December 21, 2006
Adobe's icon scheme
This seems to be the general reaction of users to Adobe's new icon scheme:

Permalink | From the computers department | Posted Thursday, December 21, 2006 at 11:24 am PST
July 24, 2005
MacDesktops.com
This is old news for lots of people, but I've been downloading background pictures ("wallpaper") lately from MacDesktops.com. I don't really know why the guy calls it MacDesktops, as the images should be perfectly usable on any operating system. There are a number of images of Macs and Apple-related things, but for me the landscapes and waterscapes are much more pleasant to look at. Images are in a wide variety of resolutions -- I haven't seen other sites where the images are not only in the standard 4:3 ratio but are also in widescreen resolutions like 1920x1200 and 1680x1250.
Anyway, I like the pictures and sent the guy $20, since I've used a lot of his bandwidth downloading them. Check it out.
Permalink | From the computers department | Posted Sunday, July 24, 2005 at 6:20 pm PDT
June 13, 2005
Web pages should not steal focus
Here's what happens to me today:
1) Go to page full of links. Open two of them in separate tabs.
2) Click on first tab.
3) Read page in first tab.
4) Click on link to newspaper story from first tab.
5) Before newspaper story loads, click on second tab.
6) Read headline in second tab and realize you don't want to read the whole thing.
7) Hit command-W to close tab.
That all works fine, except that I didn't know about step 6a)
6a) Newspaper story loads in first tab, and demands focus, so first tab magically comes to the front.
Which means, of course, that my command-W ended up closing the first tab and not the second one.
Argh. Whoever invented the thing that allows web pages to say "me! I'm supposed to be the top window! me! me!" should be forced to program nothing but embedded processors for thermostats the rest of his/her life. The "blink" tag had nothing on this.
Permalink | From the computers department | Posted Monday, June 13, 2005 at 11:04 pm PDT
June 12, 2005
Open source implementation of Mac OS X APIs
I wonder if someday there will be an open-source implementation of the Mac OS X APIs (other than GNUstep).
I hope that if so, it will be called "Cider."
Permalink | From the computers department | Posted Sunday, June 12, 2005 at 1:15 pm PDT
May 21, 2005
Firewire! Give my creation firewire!
I had a minor success today. A few weeks ago I accidentally closed the outer case of my old dual firewire enclosure on the power wire. This unfortunately blew the power supply. I couldn't figure out how to open the damn thing to see if the fuse could be replaced, so I just ended up buying a dual SCSI case listed on Craigslist. It's a a CI Design 3520 2 bay 3.5" drive enclosure. (I can't find a company that lists the price in dollars, but apparently a company in England wants £145 for it. Pretty good for $10.)
This case unfortunately doesn't have holes in the normal locations to fit other drives; it uses some kind of weird drive rails, or something, that fit little tabs in the side of this case. (you can see these in the brochure).
I'd like to say that I made the decision to just drill holes in the side of the rail assembly after searching the web and finding out the difficulty of buying these rails -- none of CI Design's listed retailers seem to carry the kit -- but in fact I found the manufacturer label only after buying the rather longer than usual screws, drilling the holes, and installing the drives. Oh well. The point is, the thing works. Yay! And I didn't have to use lighting from my castle to reanimate it. I did have to install the drives upside down, but I remember reading that this is usually OK (and Seagate's manuals specifically say "any orientation" so I'm going to take their word for it).
I now have two 120 GB drives in it, one Maxtor and one Seagate. The bridgeboard from my old case is an ATA-5 bridgeboard with the 137 GB limitation, so this pretty much maxes out the capacity. (They don't actually make 137 GB drives, for some reason; you can either use 120 GB drives or waste space using 160 GB drives. I here use 1GB = 1 billion bytes, not 230 bytes.)
I thought this was such a good idea that I bought a bridgeboard and dual 5.25" case from eBay -- I'm going to put a 160 GB hard drive and a DVD-RW drive in it and give it to my brother and his family for their iMac. I hope the case gets here soon.
The only problem is the thing sounds like a wind tunnel. I haven't decided whether to replace the fan, but I'm thinking about it. This case is quite big and there's plenty of space between the drives, so I suspect maybe it doesn't need a fan at all, but I'm not sure I want to take chances, even though this is intended to be used just for backups and occasional use when I need a lot of scratch space.
Permalink | From the computers department | Posted Saturday, May 21, 2005 at 12:03 am PDT