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Thursday
Jul152010

Single people, this is why we hate you...

Thursday
Jul152010

facebook is just boring, so say the kidz

A study by consumer research group OTX has found that kids are getting bored with facebook. 

I used to like facebook. But it’s changed so much. It’s so, well, urgh!

I guess it’s still unrivalled as a means to organises events (although twitter is catching up), but it used to be my ultimate Rolodex. All my uni friends were there, I could keep track of their progress and drop in occasionally to say “hi” on their wall. I also had some time for the groups system, as that often led to interesting forums on niche subjects.  

These days facebook is a mess, ruined by a total absence of quality control within the application system. 

I remember when apps were launched. Someone threw a sheep at me, and it’s been downhill from there.

Other than established companies offering some level of integration (XBOX Live and last.fm for example), the apps have made facebook an incoherent mess that represents an awful user experience. Also, and maybe this is my fault, I just have too many friends (mainly from school) who I hardly know. I quite liked that facebook Lite (I called it “skinny”), but it looks like it’s been canned.

One question I always ask people is, “what is the first page you check out every day?” Nowadays, whenever people answer “facebook”, I instantly knock a point off their cool-o-meter.

I understand Google is looking to have another crack at social networking. I hope they do something impressive. Also, the Diaspora project continues to intrigue me. 

(hat-tip Donald Strachan / blog)

Wednesday
Jul142010

Film School Pr0n

It's as if millions of voices suddenly gasped with joy and were suddenly silenced by the sheer brilliance of it.

All of Andrei Tarkovsky's films can now be seen online for free. All. Of. Them.

Tuesday
Jul132010

Getting your shit together

If there is one thing that really pisses me off it’s disorganised people. I used to be terribly disorganised, so I approach incompetence with the zeal of a reformed sinner. I know how stressful it is to live in a world that lacks order, and I know how easy it is to put right. So hey, why not just get your shit together?

Some people are just lazy. Basically, they don’t give a crap and when the shit hits the fan, they’ll just deal with the consequences. These people are often lost causes and they should be weeded out of any organisation that actually wants to get things done.

The second set of disorganised people are the ones that do care. Maybe they are so stressed out by their workload, they can’t help themselves. Or maybe some of these people just lack the basic organisational skills to systematically order their lives.

These people need saving. Nobody, other than your rivals, can gain from disorder and inefficiency. We all suffer.

How many times have you heard someone say, “I’m so disorganised. I’d forget my own head if it wasn’t screwed on.” Why is this person disorganised? If they know they can’t competently recall events and tasks, why haven’t they addressed this? Maybe someone should unscrew their head, just to teach them a lesson.

To be organised is, as the word suggests, to have a system. Not all systems work for all people, but a system one must have. I have a system, do you?

The first rule any productivity expert usually lays down is that your system should be a global mechanism for your entire existence. Not just a system for your professional life, but also your personal one. Separate diaries rarely work, so the unified diary is key for the productive professional. This is not to suggest that work should rule your life. Not at all. Work and life should be in balance. They should compliment each other.

As a long-term Mac user, it often surprises people when they learn that my GTD system is primarily Windows based. At my workplace it’s all Microsoft Enterprise. We use Outlook for all meetings and planning our diary. As much as I’d love to use BusyCal, OmniPlan or Things on the Mac, it makes no sense when I’d then have to plug that data back into Outlook to reconcile with my work schedule.

I do stick some personal to-dos into TaskPaper on my Macs, but they’re very much “write a blog post about this” type tasks. Otherwise it’s Outlook on my Dell work laptop or via. my Nokia E72 Enterprise smartphone. A single diary and to-do list for both my work and personal life.

And I plan everything… even personal rest time. I plan time each week for routine tasks, and ensure that every project is visited at least once each week. I have recurring periods of Catch up time and I have two 30-minute diary review periods each week. Tuesday’s and Friday’s. Even mowing the lawn is a recurring summertime diary appointment! And I’m am always very reluctant to reschedule anything.

And do you know why my system is so important to me? I don’t have to think about anything other than the task at hand. I don’t have to worry about any specific project, because I know I have time scheduled for it, and if it’s falling behind, I will pick this up in review and plan additional time into my system. Also, I know at any one time where I am with any project, and I know the next actionable task to move that project along. I don’t have to remember tasks because they’re always in the one system. This allows me to concentrate 100% on what I’m doing. It’s liberating. You feel stress seep away, and you become far more productive.

I use other non-diary systems too. I have systems for writing, document control (a tickler file) and maintain various matrices for different things. No doubt write I’ll about these soon.

