Our Prime Minister is now on Twitter!

Thoughts

Kevin Rudd is on Twitter!

It's official ladies and gentleman, Australia Prime Minister Kevin Rudd is now a Twitterling! You can follow him at: http://twitter.com/KevinRuddPM.

I sent him a message yesterday:

@KevinRuddPM G’day sir, great to see you here! Looking forward to your messages.

Now we just need at least some sort of signal that Barack Obama is still tweeting and I'll be happy. Oh and if you could fire Senator Conroy Mr Prime Minister, I'd be even more happy.

Suffice to say, I'm not holding my breath for Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong to start using Twitter. There's still time for you though sir… look, even Wikimedia Commons has a profile picture for you, ready to go!


I’m calling it quits on Facebook

Internet

Facebook on my iPhone
Facebook on my iPhone showing the disposable email address I used to register!

I've been a Facebook user know for just over a year, and I'm about ready to call it quits. What started as a fun and informal way to keep in contact with friends and other people from my Class of 2004 year group has turned instead into high school all over again. And I didn't even like it that much the first time around!

The problem stems from the same blatant showmanship and need to outdo other people as high school, only this time it's through thousands of uploaded photos to prove who has the hottest partner, who drinks the most, who goes to the best clubs, who goes to the most parties, who lives in the best cities and houses… I could go on and on. Reading the Facebook "News Feed" is just too painful to do most of the time. I'm serious!

The number one, ultra über, unquestionable supreme indicator of how "in" you're are though is your friend count. There are people I know who have over a thousand friends. I know there's no way they can keep in regular contact with that many people unless they don't have a job or study and are living off their parents still… I think I just answered my own question. Just like the social circles in high school, it's all rather silly and juvenile when you think about it.

The other problem I have with Facebook is that it's morphed into something over the last two years that I just don't feel like using or maintaining. The new interface is hard to use (though at least their iPhone web app version is still slick), and the constant reminders to install applications (don't get me started on those!) from friends… it's got to the stage where I literally use it just to send private message a small handful of people, that's it. I've stopped adding myself to groups, causes, fan pages, bomb construction projects, the works.

I was going to upload some photos of my own for example, but then I wondered what the point was when I could upload them to Flickr and have the world see them instead of the gated Facebook community that the Googles and Yahoos of the intertubes can't index.

My Twitter profile this afternoon
My Twitter profile this afternoon

I think this is why Twitter is STILL the only social network I've ever really used seriously. It's a lot more laid back and simple, and allows you to stay connected with friends and people you admire and care about without all the extra baggage and silliness that Facebook or other over the top social networks have. There are people on Twitter who revel in having thousands of followers too, but they're the exception not the norm.

I can't put my finger on it, but it feels like different types of people use Facebook and Twitter, with less overlap than I would have originally expected. I'm following and conversing with people here in Adelaide, back in Singapore and all over the world I've never met before… I certainly wouldn't do that on Facebook, and definitely not on a site such as MySpace. There's something more sincere and honest about Twitter. I look forward to conversing with my Twitter buddies during the day, even some of my extended family and even our Prime Minister has started using it. There is so much less emphasis on showmanship and arrogance, and more on friendly conversation and sharing interesting stories and events as they're happening in people's lives.

I won't be deleting my Facebook profile any time soon, but I think now is the time to change my profile image to a simple box with the URL to my blog, show and Twitter profiles. That way I can still keep a token presence and people can still find me, and those following me can keep one extra person on their über friend counts!

Sent from my iPhone.


Somehow I don’t think I’ll be sending this

Internet

No Filter, No Censorship, No Clean Feed, No Great Firewall of Australia

Senator Conroy's decision to implement mandatory filers to censor every Australian internet connection is not only a dangerous idea because it will [knowingly] generate false positives, be a threat to free speech and will slow internet access speeds down for everyone, but it will also cost a fortune to install, configure, and maintain, and will also be trivial to bypass to anyone who wants. It's hard to see how anyone could think this is a good idea, but there you go.

In my own tribute to the veritable waves of cellulose-pulp-based written communications to various local members of parliament across the country, I've decided this afternoon to whip up a final letter of my own. I've already contacted a few other state and federal ministers, but this is the letter I've written for Mr Conroy:

Dear Senator Conroy,

Grow a brain.

