Categories
Just Shelley

Trying to save the gooseneck lamp

More detail than ‘Out’…

I fell on the ice last week and hurt my lower back/hip area. It’s been getting progressively worse and today, when I tried to walk around the gentle, flat Tanglewood Trail at Powder Creek, I fell again. Except it was 70 F, and clear trails and I didn’t slip as much as take a step, feel something very unpleasant, yell out “Ow!”, or something to that effect but perhaps a bit stronger, and kind of folded in on myself like a budding flower changing its mind.

What’s worse is that I can’t sit at my desk for more than 20 minutes without some really interesting sensations that kind of make me want to take the gooseneck lamp by the side of the computer and bash it against the desk a 100 times or so.

Right now I’m jury rigged up in bed with pillows and what not and I can access the computer (thank you wireless!). But this only works for an hour or so before the goosenecked lamp starts to look mighty tempting again. This is really tedious.

Sporadic connectivity until body behaves in such a way that gooseneck lamp is no longer in danger.

Categories
Burningbird

Out

Sorry to rescind my offer to take screenshots of your weblogs with Safari. I’m
going to be out of touch for a while, and won’t be checking my email, or this weblog.

Others will be willing, I’m sure, to take screenshots for those of you interested.

Categories
Technology

Apple’s open core

As happened last year with the Macworld conference, you might as well bag writing about anything else because this week will be Apple, Apple, Apple.

Two big stories — a newer, longer TiBook and Safari, Apple’s entry into the browsing market.

I liked some features of the new TiBook such as the backlit keyboard, which I think is one of the best ideas I’ve heard with a laptop; I know I wish I had this with my TiBook. However, I’m less impressed with the length of the TiBook — 17 inches. My 15 inch works nicely, I drag it about the house and everywhere I go with no effort. All that extra length with the new TiBook does is make it too long for most computer carry bags. Heck, it’s too long for most laps.

What Apple needs to do is incorporate all the other goodies into its 15 inch model. Including the airport, Bluetooth, the graphics card, and that nifty backlit feature. That would be a tasty morsel, and I’d be putting up a PayPal donation button to have you all buy it for me.

And the Titanium PowerBooks are still the sexiest computer on earth.

An even bigger story is Apple’s release of the new Safari browser, which I don’t think is a huge surprise, was it? The best place to get a re-cap on all of the excitement is over at Mark Pilgrim’s. He did a nice first review of CSS support within Safari, and links to others who also reviewed the browser. Better yet, everyone else interested has linked to him and they’re all showing up in his referrals. Sticky Strand technology hits again.

I tried Safari and didn’t have too many problems. My weblog is quarked, which makes sense — automatic resizing of table columns that don’t contain any data, such as my outer columns, almost always looks bad in beta browsers. I also tried the browser on my more markup savvy weblogging neighbors such as DorotheaJonathonAllan, and Mark and their weblogs look great. I guess there is somthing to be said for all that they’ve been trying to teach us this last year.

If you don’t have a Mac OS 10.2 equipped machine, holler and I’ll take screenshots of your weblog with the browser and email them to you so you can see for yourself how your pages look.

Despite of all the hooflah about the TiBook and Safari, I was more interested in seeing additional examples of Apple’s unique and successful blend of open source technology paired with commercial interests. Steve Jobs has an uncanny ability to mix the two and have it work. Timothy Appnel captured the essence of Safari and it’s impact on open source when he wrote:

 

Apple’s use of the Konqueror/KHTML rendering engine as opposed to Mozilla Gecko is a bit controversial (or more accurately intruiging), but in the long run will be beneficial to the space. Instead of one open source engine, developers will have more choice and the inheritent flexibility that two different efforts provide.

I agree — two open source engines are better than one. I know it’s going to be a hassle, and we have yet another browser we have to test against with our web pages. However, competition is good — do you want to be stuck only with IE?