Sunday
Jul112010

OneLessFile

 

If like me you’re a file hound, you will love this minimalist solution from Heckler Design.

At work I operate a tickler file system for all my documentation, and I use smaller wallets to keep project notes together (moving them within the tickler file system, between allotted time slots for a particular project). The OneLessFile would be perfect. Want.

You can watch Heckler manufacture the OneLessFile, and the rest of their office solution, below:

Saturday
Jul102010

Must read: What have been the tactical lessons of World Cup 2010?

During this World Cup I've been banging on and on about 4-2-3-1 being the most effective formation in the modern game. I'm also applying my theory to my Barcelona team on Pro Evolution soccer on the XBOX, with stunning results.

(Ok, it helps that I rock. But by adding Mario Balotelli and Michel Bastos to Barcelona's weaker left-side, I've created a much more balanced and dangerous side.)

Legendary Guardian football poindexter, Jonathan Wilson, has written a brilliant tactical review of the tournament that emphasises the dominance of people playing with two covering defensive midfielders — the 4-2-3-1 and 4-2-1-3 formations. A must read.

Tonight Germany face Uruguay. Uruguay will have Luis Suárez back to partner Forlan up front, and Germany will see the return of many pundit's player of the tournament, the 20 year-old Thomas Müller. Uruguay are cautious and rely heavily on their talented finishers to take their chances. I fancy Germany to win as they're tactically more sophisticated and will be smarting after being taught a lesson by the Spanish. This might shape up to be a really, really good game.

Monday
Jul052010

My next phone

 

I’m due a new phone in October. So as you’d expect, the new iPhone was of particular interest to me. We have a 3GS, but the wife uses it for the most part. I promised myself an iPhone 4 this time around, with a view to retiring my trusty BlackBerry/iTouch combo.

I’ve been a BlackBerry user for years. But with the phone now on Vodafone, a sharper camera and system spell checker, the iPhone 4.0 is just too tempting. And anyway, my wife is getting pissed off with me testing apps on her phone all the time…

But if I were buying a new phone today, I’m not sure I’d have the confidence to buy an iPhone 4.0. I’m not flush these days. Any new phone will be around for the length of the contract. So the concerns over the iPhone antenna, are making me wonder about plumping for the first iteration of a major redesign.

I’m no fanboy. I know Apple get it wrong sometimes. The Wi-Fi on my last 15” MacBook Pro (pre-Unibody, Intel model) was utter shit. It would regularly drop my connection and was incredibly frustrating to live with. If my new iPhone has similar problems, I wonder how long my BlackBerry will sit in its drawer?

Also, I’ve always been very positive about Android. The recent acceleration in iPhone hardware evolution is down to stellar competition from Google and its hardware partners - chiefly HTC, Motorola and now Samsung. I think the best is still to come from Android, so come October, who knows what handsets will be available — there seems to be a new “Best Android Phone” every month.

Can you see why I'm so uneasy about selecting the phone I'm going to have to live with, every day, for the next 2-years? I know this is very much a first-world personal drama... but still, indulge me. :)

We’ll see how all this plays out. I would probably buy a rubber bumper/case anyway. And it’s possible that a firmware update could correct the problem (antennas can, I understand, be programmed to adjust frequency when the antenna length changes - i.e. someone bridges the two sections).

And it’s not for the hardware that I use Apple. I use the Mac because the independent development scene on OSX is light years ahead of Linux and Windows. My favourite Twitter client, word-processor, blog editor, project management software, video player, RSS reader and photography applications are all on the Mac. I use Windows and Linux every day, but it’s the Mac where I feel most at home.

It’s the same on the iPhone. I love Reeder, Tweetie (now Twitter for iPhone), TaskPaper, TuneIn Radio, Instapaper, and Night Stand on my iTouch (not to mention loads of cool photography apps on my wife’s 3GS — we share an iTunes account). I know Android versions of these apps - and potentially better ones - are coming thick and fast, but the talent and creativity that OSX-based platforms attract just blows me away. That’s why, regardless of a dodgy antenna, my next phone will still probably be an iPhone.

Sunday
Jun272010

England finally showed some spirit, but were woefully torn apart by the sassy Germans

So we're out. Now, with the shitty domestic psychodrama behind us, we can really start enjoying this World Cup.

Yeah, the players seriously under-performed, and it's about time these pretenders were honest about the fact that they're nowhere near as good as they think they are, but the coach has a lot to answer for too.

Like Marcello Lippi, Fabio Capello's compatriot, the England coach has been found out by his lack of tactical versatility. The era of Italian tactical supremacy could well be over.

