Posts Tagged ‘blog’

Trying out Google Reader

Wednesday, January 21st, 2009

Until now, I’ve used Evolution (on Linux) or Mail (on OSX) to read both mails and RSS feeds, but that means I’ve had to keep my list of RSS feeds synchronized on two machines, which is a bit of a drag.

Now that my Linux laptop is essentially a desktop machine (the battery is no longer working) I am planning on buying a new laptop, so I’ll have three machines where I’ll regularly read mails and RSS feeds.

Mails is not a problem — I don’t change mail servers regularly and I don’t add to the list of servers on a weekly basis — but the RSS feeds is.

So now I am considering switching to Google Reader.

Thanks Anders for the video.

So far, it looks like a fine reader to me, and with google gears it integrates nicely with Firefox.

I’m not getting the full benefit of it, ’cause I don’t get much benefit out of the “sharing” feature.  There’s only one in my friends list who uses Google Reader, so that’s not much fun.  I should get some more friends, I guess ;-)

My next project is figuring out FriendFeed…

21-37=-16

Highlighting code on WordPress

Tuesday, January 20th, 2009

I must have tried every single plugin for source code highlighting, and none of them can handle templates in C++!

Well, one of them could, the google syntax highlighter could, but the image it creates is uglier than ugly.

This is really pissing me off.  How hard can it be not to fuck up < and >? Or if you want to consider them tags, then not to fuck up &lt; and &gt;?

I’m giving up now and sticking to good old <pre>…</pre>.  It isn’t pretty, but at least it shows the code I want to show, not some mangled piece of crap!

20-35=-15

Happy New Year

Wednesday, January 7th, 2009

Yeah yeah yeah, I know we are a whole week into the new year and it is a bit late, but that is what this post is about…

It’s been a quiet few months from me now, with weeks between posts. I’ve been working on a new project not kept up to date on my usual interests so I haven’t had much to write about.

Not that it is really a problem that I’m not blogging, but I am getting a bit worried about staying too long out of the loop, so one of my new year resolutions was to blog some more, if for nothing else because it would force me to read some more…

With a week’s delay in wishing a happy new year, we can all see how successful I have been with this resolution.

Okay, since I work best under pressure — some would say I only work under pressure — I am now setting a goal for myself this year: I want to write on average at least one post per day.  That is a lot, so expect some pretty short posts from time to time, but I hope I can still find time for some longer ones.

Okay, so since today is the 7th and this is the first post this year, the “post score” is 7-1 = 6.

Expect more from me soon!

Well, at least I got a lot of traffic out of the deal…

Friday, October 17th, 2008

That’s the most hits I’ve ever had in a day, and I’ve already hit more than average for a day only this morning…

Ranting online

Thursday, October 16th, 2008

Earlier today, I ranted about Linux. Just now, I read Andrew Sullivan’s Why I Blog. That got me thinking…

The quotes below are all from Andrew.

We bloggers have scant opportunity to collect our thoughts, to wait until events have settled and a clear pattern emerges. We blog now—as news reaches us, as facts emerge.

Sometimes, I need to let off steam.  Those who have ever shared an office with me, or been in an office close to mine will know this.  I am pretty vocal about it, when something is annoying me.

I’m not being particularly rational about it.  I just complain a lot.

I calm down again pretty quickly, once I’ve stopped screaming and hitting the walls, but when I am frustrated about something, I do need to let off steam.

On my blog, that “steam off letting” is tagged as Rants.  Now you know, so consider yourself warned.

Alas, as I soon discovered, this sudden freedom from above was immediately replaced by insurrection from below. Within minutes of my posting something, even in the earliest days, readers responded. E-mail seemed to unleash their inner beast. They were more brutal than any editor, more persnickety than any copy editor, and more emotionally unstable than any colleague.

Now, complaining about Linux will annoy some people.  A lot of people feel strongly about it.

Not that the comments on the Linux rant are unfair in any way.  It is more that my actual rant was unfair, and the comments are actually quite fair!

Not long ago, I would would have defended Linux strongly against just about any criticism. I was a strong believer in Linux.  And it has gotten better and better since I started using it.

Why, then, do I complain so much about it now?

Two reasons, probably.

First, I’ve had a lot of problems with using it as a desktop computer that I am just not having with my new Mac.

I got an iMac a few months back, and this is the first non-Linux OS I’ve done any serious work on since I started using Linux in 1995 and so far it has been a pleasant experience.

Not all pleasure, of course.  It takes some getting use to, and quite often I get annoyed when it doesn’t work exactly like what I am used to on Linux.  And don’t get me started about the problems I’ve had with Boost and Xcode.

Still, fighting with drivers and whatnot is something I avoid on the Mac.  Probably a good thing, ’cause I wouldn’t know where to even start with that…

You can’t have blogger’s block. You have to express yourself now, while your emotions roil, while your temper flares, while your humor lasts. You can try to hide yourself from real scrutiny, and the exposure it demands, but it’s hard.

That’s the second point (about why I am complaining now).

I was just pissed off that I had to reboot my laptop twice the same morning.

A blogger will air a variety of thoughts or facts on any subject in no particular order other than that dictated by the passing of time. A writer will instead use time, synthesizing these thoughts, ordering them, weighing which points count more than others, seeing how his views evolved in the writing process itself, and responding to an editor’s perusal of a draft or two. The result is almost always more measured, more satisfying, and more enduring than a blizzard of posts.

If I had waited with my ranting until this evening, I probably wouldn’t have ranted at all.

Of course, then there wouldn’t have been this discussion, and that would have been a loss.

I really do appreciate all the comments.

Words, of all sorts, have never seemed so now.

Indeed.