Sincerely,
Ruben Schade
The Department of Redundancy Department

Funny, my other letters were substantially longer for some reason!


Rubenerd Show 256: The Moleskine retro 256 episode

Show

Larger version of cover art

Podcast: Play in new window · Download

30:34 – My obsession with and purchase of a soft cover Moleskine book from NoteMaker, Impromptu review of Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy, my take on The Rampler with blogging, Amazon delivery of David Letterman Late Show Fun Facts, the anatomy of the human hand including the ever elusive thumb, colour computer nostalgia, where the number 256 keeps cropping up, afternoon post office bus trips and wondering what the heck an Australia Post eParcel is!

Recorded in Adelaide, Australia. Licence for this track: Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0. Attribution: Ruben Schade.


It was a hot one in Adelaide yesterday

Thoughts

Screenshot from the PktWeather iPhone app from yesterday
Screenshot from the PktWeather iPhone app from yesterday

We had a sweltering 36 degree day (98.something Fahrenheit) yesterday here in Adelaide; and if it wasn't bad enough even the breezes themselves felt like they were coming out of an oven. Fortunately it's a much cooler 27 degrees today, though UV is still "extreme".

For comparison, Singapore generally averages 32 degrees (89.something Fahrenheit) during the day, every day, all year!


Google Reader feature requests

Internet

Screenshot of Google Reader on my iPhone.

So I've been using Google Reader again for a week or so now and am enjoying it much more this time around. While virtually nothing has changed from when I used it constantly last year (when I got a response from a Google employee on this post in October 2006), now I'm following and sharing material with some extrodinarily interesting people from around the world, and am learning a lot.

This isn't to say Google Reader is perfect; in fact if it came down to just the user interfaces I'd still say IAC's Bloglines has it beat. Comparisons aside, here's a laundry list of features I'd like to see:

Auto posting of comments
If someone posts a note about one of your posts in their shared items, it’d be nice if Google reader could leave a trackback link on your blog or even post the comment itself on your blog. I understand if such a system would have to be opt-in, and I understand people should have the ability to block their notes from being sent too if they want to remain private. I just feel as though I might be missing out on some good discussion here by people who don’t use Google Reader.
Easier friend adding
It seems a bit counter intuitive and convoluted that I needed to have communicated with someone using their Gmail account before a person gets added to my Google Reader "friends" section. If someone is using Google Reader, they MUST have a Google account… so why can’t I, a fellow Google account holder, just press a "Request Friendship" button on their shared items page? Why must it go through Gmail at all?
A non-Ajax version
I really dislike using pages with lots of Ajax. I don’t agree with the currently held idea that Ajax makes pages more accessible and easier to use… I know I’m in the minority though. Still, couldn’t we have a regular HTML version that works as you would expect?
Less iPhone crashing
The iPhone version of Google Reader is very slick and easy to use, which makes it great for reading feeds even when I’m on the train! What’s irritating though is it’s one of the few web pages that consistently crashes my iPhone and I don’t know why. It’s probably got something to do with downloading too many elements at the same time.
A dark background with light text
A simple little toggle button, for those of us who read our Google Reader feeds first thing in the morning and who’s eyes aren’t ready for the onslaught of "blazing white"?
A Google Reader… Reader
It’d be nice if you could click a button to get a cute person to read your posts for you :)
Battery charging ability, coffee generation
Whether I’m using Google Reader on my mammoth MacBook Pro, my tiny retro but better-than-a-netbook Armada M300 or my iPhone, I should be able to have it charge my device while I use it. And if browsing on a desktop, the extra energy should feed back into the power grid to supplement my bills. As an extra perk (ha!) it’d be great if it could brew coffee too.
Ability to filter huge animated GIFs
It surprises me how many people include huge (filesize and dimensions) animated GIFs in their feeds. It’d be nice to turn them off without turning all images off.
Automatic blog publishing
If you browse my del.icio.us category, you can see all the posts that del.icio.us generated for me automatically each day with the links I saved back in 2006. I stopped using it because having a post with just a bunch of links didn’t seem that useful. If Google Reader though could automagically create a blog post with links to each article you’ve commented on along with said comments each day, that’d be fantastic.
SMS or Twitter alerts
It’d be great if I could tell Google Reader to send me a text message or a Twitter tweet every time a particular phrase or keyword is mentioned. I’d love to be one of the first to see a post about what a moron "Ruben Schade" is.
People recommendations
Google Reader already suggests blogs you may be interested in, why not extend this to people’s shared items you may be interested in?
Simple rating system
If you didn’t have time to write a comment on a shared story, it’d be great if you could just hit a "Thumbs Up!" or "Thumbs Down" button or link. I emulate this to a certain extent with some of my Google Reader tags such as "corruption", "funny" and "wish-I-was-as-cool-as-Jimbob-and-Kelli-and-Atuu-and-…"

