This is the website of Abulsme Noibatno Itramne (also known as Sam Minter). Posts here are rare these days. For current stuff, follow me on Mastodon

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June 2005
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Hoo Ray for the Frogs!

I am working from home today because Amy was sick. I was just on a conference call and while on it was walking around the pool. Look down, and what do I see… hundreds and hundreds of tadpoles again!!!

On the one hand, I guess we really do have to get better at checking the chlorine level more often (and perhaps we need a new cholorinator), but on the other hand, maybe I can make up for my earlier mass murder of the frogs with the hose!

Amy and I spent a few minutes saving tadpoles and putting them into that same tank I was using last time. Then it started pouring rain, so we stopped.

I think Brandy is going to buy us a new tank on her way home from work, with lots more room for more tadpoles.

Uh, and then she’s going to pour chlorine in the pool and kill all the ones Amy and I don’t manage to get into the tank.

I was going to suggest just leaving the pool de-chlorined until all the tadpoles turn into frogs, but I don’t think she would like that idea. Especially since that cycle would probably just continue forever, cause there would always be new tadpoles.

Anyway, updates as they are warented on the new generations of tadpoles!

(I suppose we could also chase away the mating frogs when we see them, but they are there by the pool all night every night doing their thing. And they ain’t quiet about it either! Once the screen is up next month, the frogs won’t be able to get to the pool…)

Apple on Intel

Wow. The rumors have been building for years, but most specifically in the last few weeks. But I thought I’d wait to hear it from Steve himself before commenting. Yup, he just confirmed in his WWDC keynote that Apple will be moving the Macintosh to Intel chipsets over the next two years.

This is a huge change that for years people have argued vehemently would never happen or would kill Apple if it did. We shall see. It is fresh and I still don’t have well formed opinions. It was clear IBM’s PPCs had started to lag recently, and they were having trouble making a G5 fit in a powerbook, so perhaps it makes sense.

The coverage is everywhere, so I won’t link to any particular one, but looks like they have the transition pretty mapped out. Most apps will just need minor tweaks and a recompile, others will be able to run in emulation at a still decent speed. They’ve had the OS running on both platforms internally for the last FIVE YEARS.

The coverage I read so far wasn’t 100% clear, but I am assuming you will still have to run OS X on actual Macs from Apple, and you won’t just be able to install it on your typical WalMart PC. I think that is key. But who knows what things will look like a year from now when they start shipping the first Intel based Macs.

The OS is really what makes a Mac a Mac, and the really good case design and usability and such, not the chipset. But still… even if it turns out for the best, this seems just a tad… dirty. Intel. Ick!

We’ll see how they do though. Could be very interesting.

Chicken Suit

imageI really have absolutely nothing to say about this, other than I saw it and I knew I had to link to it.

Clothing for Chickens
(Ananova)

A range of fashion clothing for chickens has been launched by a group of designers working in Austria and Japan. Austrian Edgar Honetschlaeger said he decided to work with the Japanese on the project because he hoped to make the chicken label clothing essential. He said “It’s something that you don’t really need but everyone wants to have anyway”.

(via Boing Boing)

Probably just a joke, but hey, these days you never know.

Cinema: The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants

imageSo Saturday afternoon we needed to go to Vero to retreive Brandy’s car. (Remember, she was partying earlier in the weekend. :-) So since we had driven way out there, we decided we’d catch a movie while there. The kid appropriate choices were basically Madagascar and this one. Amy saw Madagascar first, and was chanting that, until she saw the Pants. Then she changed her tune, and it was decided. This was what we would see.

Basic plot: Four teenagers, friends for life, seperating for the summer. They decide to mail a pair of pants back and forth. Through the travels of the pants, we watch the emotional travels of the three girls as they each grow up in different ways.

I think we were basically seeing this because Rory Gilmore was in it. She is cute, but she was really skinny in this one. As they say, she needs to eat a sammich. I think the other girl with the blue hair was the best of the four girls though in terms of her performance.

Anyway, the immediate comparison here is to Raising Helen, since I’d just watched it a couple days earlier. RH is a bit more lightweight of a movie. It has the death of the sister and such, but mostly tries not to be TOO serious. Traveling pants has its light moments, but is definately more serious, and has more depth to it. You get four stories, each of which you care about. I think the blue haired girl’s is the most poignant. But they all have their moments. Rory’s is mostly happy though. She gets to find first love. The other three end up less happy, but grow from it, etc.

