Archive for July, 2007



MT4 – Maybe *NOT* time to give it a try

So I tried to upgrade this blog to Movable Type 4 this morning. It was all going fine – the install process checked for the needed software and found it, checked my database and said it was fine, and then I got to this screen:

Screenshot 01

When I pressed that Begin Upgrade button I got this:

Screenshot 02

And I couldn’t get any further. No amount of searching the forums held out any answers, and there hasn’t been any response to my filing it as a bug with SixApart. So I’ve restored back to 3.14 (lucky I backed everything up before starting the process!).

I guess I’ll try putting MT4 on a separate installation and see if goes better.

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MT4 – Maybe *NOT* time to give it a try

So I tried to upgrade this blog to Movable Type 4 this morning. It was all going fine – the install process checked for the needed software and found it, checked my database and said it was fine, and then I got to this screen:

Screenshot 01

When I pressed that Begin Upgrade button I got this:

Screenshot 02

And I couldn’t get any further. No amount of searching the forums held out any answers, and there hasn’t been any response to my filing it as a bug with SixApart. So I’ve restored back to 3.14 (lucky I backed everything up before starting the process!).

I guess I’ll try putting MT4 on a separate installation and see if goes better.

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UW email config instructions for iPhone

I’m pleased to say that we now have instructions available for configuring iPhones to work with the UW’s smtp/imap systems. The instructions are online, linked from our Getting and Setting Up Email Programs page.

The page features photographic screen shots from my iPhone (it sure would be nice to have a better way to get screen shots).

Thanks to Rick Ells, Eugene Sherman, and Andrew Benton for the quick work on this!


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UW email config instructions for iPhone

I’m pleased to say that we now have instructions available for configuring iPhones to work with the UW’s smtp/imap systems. The instructions are online, linked from our Getting and Setting Up Email Programs page.

The page features photographic screen shots from my iPhone (it sure would be nice to have a better way to get screen shots).

Thanks to Rick Ells, Eugene Sherman, and Andrew Benton for the quick work on this!


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Upgrading MySQL – and what about Movable Type?

We just switched the main servers available for faculty and staff accounts from AIX to Linux, so I spent most of the afternoon re-installing MySQL binaries. That went OK, after a few moments of panic when I installed an old version of my data from March (sorry if that messed up your RSS readers for this feed!).

Not that the MySQL upgrade is done, I notice that MT-Blacklist, my comment and trackback spam manager for this blog, isn’t working any longer. I’m not too worried about comment spam, as comments need to be authenticated with TypePad IDs, but I get a constant flow of trackback spam. It’s only a few a day, so I can certainly handle it manually for a short period of time, but that’s sort of a pain.

I’m on Movable Type 3.14. I notice that 3.2 has the anti-spam features built into the core product, but MT 4 is supposed to be out soon – It’s supposedly in its final beta release now.

So, should I:

- Install MT 3.2 now and worry about 3.4 later?
- Install the 3.4 beta now and hope it’s stable enough to not blow my blog away?
- Just live with what I’ve got now until 3.4 comes out in a production release?

Decisions, decisions – all opinions welcome here!

Catching up on recent listening

I recently had a birthday and got showered with a bunch of CDs from friends (which made me wonder how we’re going to give specific music as gifts in the download age), and realized I hadn’t posted anything about my current listening in a long time – so here are some snippets.


“Truth and Reconciliation” (Darrell Grant)

I was driving in to work one morning and heard a piano trio version of the old Jerome Kern classic The Way You Look Tonight, one of my favorite jazz standards, with a completely intriguing reharmonization. It turned out that it was by Portland pianist and music prof Darrell Grant. I immediately downloaded his latest recording from emusic and have been listening to it frequently. There’s a renaissance of good piano trios happening these days, and Darrell’s is among the finest.


“Something Like Now” (Moutin Reunion Quartet)


“Power Tree” (Moutin Reunion Quartet)

I caught the Moutin Reunion Quartet at the Ballard Jazz Festival in April and was totally
blown away by the musicianship and energy of this French quartet led by brothers Francois (bass) and Louis (drums) Moutin. Intense (but not humorless) modern jazz with lots of swing and post-modern bombast (in a good sense). Well worth listening to!


“Bad Blood in the City: The Piety Street Sessions” (James Blood Ulmer)

Blood Ulmer was part of the harmolodic fusion scene around Ornette Coleman and his Prime Time band in the seventies, playing extremely dense and multi-layered free funk. It’s interesting to watch him in the new millennium reinventing himself as a down-home blues musician, along with his producer and collaborator (and guitarist extraordinaire) Vernon Reid. To my ears none of Blood’s blues recordings has been entirely successful yet, but this outing, recorded in post-Katrina New Orleans in three days, is the best yet.


