Archive for June, 2006

Turning off vacation messages at a predetermined time

I’m very (VERY) happy to say that the new mail filter handling has been installed on the central UW mail servers.

Why am I happy to say this?

Because it means that when you set up a vacation message on the servers, you can tell it when to turn the message off! No more will I be getting messages from people that say “Did you know that your vacation message is still on?”

Yay!

The best way to get to the vacation message setup screen is to login to MyUW and pick Vacation Service from the Email channel.

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Wikis + RSS – the future of open collaboration platforms?

David Berlind has an intriguing post on his Between the Lines blog about how wikis with RSS notification of changes are set to become the standard collaboration platform within organizations.

David has some spot-on observations about the use of proprietary systems (including email systems like Notes or Exchange) for collaboration:

When you strip collaboration down to its bare essence, you have people, you have some record of their collaboration (eg: documents), and generally, there’s some way of letting those who are collaborating know when something has happened or is about to happen (notification). The problem was, and to a large extent, still is that there are different and proprietary systems and protocols to technologically support all the activities associated with collaboration.

Collaboration is often too formal. In other words, you don’t collaborate until someone says, “OK, let’s collaborate.” In order to say “Let’s collaborate” you need to schedule a meeting with a proprietary group calendaring system. Letting everyone know that you’re about to collaborate requires notification which 99 times out of 100 depends on email. Then once you start collaborating, a record of that collaboration has to be documented using a proprietary documentation technology (eg: word processors, spreadsheets, or presentation applications).

Even worse, there’s another proprietary system (a content management system) for storing, searching for, and retrieving those documents; something that happens in the course of collaboration. Something else that happens in the course of collaboration is someone improves those documents at which point, they must be passed around again for another round of collaboration. Passed around on the proprietary email system using oft-forked threads of e-mail that resulted in out-of-synch document changes. To add insult to injury, the e-mail feedback loop which may or may not have involved revisions was completely out of context of the collaborative activities themselves and required tools that were overkill given the requirements. At the end of the day, collaborating involves a bunch of walled gardens of technology that all too often, are retrofitted to the art of collaboration and that end up being manually integrated.

He goes on to observe that the use of wikis and notification can replace much of the use of email and content management systems:

With RSS as both the notification mechanism and the content subscription mechanism, you basically have a single technology that takes e-mail, e-mail attachments, and far too many round-trips (of email, to fully facilitate the collaboration) completely out of the equation.

With wikis, which can notify you when their content is changed via RSS, not only can the collaborators use 95% standard technology (there is no standard wiki markup language, yet), any and all virtual expression of the collaborative activities (new content, revisions to that content, annotations, comments, approvals, etc.) happen in the context of the collaborative environment. It’s all in the same one — one that involves almost no proprietary parts.There’s no jumping back and forth between systems or even integration of multiple systems. No word processor. No special content management system. No e-mail. No strapped-on transfer stations to get it all working together.

You open a Web page on your browser, you review it’s content, you make changes to the content, record the reason for those changes, press the submit button, and in one fell-swoop, a document is revised, a record of who revised it (and why) is made, and everybody else whose watching that document gets notified of the change through RSS.

It’s worth reading the whole article.

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Mapping sites

I’ve been playing around a bit with Google Maps and Windows Live Local and Virtual Earth.

When we were in Utah last week (in the 117 degree heat!) we rented ATVs and went up on some back country roads with some family who know the terrain. At one point one of our party took a GPS reading, and I wanted to create a map that pointed out that location on a satellite photo.

The recording of the reading I had was in the form of degrees and decimal minutes for latitude and longitude. Google Maps took that as a search term and converted it into decimal degrees, which is what it uses to actually display the map.

But for the particular area of the desert I wanted, the satellite photos on Google Maps didn’t get as detailed as I had hoped.

Microsoft’s Virtual Earth had the same resolution color satellite photos, but when I continued zooming in they had more detail available in black and white.

Windows Livc Local has good tools for remembering a map and sharing it via email, but that service doesn’t offer a way to embed a map into a web page that’s not on MSN Spaces.

So I turned to using Virtual Earth, which is the service that underlies Live Local, and that worked just fine.

I have to say that the documentation for Virtual Earth is truly excellent, particularly the Interactive SDK, which offers usable code snippets along with detailed API reference in tabs right along with the working examples. A great exemplar of a useable Web 2.0 kind of site.

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Heaven in a small package – the Epifani UL110 bass speaker cabinet

There are a number of basically impossible quests in my life: the search for the perfect mobile communication device; looking for the most powerful yet lightweight laptop (preferably one that runs OS X); finding the perfect martini (lately I’m given to Grey Goose vodka, with a twist); etc.

But probably the most impossible of these impossible quests is the maddening desire to find a small, lightweight speaker cabinet that sounds good for playing bass. Given that the wave size of the fundamental frequency of a double bass or bass guitar is somewhere around eleven feet, it’s not surprising that it usually takes a lot of oomph to move enough air to amplify the sound.

For most of the late ’70s and early ’80s I played in bands using a huge speaker cabinet that had two fifteen-inch speakers in it, custom designed for me by Porpoise Audio in Bellingham. It sounded terrific, but took two guys to move it anywhere.

In the late ’80s I moved to using a single fifteen inch Peavey cabinet. It doesn’t sound anywhere near as good as the behemoth, but I can move it by myself, as long as I don’t have to go up too many stairs – it still weighs somewhere around 70 lbs.

I’ve been starting to play some duo gigs around town with Tim Lerch, a fine jazz and blues guitar player, and realized that I had to come up with a smaller cabinet more suited to playing in coffee houses and book clubs as opposed to the loud and rowdy taverns of my misspent youth.

