Archive for January, 2010

SFPD Car 1152 Fail

So this morning we’re heading away from the Castro up Market/Portola, tailed by SFPD Car 1152.


The traffic, cowed by the presence of the police car, actually goes at the posted speed of 25-35 mph. (Have you tried driving at the speed limit? It’s an interesting experiment.)

At the top of the hill, at 08;53, we’re stopped by a red light. A full two seconds after the light changes to green not one but two cars sail through against the light!

What does SFPD Car 1152 do? Nothing! Thanks, officer, you lazy piece of work.

- Posted with
BlogPress on my iPhone.

Location:Serra Bowl,Daly City,CA,United States

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365 Posts

Getting up to speed with functional networked blogging software has been fun. Putting it into my daily workflow has been a bit more of a challenge.


My goal is at least one post daily, a la the 365 project, which aims to motivate artists to produce something for each day of a calendar year.


I think that’s close to what I was getting before, albeit in a more batched way. Now I’m trying to add a bit daily. We’ll see…


Heck, if you count the photos of my coffee cup in my lap. I guess we can go for 365 self-portraits as well.

- Posted with BlogPress on my iPhone.

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Decorating the iPhone

The iPhone doesn’t yet allow for live wallpapers (as does the newly-released Google Nexus One) but it’s just a matter of time. It’s not that we need them, but not having them, … :-)

In the meantime, you may enjoy some of the images I’ve collected surfing the ‘net all these years. They’re available* at this Flickr collection: iPhone wallpapers (others’). All of these images are being used without permission. If one belongs to you, please send me an attribution name, URL, or back-story. And, by all means, if you want it removed I’ll be only to happy to do so.

My own images, converted to 320×480 size, may be found at iPhone wallpaper (mine). These are shared with you under the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.

* One thing you folks in the future won’t believe is how amused we are by how easy it is to share digital content. These images live on my MacBook Pro in iPhone, which shares with Flickr, allowing me to trivially add and delete locally and have it all synchronized. Just fabulous. You will probably live in a world where everything lives “out there” in the cloud, redundantly, with perhaps a local copy. I want to visit you there.

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How Apple embarrasses me

I started using Macs before 1984, when the platform was called “Lisa.” It’s been an awesome ride, and I’m nothing but grateful.

But that’s not to say that it’s not been entirely free of frustration. Most of my issues, if I can generalize to a single point of contention, is that they’re developed for the environment of the company’s offices in Cupertino, and not for the real world.

Starting with decades of power connectors which were more fulcrum than useful, levering off when a laptop was put into a lap, to iPhone ringtones which are just too quiet for city life, to the company’s ever-increasing attempts to lock out jailbroken iPhones (which will, ultimately, drive to over to Google’s Android phones), to my latest frustration: the inability to convert iPhone ringtones (.m4r) alert tones back to any other format; I want to make some .aiff files (to convert to .cab files to substitute the built-in iPhone SMS and email arrival tones).

I understand that some .m4r files are copy-protected, but can’t iTunes “just work” and check? No protection, convert.

Sheesh!

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Second Life: Death by a Thousand Cuts

I spend just a little bit of time in Second Life, after having been invited in-world in 2008 for Burning Life, the recreation of my beloved Burning Man. I would love to say that time spent there has been an unabashed pleasure, but that would be a lie.

It’s not the inhabitants, nor the software, but the company which created and administers Second Life, Linden Labs. Each time they create new policy for the virtual world it seems completely ill-advised, poorly considered, and calculated to benefit a small minority while discouraging a great majority from continuing to pay LL monthly rent for homesteading.

I’ll take myself as a somewhat representative example: I rented space from a landholder, which was affordable, and had a size I liked and the ability to host complex built items; the “prim(itives) count” of a parcel of land determines how many primitives – combined into wonderful things – can be placed thereon. LL decided to completely revamp the pricing structure for those landholders, and an exodus occurred. That was thirteen months ago. I haven’t paid rent since.

I give back to the community in any way I can. In Second Life I’ve built a number of structures, like nomadic tents, furniture, like chairs and tables in a fusion Japanese style, and furnishings, like tatami mats in various sizes with the traditional grass textures in both green and beige. For the longest time I gave these away for free. Lately I’ve been charging L$1 (or about 2.6 cents) per item, just to have a trickle of income for the occasional item I want to buy.