If you have any ideas of your own, or if you've talked about a Google Reader wishlist on your blog, feel free to leave a comment. Grilled cheese sandwiches.


Windows 3.x on Mac OS X using DOSBox

Software

Windows 3.1 on Mac OS X: DOS Nostalgia on Intel Mac Hardware!

As I mentioned in the previous post in this mini-series, one of the options for running Windows 3.x on Mac OS X is using the excellent little DOSBox DOS emulator. While it is akin to comparing minnows to sharks in features, the latest Mac build of DOSBox (0.72) weighs in at 10MiB, compared to VirtualBox 2.0.4's 34.6MiB or VMware Fusion's 247.6MiB.

DOSBox also has some distinct advantages other than filesize if you just want to run DOS. You don't need to worry about setting up your own copy of DOS from scratch, saving you the trouble of configuring AUTOEXEC.BAT and CONFIG.SYS, and all the graphics and audio for a huge slew of devices is already set up. For people interested in running Windows 3.x, DOSBox provides generic emulated hardware that you can easily install software for.

Setting it up

  1. Grab yourself a copy of DOSBox and install it.

  2. Create a folder in your home directory that will serve as you C: drive in DOSBox. Alternatively if you want to keep things neat and tidy, you can create a dedicated disk image using Disk Utility.

  3. Create another folder within your dosbox folder or your disk image called setup for example, then copy the contents of each Windows 3.x floppy disk into it.

  4. If you created a disk image, mount it in Mac OS X, then fire up DOSBox and map your image to c:. Obviously if you created a folder, reference that instead:
    mount c /Volumes/[NAME OF IMAGE]
  5. Now you can navigate to your Windows installation files and start the setup process:
    z:\> c:\ 
    c:\> cd setup
    c:\setup\setup.exe
    

Installing Windows

When you see this, you're home free!
When you see this, you’re home free!

The Windows 3.x installation process is fairly self explanatory, but just a few helpful pointers:

  1. Choose "Custom Installation" with your arrow keys during the DOS-based part of the installation.
  2. When you're asked, don't worry about using the option to search your drive for existing applications, there aren't any! Leave the option to install printers checked though.
  3. When you're asked about virtual memory, leave it with the default "Temporary" option. Because we're dealing essentially with a folder not a real file system, "Permanent" virtual memory won't work.
  4. You'll be asked if you want to make any changes to AUTOEXEC.BAT and CONFIG.SYS. Choose "Let you make the modifications later", because DOSBox won't use any boot files Windows creates anyway.
  5. When you get to the printer installation step, click the "Generic / Text Only" option and hit [Install…]. Windows in the day needed a printer, any printer, to display some fonts properly.

Creating a preferences file

To save yourself the trouble of writing out that nasty mount line each time you start DOSBox, and to allow yourself to tweak some performance options it's best to create a preferences file.

  1. Within DOSBox, enter the following (in one line):
    config -writeconf "/Users/[YOUR-USER-NAME]/Library/Preferences/DOSBox Preferences" 

  2. Quit DOSBox then open the file you just created in your favourite text editor. At the very end of the file is where your custom AUTOEXEC.BAT code can be written. Enter the exact line you entered above to map your disk image or folder to drive c:.

  3. Under this, enter the following line to help Windows and DOSBox locate files:
    SET PATH=%PATH%;C:WINDOWS

  4. If you intend to use DOSBox just to run Windows 3.x, add these lines right after your mount line so Windows starts when you start DOSBox, and DOSBox quits when Windows does:
    WIN
    EXIT
    

Starting Windows 3.x

Now you have a basic Windows 3.x installation running on your Mac! It's somewhat of a surreal sight:

Windows 3.1 on Mac OS X
Windows 3.1 on Mac OS X!