Today I took delivery of an Epifani UL110 cabinet like the one pictured above, and I couldn’t be more pleased. It weighs 22 lbs – I can easily lift it with one hand. And the sound, powered by an Ashdown Bass Magnifier amp head, is nothing short of astounding. It reproduces my upright bass with incredible fidelity – the lows are rich and full, and the definition of the midrange and high end is fully present without being grating. I have no idea how they get so much sound out of something so small and light.

This is the best sound I’ve had for an amplified upright bass yet, and I can’t wait to try it out on a gig, which I’ll get a chance to do on July 29 at Soul Food Books in Redmond – come on out if you want to hear how it sounds.

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Impressions from the Windows Live @edu discussion

It turned out that the substantive details of the day’s discussion at Microsoft last Thursday were under an NDA, so I couldn’t blog the sessions.

I can say that it was a terrific day of sessions (thanks, Walt!) with the program managers of the various Windows Live application areas, and that I came away very impressed with the talented and capable group of folks working on the Windows Live family and the passion that they bring to their work.

While most of today’s tangible WindowsLive@edu program is centered on identity management and email, I was particularly impressed with the directions we heard presented by Todd Biggs for the WindowsLive as a platform for developers and mashers, and from Karen Luk on what they’re planning for future work on Spaces as it transitions from MSN to Windows Live.

One of the telltale moments of the day was hearing Omar Shahine, the Lead Program Manager on Windows Live Mail, quoting the 37 Signals guys from Getting Real on releasing software often in an iterative style as being the way to build the best software. One doesn’t expect to hear that kind of development style being evangelized at Microsoft, but it’s good to see.

There’s lots of good stuff going on in the Windows Live world, and it will be exciting to watch it develop.

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Hotels using overly aggressive filtering

We’re staying this weekend at the Best Western Coral Hills hotel in St. George, Utah, while visiting some of Michele’s family who have retired down here. Like most moderately priced hotels I’ve been in lately, they provide free wireless Internet access – why is it the expensive hotels charge guests for Internet access, while the cheaper chains include it free of charge?

At any rate, when one of our party went to post some photos on her MSN Spaces account she found access to the site blocked. Sure enough, the hotel is using something called InfoWest Clean Internet, which not only blocks access to all MSN Spaces, but also all of MySpace and Facebook. Interestingly, they don’t block access to Google Pages, at least not yet.

There’s a site where InfoWest explains why they’re blocking MySpace:

Here are the simple reasons we block MySpace.com:

1. It contains suggestive and pornographic images
2. It allows for the easy posting of way too much personal information
3. It is a context for dating and personal ads
4. It can be and has been used to exploit children and teenagers.

We welcome your comments.

I gave them my comments on blocking the social networking sites in their entirety. Might as well block the whole Internet while you’re at it. Sheesh.

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Hotels using overly aggressive filtering

We’re staying this weekend at the Best Western Coral Hills hotel in St. George, Utah, while visiting some of Michele’s family who have retired down here. Like most moderately priced hotels I’ve been in lately, they provide free wireless Internet access – why is it the expensive hotels charge guests for Internet access, while the cheaper chains include it free of charge?

At any rate, when one of our party went to post some photos on her MSN Spaces account she found access to the site blocked. Sure enough, the hotel is using something called InfoWest Clean Internet, which not only blocks access to all MSN Spaces, but also all of MySpace and Facebook. Interestingly, they don’t block access to Google Pages, at least not yet.

There’s a site where InfoWest explains why they’re blocking MySpace:

Here are the simple reasons we block MySpace.com:

1. It contains suggestive and pornographic images
2. It allows for the easy posting of way too much personal information
3. It is a context for dating and personal ads
4. It can be and has been used to exploit children and teenagers.

We welcome your comments.

I gave them my comments on blocking the social networking sites in their entirety. Might as well block the whole Internet while you’re at it. Sheesh.

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Windows Live @ edu discussion with Microsoft

I’m down in Mountain View, California, for a day long meeting on Thursday with Microsoft and representatives from a bunch of US colleges and universities about the needs of higher ed that might be met by some of the Windows Live offerings – specifically we’ll be talking mostly about mail and calendaring services. I’ve said previously that I think the Windows Live folks are starting to offer some nice services, and I look forward to the opportunity to discuss the directions with the development teams.

I’ll blog as much as I can from the meeting.

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Windows Live @ edu discussion with Microsoft

I’m down in Mountain View, California, for a day long meeting on Thursday with Microsoft and representatives from a bunch of US colleges and universities about the needs of higher ed that might be met by some of the Windows Live offerings – specifically we’ll be talking mostly about mail and calendaring services. I’ve said previously that I think the Windows Live folks are starting to offer some nice services, and I look forward to the opportunity to discuss the directions with the development teams.

I’ll blog as much as I can from the meeting.

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Getting Outlook 2007 beta to connect to UW IMAP servers

I finally got Outlook 2007 to connect to the UW’s IMAP servers.

To do so, I had to set the type of encryption connection to use SSL – not TLS on port 993 in Account Settings/Change Email Account/ Internet E-mail Settings / Advanced.

Stupidly enough, if I set the Root Mail Folder to be mail, which is where all the user folders reside by default on the UW’s email service, Outlook doesn’t see the Inbox, which lives above mail in the hierarchy. If I don’t set a root folder it sees the Inbox, along with all the non-user folders that are their for processing purposes. This seems seriously broken, in a way that previous versions of Outlook were not.

Well, maybe I spoke to soon – now I’ve gotten a message saying Microsoft Office Outlook has stopped working – Windows is collecting more information about the problem, followed by a dialog box offering to turn on diagnostics, which just sent a bunch of info off to Microsoft.

Sigh.

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