“My Heart’s in Memphis: The Songs of Dan Penn” (Irma Thomas)

As an old R&B and soul musician I’d been vaguely aware of Dan Penn as a Memphis songwriter associated with the Muscle Shoals recordings of the sixties, who wrote such classics as Do Right Woman for Aretha, Dark End of the Street for James Carr, I’m Your Puppet and others. A few years ago a friend (happy birthday!) turned me on to Penn’s more recent recordings, and I became a fan. On this CD from 2000, New Orleans soul great Irma Thomas sings some old Penn songs and adds some new ones. I have to say that overall I think the old songs resonate more than the new ones, and the production is a little slicker than I’d like, but it’s great to hear some real old-school soul music from some worthy masters.


“Night & the Music” (The Fred Hersch Trio)

Another lovely piano trio recording, with the terrific Drew Gress on bass and Nasheet Waits on drums. Somewhat introverted but deep, with great interplay among the trio. A modern take on the Bill Evans tradition.


“Live at the Fillmore East” (Neil Young and Crazy Horse)

I was a big fan of Neil Young’s Everybody Knows This is Nowhere when it came out in 1970, and this is a great live set from that era. Crazy Horse – wow. I have to agree with a review I saw that it sounds like an early version of Tom Verlaine and Richard Loyd in Television.


“The Fawn” (The Sea and Cake)

I chanced upon this 1997 release on an emusic list of the “50 Greatest Summer Recordings” (it was number 39) and downloaded it. As the band says on their own web site, they play “dreamlike, hot-buttered pop music that sounds delicately handcrafted, yet effortless all the same.” I intend to check out their new release, Everybody, too.

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iPhone impressions – day 5

While walking across Red Square yesterday, I noticed two students using iPhones. Given that it’s summer and there were probably a total of about fifteen people in the square at the time, that might be an early indicator of a broader penetration of iPhones this fall than I had been thinking likely.

I spent some time yesterday with Eugene and Rick taking some photos of the iPhone email setup screens to be used in a set of instructions for how to configure the iPhone for use with UW IMAP email. Hopefully those should be in place soon, linked from the Getting and Setting Up Email Programs page. It’s too bad there’s not a screen capture utility on the iPhone.

So far it looks to me like Bloglines doesn’t work very well on the iPhone, but Google Reader does.

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Farewell to Peter Lyman

I was shocked and saddened to read on Danah’s blog that Peter Lyman died yesterday from cancer.

Peter was the University Librarian at USC in the early ’90s, at a time when I was living in DC and looking for what to do next in my life. I interviewed with Peter and John Waiblinger and they offered me a job at USC, which I accepted.

Shortly after I accepted the job, Peter came to DC and we got together to chat. He was heading out to CNRI to meet with Vint Cerf and Bob Kahn, and he invited me to come along. He was heading to Dulles after that, and asked if I’d drive to both CNRI and then take him to the airport. He was leaving on some overseas trip, and we soon realized that his huge suitcase and the Miata I was driving would present a challenge. We put the top down on the Miata, and Peter held onto the suitcase balanced on top of the trunk lid while I drove the Dulles toll road to Reston.

I still remember fondly sitting in the room with Peter and the two fathers of the Internet, soaking up the immense amount of intelligence that I was privileged to experience. The link between the library/information folks and the engineers forging the net was beginning to be formed in those early days, and Peter was one of those whose energy and intellect helped create much of what we now know as life on the net.

A week or so after that meeting the USC folks called to say that they had received a massive budget cut so wouldn’t be hiring after all, so I never got a chance to work for Peter, which I’ve always regretted (though he left shortly thereafter to go to Berkeley, and I ended up at the UW a year or so later).

I hadn’t seen Peter in a few years, and didn’t know he was sick. He’ll be sorely missed, though his presence will live on in the work of his students and those he mentored, like Danah.

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iPhone Impressions Day3

The iPhone browser can’t display the Facebook Mobile site – trying to go to m.facebook.com gets the message Safari can’t download this file. Safari on my PowerBook has no problem showing the site, and the iPhone shows the regular Facebook site just fine. Wonder what’s up with that?

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iPhone Impressions Day3

The iPhone browser can’t display the Facebook Mobile site – trying to go to m.facebook.com gets the message Safari can’t download this file. Safari on my PowerBook has no problem showing the site, and the iPhone shows the regular Facebook site just fine. Wonder what’s up with that?

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