9/100 How I Find Blogging Ideas

To be honest, I’m not entirely sure. I read a lot of feeds usually several hundred posts in a single sitting and while reading I tend to create placeholder posts in my blogs so that they can serve as reminders of things I want to write about later. For example, the current placeholders I have … Continue reading “9/100 How I Find Blogging Ideas”

To be honest, I’m not entirely sure. I read a lot of feeds usually several hundred posts in a single sitting and while reading I tend to create placeholder posts in my blogs so that they can serve as reminders of things I want to write about later.

For example, the current placeholders I have are regarding digital nomads, the ghost (which CB calls the context engine), a comparison of the iPhone to a modern Blackberry and some commentary on recent posts by A-list bloggers. Not all of them will make it into final posts – some will be repurposed and/or deleted. But it serves as a digital notepad where I can leave some ideas and try them out later.

This serves me for the several blogs I write for – be that NiMUG, cimota, infurious, Mac-Sys Ltd, lategaming or the other couple. I don’t tend to write with an agenda – I write about what interests me at the time and so it’s possible to have blog post reminders wait for weeks and weeks while I organise my thoughts about it.

[Chris Brogan’s 100 topics]

Blame Apple. Blame Steve Jobs. Don’t blame the technology pundit.

So, here’s the deal. Let’s say you want a job as an IT pundit. You first find out whether there’s any jobs. There’s one at ITWire, a site that reports to be “connecting technology professionals”. You use your charm and wit to get a job. Brilliant. They didn’t bother to even check your IT credentials! … Continue reading “Blame Apple. Blame Steve Jobs. Don’t blame the technology pundit.”

So, here’s the deal. Let’s say you want a job as an IT pundit. You first find out whether there’s any jobs. There’s one at ITWire, a site that reports to be “connecting technology professionals”. You use your charm and wit to get a job. Brilliant. They didn’t bother to even check your IT credentials!

So this brings me to Apple’s Xmas gift: wireless networking problems, by Sam Varghese. Like Sam I have a gleaming MacBook Pro. Like Sam I use wireless networking. I also use a variety of wireless routers from Apple’s own brand, premium brands like Cisco and of course, cheap as chips brands which come badged by my local IT shop in a white box.

And no, I’ve not seen any wireless problems with Leopard.

So, what do we have here.

Two people both using ostensibly the same hardware, using the same protocols, using likely the same embedded operating systems in the access points and yet one of them has a problem.

Sam rubs his grey RMS® beard and starts to write an article where he will moan that his wireless isn’t working and blame it on Apple. He makes allusions to a recent fix being very vague ad then not fixing the issue. Can’t really have been a software problem then, Sam. Then, he’s going to finish up with some fairy tale abut how one time at BandCamp he and some Linux d00ds cooked up a hack to help Ubuntu users connect to wireless network and therefore proprietary software is inferior to GPL software.

Okay, so let’s dig a bit deeper.

  1. He doesn’t mention which brand of router he’s using yet this is, in my experience, likely to be the source of issues. Maybe they’re a heavy advertiser with ITWire? Wouldn’t be good to publicly criticise them. Maybe they use an embedded Linux as their OS? Again, not politic to criticise when you’re all about the Free® software. No sir.
  2. He doesn’t mention his troubleshooting steps. Because then someone could point out he’s doing it wrong. He’s not created a new Location, or deleted the entry out of his Keychain because they are, after the router, the most likely source of issues with wireless. The Locations issue boils down to know-it-alls changing values they don’t really understand. And sometimes the password in Keychain can get confused especially if you change your Wireless network password.
  3. He claims Apple is ignoring the people who have this issue without actually linking to any of the places where people are complaining about the problem. We can’t then verify if they have correct setups, whether they have bothered trying to fix anything or whether, like Sam, they just want it broken so they can kvetch
  4. He’s not specific with his log files or error messages because, let’s be honest, he doesn’t want this fixed easily. Mainly because the error lies between keyboard and sofa. Sam – you can fix this. Really you can – and it won’t require writing one line of code.

We don’t really want to dwell on the fact that the networking stack is Leopard is Open Source under the APSL which, despite not beig GPL, is a Free license (according to the FSF at least, though Sam disagrees).