At various points in the movie, there were people crying all over the theater. And that is one of my main criterea for a good movie. You’ve gotta cry! And this one does that.

So, I liked this movie. Madagascar might have been fun too, but I’m glad Amy picked this one.

Treo Number Six… Or One

imageI have had a long history of Treo problems. Within a few days of getting Treo #5 the yellow spot sort of thing that had happened with Treo #4 started happening again. Of course, I didn’t go right back in, cause it is a pain in the ass. So I used it as long as I could.

About a week ago we went back to the Sprint store. But this time I let Brandy do all the talking. She threw a fit about how this was the fifth one, and we had big problems with the 600, and we wanted something different. So they ordered me an upgrade to the 650. Woo!

We picked it up Saturday. I have spent a bunch of time since then configuring it and getting it set up the way I like. Definately an improvement over the 600. At least so far. We’ll see if it gets a yellow spot too.

So, while this is Treo #6 overall… it is now a new model. Lets start the count over. This is Treo #1, at least as far as 650’s go.

DVD: Raising Helen

imageFriday after work, Brandy was going out partying with people from her work, so I suggested to Amy that we have one of our movie nights at home which we haven’t had for awhile. So we ordered Chinese and watched her current Netflix movie. It was Raising Helen.

That’s the one where the New York Sex in the City Style woman’s sister dies, and suddenly she has three kids. You get the struggles as she adapots to suddenly having kids. She has to give up tons. Her life changes completely. The kids are in mourning and the oldest one rebels.

OK, I’ll admit something. At this point I saw this DVD almost two days ago. I meant to write the little web review thing right away, and had a number of things I intended to say. But things kept coming up and it is now two days later, and I mostly forget now. And I guess that says a bunch.

It was a decent little movie. Pulled some emotional strings at the right moments. At the end things end up like you think they would. I did not like the woman playing the older surviving sister. I didn’t mind the couple of hours I spent. It was fun and I got to hang out with Amy. But it wouldn’t be on a list of movies I must own or watch again…

CM Adoption

It has been a LONG time since I blogged anything related to what I do for a living, but I figure an occational entry on that front is OK, even if most of the people who read this could care less.

I came across an interesting article today on the phases of spending on a content management implementation. It appears to be more geared toward web content management, but also applies to other types, including the presentation manangement sort of thing we do.

Spending patterns during CMS implementation
(James Robinson, CM Briefing)

Beyond the initial go-live, there is still much work to be done. There is typically more content to be migrated, or more sites to be moved into the CMS.

The number of authors is generally also expanded during this phase, particularly when moving to a ‘decentralised’ authoring model.

More work will also be done on general ‘housekeeping’, such as rewriting key content, deleting old material, or further restructuring the site.

Workflow rules may also be tested and refined, along with security settings and other CMS configuration details.

Overall, it may take upwards of 12 months to fully complete the content migration, and have the CMS running as ‘business as usual’.

(via CMSWatch)

Actually, I think if anything here, they significantly underestimate the effort required in the adoption phase. While the dollar costs may be less if you don’t count person*hours, the total costs are more significant. One of the biggest reasons for CM implementations failing is underestimating the work required for the adoption phase. Work processes have to be adapted to the new tool. Habits need to be changed. Internal users need to be “sold” on the idea that the system actually helps them. They have to become comfortable with the tool. The best way to use the tool to match the business needs has to be determined. And for any enterprise scale tool (and even many smaller scale ones) this is not trivial, and requires thought and planning. Those that try to just “wing it” will almost certainly fail unless they get really lucky.

No Longer the Answer

At work I used to be extention 42 on the phone system. And as everybody knows, 42 is the answer to life, the universe and everything. But a couple days ago lightning messed up the phone system. Today phone repair guys were in the building and replaced the core switchy thingamabob for the phone system. Lots of people got new extensions. I am now #37. I am saddened and dissapointed. I liked 42.

Now, of course, nobody ever uses the extentions. All calls go through the receptionist. But still, it is the principle of the thing. 42 was cool! 37 is just, well, 37.