GTD

January 7, 2008 at 1:45 pm

screenshot.pngI don’t think GTD is going to help with this one

Unbelievable

January 7, 2008 at 12:41 pm

The judge in this article is truly a horrible person.

TED Talks

December 15, 2007 at 7:51 pm

I’ve just subscribed to a video podcast of TED Talks and have started downloading 37 of the videos. Looks like I won’t be bored anytime soon (as if there were any risk of that). It would be nice if I had time to read a book in increments of more than 15 minutes at a time.

Apple Tablet Speculation

December 7, 2007 at 6:26 pm

Many people are predicting that Apple will announce a tablet-style computer this January. Most of those same people have been predicting a mac tablet for years, but this time I’ll join them.Most tablet PCs have been too bulky, trying to do too much in hardware. With the flip-around screens and built-in keyboards they tried to do everything a laptop could do because the windows OS required a real keyboard and mouse. If you’ve used an iPhone you know that you can do just about everything with a couple of fingers. If you need more of an interface there’s no reason a keyboard and mouse couldn’t be connected via bluetooth or a simple dock.Here’s what makes me think that Apple is going to announce their tablet soon:CoverFlow: Apple’s method of graphically “flipping” through a collection of albums covers (or folders and icons in the just released Leopard) would be the perfect interface for a touch-based computer. The iPhone and iPod Touch both sport it and with coverflow built into the Mac OS X Finder a general purpose computer can be navigated with a finger (or two).iPhone and iPod Touch: These are already basically mini-tablets. Just increase the screen size, CPU and RAM and you’ve got a great email/web/music/movies/drawing/video-chat/skype device that would be right at home in the kitchen, living room, or briefcase.

Wingsuit

December 3, 2007 at 1:44 pm

This is something I’m sure I’ll never do.

Java on Leopard

November 6, 2007 at 6:23 am

Related to my previous post defending Apple and their handling of Java on Mac OS X, Apple has just released tech note 2196 which includes all sorts of goodies for Java developers on the Mac. This document includes settings that let java programs look and feel more like native Mac applications. Because these settings are implemented as client properties, applications that use them can remain completely cross platform while gaining certain behaviors or visual effects on Mac OS that had previously been impossible for java applications.Here’s a screenshot that shows a java app (moneydance) with the unified toolbar, file proxy in the window title. The window below can also be dragged by clicking on the gray background, just like a native app.

Picture 9.png

Between the new Java UI properties and XCode 3 I couldn’t be happier about using the Mac as a development platform.

Java on Leopard, or how I learned to stop worrying and love to code

November 2, 2007 at 10:15 am

There was recently an article on javalobby.org complaining about Apple’s support of Java on the mac. This article was uninformed, angry and just plain wrong on most counts. The article and most of the responses really make java programmers look like a bunch of jerks. So much so that it made me seriously consider (again) switching from Java to a purely Objective-C environment whenever I have a choice.I had started writing a long and detailed post about my thoughts on the matter but came across Adrian Sutton’s and realized that he expressed the exact same sentiment, only more succinctly. My favorite part:

stop whining and start coding

Names vs Identifiers

October 8, 2007 at 9:56 am

The Names Project states that it

…is going to scope the requirements of UK institutional and subject repositories for a service that will reliably and uniquely identify names of individuals and institutions.

The trick is that a name is not usually unique - names are always context sensitive and when their context expands they can become ambiguous. My name, Sean Reilly, was unique within my immediate family but is far from unique on the internet or even in my city.Identifiers on the other hand, are always unique. You might say that identifiers are names in a certain context that ensures that a name can’t refer to two different things.My guess is that the Names project is actually looking for a system of identifiers to use in place of names.There is no shortage of identifier systems on the net, such as Handles, DOI, OpenID, XRI and, of course URI.I’d suggest they use Handles for the Names project, but I’m biased. I’d at least recommend changing the name or stated purpose of the project to something with more of a focus on identifiers instead of names.

You are the government

October 8, 2007 at 9:48 am

When the USA first came into existence, the bill of rights and constitution were an attempt to guarantee that the government could never take away the basic rights of individuals. The problem is that there’s nothing preventing corporations from gaining and abusing power over individuals. Any hope for the government to keep a check on corporate power was lost when Reagan was elected, if not earlier.Take the health care system in the US. It is run by private corporations, is inefficient, expensive and doesn’t provide the best care available. The cost of simply being insured in the US has skyrocketed in the last 6 or so years. The UK has a national health care system in which:

  • Everybody is covered
  • Per person, it costs less than half what people pay in the US
  • Private health care is available if you want it.

I’ve recently lived in both systems. I had a high quality employer-provided health care plan in the US until April 2006. Since then I’ve lived in Scotland and take part in the National Health Service (NHS). Due to living a daring and dangerous lifestyle, and recently having had baby daughter, both my wife and I have had our fair share of visits to medical professionals in both countries. We couldn’t be more pleased with the level of care we’ve gotten and dread the day that we have to go back into the US system.The UK health system is so much better than the US system that I am shocked when I hear people in the US rant that they don’t want the government in charge of their health care. Would you rather your health care be run by corporations whose sole purpose is to make money and whose only way of making money is to prevent you from getting health care?What is it that makes people think government run services are so inefficient? Maybe it has something to do with the fact that 95% of broadcast news is filtered through the same corporations that are raking in big bucks doing things that the government would otherwise be doing (usually more efficiently).Is it efficient for the US military to outsource things like truck driving and mess hall operations in Iraq? Hell no - it is wildly more expensive. Yet the taxpayers are shelling out a (starting) salary of $125k for KBR truck drivers when it used to pay $17k for US military drivers. Which option do you think is more efficient? Makes it easy to understand how the US is blowing $30 BILLION dollars a week in Iraq. It also makes it obvious that this war is nothing but a transparent profiteering opportunity for companies like KBR (Halliburton), Blackwater, etc.Health care in the US is currently run by the domestic equivalents of KBR, Blackwater, etc. I don’t think there’s much hope that more politicians can or will stand up to the corporate media whose favor they need in order to get elected. My greatest hope is that change can come from the bottom up. If one US state can provide a real health care system then there might be a chance at sanity.[random note: MarsEdit makes it way too easy to put your personal rants onto a public weblog]

Repeat a Bad War?

October 4, 2007 at 6:31 am

Please excuse the redundant title.How stupid would we have to be to allow Bush/Cheney to repeat the Iraq war in Iran given that:

  • The financial health of the USA has been decimated by vastly increased spending (trillions of dollars being spent in Iraq)
  • The US military is already stretched thin dealing with the mess in Iraq
  • The national health care/insurance crisis is leaving more people without health care

I don’t see how we can afford another war either financially or logistically. Not to mention the cost in human life which is conveniently ignored by most of those who are not at risk.Of course, it does seem that every action made by this administration has benefited either Cheney’s former employer (KBR/Halliburton) or large donors to their campaign. Another, larger war would certainly be a boon to the likes of KBR, Blackwater and gang. Have they done anything to make life better for the average US citizen?I also don’t understand why the President of Iran was denied permission to pay his respects at the site of the world trade center, so maybe I’m just out of touch.

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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 License. | sean reilly