2010
08.23

Google Android’s Dirty Little Secret

The future of smart phones will not be as promised:

The dirty little secret about Google Android | Tech Sanity Check | TechRepublic.com.

2010
08.20

Change Video Playback Speed

This is a cool little tool that enables you to slow down (or speed up) video playback on the Web for a variety of purposes.  It retains proper pitch and even works with YouTube.  Pretty cool.

Change Playback Speed – Variable Speed – Time Scale Modification of Audio – Enounce, Incorporated – Enounce.

2010
08.12

The Purdie Shuffle

I have longed to master this beat for years.  I first heard John Bonham’s version of it on Fool In The Rain back when I was just learning to play drums as a teenager, but eventually fell in love with Bernard’s original on Home At Last and Babylon Sisters.  After really giving this some focus the past week or two, I feel like I am much closer to feeling this the way it should be played.  However, it will be a long time before I risk posting my version of it to YouTube.  🙂

Bernard Purdie’s Beat, the Purdie Shuffle, Is Everywhere, Including ‘Hair’ – NYTimes.com.

2010
08.11

Overview of What’s New in Gmail

Google has made some minor changes to mail, contacts and tasks to enhance the Gmail experience.

Overview of what’s new in Gmail – Gmail Help

2010
07.16

How a Web Design Goes Straight to Hell

For those of us who have been doing Web design for years now, we can relate to this hilarious comic strip.  I am hoping to purchase the poster soon and put it up in our Web Services area because most of us have been here, whether at Butler or beyond.  🙂

How a Web Design Goes Straight to Hell – The Oatmeal

2010
07.09

Learn Camel Case, PLEASE!

Please!  STOP using spaces in your folder and file names on the Butler network, the Web or any other network for that matter.  Most of us use Outlook here at Butler, an email client that is quite capable of making hyperlinks out of properly formatted URLs and file locations.  However, when University staff members insist on using spaces and special characters in the file names, the hyperlink functionality fails because the hyperlink stops at the first space in the string, rendering the link useless.

A perfect example of this is when someone sends out a BUFILES location that contains something I really just want to go check out quickly.  Recently, IR had a picnic and several staff members posted pictures and video to this location:

\\bufiles\group\InfoRes\~~ IR Resources ~~\IR Photos\IR Picnic 2010

Of course, an email went out telling everyone about it.  As you can see from my example here, only a portion of the string is hyperlinked automatically.  Sure, someone COULD have taken the time to hyperlink the whole line, but when Outlook (and many other communication tools) have the built-in capability of converting these strings to hyperlinks, why can’t we just learn to stop putting spaces and special characters in these file and folder names?

Call me old school, but I can still remember the days before Windows and other GUI operating systems unchained us from the eight-character limitations of DOS (as well as other legacy file naming conventions).  However, we have also become a society that relies heavily upon connectivity, Web technologies, etc.  Those technologies don’t give a rat’s booty about “pretty,” user-friendly or aesthetically-pleasing file names.  You throw a space in a file name of a Web page or file accessed via the Web and that’s when you start seeing those wonderful “%20” blemishes showing up in your URL strings.

So, I’d like to plead with everyone who has or will ever share data with anyone on a network (including the World Wide Web) to please STOP naming files this way.  The world gave us Camel Case for a reason … USE IT!  This is a habit I formed many years ago when systems were less forgiving and as an acceptable best practice when naming variables in programming languages.  If nothing else, use hyphens as spaces.  Most “user-friendly” URLs are generated this way (just look at the URL of THIS Web page).  Google will even recognize hyphens as spaces, so it’s a win-win for everyone.

Whatever you do, it should FACILITATE the quick and easy sharing of information.  If you reference a file location in an email, I should NOT have to copy and paste the whole string into some other window.  I should be able to merely click the link, look at the data you’re sharing with me and then move on with life.  If this is my expectation at 42 years old, imagine what our students in their late teens and early twenties must expect.  Jumping through hoops to share or access data is old school, not me.

So, how SHOULD that previous link be formatted?  Like this (assuming all folders and file names were changed to ACCURATELY reflect their purpose AND avoid redundant words in the file architecture):

\\bufiles\group\informationResources\general\photos\picnic2010

It’s a thing of beauty, folks.  🙂  Of course, I realize that this would require a GIANT project that would include a billion conversations surrounding library science naming conventions, etc., but I think it IS feasible with a little determination and communication.  I’m sure this pipe dream of mine will never be realized and the tools we use may never catch up with the uninformed ways in which we use them … but, I can always hope.

2010
06.17

How Harmonix Is Tricking Lazy Gamers Into Learning Real Instruments

A few plastic buttons on a fake guitar neck was only the beginning.  As a musician, I always suspected these games could do more to teach and promote REAL musicianship.  For example, the drum trainer in Rock Band 2 is a very useful tool for beginning drummers.  Check out what Harmonix is doing with REAL Fender guitars.

How Harmonix Is Tricking Lazy Gamers Into Learning Real Instruments.