Apparently Apple must now “be well aware” of the issues Leopard has caused with “laptop users”. He’s seriously that generic as if half of the people who bought Leopard since it’s launch (probably half a million laptop users) are all having the same issues as him.

Uh…Sam….you don’t work in tech support do you?

[Interesting to note one of his earlier stories: Was it Automatix or bad RAM that killed Ubuntu?]

Night terrors

For a few months my son Jacob went through a patch of night terrors. He would cry in his sleep and if I was there quick enough then the touch of my hand was enough to send him quietly to the land of Nod. However in most situations I’d hear his cries too late and … Continue reading “Night terrors”

For a few months my son Jacob went through a patch of night terrors.

He would cry in his sleep and if I was there quick enough then the touch of my hand was enough to send him quietly to the land of Nod. However in most situations I’d hear his cries too late and then there was no reassuring him. Everything you offered from comfort to a drink was met with the same wail. Trying to hold his twisting screaming form was heartbreaking but eventually I figured out how to break him from his nightmare and that was to give him a real scare. Otherwise he’d be trapped in this nightmare and no-one wanted that. So a loud bang or turning out the lights suddenly and he’d be surprised enough to calm down and minutes later he was asleep again.

I guess Night Terrors must be a particularly lucid dream so that the dreamer finds it hard to tell the dream world from the real one – even though the dream world may be ridiculous – because in dreams nothing is too far fetched and anything can happen.

Tonight I have night terrors. A nightmare is visiting me tonight and I’m hoping someone will wake me up.


Blogged direct from iPhone.

Revealing the not-so-secret curmudgeon in me…

James at eirepreneur writes: ‘maybe we can do business some day’ Startup entrepreneurs should read that a few times. We like to think of ourselves as great socializers in this country, and we are, but not in the same way as the entrepreneurs in Silicon Valley. As regards doing business we’re much more inclined to … Continue reading “Revealing the not-so-secret curmudgeon in me…”

James at eirepreneur writes:

‘maybe we can do business some day’

Startup entrepreneurs should read that a few times. We like to think of ourselves as great socializers in this country, and we are, but not in the same way as the entrepreneurs in Silicon Valley. As regards doing business we’re much more inclined to cost social capital in terms of immediate payoff. “Why bother with OpenCoffee, Barcamps and Podcamps if I don’t have a new customer or business partner next week?”. But in California social capital is a long term investment and one made without expectation of payoff.

I’m sorry James but that reads to me just like the have a nice day wishes you get from your local fast food franchise. It’s no more committal than that certainly. If they were genuinely interested then it would be immediately followed up. It sounds like a “let’s be friends” statement when a courting doesn’t go quite the way you planned it.

It has the desired effect of course, leading us to feel good about the person probably in a way we no longer respond to when conversing with a franchise employee. Familiarity, however, will breed contempt. Right now, it’s just new.

The fact that it costs nothing to smile is not lost on the locals who don’t always look for an immediate payoff. Indeed there are likely hundreds of instances where we can look at the people in the Irish blogosphere and wonder: where’s the payoff? Indeed we might as well look at the blogosphere itself and consider where is the payoff? There’s precious few people making a living off blogging and I blog variously for my personal enjoyment as well as for the entertainment of the masses – and not for the payoff (what payoff???)

Paddy’s Valley is, from what I can see, living RSS. It’s delivering the content to the people we want to read it. They’ll learn, we’ll learn – it’s the semantic web, just minus the web bit. I’m a cynic because I’ve been to enough trade shows and talked to enough businesses that I recognise ‘maybe we can do business some day’ as a substitute for ‘goodbye’. It’s notable that it wasn’t said by any of the companies and partners that I did end up doing work with. If anything it makes me consider the sentiment handed over with fries and coke as possible even more sincere.

It is said we must judge ourselves by our achievements and others by their intentions. Let’s see some intentions and not just words.

It sounds more like amazement that complete strangers are polite!

*shock horror*

Who would have thought it?

Linux toys getting exciting…

Sure, we had a barney about the OpenMoko and other devices the other day but one thing that’s cool about Linux is the way that it proliferates in embedded devices. I’m quietly lusting after a Chumby as an internet appliance for the house. Though I’d not be developing for it, it’s the kind of device … Continue reading “Linux toys getting exciting…”

Sure, we had a barney about the OpenMoko and other devices the other day but one thing that’s cool about Linux is the way that it proliferates in embedded devices.