I said as much on facebook earlier today:

I fear for England. 4-4-2 is too unsophisticated against a decent 4-2-3-1. Hopefully the players are savvy enough to change on the fly. Barry is key, but he's not looked great yet in this tournament. Two up front may mean we lose the battle for the ball in midfield — not to mention our distribution has been shocking up to now. Here's hoping I'm wrong.

Post game, the always brilliant Zonal Marking sums it up perfectly:

For the past six years, the major talking point regarding the England team has been an inability to get the best out of both Gerrard and Lampard. Both Lampard and Gerrard? Neither are at their best in a 4-4-2. Nor is Rooney, nor is Barry, nor is Carrick, nor is Joe Cole, nor are any of England’s small band of creative players. Even if Capello thought 4-4-2 was best before the tournament, he surely must have seen that it wasn’t working when England limped to draws against the US and Algeria, and a narrow victory over Slovenia.

England did do a few things right today. Going forward they created chances. Had Lampard's goal been given, maybe England wouldn't have been so exposed by the rampaging German counterattacks. At the hour-mark, England were playing like it was the last 5-minutes, and were suitably punished for this naivety.

So what does England do? Prior to the tournament, and following England's tremendous record in qualification, the FA handed Capello a big fat new contract. So it's unlikely the Italian will resign. No doubt he also feels desperately let-down by supposedly world-class players.

I don't think Capello should resign. But I do think he needs to rethink his approach. There is no doubt the Terry/Bridge saga created a rift. And what the fuckity fuck Terry thought he would achieve with his attempted coup, I have no idea. Terry is overrated and his ego is disruptive to the England project. I would dump him. I know Upson's performances today highlighted England's deficiency at centre-half, but still, Terry is more trouble than he's worth. England must be united behind the coach.

Everyone appreciates Barry's contribution in the anchor role, so why not play two people in that role — like Brazil, Argentina and Germany? What is the point of playing two strikers if you constantly lose the ball cheaply in midfield?

A lot to think about, but if Capello leaves, who else is there to choose from? Since Steve McClaren is damaged goods, it's Roy Hodgson or another Johnny Foreigner. May as well stick with Don Fabio, no?

Saturday
Jun262010

WHSmith Promo fail

It's the weekend, so I thought you might be interested in some RETAIL FAIL. More specifically: WHSmith FAIL.

If you don't live in the UK. WHSmiths are a retail phenomenon. 'Smiths are able to charge astronomical amounts for bars of chocolate and boring stationary, and yet people still shop there. When a videogame has hit the bargain bins in Gamestation, chances are you can find a cellophane-wrapped copy in WHSmiths at full launch day price. The only redeeming thing the store has going for it, is that it stocks just about every magazine imaginable.

Anyways...

I've been after a new USB flash-drive for a while. I had to send a large file to Italy a month ago, and I sent it on one of my personal thumb-drives -- so I can buy one and charge it to work.

I was in town today and decided to pop into WHSmiths and pick one up. They've always got a sale on thumb-drives and webcams for some inexplicable reason.

As expected there was a large gondola-end display of reduced drives, including a very sexy HP drive -- the v210w.

The drive was reduced from £49.99, to £19.99. It's tiny, with a chromed metal finish. A great deal, or so I thought.

When I took the display card to the till, it came up at £49.99! The young sales-assistant went away for a bit, and came back to tell me that she couldn't sell me the device at the advertised price because it was on the system at £50.

She went on to say that promotional materials are dictated by head-office, and that they'd emailed already to complain about discrepancies on the till system. Bastards.

So, rather than kicking off in store on a Saturday morning (the store assistant, to be fair, had been very pleasant), I decided I'd take the matter up with the glue-sniffing morons at head-office.

Below, my email.

from: Aaron Murin-Heath

subject: in store promotion: 8GB HP memory stick

to: customer.relations@whsmith.co.uk

Good morning,

This morning I visited your Newark on Trent store. I have been looking for a new USB memory stick for a while, so imagine my delight when I saw a very nice 8GB "Premium" HP v210w flash-drive in your 60% sale.

I have attached a photo of the promotional display.

When I took the item card to the till, rather than charging the advertised £19.99, it rang up £49.99 - the non-sale price. The store assistant went to seek some advice, and returned to say that the store had emailed head-office about such issues, and she was afraid she couldn't sell me the item for the advertised price.

Apparently the WH Smith head-office instructs stores on its promotional displays, yet can't get it together to ensure that the promotional items are priced as advertised on the system. A rather shoddy state of affairs, no?

Needless to say I was more than a little annoyed. But, not wanting to cause the nice young assistant any trouble, I decided to take this up with the people at fault... the plonkers at head office!!