LL now proposes to do away with all freebie items from their web-based storefront and to charge L$99 each month per item. The erstwhile reason is that free items clutter up their search engine and tax their computing resources. The sad truth is their search engines, both in-world and on the web, have been neglected and are just one step up from useless. And with other companies hosting terabytes of search data, blogs, and other not-for-cost offerings, the computing resources story just doesn’t wash. The upshot of this terribly short-sighted, stupid decision is that I, and hundreds of other programmers and crafts-people have removed their items from the storefront, depriving new arrivals (and old-timers) that quintessential experience of shopping for free, outfitting their avatar as they become hooked on the virtual experience.

With each decision Second Life becomes less engaging and less compelling. It’s a sad thing to see a company work so hard to drive themselves out of business. Very sad.

[Note: there's nothing posted here that I haven't told Philip Linden face-to-face in meatspace. So I feel I've done my small part, although in the face of pressure from big business in-world I'm afraid it's all for naught. It was nice while it lasted.]

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We start 2010

As our home renovation restoration [videos] comes to completion, the little things prove both more vexing and time-consuming than ever imagined.

Today I have to take the 8 Hallophane lights I found at salvage and have the stems shortened; somehow, what with measuring twice and all, they hang too low. So the car gets loaded and towel-wrapped lamps go back to Berkeley.

The ancient period-appropriate medicine cabinet is to arrive this morn, stripped of a century of paint. I haven’t seen it yet but I’m hopeful.

Fruits and veggies in my pack, list of chores in hand, hot coffee in my mug, I start 2010.


- Posted with BlogPress on my iPhone.

Location:24th St,San Francisco,United States

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The Hiller Aviation Museum

Good day! We’re down in San Carlos, at the Sky Kitchen, before heading over to the Hiller Aviation Museum, one of the kids’ favorites.

Both Isaac and Lila have been using the flight sim.


but with very different styles:


That’s Isaac wedging a 747-400 inbetween two other planes on the Narita, Japan, tarmac.

- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone.

Location:Bayshore Fwy,San Mateo,United States

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Mission Fiesta Laundromat

It’s damn early in the morning, and I’m enjoying the cold night air as I sit outside under the banks oh solar panels at my favorite all-night laundromat.

In about a month I’m hoping to be able once again to do laundry at home, but I’ll miss the interesting Mission neighbors and this quiet time.

- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone.

Location:S Van Ness Ave,San Francisco,United States

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Awake way before first light

Good morning happy New Year’s Day. I’m before first light because Lila, who is at a sleepover party, called to have me come over. By the time I go drove across town of course she’s gone back to sleep.

Still, my coffee is hot and it’s a really wonderful time of morning. It’s black out there with no hint of the rising sun. It’s quiet and the top is down on the convertible. 51° this morning seems much warmer than 47° yesterday even though I’m wearing way less. Even last night was very warm by the standards of this cold snap.

I going to a nearby coffee shop hoping that it’s open and enjoy a nice cappuccino.

Good morning and a very happy new year to you and yours.

Update: Martha & Bros. Coffee is open this New Year’s Day and all is well. I’m hanging in the neighborhood until the gaggle of girls wake and I’m ensured breakfast is underway and all is good. I don’t want to take her home because the sleepover will end with a surprise.



– Posted from my iPhone via BlogPress

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Another iPhone blogging client…

BlogPress [update below] is only half-baked, having issues with post times (everything appears to be from eight hours in the past; I’m in UTC-8…).

So I’m testing iBlogger. Let’s see… I can add a “posting from” geotag into my posts. Editing brings up the HTML, which is a bit cheesy… Loading a photo is taking freakin’ forever…

Update: I wasn’t using the latest and greatest version of BlogPress. Upgrading adds video support, better control of photo storage location, YouTube support, etc. It too now has hooks for geotagging post location, but it’s not appearing in my posts. FAQ?


Let’s see if the posting date bug is fixed… it is! Great! Exploration continues.

Video?

– Posted from my iPhone via BlogPress.

Location:Cortland Ave,San Francisco,United States

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