I’m quietly lusting after a Chumby as an internet appliance for the house. Though I’d not be developing for it, it’s the kind of device that I think my kids would use. I’ve been trying to find something that would give them a “limited” internet experience with a tactile approach. The fact they’ve all been able to use my iPhone to view pictures, movies and music shows the utility of it.

Chumby is a static counter-top device. A recent competitor to it might be the wizPy which suffers from an awful camelCase name. The selling point seems to be that it’s a mobile Linusx handheld that also seems to allow you to boot an x86 PC over USB and provide you with the same environment. That’s neat.

SAP to support iPhone

Reuters has this little snippet about SAP planning to release an iPhone client despite analysts falling over themselves to tell us the iPhone isn’t business-friendly: On Monday, SAP broke with precedent by saying it would introduce a version of its upcoming customer relationship management software for the iPhone before launching versions for mobile devices from … Continue reading “SAP to support iPhone”

Reuters has this little snippet about SAP planning to release an iPhone client despite analysts falling over themselves to tell us the iPhone isn’t business-friendly:

On Monday, SAP broke with precedent by saying it would introduce a version of its upcoming customer relationship management software for the iPhone before launching versions for mobile devices from RIM and Palm Inc (PALM.O).

The reason? SAP’s own salespeople were clamoring for it, saying the iPhone was easier to use, according to Bob Stutz, SAP senior vice president in charge of developing customer relationship management software.

“This isn’t necessarily iPhone deployment by way of the IT department, but it’s by people who really want to use this device and IT is responding in a really positive way,” said Michael Gartenberg, an analyst with market research firm Jupiter Research.

This is exactly the way that the market should work. The customers want something, they build a case and the IT department responds in a positive way. In the most simple of business cases, “easier to use”, that’s exactly the sort of response an IT department should respond with.

I’m not a fan of Blackberry devices. In a previous life I was forced to help people use them when attached to the O2 network and I can say that simply because their IMAP implementation in the device sucked the big one it was not a pleasure to use for email. It was functional, it was something the customer tolerated, but under no circumstances did it take away the pain. (And frankly the number of keyboard shortcuts we needed to look up made it more reminiscent of using Wordstar or DOS than a modern handheld device).

February brings us the iPhone SDK and SAP is one of the first of many companies which will be queuing up to get their applications onto iPhone. Others we’ll see will be Skype, VNC, a Terminal, an AIM client, an MSN client – maybe even a Yahoo client (as long as they all maintain Store-And-Forward IM messages).

Sure, analysts tell us that an Exchange client is essential but that’s for Microsoft to produce and we have to ask them why they wouldn’t create Outlook for iPhone and why everyone expects Apple to create it? Same reason they don’t produce Outlook for Macintosh – because the Mac would continue to replace Windows in business but at a frighteningly quicker rate. I’ve said before there is no option out there for Groupware which realistically compares to Exchange. SAP is creating a client for their corporate applications and not expecting Apple to build it. So, come on Microsoft, where’s the client for iPhone?

(Why does Microsoft get that benefit of the doubt? Cisco creates clients for their servers/routers. SAP does for their applications. Apple does for their servers. Why does Microsoft get away with this crap?)

What application would you like to see on your iPhone?

8/100 Ways to Save a Bad Time at a Conference

For about a decade I was a regular at the gaming convention scene. I made a real effort to be busy over the entire weekend. Before we started Crucible Design this was a bit more challenging; not so much at the local convention because I was an organiser but at the conventions in Cork and … Continue reading “8/100 Ways to Save a Bad Time at a Conference”

For about a decade I was a regular at the gaming convention scene. I made a real effort to be busy over the entire weekend. Before we started Crucible Design this was a bit more challenging; not so much at the local convention because I was an organiser but at the conventions in Cork and Dublin, you had to make an effort to have fun sometimes. This meant either booking yourself into games or running them yourself. It meant, despite being sober as a judge, you’d ignore the awful smell of urine in the entranceway to the bars and your realisation that drunken nerds are actually more annoying than sober ones.