So no, I don't have my nice HP memory stick. I had to make do with an awful bog-standard Sony one.

I am aware that I don't have a god-given right to a discount, but I do expect to enjoy an offer, when a store as established as WHSmiths, advertises one!

As you may have gathered, I'm more than a little disgruntled.

Aaron Murin-Heath

Geek, writer and all-round good guy

As you can probably gather, I'm more than a bit pissed off. I really liked that thumb-drive. But no way could I stick a receipt past the hawks at work for £50.

Finally, if you have a twitter account and wouldn't mind helping me stick it to WHSmiths, please retweet this. Thanks.

Sunday
Jun202010

Toy Story / The Wire mashup

This makes me want to dig out my Wire boxsets and watch it through again.

via. Kottke

Wednesday
Jun162010

Don't be fooled again. Obama is Bush

Watch at Gawker. Till the end.

I'll not dare dream again.

Monday
Jun142010

On the football

What a dire start to the World Cup?

I understand that it's important to not lose your opening game. But jeesh; this is pants.

I can accept that England is rubbish. I expected as much. We'll qualify out of very poor group. But beyond the second round? It's anyone's guess. I'm surprised at the dour football on display from sometimes exciting teams. If it weren't for the Germans giving Australia an absolute mullering, I might have just given up on the tournament.

Admittedly the Argentinians were good for the money. They dominated Nigeria, and if it wasn't for some brilliant keeping, they'd have scored a bin-lorry load of goals. But the rest? Shite.

Going back to England. The most important player in the modern football team is the anchor. The defensive midfielder that provides cover for marauding full-backs and distributes the ball intelligently. Claude Makélélé is the archetypal anchor. He was immense in empowering the best attacking players in the world to realise their potential. In Essien, Chelsea have as good a replacement as they could hope for - even if Essien is far more attacking in his play.

Without Gareth Barry England were disjointed. And as the midfield swept forward at every opportunity, they both smothered out the threat of Wayne Rooney and exposed the lacklustre centre-back paring of Terry and Carragher.

This is not the fault of Gerard or Lampard. Both are terrific players. But they're both attacking minded players - England needed a Mascherano, a Pirlo or an Alonso. Barry should suffice, but without him England will be home before the quarters.

Jamie Carragher is a good player. He can play all over the pitch, and two or three years ago, would have made the perfect utility player. He's too slow now against snappy forwards. If we face the Ghanians in the second round, he's going to struggle against their raw pace. And the thing is, if Barry suffers another set-back, we might need Carragher further forward.

Sunday
Jun132010

Football

Football is so popular because most of us have the emotional intelligence to be able to buy in to the spectacle. The utter frivolity of what is at stake is the perfect excuse for a great big global party, in which people of all ages, from all continents and from all religions, can participate. The simplicity of the rules means literally everyone can understand what is going on. Yes, there have been idiots who use football as an excuse for violence… but the game was always the excuse, and not the cause of that particular type of stupidity. These men do not define the sport, and they are a dying breed. In their place steps an ever growing number of sports fans who just want to watch the game with their friends, old and new.

Are we wasting too much media attention on the unfoldings of a meaningless tournament in South Africa? I find it hard to be annoyed. Once every four years, the eyes of all of humanity turn towards the same place. Everyone, whether they like it or not, is distracted by the same thing. It is not religious, it is not violent, and it cannot be bought. Its a delightful phenomenon, one we should cherish.

A great piece by Robert Sharp.

Also, check out Sim-O's brilliant piece.

Sunday
Jun132010

My Batman woes

batmancar.jpg

It all started with my son and his cousin, Jess, making comic characters w/paper. Batman, Joker, Catwoman etc.

We encouraged it.

Being creative, playing together and all that jazz.

I walk in this morning and Batman and the Joker et al are having their Christmas Party. Apparently they're all now fucking friends.

The bastards have ruined Batman. Ruined I tell you.

Friday
Jun112010

I actually want to see this movie

These Funny or Die mock-ups just get better and better. In many cases, they're more interesting than the flicks that actually get made.

Sunday
Jun062010

Red Ring of Death shirt

Been there. Done that. Got the T-shirt.

RRoD.ong

Buy at BustedTees.

Sunday
Jun062010

Norwegian Good

How can a movie called Norwegian Ninja be anything but awesome?

To be honest, this looks mental. via /film.

Sunday
Jun062010

Never judge a book by its cover

The Guardian's Imogen Russell Williams on Stephenie "Twilight" Meyer's latest work:

In fact, the most interesting thing about it is the cover: a glossy black number with an hourglass almost emptied of its blood-red sand. It's very pretty. It should be (double-)wrapping a better book.

