Archive for March 2006

MySpace Follow-up

This article, while quite succinct, has a definite understanding of the concepts that MySpace *should* follow. I found myself nodding in agreement as I read. Although the self-proclaimed "MySpace whores" that may read this will not care one bit, I believe this article hits the nail on the head.

Regardless of the fact that it is futile to tell MySpace to integrate with Flickr and Jabber on the backend, I think it would do more bad than good. I don't want to see Flickr banned at school because too many idiot kids joined and are posting pictures of themselves drinking. Right now, Flickr is a respectable site. And Jabber... don't even get me started. It would be great if kids all used Jabber instead of AIM and (for the minutely more computer-literate) MSN Messenger, but it would just confuse them. They'd wonder why there's no "official" Jabber client. And then we'd have to start explaining the meaning of "open source" and "clients vs. servers" to kids.

Don't get me wrong, I'm all for them learning it. But only if they teach themselves.

What I Want to be When I Grow Up

This guy is my hero.

Photo Friday: smooth

Photo Friday: smooth

Originally uploaded by Kevin Walter.

My first forray into the weekly Photo Friday contest.

Photo Friday challenges users to find a picture relating in some way to that week's theme. This week's theme is smooth. Hence... the serene glass of water... you know, because it's smooth.

FREE (!!!!) Microsoft Exchange account (and the lengthy history of my hosting troubles)

I'm not a huge fan of free e-mail services.

That being said, these last few months I've found extreme solace in the thousand-plus Gmail accounts I registered just like everybody else when it first came out. I've had numerous problems with servers, hosting, DNS resolution, and nameservers in the last eigth months or so. First, back in July of last year, I leased a server from now-defunct I-net. They worked fine... until their service started going down for 3-day sprints while their provider "fixed their Cisco network card." Then one Sunday afternoon they tell me I'm getting a $500 severance check and I have 24 hours to clean my server... yeah, all 160 GB of it.
I managed to bargain my way until Thursday, all the while experiencing the unprofessionalism of Forrest "Gumpy" Bowman, someone my partner and I assumed was his brother, and Corey Haggard. Mike and I came to refer to them as the "Dumpster Hosts" because we had a theory that they lived in the dumpster outside their data center (due to the fact that one of their wireless connections kept going out... that was a long time ago... we were working on about an hour of sleep each, so bear with us :-P ).

I managed to convince my mom to loan me $150 for the setup of a new server (the check wasn't due for 30 days), and as I quickly moved my files over to that one, I became increasingly annoyed at these new hosts. They took longer than advertised to set up the box, they didn't update my kernel, and they took a month and a half to propagate reverse DNS for my IP addresses. (Sorry for the jargon kids... let's just say they sucked.) I dealt with it though, since their prices were pretty damn good.

Now that I mention it, their prices were better than great. I signed up for a special reseller account with them, where all prices were supposed to be lower if I was able to sell 3 or more servers within the first month of my service. I had them for five months... and they never reverted to the regular price, even though I had only one server the whole time. Idiots.

Speaking of idiots, my I-net check never did come. I have a few lawyers taking a look at the documentation I provided them to see what can be done legally, but frankly it doesn't look good, since almost all of our dealings were through IM conversations.

I got rid of Ezzi at the beginning of this month, just because I couldn't afford it. I picked up a temporary hosting account at DreamHost, which is where I'm at now (for the next few days anyway), and it's pretty nice. Their control panel frankly sucks, but they do support an incredible amount of features, and prices aren't terrible either. They have a three-month money-back guarantee, which I plan to take advantage of shortly (like we're talking days or a week at this point). In the meantime, DGforums.net as well as my other sites will be down. (This site is hosted on an old free account on Jake's co-worker's server, and DGforums.net may be temporarily offloaded here, but that's a whole 'nother can of worms).

Shortly, I'll be completing the building of my own server, OWNED by me, so my monthly costs will be considerably lower. It's called colocation, and basically what I do is ship my server out to the data center, where they hook it up to a very fast Internet connection (100mbps to be exact--Comcast in comparison is 6mbps), turn it on, lock it up, and let it be. I can remotely access the server to do any management tasks needed, and they'll be happy to do any OS installs or other software upgrades that require someone on location with a CD in hand for free.

Problem is, I have to have the funds to purchase the components and server parts, and getting the money back from my DreamHost account is really the only option at the moment.

ON TO THE REAL REASON I started writing this: Microsoft Exchange. MS Exchange is a a super-premium-awesome-cool piece of software for Windows servers that allows a person to read their e-mail on the web and on their PC, with everything from flagged messages to contacts to appointments completely synchronized. IMAP can do this for Linux (and is free), but Exchange is colorful (and expensive). I had a free Exchange account on a trial basis from 1&1 a while ago, but got rid of after my trial was up. It is really cool... not even kidding here.

But I digress. Mail2Web.com has a relatively new feature (new since the last time I logged into my account there back in '04) that offers a free @mail2web.com e-mail address... WITH AN EXCHANGE ACCOUNT! Not to mention it's free. Go and sign up, try it out. You can't really get the full experience with their modified logos and ad-infested Inbox, as well as if you don't use Outlook 2003 for e-mail. But it's still cool nontheless.