We learned quickly to make sure to book what we could, bring just too many books for comfort so we’d have choices recognising we could always pick up another game at the trade stalls and give that a go. Over time our sophistication increased as we included card games like Lunch Money in our backpacks and turning up at conventions became more of a social experience. I remember playing some memorable games in Cork and Dublin – SLA Industries, MERC2000, Traveller with the same people every year for a few years. It was really our only contact with them.

Without the safety net of friends or pre-packaged games, such as at IT conferences, you’re left with some conundrums but my suggestion is the same: make your own fun

We’re going to have to assume that you’ve done your preliminaries. You’ve gotten accommodation, you know where to get potable food and water and you’ve got some sort of access to the internet. You’ve made some sort of attempt to meet up with like-minded sorts beforehand but we’re in one of the days when your friends could not attend and so you’re left to your own devices.

  • Find somewhere safe to leave your baggage
    • Not metaphysical/psychological/emotional baggage here but the fact that most of the time I find myself tramping round conventions and conferences with a bag on my back. This was especially painful at gaming conventions as I was toting probably 20 kilos of books. At IT conferences, like Apple Expo, I’d have a packed bag with laptop. It wasn’t terribly heavy but it was wearying. And more importantly if you do hook up with like-minded fellows later on in the day, they will all have somewhere to ditch their stuff too before they go to the pub. Don’t be the guy with the huge heavy bag at the pub. Don’t be that guy!
  • Be curious
    • Seriously, what do you have to lose? If you see a group of people in a heated discussion about something interesting then listen in. If you see a notice asking for people to attend something then go to it. If there’s someone sitting behind a trade stand at the conference, then there’s going to be a 80% chance they’re bored too. Go and talk to them – you’ll learn a bit about their product or, if they’re just filling in, you should end up just having a chat. Even at Apple Expo with the language difficulties I’ve had some cool chats. And even a bit of flirting. Which is fun when you don’t really understand French. (At least I think she was flirting – she may have been threatening me with pepper spray, who knows!)
  • Set yourself a goal
    • Don’t just amble about aimlessly and give yourself blisters. Also – don’t just bury your head in a book. Conferences are social events, especially if it’s an Unconference. Make yourself some simple goals
      – talk to five people;
      – get five reciprocal swaps of business cards (or emails if that’s too old school);
      – attend three panels and ask one question at each
  • Don’t be afraid to leave
    • I know you’re there for the conference but don’t feel that during the open conference hours you have to stay where you are. For example, last time I attended Apple Expo I took 36 hours out and visited my friend Waleska in Lyon. It’s a 2 hour train journey from Paris but it’s the gastronomic capital of France and therefore will definitely be worth it. Likewise in Dublin or Cork, take time to pop out to the local shops, pick up a gift for your SO, eat somewhere nice.
  • Buy something you shouldn’t
    • I know, it’s not fiscally responsible to advocate this and in my case it meant me buying an iPod touch. And this then made me crave an iPhone. And as a result, my SO wanted an iPhone. So it quickly became a very expensive proposition. But it is an option and it’s worked at nearly every conference I’ve been to that has trade stands.

That’s it, these are my tips for making an unenjoyable conference into something to remember. I’m sure that others would come up with much more constructive ways – the obvious one being that if you’re not involved in something, start something! But if you’re the sort of person who does have a bad time at a conference then you’re unlikely to be the sort of person who can strut out into the crowd and make a bit of noise to start something.
[Chris Brogan’s 100 topics]

Everyone is 12 years old on the Internet

Today, we were looking up domain names for a new venture which would provide content to mobile devices which would be aimed at those with touch screens. We played about with touch* and then the meme moved to iterations of finger* [13:33:01] (aidan) Sounds a bit rude. [13:33:17] (mj) Because you’re 12 years old. [13:33:38] … Continue reading “Everyone is 12 years old on the Internet”

Today, we were looking up domain names for a new venture which would provide content to mobile devices which would be aimed at those with touch screens. We played about with touch* and then the meme moved to iterations of finger*

[13:33:01] (aidan) Sounds a bit rude.
[13:33:17] (mj) Because you’re 12 years old.
[13:33:38] (aidan) As are most comic readers.
[13:33:50] (mj) Everyone is 12 years old on the internet
[13:34:09] (mj) which is why Aqua’s buttons were said to PULSE and not THROB
[13:35:30] (aidan) 🙂