperlinked text and drag it, it still copies only the URL. If you highlight a phrase or paragraph that includes some hyperlinks it copies only the text! On Windows, drag-dropping hyperlinks also copies only the URL but drag-dropping a blend of non-hyperlinked text copies the formatting including the hyperlinked text.

Conclusion

Even with an annoyance or two, the Kim’s migration is a success and I do not think she would like to go back.

Learn what’s the buzz on wall discussions with Facebook Lexicon

15 Apr

Facebook Lexicon, a new utility that Facebook just announced can help you learn how certain words are used on discussions taking places on wall posts.

With that knowledge in hand, let’s see what’s the buzz on the Habs right now as the buzz in Montreal is increasing week after week.

habs

We see a neat increase before the end of the regular season and a huge spike of discussions with the playoffs now taking place. Makes sense! Click on the above picture to see the most recent stats on wall discussions about the Habs.

It’s pretty neat, but I would really like to see some numbers. Maybe they only use samples? In any case, I think the idea is more to compare tendencies.

So, without wasting time, let’s compare between the Habs and the Bruins:

habs_vs_bruins

Ahhh! That’s better. No wonder the tickets for the series in Montreal sold in minutes and they were still tickets available in Boston at the first day of the playoffs…

UPDATE: you need to be logged in Facebook before clicking on the images to see the latest stats.

My first 2008 resolution

3 Jan

First, Happy New Year 2008 everyone!

No, I’m not going to say I’ll blog more, because I don’t know if I will be able to follow through.

All my resolutions for 2008 have the goal of making my life simpler and easier.

My first step is to start with emails to stop the information overload. I’ve been using Outlook since 1996. My PST file was now over 5 gigs!

First thing is that I’ve put this file aside and it’s now an archive. I am starting with a blank slate. Then, I imported my contacts for the old file and I will have to delete a few outdated contacts. I also imported my tasks and I them cleaned up so that I only have a few future tasks to do. For the inbox and email folders, I did not import anything. I really want to start fresh. If I ever need something from the past, I will search my archive.

I’ve  also set up my email account so that emails stay on the server for 2 days. Over the holidays, I configured GMail to fetch emails from my server. I already have a Web mail access, but it strains under the load when I keep too many messages. I plan to gradually migrate to GMail to archive my emails instead of using Outlook. This way, I’ll have everything available online. That’s why I’m keeping my emails on the server for 2 days: it is to be sure GMail fetches them.

I’m also continuing to unsubscribe from every newsletter. All of them! I use RSS feeds with Google Reader instead. This way, I will read what I want when I want instead of having my Inbox fill up with things I don’t really need to be distracted with. My goal is that the only emails I eventually see will be from friends and business contacts.

To free yourself from information overload, I recommend reading this post from Tim Ferris: 12 Filtering Tips for Better Information in Half the Time: RSS, Del.icio.us and StumbleUpon