Tab Mix Plus not working well in Firefox 3.5

Software

Tab Mix Plus artefacts in Firefox 3.5

Unfortunately I've come across something that doesn't seem to be playing well with Mozilla Firefox 3.5: Tab Mix Plus. Despite working flawlessly in the betas and release candidates, my tabs since going to the final release have been displaying weird artefacts or are simply not drawn properly.

I'll wait to see if I can reproduce it predictably, then file a bug report or post a message on their forums. I'm running version 0.7.2009062901 which as far as I know is the most current one.


Gmail’s awful new label system

Internet

Gmail's awful new label system

Remember that maddening "Personalised" Start Menu option Microsoft introduced with Windows and Office that hides certain applications and items you didn't use as often behind a chevron? Alas it looks like Gmail has been given a similar "feature" as of this afternoon.

When you browse to Gmail now, only a subset of your labels are shown, along with an option to change what's visible. Fortunately this allowed me to painstakingly click "show" next to each one to display them all again. Neal from the IntoYourHead show seems to like this though, which leads me to think at the very least Google should have given us the option to disable/enable this function. Unless they don't think we can handle such a thing. Grilled cheese sandwich irons have handles, and aside from the occasional blindingly painful liquid cheese scaldings I'm fine.

UPDATE: I’ve been told you can click the “Show All” link in the Settings→Labels screen to show all your labels again. Whew!

Normally I'm not this harsh (at least I hope I'm not!) but I was so vocally against this when Microsoft did it, and now Google is doing it with Gmail. I really hope this isn't becoming a trend.

This also raises another issue with this whole Cloud Computing (or whatever the latest 1337 catchphrase is) concept: we don't really have any control over these web apps.


On Qantas and the 787 Dreamliner

Travel

The Boeing 787 Dreamliner, photo copyright Boeing

If I had posted this entry before my praise for Unicomp (Kudos to Unicomp), it would have been entry 1787, a particularly onerous number considering troubles at Boeing with their latest generation 787 Dreamliner. A sub-par segue I admit, but I did think it was spooky.

After yet more delays, Qantas have cancelled their order for 15 of the medium range, energy efficient airliners and have deferred their order for Jetstar, their low cost subsidiary. From Flightblogger:

The news came early this morning in Sydney, that Australia’s largest airline, Qantas had made significant changes to its 787 order, deferring the 15 787-8s it was supposed to receive starting in mid-2010 for Jetstar, while [cancelling] 15 additional 787-9s scheduled for delivery in 2014 and 2015.

Qantas management claim this has nothing to do with the repeated delays for the 787, instead citing troubling economic times as the reason. I'm willing to give them the benefit of the doubt on this one, but I can't help but think these delays did have some bearing on their decision. On the other hand as a regular air traveller I would take designs thoroughly safety tested over well timed releases any day of the week!

While ultimately I'd much prefer to have high speed trains replace the bulk of air travel because they'd use less energy and would be more comfortable and fun, I think the 787 Dreamliner is a remarkable plane. If you haven't followed it's development, the fuselage is the first to be fabricated largely out of composite materials which is more lightweight and stronger than aluminium, and the uniquely shaped GE engines give similar thrust with less fuel consumption. We're really looking at the future here, at least I hope we are.


Kudos to Unicomp

Hardware

Unicomp SpaceSaver keyboard

It's often the case people are quick to report negative experiences with products and companies, but they don't talk when something goes well.

Yesterday I ordered a Unicomp SpaceSaver bucking spring keyboard and paid in full as talked about here. A few hours later I received an email:

Thank you very much for your recent keyboard order. As you are aware, shipping costs today are considerable and an important part of your buying decision. We want you to understand that we do not add handling costs and we pass along discounts we receive from our carriers so our shipping rates are among the lowest in the industry.

[LIST OF QUOTES]

The shipping costs do not include any duties or taxes which your country may impose. […] Please give us your approval and tell us how we should ship your order. An email note with the appropriate tracking information will be sent when the order ships.


