Category Archives: Uncategorized

Well Formed Log Entries

Sam Ruby has started a wiki to discuss what really
makes up a weblog entry. He started it out with the following:



Authentic Voice
of a Person.  Reverse Chronological Order.  On the web.  These
are essential characteristics of a online Journal or
weblog.


I think we should
expand the scope of this just a bit, from “online journals or weblogs” to
“syndicated content”. There are a lot of interesting applications of syndicated
content that have nothing to do with journals or weblogs, and these will
arguably only grow in importance over time. For example, e
vent log
monitoring
– no voice, and not on the web…but uniquely
useful.


In any case, if you’re
interested in syndication, definitely take a
look.

Speakers

I’ve never had to work
so hard to spend $150.


Late last week, I
subscribed to PressPlay just to try it
out (more on them later). After listening to music all day, I decided I needed
some new speakers; I was using some very old HK’s that came with a computer
several years ago, and they just weren’t cutting it any more. I called Tom, and we got to work finding
a new set.


First stop was a set
of Monsoon
PM-9’s
 for $79 from Circuit City. The box looked like it was a
shock-testing dummy, and of course one of the speakers was broken when I got
them home. Off to another CC store to exchange, got them back home, hooked them
up. Other than an annoying hum from the sub, these were fantastic speakers –
well worth the price. The sound was a little different than I’m used to, but
pleasing.


That hum, though, just
wouldn’t go away, and it was annoying and headache-inspiring. It was some kind
of ground loop thing – the hum would go away when I unplugged the computer
audio-out from the speakers. Further, if I hooked up my laptop to them, when the
laptop was running on batteries, all was well – but plug anything into
it (ethernet, power, USB device, whatever), and the hum would come back. I could
plug the sub into another outlet about 30 feet away (with an extension cord
snaking through the house), and it was much better, although still there. So
back to the store for a Monster Power power conditioner…still no love, the hum
just wasn’t going away.


I bribed Tom to bring
over his JBL speakers for a test case, and they worked fine without any hum. So
it’s evidently just a problem with the particular circuitry in the Monsoons with
my devices and power circuits. Bummer – I’m getting really fond of these
speakers by now, but the hum wasn’t going away.


So I spend the morning
researching speakers, and finally head back to CC with my iPaq and a few 128kbps
encoded WMA’s. I tried the Altec
Lansing ATP3
($79) system first – what a complete pile of junk. Turn it
up past halfway or so (and this isn’t loud by any means), and the distortion
becomes more noticeable than the music. I found a set of Klipsch ProMedia 2.1’s ($179), which I fully
expected to rock my world…but actually I wasn’t impressed. The satellites
sounded great, but the sub sounded a little muddy (surprising…maybe there was
something wrong with the one on the floor). Finally I tried the Altec
Lansing 621’s
($149), and I was pleasantly surprised; pretty neutral
sound, and enough power to play what I want without distortion. Took them home,
held my breath, plugged them in, and no hum. Cool! They also sound great…so
far so good. There are a few things I don’t like too much – the 2-button volume
control, no remote sub volume, and a couple other things, but so far I’m liking
them.

The RSS Soundbite

An interesting post
from Dwight
Shih
:



Tim Bray is in sales mode
and wants to know
What’s
the RSS Soundbite?
My advice would be to load up NewsGator and pitch RSS as
pull email. Email has already achieved pretty near universal acceptance in
business. Many people consider their email archives to be their primary
information storage vault — and the ones that don’t know people who do. So
pitch RSS as broadcast email and don’t give the web a chance to confuse the
issue.


I’ve been talking to a
company who is thinking about this from the email marketing perspective. Now,
normally the words “email” and “marketing” in the same sentence send a shiver
down my spine (and terms like “opt-in” just make me laugh), but I can totally
see this. If I could subscribe to a RSS feed that’s personalized for
me, containing advertisements and offers of stuff I might actually be
interested in, based on information I’ve given, I’d be all over it. Not only
would I read it, but I might even buy stuff from it. And it’s all under my
control – if I decide I’m no longer interested, I just remove my subscription.
Try that with email lists – heh.


So let’s recap. People
are getting news in their mailbox with NewsGator. They’ve voluntarily subscribed
to feeds they know contain advertising and offers. They’ve indicated the stuff
they’re interested in. Advertisers buy space in these feeds, based on user
interests and demographics. If I’m an advertiser, this seems extremely valuable.
Seems good for everyone.


