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broadcasters fail to tune in, no film at 11

To paraphrase a line from The Life of Brian, what CBS blatantly refuses to realize is that it’s the advertisers who’re the problem. Treating viewers like we’re the problem is only going to accelerate the demise of the already outdated broadcast TV model. Whining about it on the part of execs, lawyers, et al is really beside the point.

a post about nothing

I came here to post something and got sidetracked by the news of the new WordPress release. I think it’s way cool that they decided to honor The Sound with the name of this one. Makes me want to get my car stereo situation fixed.

coding in the ivory tower

My favorite IM client, recently renamed to Pidgin, also recently released a new beta version that diverges significantly from previous behavior and appearance. I get the impression, looking at their site, that this is to be treated as a near-release candidate.

One of the devs points out in his blog that there’s a current hot issue over how the client provides information about which IM service you’re currently chatting over, or which service you would use if you were to message someone in your buddy list. After reading the discussion in the bug report and the comments on his blog post, I can only conclude that the Pidgin developers are only coding for themselves. They are presenting the stereotypical, snide, elitist attitude that many critics attribute to open source developers.

They have made it clear that no matter what anyone says, the logical “use cases” don’t justify reinstating a recently disappeared feature – one which I and other users took for granted as a part of how the app behaves, and have found very useful. To my way of thinking, if you create an app that users love and then hack pieces away without regard for user feedback, you’re shooting yourself in the foot (stabbing yourself in the eye, what have you.) You won’t be trusted as a good steward of open source going forward, and people will begin to abandon use of your product as soon as they can find a reasonably usable alternative. This is bad for everyone involved.

Listen to your users, and stop pretending you live in a perfect vacuum.

untitled test

Taken at the Atlanta Botanical Gardens. I use this one as my desktop background occasionally.

tasty beverage

A test post directly from Flickr. Nothing to see here… except one of the cooler photos I’ve taken.

copy / paste workarounds in gnome

If you’re forced to work around copy and paste limitations in Gnome with certain X11 applications (xterm!), I can heartily recommend leafpad over gedit. It’s much lighter and quicker to start.

pic of the day

From brookenovak‘s Flickr stream.

PS/2 keyboard port RIP

Dear lazyweb,

The PS/2 keyboard port decided it was done being useful when I powered on my desktop this morning. After being taken to the cleaners by Best Buy (misnomer, ha!) for a PS/2 -> USB adapter, I’m back up and working.

Should I worry about other failures following close on this one? I’m not budgeted to replace a system right now, but I’m reluctant to go for a motherboard swap just for this failure if it’s going to stop at the keyboard port. The motherboard in question is an Asus A8N-SLI Premium, and I’m using an IBM Model M keyboard (naturally.)

beryl 0.2.0 released

The new version of beryl, a compositing X11 window manager, was released today. Hurray for the eye candy, and some cool usability in the bargain!

I especially like Scale (think Mac’s Expose) and translucency with blur for helping find or keep track of open windows. Here’s one of the better videos demonstrating some real world uses of the effects available.

[kml_flashembed movie="http://www.youtube.com/v/dJO6CLln-B0" width="425" height="350" wmode="transparent" /]

incorrect times in Windows?

Are you wondering why your XP Home or other Windows system seems to have missed the update for DST changes? I was, until I went to the Windows Update site and checked what I was missing.

I don’t have automatic updates enabled, to prevent Microsoft pushing their pet projects like IE7 on me as “critical” updates. As a result, I missed KB931836, which appears to have just been published 02/07/2007 anyway. Way to support those of us who don’t drink your koolaid, M$.