Meow. But somehow I doubt Mrs. Meyer gives a fuck.

Sunday
Jun062010

Wired FAIL

From Wired:

The iPhone, introduced in 2007, arguably created the modern smartphone industry. The template pioneered by the iPhone — a roughly 4-inch slab with a touchscreen interface offering quick access to thousands of applications — has become the standard for Web-surfing handsets.

I'm sorry, but attaching the prefix "arguably" doesn't excuse the author for such ill-informed crap. I'm sure the millions of BlackBerry, Treo and N-Series customers would disagree. And modern? WTF? This is the cell-phone industry - it's all twatting modern!

Ass-helmets.

This is what happens when a supposedly tech-savvy publisher farms out content production to Reuters

Friday
Jun042010

Got a new Mac? Here are a few essential FREE downloads?

A friend of mine has just bought his first Mac. He was an iPhone user so I guess we can put this down to the Halo effect. Anyway, we had a brief exchange on facebook about the essential software he should download, and it got me thinking that this might make a decent post for Rational Geekery. Not to mention saving me writing the whole thing again next time a friend buys their first Mac!

System

First things first... Growl. It's amazing that Apple hasn't just built Growl into the Mac. I couldn't imagine a Macintosh without it - it just wouldn't feel like a Mac. It's an app that displays messages to alert you of changes to programmes you're running. New emails, IM updates, or that a download is complete. It might sound a bit intrusive (not-to-mention anti-GTD), but the levels of customisation are insane, and you can create a version that suits your needs perfectly.

I shouldn't have to tell anyone how cool Dropbox is, but if you don't have at least the free 2GB account, you're seriously missing out. Superusers even keep their Safari bookmark file in their Dropbox folder, automatically syncing them across multiple machines. Another solution for Safari bookmark management is Xmarks.

As you get used to your Mac you'll start to understand the power of the Finder and Spotlight. Everything on the Mac is so easy to find quickly. Alfred is a new and very cool programme that supercharges the Spotlight and adds in web functionality. It also negates the need for the mouse in many instances, which is always a good thing. Very interesting and useful.

Caffeine is another essential. You need this programme. It does one thing, it overrides your Mac's power-management and stops it going to sleep. Use carefully for obvious screen-wrecking reasons.

Video

Development on Perian seems to have gone quiet, but it's still a useful component to make QuickTime far more compatible with other video formats.

The Mac is blessed with two excellent free video-players. Miro has a beautiful GUI and also makes a good torrent client. I tend to use it instead of iTunes as it's less stodgy. It really is the dog's dangly bits and will play almost anything you throw at it. The second open-source player you need is VLC - which you probably already know about as it's also on Linux and Windows. VLC is several different kinds of awesome and is brilliant for file conversion (see also Handbreak). Some people recommend movist, but it's not something I use. It might be worth a gander.

Messaging

If you're a fan of instant messaging (to be honest, I'm not), you'll need Adium. Endlessly customisable and, with a variety of plugins, can work with pretty much any IM service — including facebook chat.

For most people, the bundled Apple Mail app will serve all your email needs. But for me it's not enough. Maybe it's me, but I had all sorts of bother when I swapped my Gmail accounts over to IMAP from POP3. Hundreds of deleted messages would routinely be dumped to my BlackBerry. I was close to giving up on IMAP when I tried Thunderbird 3. Now IMAP works brilliantly. I have email synced across multiple Macs and Linux machines. It's a revelation. Use the Lightning and Provider extensions for two-way Google calendar syncing.

Twitter

There are two twitter clients I recommend. Tweetie for Mac (a free ad-supported version is available) is simple and incredibly intuitive. Secondly, if you want more functionality, try YoruFukurou, which is really good.

Images

I'm not sure if, eventually, Skitch will start charging for its image hosting/basic editing service, but until they do, it remains a brilliant free resource with a great native Mac app. You'll have loads of fun clipping screenshots and making funny doodles on them. :)

Another good project that has gone quiet is Seashore. Seashore is a very simple image editing programme, think Photoshop for people who just need the basics. I use Pixlemator and Photoshop CS4 mostly (I haven't upgraded to Acorn v2.3 yet), but I'm afraid they're paid apps. If you want the full image-editing experience, there is always Gimp, which is open source and completely free - although you'll need to tinker a little to get it installed on a Snow Leopard machine.

Come back soon...

I'm going to add to this post over time, and link to it from the front-page. Hopefully it might become a useful reference for new Mac users. If you're looking for more great Mac apps, check out my recommended software page and my 5 Most Used Apps post. If you have anything you think I should add, drop me an email and I'll take a look. Laters.