A face-lift and an update

It’s been right around a year since I posted last in the blog, and I figured it was time for an update, after someone commented on my How to Handle Online Harassment blog post and a code error prevented me from approving and replying.

A couple new things have happened that have kept me out of the how-to-tech world as much as I have been in the past:

First I was married around this time last year. The wedding itself was an exercise in fusing current technology with the 1940s. The wedding ceremony music was timed to the second from start to finish so it could begin on 11/11/11 @ 11:11am. (If only the sound booth guy would have followed instructions, everything would have worked out fine). Everything was instrumental, but varied from Vivaldi’s Four Seasons, to Smashmouth’s Accidentally In Love. I walked out, of course, to the opening credits music from The Matrix: Revolutions. It had to be done.

The reception music was all controlled from my Motorola Atrix Android phone, using some Brookstone Outdoor Wireless Speakers, and a subscription to Grooveshark.com. A slideshow video was created using Animoto.com to add a little more flair and excitement to the otherwise dull “here’s all our photos from our entire life – YOU MUST WATCH THIS BORING THING” video. I hate those – especially the ones that require 3 or 4 songs to finish – mine was 1 song and only spanned our adult lives from just before we met up to the wedding. You can view it below (if you have Flash):

The decorations for the wedding (if they had to be ordered) were all homemade with the materials being ordered online, and mostly from etsy.com. I made our Save the Date notifications and our wedding invitations in Adobe Fireworks, and we created a Facebook page to keep everyone up to date, and a Google Document for handling the RSVPs using the Custom Form interface.

Source: appboy.com

The second major tech-related event in my life was receiving my first iPad (3rd Gen) as my wedding gift to myself when it was released in March. I have had it with me every day, all day, and have been trying to use it as a content production device, but there are just no good apps for anything other than photo editing for my various interests. There are indeed a ton of apps out there for other peoples’ interests, but coding and photography are where mine lie, and I have yet to find a coding app that meets my three feature criteria: SFTP, PHP code highlighting, SVN control – all within the same app.

If you’re aware of any apps that contain all 3 of those features, please let me know in the comments below. I have been searching for nearly 9 months now, and have run across several that meet 2 out of 3 – and as the song goes, “2 out of 3 ain’t bad,” but since there is no file system that spans multiple apps, I need all 3 for it to effectively replace my work laptop.

I did consider starting a “working in the cloud: iPad edition” series, but I don’t have the money that someone like iPad Today has for trying and testing all kids of app recommendations, and there are already fairly comprehensive blogs dedicated to this subject, like AppAdvice.com.

In other tech news, I started backing various projects on Kickstarter.com. So far I have backed 3 projects that I considered useful or unique items.

First to ship, but the 2nd project I backed, was the SmarterStand from smarterstand.com. So far I have not engaged in 100% use of the product because I currently use a DoDoCase for my daily iPad protection. However, I foresee a future blog post here reviewing the product once I do decide to use it daily.

The first product I backed, and likely next to ship, was the popular Pebble Watch. I have been waiting for this since May 2012, and look forward to the day it actually ships. I don’t know if I will get involved in writing any applications for it, but I do plan to test it both with my Android phone and my iPad.

And most recently, a product that hasn’t even met its funding goal yet: Light by Moore’sCloud. If you’re reading this before 12/21/2012, please pledge to back it also…not because of the Mayan Calendar, but because there are 25 days to go (at the time of this post) and they are only 26.3% funded. It is a mobile-controlled (iOS at the moment) lamp that runs LAMP, with an app for controlling the color, timers, and wifi for alerts & additional functionality. It’ll match any part of an image for color choice, as well as cycle through other custom choices. You’ll have to watch the video on their page to get all the details of this beautifully designed product.

And finally in other news, as I mentioned at the start of the post, I was forced to update the blog in general because I had a legit comment on my How to Handle Online Harassment blog post, and I needed to approve and reply to it. In doing so, I removed several plugins, updated several more, and decided to go with the “twenty eleven” blog theme from WordPress this time. It’s simpler, and now my blog works with the WordPress iPad app.

In updating and replying to the aforementioned comment, I noticed that someone cited my article in their own article back in April 2012, along with many other sources. Their article was titled “Social networks: the rise of online harassment“. This marks the first time I’ve been cited in something as a “source” instead of as a link. So, thank you Anna Maria Alba for considering my blog post, and its comments worthy of citation.

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

The EverCoupon: The last coupon you’ll ever need

Today on Facebook, I saw one of my friends mention…

“I want to be an extreme coupon-er…”

My first thought: I don’t want to be behind you in line. My second thought: How do I solve this problem?

The Proposed Solution

The solution I’ve come up with is a smartphone app that lets you photograph coupons. It scans the photos, and credits them to your online account as available discounts, and automatically removes them when they expire.  Of course, you’d also be able to share the coupons with your friends as well. You then take your phone with you to the store, and pull up the app. It displays a scanable barcode for the clerk. When scanned, the store’s system contacts the cloud-based coupon-holding server, deducts the coupon values from your total, and they are then removed from your account.

No more waiting behind that one person who brought 30 coupons to the store. No more keeping up with which coupons are still valid/newly expired. Just a smooth shopping experience for everyone in line.

Technorati Tags: , , , , , ,

How to Program a Human – Part 2: Emotions

Have you ever considered why it is people have emotions? What are emotions really comprised of? What triggers them, what determines their intensity? What causes the same stimuli to be interpreted in two different ways, by two different observers?

I’ve put some thought into this during a discussion about the creation of an emotions chip and how one would go about programming emotional responses into a computer or robot.

Consider this hypothetical humanoid example:

John and Matt are friends – they’ve been friends since they were little kids. They like to rough-house, have insult contests to see who can come up with the most insulting quip, and have generally different preferences in women.

While running down the city sidewalk, John takes a physical jab at Matt, Matt reacts with a friendly reciprocal jab. During the horseplay, a bystander gets run into, and also jabbed. The bystander yells out some profanity and insults, and fumes about it the rest of the day.

Continue reading

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

JavaScript, XHTML, & AJAX…again

Cover image for product 0471777781Well, I haven’t done much that was technically inclined, except for some various coding forays into the world of JavaScript, and XHTML– consequently it led me back to AJAX and XML-Http-Requests. But I didn’t bother to post anything about that, since it was work-related, and not website-related…kind of. Continue reading

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

POC: OpenVPN + Internet + MS Exchange Active Directory + Windows/Linux Mobile Client

I have this idea, ok? What I noticed while migrating some of the users from the Admissions Department at the University for which I work, was that it was tough to explain to them sufficiently that:

  • Their passwords are going to have to change at some point, due to security policy.
  • When they change it on their desktop, it’s not automatically done on their laptop.
  • After changing the desktop password, they need to connect the laptop to the network and then login with that new password for it to be cached.

Now, it’s easy to write out, and easy for a tech to understand the scenario – but it’s not that easy for a 45yr old Hispanic guy who hates his laptop anyway to grasp. But what if they didn’t have to grasp anything? What if no matter where you were, the login process and the features available were as seamless in Wisconsin as if you were sitting at your desk in Texas?

What I’m proposing is this: Continue reading

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,