Jim Owens

So by being an international customer I received an email shortly afterwards with a list of shipping options to Singapore including prices and estimated arrival times, and I was given the option to choose on the proviso that if they can get them shipped cheaper they'll refund me the difference.

I haven't even received said keyboard yet, but my email exchanges with Unicomp including this recent message have really impressed me. The people who run this company are friendly, honest and sincere. Other online retailers could really! learn from these people.

If I love this keyboard as I suspect I will, I'll be recommending Unicomp to everyone I know.


Happy Canada Day!

Thoughts

Happy Canada Day!

A happy Canada Day and Fête du Canada to all those whom this greeting may concern! As I've said before here, my father loves your country, he says it's the most breathtakingly beautiful place on Earth with some of the friendliest people… he did say "warm people" at one point, but given the double entendre regarding climate he changed his wording! I'm determined to visit it myself one day :-).

We Aussies desperately need a new flag as beautiful as the Canadian one. Canada proves you can be a Commonwealth realm (aka: having the Queen) without needing a boring Red or Blue British Ensign as the basis of your national flag.

Peace, democracy and love… keep showing us the way Canada!


Just ordered a Unicomp SpaceSaver keyboard

Hardware

Unicomp SpaceSaver keyboard

Enough talk already! After weighing up all the options, I finally plonked down the dough and ordered a Unicomp SpaceSaver buckling spring keyboard. While I was drawn to the retro beige and light grey key colour scheme I ended up getting the black and grey version so it would match my Apple hardware, Samsung monitors and whatnot. Plus it looks just like my Commodore 16 :-D.

Despite having some older machines that only recognise PS/2 and that I could only configure an alternative key layout if I used the PS/2 version, I opted for USB. I already carry far too many adaptors, dongles and other riff raff between Singapore and Adelaide as it is, and I worry a PS/2 to USB adaptor would just be another thing to lose. Plus, I've read the IBM Model M series keyboards draw far more power than regular keyboards and that you need an active converter rather than just an adaptor to change the signals. Not sure if that's true for the Unicomp keyboards too, but I figured I may as well play it safe.

If you skipped my obsessive coverage of keyboards of late (IBM Model M and Northgate Omnikey keyboards and Unicomp and CVT keyboards), Unicomp manufacture keyboards to the same specifications as the original IBM Model M keyboards from the 1980s that use buckling springs which feel much nicer to type on and give a classic audible click with each keystroke. I was able to use a classic IBM keyboard back in Adelaide at my university and it really does make a huge difference.

While I do love the svelte keyboards Apple are currently producing and will continue to use them on my other machines (even my non-Macs!) I'm looking forward to using this IBM/Unicomp keyboard for programming and writing blog posts.

10-15 business days… I might explode waiting that long! Yes, I get excited about computer keyboards, shaddup.


Songs with B words in them

Media

Michael Franks and The Trashmen

Reporting from the Tanglin Mall Starbucks at Tanglin Mall, surprising though it may seem. At Tanglin Mall.

I’ve noticed a reoccurring theme of posts on the J-Walk Blog wherein either John Walkenbach (or another person from J-Walk and Associates…) searches his music library for song titles based on the presence of a particular word. The last time I did this was on my birthday earlier this year, so I figure now is as good a time as any to do some more.

Here is a list of songs from my music library on my MacBook Pro that contain the following whole words. Granted I only have a few gigs of music on here compared to my desktop back home, but it'll suffice.

Banchen

  1. Banchen DanlihKarjem Saeji

Barefoot

  1. Barefoot on the Beach — Michael Franks

Bet

  1. Bet I’ll Never Have a Whole Wheat Radio Artist Page — Ruben Schade

Boat

  1. I’m On A Boat!!! — The Lonely Island
  2. Six Months in a Leaky Boat — Split Enz
  3. Volga Boatmen — The Glenn Miller Orchestra
  4. Volga Boatmen — Leningrad Cowboys

Boring

  1. Being Boring — Pet Shop Boys

Brazil

  1. Brazil — Pink Martini
  2. Down In Brazil — Michael Franks
  3. Non-Stop To Brazil — 小野リサ (Lisa Ono)

Burchfield

  1. Burchfield Nines — Michael Franks

With all this talk about words in songs beginning with B though, we must not forget that The Bird is the Word. The bird bird bird. The bird is the word. Papa-oom-mow-mow-mow. Papa-oom-mow-mow-mow. Don't you know about the bird? Everybody knows that the bird is the word!

