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  • Safari CSS Bug?

    safari-clearAnyone else seen a bug with clear: both; on Safari? It seems like it is being a bit overzealous in what it is clearing. As you can see in the image here, it seems to be clearing the space from the <div> on the left, which I would think is out of the scope of that clear: both. It looks fine in Mozilla (and I believe IE).

    Update: If you are looking at this at Safari you’ll most probably see the behavior right now.

  • Mac Office 2004 NitPick

    I’ve been trying out the trial version of Office 2004 for the Mac (and should have a real copy of it on the way very soon now). I have to say Microsoft has really done some cool things here. The project manager in Entourage rocks. It’s the kind of thing that would be insanely useful to my ADDness. But there are a few things about it that I have to rant about. The first is that some kind of syncing between Entourage and Apple Address Book isn’t in there. I read a nice post on this over at blogs.msdn.com by Dan Crevier that explains the reasoning, but it still annoys me. Thankfully there’s a nice shareware app out there that does it called Sync Entourage – Address Book by Paul Berkowitz.

    My next nitpick is one that I have with a few apps on OS X. In text fields, Cocoa uses emacs control characters for navigation. ^n, ^p, ^a, etc. Even ^k/^y. It’s very handy for those of us who sometimes use those out of habit. The problem with Entourage is that it doesn’t use these, and in fact those commands do other things altogether. I’d love to have a preference setting to turn that on if I wanted. I just find them much easier to use than the arrow keys. From a typing standpoint it doesn’t require me to move my hand to another position at all.

    Once I have the full version of Office I’ll write up a bit more of a review, but so far it’s pretty damn slick.

  • More On The Cult of Mac

    John Dodds of the Independent writes the first of two articles about switching from Windows to Mac. He’s got some good to say, and some bad. The good:

    A different issue emerged in setting up my Wi-Fi connection. (Apple calls it Airport). The absence of a confirmation message left me thinking I’d done something wrong, but all I needed was to unplug the Ethernet link: it switched over automatically. I had expected a Windows-style confirmation of success, but Apples don’t prompt you when something’s gone right, such as plugging in a disk or setting up a wireless router. They just silently incorporate it. That’s a major difference in approach: Windows thinks it’s a surprise worth telling you about when something works. Apple doesn’t.

    And some of the bad.

    Also, when working with multiple windows it is sometimes difficult to find what you want, and the thinness of the side sliders of any window demands very accurate cursor control. I have often found myself working on the wrong documents or applications because they were already open or lying dormant on the desktop beneath.

    Other annoyances include trying to get both time and date displayed, and the single-button mouse – no doubt there’s an internal Apple logic, but it’s still irksome. Much more annoying is the lack of a forward delete key. You can use a combination of keys, but I’ve still deleted the wrong text many times. Also, files downloaded from the web are all dropped into a separate folder, rather than one you specify. But these are minor quibbles. [The Independent] [via MacMerc]

    I definitely agree with him on the mouse. It still kind of blows my mind that Apple doesn’t use other mice. Almost everyone I know has bought a wheel mouse for their mac. I even have one that I use on my laptop when I’m at my desk. I’m curious to hear what hear what else he’ll have to say in the second article.

  • Airport Express and the Genius of Apple

    Today while looking for a wireless mouse I picked up an Airport Express. For those of you who aren’t aware of this device, it is Apple’s mini base-station, music streaming, usb printer sharing, network extending device. Currently, I have it set up downstairs hooked to the stereo and had it cranked up while I sat out on the porch. Currently, any mac in the house can stream music to it from iTunes. In some ways it’s not a perfect solution, since in my parent’s case they’d have to go upstairs to their mac to start iTunes. But for someone with a laptop or a laptop and a desktop it just plain rocks. And I’m not the only one who is loving it.

    Here’s where I think Apple was smart with this device. They’ve made it so easy to want more than one of them. I’ve already got one and can easily justify two more. The second I’ll use in my room as a print server/wireless client. The third will go on the third floor hooked into the home theatre setup. At around $130 each it isn’t something I’ll pick up right away, but once I get my laser printer I know I’ll be eyeing it.

    Of course, then I may want one for when I’m on the road. MacMegasite has a neat article about using the Airport Express in a hotel room.

