9 Dec
Dean Peters, webmaster at blogs4God has written that he feels it’s time to change the site. Not just the look-and-feel, but the whole content and purpose of blogs4God.
Originally, the list was established to help the Christian voice be identified in an emerging media, the blogosphere. Now it has become noisy to the point of inefficacy.
Meaning, if I/we could catch up to the backlog of submissions over the past couple months while in transition, would listing these new blogs have any impact whatsoever other than to make blogs4God different like everyone else? If that last statement confused you, ask yourself, would you notice yet another tattoo on Dennis Rodman?
I think he’s probably right. As much as I love blogs4God, it’s probably due for a renovation. All sites renovate over time. I’ve changed my site here a few times, including from Movable Type to Typepad & back again.
Commenting on the suggestions that Dean has made:
The syndication issue is a big one. Now that Google has acquired Blogger and are providing (Atom) syndication as part of the free service, most bloggers have access to syndication of some sort.
19 Nov
As a developer, very few things irk me more than seeing software that was designed by people who either don’t know or don’t care about how the users will interact with the software. This can be seen in many programs, from useless or confusing error messages (Eg. BSoD) or unintuitive interfaces that have no consistent tab-index and confusing labels. It annoys me especially because it makes us all look stupid & generally reinforces the image of the computer nerd as being someone who has little or no contact with The Real World™.
Taking the time to look at your software/website from the user’s perspective is absolutely critical if you want people who use your software to praise your name, rather than issuing a plague o’ both you & your company’s houses. This issue was brought up to me again recently while I was trialling a copy of Microsoft SQL Server. The trial version has a (fairly impressive) 120-day trial period. This is fine. However I get in to work one morning & the site that I’ve been developing to try out the software won’t load, complaining about the database connection failing. I check the SQL Server Agent & the server is in fact not running. I attempt to start it again, but it won’t. No error message, the agent just tries to start the program then reports that the server isn’t running.
Really helpful.
11 Nov
Niel Bornstein on the O’Reilly Weblog has posted about using Skype
I downloaded the Mac OS X client last night. It installed
easily, in true Mac fashion. Within minutes I received a call from my
friend and colleague Edd Dumbill — the first time we’ve actually ever heard each others’ voices.He came through loud and clear, even on the iBook’s tiny built-in
speakers. And although the iBook has no audio in port, Edd reports that
the built-in mic produced decent sound on his end of the connection
across the pond.
We use this at work too, as we regularly communicate with our UK office. It’s brilliant, totally free and the windows installer works as easily as the Mac one (don’t look so shocked). The only problem comes about with itthe transmission breaking up a bit if you’ve got a low-bandwidth pipe & you (or someone on your network) starts downloading something big. But this will soon be fixed, as we’re hopefully changing to a 2MB SDSL link. Joy!
Skype also has the added ability to do instant messaging as well as voice, so you could conceivably replace messenger with Skype, but that would require all your contacts to move over too & the interface for organising contacts needs a bit of work - there’s just one list, no ability to sort into categories. But this is a small complaint about what is a very good, stable piece of software.
10 Nov
Firefox 1.0 has been released! Finally, after so long, the final wait is over. So go get Firefox now.
Great things about the new version:
Not so great:
Plugins will soon be updated, I imagine.
Other reports around the web:
6 Nov
6 Nov
As I mentioned earlier, Bible Gateway has released a beta for its new site. At the time, the only RSS feed that was working was the NIV, but they have recently updated that and it appears that the different versions are now working.
(From my earlier post)
The version seems to be selected by a numeric query string variable on the feed url. The NIV is 31, so the URL for it is
http://www.biblegateway.com/usage/votd/rss/votd.rdf?31.
To change which version you want, change the default version on the settings page. But to simplify I’ve made a list of all the English language versions VOTD feeds.