Features that Windows Live Spaces needs

Two features that I’d really like to see:

1) Notification email when someone posts a reply to a blog posting.  I’ve missed responding in a timely manner to the last two people to reply to my blog.  Sorry Joe and Jeff!

2) The feature in Live Spaces that adds grammatical and spelling errors to my posts really needs to go.  I mean, I would never type in stupid typo’s and bad grammer in a post, so it must be Live Spaces doing it, right?  Right?!  Yes Justin, I know I made a few of those in the last two posts as well!  I mean Live Spaces did it!!!!

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It’s all about the tools… Russ Fustino’s developer tools presentation

Last night I had the pleasure of sitting in on Russ’ presentation called "It’s All About The Tools – Episode 1".  I’ve sat in on a couple of Russ’ presentations and always enjoyed them, and last night was no exception.

He opened the session saying that one of the reasons he does them is because it tends to get people excited about what they do and the tools they work with, and I have to agree that I feel the same way.  I will frequently go to presentations such as these, even when I believe I know the content (not true in this case!), just because it’s a nice kick start.

Last night Russ covered a lot of ground, including introducing us to a snippet tool that’s built into Windows Vista.  To find it, just click on the Start "Orb" in vista, and type "Snip".  Run the snippet tool and it will pretty much be obvious how to run it.  This is a great tool to use when you’re at a customer (or walking one through something) and you don’t want to have to explain how to do an "alt-printscreen, find and launch paint, paste to Paint, select an even smaller area, copy, new image with smaller dimensions, paste again and finally, save as jpeg" process.  In my day to day job, I’ll stick with using Snag-It from TechSmith.

A much more important tool is Fiddler.  This is an http proxy for debugging the http protocol. I’ve used similar products, but Fiddler looks like a very nice tool that’s priced right (free!), and one that I’m adding to my kit tonight.

The bad news is that this was the 42nd, and last, of Russ’ presentation on these tools.  The good news is that 1) The entire deck can be found on his site, and 2) He has begun the Episode 2 tour.

If Russ comes around to your area, make the time to sit in on his session.  I certainly learned several new things, and got my creative juices flowing in a mere 90 minutes.

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Has Apple lost their touch?

Apple has been on one heck of a resurgence over the past several years.  Starting with the candy colored iMac’s, through the iPod to today’s iPhone and other Apple products, they have been delivering the goods in the consumer / home electronics space, with only the rare misfire (Cube anyone?).

Recently however, my experience with Apple has begun to go downhill.

To start with, as mentioned in a previous post, Deb’s iPhone was very difficult to get upgraded to firmware version 1.1.1.  Her phone had never been hacked in any way, but the upgrade didn’t "take" on the first try and it took hours to finally get it working.

Unfortunately the iPhone saga doesn’t end there. Ever since the upgrade the phone has been unreliable, which is the ultimate sin of a phone! It locks up periodically, has trouble during syncing, won’t sync music and using the Apple Bluetooth Headset is touchy at best.

In an attempt to solve these problems just went and completely wiped her phone and reloaded 1.1.1 on it.  Unfortunately that didn’t go smoothly either.  Once the upgrade was started on her phone it stopped responding and we got an error in iTunes.  Upon researching the error we uninstalled all iTunes / iPhone related software on the laptop, reinstalled it and tried re-upgrading the iPhone.  At this point the phone wouldn’t even show up on her iTunes!  To get the upgrade to work, we had to move the phone to my laptop (Thinkpad’s rule!) and even then the first attempt at getting the firmware loaded failed with an error.  Trying again finally got it to work. For the past two days that phone appears to have been stable.

Enough about the iPhone, eh?  I purchased Leopard a few days after it came out and upgraded my Mac Mini.  After the reboot I ended up with a blue screen and a mouse pointer, but nothing else.  After some research it appears that the problem was caused by a program that Logitech installed on the Mac (for the mouse driver).  Of course, it’s not like there are a lot of Logitech mice and keyboards out there, so I could see how Apple wouldn’t test against it (not!). 

After doing some research I knew how to "properly" install the OS to work around this problem (don’t do an upgrade, do an archive and fresh install).  In order to do this, I needed to tell the Mac to boot off of the DVD rather than the internal hard drive.  This is done by holding down the ‘C’ key on the keyboard during the boot process.  After trying and failing this about 20 times I ended up having to call Apple support.  After some trail and error we found that the Mac Mini was not recognizing Apple’s own aluminum keyboard! I had to plug in a USB keyboard (from Microsoft of all places) and use that to boot up with the ‘C’ command.  Once that was done, the install went perfectly and the OS works nicely.

Now, in all of these things, there have been plenty of places on the web to go for support, and when I had to call Apple they provided support without any question.  However, this isn’t so different from working with Windows Vista or Linux, is it?  If everything you try breaks, why is it better than competing systems?

Oh yeah, the super shiny screen on the new iMac is also a grave mistake, even the salespeople in the Apple Stores have to tap dance around this "feature".

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Welcome to the Apple iBrick

Today, after returning from being on the road for 11 hours visiting clients and prospects, Deb plugged her iPhone into her PC (running XP), and without thinking, said Yes to installing the latest iTunes & iPhone update.  Normally this wouldn’t be a problem.  Unfortunately, the update didn’t work.  It basically bricked her iPhone.  I figured out how to reset the iPhone and got it to resync with Outlook again which involved lots of button mashing, PC resetting, USB port changing, and voodoo incantations.

I haven’t documented the error codes or anything because there are tons of people out there complaining about this problem.  Apple has screwed up but good on this one.