  • LiveJournal RSS Celebration

    The other day over on #joiito i was whining about how I wished I could get friends-locked posts in the RSS feeds on LiveJournal. Luckily LJ user crschmidt was there to let me know that it was possible. In general, the link to someone’s feed on LJ is http://www.livejournal.com/users/[username]/data/rss. The problem is, it only shows you public entries. So, in order to get friends locked entries, you need to send along your LJ username and password and tell LJ what kind of authorization method to use. The end result looks something like this:

    http://[YourLJName]:[YourLJPassword]@www.livejournal.com/users/[username]/data/rss?auth=digest

    Note that this will only work in RSS readers that do the right thing with urls that have login information in them. But it works in NetNewsWire so I’m happy. While I still have my friends page, this means I now have access to all my LJ friends in the same place I read other blogs.

  • Apple Blows It Again

    So Apple has information up about their new iPod and I’m kind of pissed. A few years back I’d bought a 20GB iPod, right before the release of the one with the dock. I didn’t mind not having the dock, but it quickly became apparent that Apple was going to ignore their older iPods. They got just enough updates to make things run better, but none of the new features like on-the-go playlists.

    Fast forward to a month ago when I bought a new 40GB iPod. It doesn’t bother me much that they now are $100 less. I’ve had things like that happen to me all the time. What bugs me is that all the new iPod features announced today are only available for the new iPod. I’m afraid they’re going to stop adding new features to this iPod. The even more annoying thing is that many of the new features don’t seem to be hardware based features. Features like Multiple on-the-go playlists, tweaking playback speed, and one click shuffling are not things that I’d expect to need new hardware to do. Bah, thank you Apple for screwing me over again.

  • iTMS Weirdness

    Yes, it’s the day for me to comment on iTunes. Has anyone else noticed that they have stopped saying that albums they have are only partial albums? Or is this a bug over there. I noticed in their RSS feed that they had a bunch of stuff by The Cars. In the RSS feed it indicated that it was the full album, yet when you go to iTMS there are only five songs from it listed. The even weirder part is they have a ‘add album’ button which is $9.90. Yes, $9.90 for five songs that would be $4.95 bought individually. I think Apple needs to have an iTMS blog for reporting on things like this. Especially since their support page was insanely broken when I tried to leave a message about this.

  • iTunes Lameness

    I love wireless. Lately I’ve taken to sitting out down on the porch during the day when it is nice out. The wireless signal there is great and it’s covered so I’m in the shade (with no glare issues). I’ve also been making use of the music sharing feature of iTunes a lot because of it. Also, since I’m driving between Boston and Hartford a lot I’ve started getting into audiobooks. Currently I’m on the third book in Stephen King’s The Dark Tower series and it has completely sucked me in. This morning I sat down to listen to the last part on the porch (something I hadn’t done before) and discovered that iTunes won’t share out audiobooks from audible. What the hell? Audible? Apple? What’s the story here?

  • Airport Express and iTunes 4.6 and What I Think Is Missing

    globalnavexpresshi06072004Apple’s new Airport Express sounds great. It’s one of the things I’ve really been looking for. A nice way to have a wireless repeater that (hopefully) doesn’t kill the network speed. Everything else is just really good icing. Mini base station, great. Printer server, great. Streaming audio receiver: great. AirTunes, which is part of iTunes 4.6, here’s where I think they missed slightly. You can only stream to an Airport Express box. I would have loved to have seen the ability to stream to any other box running iTunes. Yes, there is music sharing, which is great, but I can think of times when I might want to be just streaming to a laptop. Or both a laptop and an airport express. I live in a fairly good sized house and maybe people in multiple places want to be able to tune in.

    I think Apple also needs to come out with some kind of stereo/AV component for listening to music and viewing photos (and maybe even movies) on your home theatre system. Something that works like TiVo’s Home Media Option (which is now included in the TiVo subscription instead of as an add-on), but more tuned to how Apple does things. It would let you listen to AAC encoded files, and AAC files you bought from iTMS. But it would act more like the iTunes music sharing does. To me, this could be the killer box for Apple. Roku comes close with their products, but it still isn’t exactly what I’m looking for. The one thing I know I don’t really want is a full computer attached to my home theatre system. It just seems like overkill to me when I have a server already that has all that stuff stored on it.

  • Cool Screen Saver

    We would like to provide mysterious suites constructed by random matching of the words and pictures. Enjoy yourselves in the surrealistic world spun by strange coincidence and eternal imagination.
    And run your meditation on what “meaning” represents.

    For those folks with OS X, here’s a very cool looking screen saver called Hotel Magritte. It’s quite nice. He’s also got some other ones up there that look pretty cool.