The browser’s interesting, and the computer’s sexy, but the top story for me is Apple’s release of an X11 Windows system for Mac OS 10.2. It’s based on the XFree86 project, just like XDarwin, the most popular X11 for Mac OS X at this time. Again, an effective blend of open source and commercial use, and increased competition among vendors.

Apple may have added entries for both the browser and the X11 markets to their stable, but they left the barn door open and anyone with a keyboard and an inclination can trot in and hunker down at the same oat bin.

Categories
Weblogging

Welcome back bird of a feather

Few things could have cheered me up more this week then to hear from my old friend Chris, otherwise known as the great Stavros the Wonderchicken, terror of weblogging and MetaFilter, both; and to read that he’s started his weblog again.

Welcome back my friend. We Birds need to stick together. Kick butt, and take no prisoners.

Categories
Writing

Why writing tech is hard

AKMA has been having problems with his MT installation on Windows NT 4.0. My first reaction was to say, “Dump the trash and get a real OS, Linux”, but I realized that could be less than helpful.

Reading the discussion thread where AKMA found his solution highlights how difficult it is to write about technology. Believe it or not, it isn’t all about “First, write code. Do so without error”. There is a balancing act to the coverage, and a requirement of tone and clarity for an effective technology book.

If you make incorrect assumptions about the other person’s skill level, you frustrate them and force them into a position of having to ask and re-ask questions. Never put your audience into a position of having to ask the same question more than once.

However, if you assume too low a level, then you annoy them and they usually respond with “I know that. I wasn’t asking for___. I was just asking about____.”

Mind reading helps.

I’ve authored, co-authored, or contributed to 13 books on computer technology and have written for several online and offline magazines; it never gets easier knowing what to say and how to say it. In particular, with the “Practical RDF” book I’m just now finishing (and which I should be working on, but I’m taking a break to do laundry and a little weblogging), I had to question my interpretation of how much to cover more than once. There’s a lot of material for one book — what to put in, what to leave out. Who is my audience?

(Of course, it also helps when working with a book to have excellent editors, which I do with Prac-RDF.)

I find that the best approach to tech writing is to write to a certain level, a bit lower than the book’s assumed reading audience; and then write in a matter-of-fact voice, using a casually professional manner. Whatever I do, I avoid cute. Humor is okay (why else would I call Reification “The Big Ugly” in the book?), but never talk down to your audience, and don’t get caught up in your own cleverness — your audience will cut you at the throat.

A technical writer also never, ever makes the audience feel stupid. My job as a writer is to make you excited about the techology, interested, to answer your questions before they’re asked. My job is never to make myself seem more intelligent than I am by discussing complex topics in obscure phrases. Tech writers who write to build themselves up should be forced to eat their unsold stock.

After this book is done, I mean really done, I won’t have a professional writing assignment. For the first time since 1995, I won’t have a professional writing assignment. In the almost two years I’ve had this weblog, this is the first I’ll be able to devote all my writing and my creativity to this weblog and my web sites.

I’ll be able to finish my online C# book. I’ll be able to finish my web site makeover. I’ll be able to have some fun with my photographs, and enjoy other’s photographic endevors (which are much better than my own). More time for hiking, and driving Golden Girl around the country.

I have so many tech toys I want to create. I want to create a desktop application that incorporates WYSIWYG editing and posts to MT on my server — all using the Mozilla toolkit. There’s my PostCon system and the new Quotes. And I have dozens of other things I want to create, and new technology to explore, just for fun.

There’s so many things I want to write, and so many conversations I want to have. People to meet, too. In the flesh even. Maybe I’ll even find time for romance (which I will NOT write about).

Finally, I want to become a bigger pain in the butt then I already am with the powers that be, in weblogging and in the world. I may be broke (aren’t we all?) and I may not be writing professionally, but I still have my edge, my keyboard, my weblog, my mind, and my audience. One can do a lot of damage with all that.