Funny thing is, I was just saying to someone a few days ago about the iPhone being the only thing that has been reliable for Deb, so it was worth it, regardless of the cost.  I guess that’s no longer true!

And before any naysayers pitch in about the update "bricking" the iPhone due to mods – are you nuts?! This is Deb’s phone.  It was never modded.  This is a software f-up by Apple.

Finally, now that the phone is syncing, it’s throwing an error -69 when trying to get the music on the phone so in order to get a clean sync, we’ve disabled all music syncing, which really sucks for the flight to Chicago tomorrow.

And now the multifunction fax / printer has started jamming.  And a client’s server has decided that SQL Server 2000 is an unstoppable and unreachable process.  Next thing you know the roof will fall off our home.

"Want fries with that?"

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Task switcher that Vista should have shipped with…

I tell you, some days I love Vista and on others, well not so much.
 
One feature that seems cool but doesn’t really prove useful is the Flip 3D feature.  Apple has one on their system that makes a lot more sense – press a button (or squeeze the side buttons on the Mighty Mouse) and you’ll get Expose.  This shows miniature versions of all open Windows on the desktop at once.
 
Well, it turns out that Bao Nguyen has created Switcher, a program that pretty much does what Expose does.
 
I just installed it and I’m very impressed.  Give it a shot.  It’s free, small and easy to work with.
 
PS: Let’s hope this posting makes it up without any typos. <sigh>
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How to spend your 40th birthday

 Okay, so I didn’t do much of anything on my 40th, which was nice (except for the client who kept calling about unimportant stuff no many how many times I told them I was taking the day off unless it was an emergency).
 
The one thing I wanted to do was to get to Clearwater Beach and go to my favorite beach bar "Britt’s".  Unfortunately, due to all of the construction going on over there, the Britt’s that I enjoyed is gone.  They still have the "other" Britt’s, which has the pizza I so enjoy (New York style – fold it and let the grease run out) so it wasn’t a complete washout. 
 
Oh yeah, and I drank some… 🙂
 
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Vista – it’s the little things that make it so nice.

I’ve been using Vista on my desktop since it was officially released at the consumer level.  I didn’t blog about it, but my upgrade on my desktop workstation did not go well.  Generally, unless you have a large IT department doing the work, my advice is get Vista with a new machine.
 
Yesterday I caved and purchased the new Apple aluminum keyboard and a Mighty Mouse.  These two things are pretty expensive considering that they are both wired, but I absolutely love the feel of the flat keyboard, and I thought I might as well make it a matching set.
 
The important part is that I wasn’t originally planning on using these devices on my Vista laptop.  Rather, I was going to use them on my Mac Mini which I keep around just to be cool like Steve Jobs .  However, at some point last night I decided to plug them into my laptop to see if they would work.  Well, Vista picked them up and they work quite nicely.  Without installing any software the keyboard is working, and the mouse and its weird buttons and scroll ball (on top) are working fine.  The special function keys (volume, etc) aren’t working yet, but I believe Apple has a driver out there somewhere.
 
After that went smoothly, I was playing around with Flip-3D in Vista and I noticed that when I did it, my MSN Live Messenger window automatically indicated that I was ‘busy’.  This isn’t a Vista feature, but it’s a nice bit of integration between Vista and Messenger.  There is a setting that you can turn off that prevents the ‘busy’ flag from being set whenever you are running a full screen app (which Flip-3D apparently counts as) or in presentation mode.
 
Finally, things like the breadcrumbs in Explorer, the search in the start menu (I haven’t organized the start menu ever – no need, just type a few letters), the previews in the task bar and the previews when using Alt-Tab just make Vista a nice place to spend time.
 
Maybe another day and I’ll post about the Vista annoyances… can you say UAC?  I knew you could!
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New Sharepoint 2007 Training

The (in)famous Ted Pattison has just announced that The Ted Pattison Group will be hosting a new training class for Sharepoint 2007, starting August 27th.  This class will focus on creating solutions in Microsoft Office Sharepoint Server, without using programming.  See the details at: http://tedpattison.net/Courses/SSE301.aspx.
 
I’ve been to Ted’s training and found it very helpful.  If you use Sharepoint 2007 in your business (either Sharepoint Services, or Sharepoint Server), I strongly recommend you take the time and go to one of his classes.  You will learn a lot, and by taking the four days out of your schedule, you’ll be able to focus on Sharepoint, and not the daily interruptions that plague us all.
 
Have fun!
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What’s the weirdest thing you’ve found in your hard drive?

When I say "in your hard drive", I mean that quite literally.
 
We are destroying some drives for a medical customer.  Since we do not have the proper SCSI card to actually connect the drives, we’ve decided to physically destroy the drives.  One of them had a stripped screw, and we ended up folding back the metal cover over the drive platters to get access to them. 
 
Amazingly, when we flipped back the cover, we saw that one of the drive platters had a large X written on it with a black marker!  See the attached photo.
 
That’s the strangest thing I’ve ever found *in* a hard drive.
 
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Ever had a truly busted SQL Server 2000 install?

Recently, while installing CRM on a client’s server, we discovered a "broken" SQL Server installation.  Enterprise Manager wouldn’t run, and certain SQL Services were no longer working.  In order to clear this up, I tried to do an uninstall and reinstall of SQL Server.  Unfortunately, during the uninstall, it errored out.  So I was left with a SQL Server install that wouldn’t uninstall, and wouldn’t run.  In trying to reinstall it, it would not allow an installation as the default instance.
 
Fortunately, Microsoft has a document on how to repair a disaster of this level.  Take a looksee at http://support.microsoft.com/kb/290991 and follow the instructions very carefully.  After doing all those things, you too can have a working SQL Server 2000 installation. 
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