Related Posts


Mozilla Firefox 3.5 is out

Software

New Firefox 3.5 icon

After many longs months of hard work, Mozilla Firefox 3.5 is now available for download for Windows, Mac and Linux, and I assume the tireless and generous folks over in the ports system will have it for FreeBSD users soon too. Kudos to the entire Mozilla team for all their efforts and for delivering such a great product. I've been using various release candidates and beta versions of 3.5 for several months now and have been impressed.

While I've drifted over to Apple's Safari and Google's Chrome a few times and while I encourage other Mac users to use Camino if they're not technically inclined, Firefox and it's numerous security and privacy extensions continue to be the preferred glasses I view the internet with along with Opera.

Randy Jensen on Twitter posted a comment that may be useful for Windows users if you find Mozilla's servers too slow during this peak download time:

In case your having trouble getting Firefox 3.5 from Mozilla’s servers, try FileHippo http://bit.ly/19yb15


Twitter needs personalised filtering

Internet

In response to Dave Winer a few days ago I discussed having an associated external URL with each tweet was on the top of my wishlist for Twitter features. It turns out I was too hasty in posting that idea, I have an even better idea for a Twitter feature: filters.

One of the reasons I don't like Facebook's new "life stream" feature is because they assume I care what all my friends are doing constantly. To me, Facebook is a glorified phonebook. With Twitter, I follow people precisely because I'm interested in what they're doing and saying.

The thing is I have a ton of warm, friendly people on Twitter I follow now, but if I read one more cringe-worthy Bible quote, or another story about swine flu (or H1N1 as everyone here in Singapore calls it) I might spontaneously combust; something I'm not sure my medical insurance covers. It works both ways too, I'm sure plenty of people follow me despite my incessant Apple and FreeBSD related tweets!

In the meantime I may need to start looking for a different Twitter client. I moved from Twhirl to TweetDeck back in late 2008 and never looked back: it turns my widescreen 23" monitor into something better than CNN, IRC and SMS (loving the TLAs) combined, but the filtering features are far too basic and aren't static between sessions.


The HP 12C as the greatest iPhone app ever!

Software

UPDATE: HP also sell a clone of the 15C which was their scientific calculator instead of this financial one. Unfortunately it’s over AU$36.00 which is far more than I’d like to spend. Both have RPN and the retro HP interface which is all I care about right now :)

While I am an extraordinarily happy iTelephone owner, I always thought the argument that the application store was the sticky-ist feature keeping people on the platform instead of using other devices like the Palm Pre was.. misguided. While I do use many applications on my iTelephone, if it turned out I liked the Palm Pre or an Android phone better I wouldn't hesitate to move over.

Until now!

Because I have bought and downloaded the single greatest mobile phone application for my iTelephone of all time. This one application is so overwhelmingly, awe inspiringly amazing that it alone could keep me as an iTelephone user for the forseable future.

I am talking of course about the official HP 12c Programmers Calculator application which was just released. It's a faithful reproduction of the original with it's reverse polish notation goodness and the same retro buttons and interface.

At AU$17.99 it's not cheap as far as iTelephone applications go, but it's still far cheaper than picking up a second hand 12C on eBay and given I always have my iTelephone with me it makes it even more convenient. Goodbye default Calculator!

If you don't know what the HP 12C is, check out Wikipedia. In a nutshell, it was one of a series of sophisticated pocket calculators that HP sold in the 1980s but then stopped manufacturing. They're collectors items.

Now I just need to figure out how to hide the stock Calculator application so I can put the 12C in it's place :).