Here are links to some of the latest Longhorn screenshots. So far, I am not impressed. Filterable Explorer views, categories to complement folders (I think that is what I saw in the screenshots), desktops as windows, and merged window title and menubar are not exactly worth the upgrade. Scoble, give us a screenshot that will pop my eyeballs, something that justifies all the hype. Spill the beans or else!;-p
Busy Saturday
Yesterday, I went to bed at 6AM and woke up at 9:30AM to hike with my family at Huddart Park alongside my son's boy scout group. It was supposed to be an hour hike but we ended up hiking for 3 hours. Everyone got dog tired from crawling all over the mountain and then getting lost. I wasn't physically prepared to climb mountains with my flatfoot so when we got back, I ended up with a really nasty muscle cramp that just wouldn't go away until my wife gave me a massage. My kind of enjoyable hikes are strolling in Zen gardens, not climbing mountains and being smothered in million acres of trees in zombie mode.
After taking a short nap to recover, our dinner guests arrived and it was party time til 10PM. Waking up to an avalanche of muscle aches and a bad hangover this morning brought back memories of Lake Tahoe ski trips from my younger days. Ouch.
Open Source Java KMS and Identity Management Projects
Carlos E. Perez posted two more list of open source Java projects: Knowledge Management Systems and Identity Management Solutions. Good stuff. There is also a short list of non-viral XQuery implementations.
Tough Choices?
A wild thought out of the blue: if you had to decide between the survival of the last family of Bushmen or the last wild herd of elephants in Africa, which would you choose?
Attention Landscape
Read this:
So imagine a flat X-Y plane – any floor will do – that's a map of topics in two space.
To illustrate a little, let's stand on the map at 'environmentalism'. Somewhere near we can see 'Lomborg', 'ANWR' and 'Kyoto'. A little further off in the direction of the latter two is 'fuel cell' and in the mid-distance behind is 'Saudi Arabia.' 'Anime' and 'Reality TV' are lost in the haze, in an unknown direction.
Now, up off the ground, and let's add a Z (vertical) axis. This axis is attention.
Let's give every reader / viewer in the audience for our medium 100 poker chips, and ask them to put the chips on the map areas representing how they would ideally like to spend some time and attention this month, available content permitting.
Cue the special effects, and pour in the water.
Now let that water represent the fixed costs of entry in the print medium, restated as the amount of attention you need to monetize to survive. You'll notice most of the landscape is now underwater. So are the business models of those on the small peaks.
Now, back to the blogscape again. Drain most of the water – fixed costs are way down. Even many of the smaller hills are dry – making money – if only indirectly as a form of virtual advertising. The diarists are still underwater, but the snorkel is pretty cheap. There's also a lot of life on the lower slopes of the big peaks, more microclimates and ecologies to exploit.
No, it's not me talking but Tim Oren ranting on the naivety of the Power Law (warning: over-simplified). He is doing a Don Park as in Don't Park and Think but Drive Right Into The Damn Picture thing. I really enjoyed this post, particularly the pouring and draining of water. Tim forgot to add the part about zooming way out to reveal the map as the skin on a drum on which the Hands of Time beats on constantly. Heh.
Lazy Photography
Digital camera and photo editing software encourage lazy photography. Before, it was more like hunting, carefully planning and working for the perfect shot. Now, its like drive-by shooting to collect images for further work. Reading digital camera reviews reveals that considerable number of people buy high-resolution digital cameras just so they can use just parts of images. This is sad in a way.
Update #1 – 11:34PM PST
Wow. I like this kind of photography (warning: very wide picture). I wonder how one takes pictures like that.
Eclipse 3.0 M4
I am very happy with Eclipse 2.1.1, but Eclipse 3.0 M4 has interesting new features including a new browser plugin, so I tried it today. Well, I didn't get very far into it. IDE itself feels pretty solid but plugins I use were not quite up to the challenge.
Several plugins I use require EMF and XSD plugins, but those plugins are hardwired to Eclipse 2.1.1 for some unknown reasons and were causing configuration problems. Patching the offending dependence tags in EMF and XSD features.xml files didn't fix the problem. Since I need those plugins and don't have time to fix the problem myself, I can't use 3.0 M4.
BTW, Eclipse 2.1.2 will be released end of this month with at least 54 bug fixes. EMF and XSD will still cause problems, but I expect them to be updated fairly soon for Eclipse 2.1.2. Eclipse 3.0, on the other hand, won't be released until well into next year.
Back to the Future: Visual Studio 6
I use Visual Studio .NET 2003 (VS.NET) for Win32 projects and .NET tinkering. Unfortunately, my clients are still using Visual Studio 6 (VS6) which uses different project file format from the VS.NET series. VS.NET will convert VS6 projects into VS.NET projects but not in the opposite direction. This is a common problem for Windows developers who want to use the latest tools like me.
I use Stephane Rodriguez's open source tool to convert VS.NET projects to to VS6 projects. It used to work only with VS.NET 2002 projects but the most recent version works with VS.NET 2003 projects as well. Problem solved.
Voluntary ID for Faster Boarding?
I like the idea behind the Verifiable ID venture by Steven Brill (news, press release, website). It is an echo of my Trusted E-mail Network (TEN) idea: workable alternative for the needy. But I don't see why security has anything to do with the ID when the real problem is the long line. Having the ID doesn't excuse you from being searched before boarding. It also doesn't offer any value beyond what passport provides. Also, international travellers will get only half of the questionable benefit.
It will be a lot simpler and more effective to just sell private line passes for a frequent travellers. It works just like those privately-operated freeways. Companies can partner with airports and transport authorities to install and operate private lines wherever there are long lines. With private and voluntary membership, they can be much through without ACLU screaming at them.
Besides, wouldn't you pay a little extra to get frisked by a sexy bombshell carrying an Uzi?
Harvest
Nothing much to post about except that I am busy. Here are some pictures of persimmons and tomatos we harvested recently. While tomatos are gone now, persimmons are starting to ripe.

Squirrels ate parts of the left one. Ever seen constipated squirrels?

I love eating tomatos with salt. Yummy!