Fine. Stick with your precious Gmail. The average human being doesn't know their IMAP from their OWA from their POP from their Pepsi. One of these days, though...

WoW guide author sues Blizzard

The author of a World of Warcraft self-published guide appearing on eBay had his auctions removed a few months back because Blizzard claimed it infringes on their trademarks. They say that no one can write a book about WoW.

The author has now filed a countersuit against Blizzard saying that according to the first amendment, you can write a book about anything. I tend to agree.

Source

Try Before You Buy/Rent/Borrow

I'm a pretty big movie buff. I check out movies from the library, have a Netflix account, have an exchange system with several friends for recent DVDs, and IMDb.com is on my favorites list. So I was happy to discover a really neat site today that allows you to preview the first 10 minutes of a movie for free.

First10Minutes.com sports a clean interface, minimal advertising, and a growing selection of titles to prview and download. Links to buy and rent the movie online are easy to access as you're watching the video.

Critics can't tell you everything. Sometimes the best way to figure out if a movie is worth your money is to watch it for yourself.

Online TV Listings and Planner

One of the absolutely coolest sites I've come across in a really long time is MeeVee. I've been using their service for a few days now, and I'm already addicted. It has become one of my Bookmark Toolbar favorites, the ones I check daily or often multiple times a day.

MeeVee is an online television listings guide and planner. Listings for up to a week in advance are available, and it has all the channels specific to the cable subscription in my area. You can search for shows, browse through the channels, and view video clips for certain programs, all in a Web 2.0 environment. This is all nice, but the real killer app is the Planner. I can add shows by individual program, all episodes everywhere, all episodes on one channel, or all new episodes everywhere (the one I use the most).

The site is currently in beta, and it still has a few things I'd like to see before I give it my hands-down A+ approval. RSS feeds are noticably missing from the site. This is without a doubt something that should have RSS feeds for indiviual users, channels, programs, and recommendations. Speaking of which, I've been rating shows for a few days now, and its personalized recommendation feature is looking a little loose. Maybe a bit of AI improvement there? Of course, I also have a pipe dream that the site will be able to interface with DVR software over a home network and record your shows for you. I'm sure there are $1000 DVRs that will do this, but not owning a DVR at all, I wouldn't know. And I doubt they have the slick interface of MeeVee.

Overall, definitely worth the time and effort of creating an account and giving it a shot. I will without a doubt be using MeeVee daily to keep an eye on my must-see TV programming.

Top 10 Reasons I Hate MySpace.com

My blog has a mixed audience. I, of course, am a high school student, so I have readers that are my age, but I also have readers that are adults, even teachers. Those that know me best know how much I despise the web site MySpace.com. I absolutely abhor it. Maybe it's the web developer in me (Jake feels the same way), but I can not stand that fact that kids are being given the ability to make personal web pages without any kind of instruction or direction.

The first of many Top 10 lists to come:

Top 10 Reasons I Hate MySpace.com
  1. It puts REAL social networking sites to shame.
  2. It allows idiot kids to make web pages that have a black background on black text.
  3. It allows idiot kids to make web pages that have loud, annoying background music. (REAL web designers stopped doing this in 1997, even before then it was a dumb novelty)
  4. It has a horrendous amount of ads and pop-ups.
  5. That same horrendous amount seem to defeat my blocker.
  6. It fails to inform its users that any info they put there can be seen by not only their friends, but their teachers, principals, and parents. (apparently this isn't common sense?)
  7. For some reason, now bands, TV shows, and even TV shows that I watch (!) are using it.
  8. For some reason, its users are in some kind of battle to pretend they have more "friends" than they really do.
  9. Its commenting system is abominable.
  10. It isn't completely Firefox-compatible.

I'm a pretty opinionated person, but sometimes it takes just one tiny thing to set me off into an all-out attack on something (like MySpace.com). David Jakes can claim that today with his recent post located here on yet another one of the problems arising out of use of MySpace.

One of MySpace's core features is the "profile" where users can opt to disclose a great deal of personal information, one of them being whether or not they drink alcohol and smoke. Being underage, a lot of people can get in some serious trouble for that. Take one friend of mine for instance: he puts on his MySpace profile that he drinks and smokes, and he happens to be on the track and tennis teams at DGS. If that gets seen by a school administrator, he's off both of those. I've never been a huge fan of censorship and I've hated it even more when school district employees look at my stuff online. It's gotten me suspended, it's gotten my web sites blocked at school, and it's gotten a lot of people pretty high up in the food chain of DGS pretty angry at me (but those are three more stories for another time). But now I'm starting to come around. Maturing? I don't know. I typically don't want the school seeing what half my friends write on their MySpace profiles, but I think the lesson that the Internet is available to everyone needs to strike a little closer to home here in the Downers Grove area before it gets taken seriously. Don't get me started on Xangas...

The "new" blog

I can't begin to remember the number of times I've removed this blog, added it again, made 4 posts, and repeated the process. Hopefully I'll be keeping this one for a while. I formerly had two blogs, a "DGblog" and one on this KW.org site. My DGblog will be replaced with this one as well.

I do suppose it's a law of the blogosphere that all first posts are indeed the crappiest ever.