So what do you think?
Would you subscribe to such a feed, personalized for you? I’m curious if I’m the
only one who thinks this could be a good idea.
:-)

What to race?

I think my racing
career is at a crossroads.

 

I want to move
on to a pro series; something with more exposure, prize money, etc. SCCA Pro
Racing has just announced the end of the Pro Spec Racer series; and in any case,
I think it’s time to move on. The problem is, I can’t find any great
options

 

2004 Pro Formula
Mazda
– an excellent new car next year, and
from what I can tell, this is a well-run series. Heavy commitment from Mazda, a
television contract, and races within the U.S. Sounds great, right? A few
problems…one, there are very few cars still available in the planned
production run. Delivery won’t be until the end of the year at the earliest, but
they need deposits immediately. Second, the cars are pretty expensive – about
$70,000 (ouch). Third, no payout until the end of the season. Total cost to run
a season, not including car – probably in the $100,000 range, plus crash
damage

 

Fran-Am
2000
North American Pro Championship – A relatively new series, excellent
cars from a technical perspective, and pretty
significant payouts
. And if I could pick the races I wanted to run at in
North America, they’ve got them – 5 weekends with CART, and 1 or 2 with Formula
1. Wow, how cool is that? Payout – $28,500 purse per-race, year-end payout
involves paid rides in the Formula Renault V6 Euro-cup. TV contract, but
tape-delayed to November/December timeframe. And there’s actually a car in
California for sale right now. Downsides – car is also pretty expensive, around
$50,000. And many races in Canada, which are a really long tow from
Denver, which translates to either a lot of time or a lot of money. Total cost
to run a season – probably around $120,000, plus crash
damage

 

Formula SCCA – a new car, new
class, new series. Relatively
inexpensive, with the car selling new for under $30,000. Downsides are many,
however. First, lousy payouts. $800 for
finishing first in a pro event? Come on, that doesn’t even cover a set of tires
and entry fee. Second, sanctioned by SCCA Pro Racing – the same crew who just
cancelled the Pro Spec Racer series without notice, and who seem to have a less
than stellar repuation for securing series sponsorship. Will the series last? I
hope so, but who knows. Third, the cars aren’t ready yet, because of technical
problems. This whole thing strikes me as not well planned, but maybe they’ll
surprise me. Total season cost – $50,000 range, plus damage.

 

We’re working on
putting together a sponsorship package right now, and I think we have a pretty
good case to make. However, for the first two series I mentioned, I would
need sponsorship to run them. And to do well in the series, I need
testing time before next year’s season. Which potentially puts me in the
uncomfortable position of needing to buy a car now, without knowing for sure if
we’ll be able to raise the required funding to race it. The third series isn’t
quite so bad, but the rewards are far less in terms of payout and
exposure.

 

I’m a little
torn…the Fran-Am car for sale suddenly came up, but I’m having trouble pulling
the trigger on that deal. It’s an uncomfortable financial situation, before I
know if we’ll be able to secure sponsorship.

 

Sigh.

RSS Ubiquity


A while back, there
were a some posts about NewsGator
being “too easy” to use, and people resisting reading RSS feeds in Outlook for
this reason. We’ve discussed the feature set of NewsGator many times…but let’s
talk more about integrating RSS with Outlook.


Today, some might
argue that mail and news are indeed two separate things; since RSS isn’t a real
part of people’s daily responsibilities, it’s not a big deal to open another
application to read news.


But what about moving
forward, with RSS becoming much more ubiquitous every day? You’ll have RSS feeds
from weblogs you read, maybe feeds from your internal build or bug tracking
systems, feeds from news sites, feeds from your product’s support forums. It
integrates into your work; it becomes part of your routine. At this point, when
RSS news is as much a part of your day as email, wouldn’t you want them all
integrated into a central information management point? Outlook is the obvious
place to see it all.


You’ll have information from multiple sources – your
email, mailing lists, exchange public folders, RSS feeds – all in one
place. No need to explicitly convert
between them. You want to email a weblog
post to a friend? You click forward. You
want to post a mailing list item to your weblog? You click “Post to weblog.” You
want to reply via email to a weblog post? You click Reply.


And it’s all here today.