Drivers

It is possible to drivers to get better performance, graphics, sound etc. DOSBox emulates a generic SoundBlaster card and a custom S3 Trio graphics card. The VOGONS (Very Old Games On New Systems) forum has a thread dedicated to this. If I have time this week I'll elaborate further in a separate post, keep an eye on the dosonmac tag.


Spamhaus names Microsoft in their top 5

Internet

I'm not surprised at all by this, but Microsoft has been named and shamed as the 5th worst spam service ISP as of the 26th of November 2008 by Spamhaus. They certainly didn't hold back any of their criticism or water down their explanation with pleasantries:

Spam continues to plague the Internet because a small number of large Internet Service Providers sell service knowingly to professional spammers for profit, or do nothing to prevent spammers operating from their networks.

Although all networks claim to be anti-spam, some network executives factor revenue made from hosting known spam gangs into corporate policy decisions to continue to sell services to spam operations. Others simply decide that closing the holes in their end-user broadband systems that allow spammers access would be too costly to their bottom lines.

The majority of the world’s service providers succeed in keeping spammers off their networks and work to maintain a positive anti-spam reputation, but their work is undermined daily by the few networks who, out of corporate greed or mismanagement, choose to be part of the problem.

These are their current rankings for worst spam enabling networks:

  1. cncgroup-hn
  2. hostfresh.com
  3. vsnlinternational.com
  4. gilat.net
  5. microsoft.com
  6. sistemnet.com.tr
  7. cnuninet.com
  8. ecommerce.com
  9. verizon.com
  10. colocentral.com

And their current rankings for worst spam origin countries, again as of 26th November 2008:

  1. United States
  2. hostfresh.com
  3. vsnlinternational.com
  4. gilat.net
  5. microsoft.com
  6. sistemnet.com.tr
  7. cnuninet.com
  8. ecommerce.com
  9. verizon.com
  10. colocentral.com

Running Windows 3.x on a MacBook Pro

Software

Windows 3.1 on Mac OS X: DOS Nostalgia on Intel Mac Hardware!

In my search to find the best way to run Windows 3.x on a MacBook Pro for an assignment I talked about as well as for some silly nostalgia, there seem to be several different distinct ways of doing it. In a nutshell we have:

Dual booting with DOS
Not really feasible considering the amount of trouble I’ve already had with triple booting this MacBook Pro, plus I’m fairly confident that Apple does not supply graphics, audio and networking drivers for DOS or Windows 3.x. :-D
DOSBox
DOSBox is a dedicated, free and open source DOS emulator. It would certainly be the easiest and fastest way to get set up, but I’ve been told running Windows in it pushes the limits of it’s capabilities and it runs fairly slowly. If it works though, it’d be great!
Emulating IBM PC DOS 7.0 / 2000
Emulating just DOS is overkill when the superb DOSBox project exists, but for Windows 3.11 it may be necessary. I’ll be trying out IBM’s PC DOS 2000 which is essentially rebranded PC DOS 7.0, but is Y2K compliant, includes the Euro symbol amongst other goodies and can boot and install entirely from a CD. From previous experience I know it runs classic versions of Windows extremely well, which FreeDOS still seems to have some difficulty with.

I could try Sun Microsystems’ VirtualBox, VMware Fusion, Q (the Mac OS X native QEMU port) and Parallels Desktop, but I’ll stick to trying the first two seeing as I already use them.

If you've ever wanted to run DOS and Windows 3.x on your Intel Mac hardware (and I know there are millions of you, ha!), stay tuned.


Video: Now there’s a gas leak in Adelaide!

Media

It's been an eventful few weeks in Adelaide. A few weeks ago it was a bomb scare in a bank in the CBD, now I've just received a text message from my sister that there's a severe gas leak on North Terrace: there are ambulances, fire trucks and police cars swarming everywhere!

UPDATE: It was discussed on Seven's 6pm news a few minutes ago, I recorded it and uploaded the video on YouTube:

Play Adelaide 7 News: Gas scare in the CBD and WW1 Remembrance

And other Australians sometimes accuse Adelaide of being the "boring" state capital… can you believe it?