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March 4, 2008

One of those days

We moved back to Seattle 11 months ago, and in the process, my jumper cables got packed.  Our garage is full of packed boxes, and my jumper cables are still somewhere in there.  The only reason I know this is that I NEED them this morning as apparently I moved my lights from "auto" to "stay on all night and kill the battery".   And we have a big event in downtown Seattle today - naturally.  Gah.   My lovely bride is going to the hardware store to buy jumpers while I blog - er - do my email. 

On an unrelated note, Yahoo! just launched their hosting plan for $11.95 a month for unlimited storage.  I think there are upload limits of some sort to prevent people from totally abusing it, but for my purposes, it is unlimited.   I was on their legacy "standard web hosting" which was $19.95 for 10GB storage, but I switched over this weekend.  This new deal is screaming freakin' deal.  Aside from all theeislers.com subdomains having 403 errors for about 12-14 hours, it was smooth as a zipper, as my son would say.

Okay, back to email.  Still lovin' Live Writer!  Also lovin' the fact that Entourage supports accessing Exchange via https://blah.blah.com so no VPN required!  I have an Alienware gaming PC with a 30" monitor and one of the new 24" iMacs side by side in my home office, and so I spin 25 degrees in my chair to use one or the other - it is a pretty sweet setup.

Comments

I keep cables in the trunk of every car in the family.

I also keep a small set of wrenches and sockets in the trunk.

BMWs have such a toolkit mounted on the inside of the trunklid. I no longer own a BMW, but I learned the lesson: having a set of tools handy is good.

If for some weird unknown reason I didn't have jumpers in the trunk, I could have grabbed the wrenches and swapped batteries with the wife's car.

OR, here's a trick - loosen your cables, tap them to the wife's battery to start the car, leave it running off the alternator for seconds while you bolt your battery back in place. It's bad to run for any length of time with no battery, it stresses diodes in the alternator, but in a pinch that's one way around the problem.

Of course this doesn't work if you have a Chrysler - some of those require changing the battery through the wheel well - that is, remove the tire to get the battery out.

March 2, 2008

Live Writer

Okay the photo's below have nothing to do with Live Writer, but Live Writer made it super easy to import them.  I stumbled onto Live Writer when I got a Live Messenger upgrade this morning, and I figured I'd give it a try.

I was pretty skeptical it would be useful for me - I assumed it would only target Live Spaces and Sharepoint.  I was wrong, wrong, wrong - I went down the "other weblog" path and after typing in my Movable Type info, not only did Live Writer do the right thing, it even went and detected my style so that my WYSIWYG editing is exactly in the style of my blog.  Very cool.

After passing the first test (configuring), next test was photos.  My pet peeve of all blogging software for Mac or Windows is the lack of good photo support (at least good photo support that also works with 3rd party blog solutions like Movable Type).  While seemingly easy, I have to date not found any software besides RocketPost that works well with photos and Movable Type.  My wish list is a simple one:

  • Auto builds thumbnails and larger images (and remembers the sizes I want to use - I don't want to set them every time)
  • Supports Drag and Drop  
  • Supports effects for image presentation (like drop shadow) and for the image itself (sepia, black and white) (heck, this wasn't even ON my wish list before, but Live Writer put it there)

The only knock (and it is a small one) on Live Writer is that you can't change the default effect, so if you don't want drop shadow around your photo, you have to change it every time you publish a photo.   At first I thought you couldn't control the default sizes, and while you technically can't (the inline photo is always small and the larger photo is always medium), you can click on "advanced" when editing a photo, click on the triangle with a line under it, and then change the default maximum size of small, medium and large photos - which is the same thing, albeit a little hard to discover.

Other stuff I loved:

  • As I edit this, I am marveling at how much I LOVE that I am editing in the style of my blog.  It is super, super cool. 
  • Web Preview is also super cool - it shows you exactly how your post will look integrated into your full blog page.
  • You can insert all the usual suspects (hyperlinks, pictures, maps, tags, video) but they also have plugins - I gave a Flickr plugin a quick spin, and it was pretty cool (albeit it wouldn't let me log onto my Flickr account and so I couldn't see any of my images as they are all private).  And the "Insert Current iTunes Song" plugin is nifty.  I click it, and out comes: music note While writing this, I was listening to "Lookin' Out My Backdoor" by Creedence Clearwater Revival

I've completely switched over - this ill-attended blog and my family blog are now being published via Live Writer on Windows.  While yes I work for Microsoft in MacBU, I use the best tool for the job I have at hand, regardless of who makes it - and Windows + Live Writer is a home run in my book.

I took the below photos Sunday afternoon before Macworld started. Our marketing team  did a fantastic job:

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Comments

I was all ready to hear something about Mac:Messenger the way this post started out... "I got an update to Live Messenger that led me to an update to Live Writer..."

But that was just me being over optimistic. Won't happen again, promise.

Excellent photographs! I think it shows not only what an excellent job Marketing did, but also gives us a chance to speculate on all the things that have to be done to put a successful booth, lounge, and all the other details together for a show.

Amazing job. So, what's on for next year? :)

Hey vmarks! Sorry to bum you out. Since I will never contain official MacBU announcements here, you won't have to get optimistic in the future on my blog :-)

It is definitely a multi-month planning effort to pull off a show the scale of Macworld. And even with all that advance work, a few folks had to stay up all night Monday night to get the final touches nailed - we had a heck of a big set up this year.

Next year, who knows? It's hard to top Devo!!