Archive | 2005

Open Document Format Approved

Slashdot posts “An anonymous reader writes “The OASIS Group announces that the third Committee Draft [PDF] of the Open Document Format for Office Applications (OpenDocument) v1.0 Specification has been approved as an OASIS Standard. The submission of the approved standard can be found at here. The OpenDocument format is intended to provide an open alternative to proprietary document formats including the popular DOC, XLS, and PPT formats used by Microsoft Office. Organizations and individuals that store their data in an open format avoid being locked in to a single software vendor, leaving them free to switch software if their current vendor goes out of business or changes their software or licensing terms to something less favorable.”

That’s great news! I was recently cleaning up some loose ends on my web site, and noticed that the oldest of my whitepapers at http://www.tedroche.com/papers.html were exported from MS Office 95 (I think) with the awful HTML that’s hostile to most browsers. I went to open up the original documents in OpenOffice.org and found they could not be read. Just as predicted in “The Long Now,” I have data locked up in a proprietary format I cannot read. I’m sure I can find a machine around here somewhere with the correct translators (and if I don’t, in this case, it’s no great loss) but it’s disturbing to see bits on disks turned from information into random noise.

Okay, so it Just Works, only maybe with a few glitches

Still delighted with all of the new toys that Tiger has brought to my iMac. However, I’ve had a chance to run more of the apps I have installed and have run into a couple of glitches: Fugu, a free SCP client I mentioned here needed an upgrade to run under Tiger. Note that Apple seems to keep a pretty tight rein on their beta sites with NDAs until the product has actually shipped. NetNewsWire 1.0.8’s preference page seems to be broken, but I haven’t chased that one down yet, and think it’s time I ought to get on the 2.0 beta, anyway. And Radio Userland is reporting that my web backup is failing to back up my May posts, for some reason. Also pursuing that with the Radio staff. Whether or not these are Tiger related or messed up because I “fixed file permissions” or because we had a thunderstorm two days ago is still to be determined. Still, no major glitches – mail, Safari and NeoOffice/J are rocking along. More as I figure it out…

Apple announces new iMacs

Computerworld News reports Apple delivers 2.0GHz iMac G5, cuts top model’s price. “Continuing a recent string of announcements, Apple today updated its iMac G5 computer line, bumping up the processor speed in the mid-range and top-end models to 2.0GHz and adding AirPort Extreme and Bluetooth 2.0 wireless networking to all three versions.”

In addition to getting faster G5 processors, the iMac now includes an ATI Radeon 9600 video card that features 128MB video memory — twice the video RAM available before — a new 8X SuperDrive that provides double-layer burn support, built-in Gigabit Ethernet and 512MB of RAM across the line.

Oof. Those are rockin’ machines.

Happy Birthday, Dave!

I read Scripting News for a while before I knew what a blog was, nor that there was an entire software field that had blossomed around the idea of journals and RSS. I read it because I enjoyed Dave’s opinions and insight, and I still do. Happy 50th, Dave. What’s the plan for the next half-century?

FireFox to include native SVG support

Slashdot posts “Firefox 1.1 Plans Native SVG Support. Spy Hunter writes “The Scalable Vector Graphics format has yet to take off on the web, perhaps due to a small installed base of SVG-enabled browsers. That could soon change as the latest Firefox 1.1 nightly builds have started coming with native SVG support compiled in and enabled by default. If this feature makes into the Firefox 1.1 release (which is not certain, but likely, as the developers want it to happen) it will increase the number of web users who have an SVG renderer installed. But perhaps more interesting than that is the possibility of mixing SVG graphic elements directly into the markup of regular XHTML pages, freeing vector graphics from the small rectangle of a browser plugin and opening up a host of exciting new possibilities for web developers. This is enabled by the integration of SVG directly into the Gecko rendering engine, instead of as a browser plugin. With such a useful web developer feature available only in Firefox, could we soon start seeing websites asking their users to download Firefox to get the best browsing experience?”

Exciting news! I’ve always been a fan of using graphs for presenting information, and SVG has a lot of nice features. Lauren Clarke has a presentation on using SVG with Visual FoxPro here

Mac OS X Tiger Upgrade: It Just Works

After interminable cleanups, file permission checking and backups (and a backup of the Tiger DVD), I installed Tiger over Panther with no problems in about an hour today. Slick! Tiger has some pretty neat new tools in the Spotlight desktop search engine and the Dashboard desktop widgets. Looking forward to learning more.

Getting Flat and the Tyranny of the Bell Curve

The Doc Searls Weblog posts Flattening out. “Getting Flat, Part 2 completes my long essay for Linux Journal on Tom Friedman‘s The World is Flat. (Here’s Part 1. …. Most of what I write in Part 2 isn’t about Tom Friedman. It’s about the boat anchor we call the bell curve, and why continuing to shape kids with it is The West’s worst handicap in a flattened world… In case you haven’t noticed, my life has been one long fight against the bell curve. I recount some of that in the piece as well.”

What starts out as a review (and many links to a pan) of a “new paradigm of the month” book turns into a touching, intensely personal and insightful complaint against the prejudices of the bell curve. Well worth reading and contemplating.

Tiger Day One

Laura and I were at our local Apple dealer – Bitznbytes in Concord – at 6 PM last night to pick up a copy of Tiger. Fortunately, there was no long line of loonies dressed as strange characters – no wait at all, in fact – walked in and picked up our copy, chatted with the staff, played with the computers and left.

Today was much too nice a day to spend inside playing on the computer – Laura and I worked in the yard instead – so I’ll devote a little time over the weekend to getting the machine backed up and set up for the upgrade. O’Reilly & Associates web site MacDevCenter like “Everything You Need to Know to Install Tiger and “Housecleaning Tips for Tiger” worth reviewing before you leap in.

As my iMac is primarily a desktop machine for NeoOffice/J documents, email, browsing, blogging and as a terminal into remote machines, I don’t have a lot of software installed on it, and so I’m going to try the lazy man’s approach of upgrade-in-place, rather than a Freemanize of “blow everything away” – partition, format and reinstall – that would be more appropriate for a more heavily used machine. If the install gets glitchy, of course. that’s always the last resort. Stay tuned.

Ars Technica has a review of Tiger here including what seems to be a well-deserved bash of the Mail GUI redesign and a great explanation of fine-grained vs. course-grained kernel locking. Ars Technica has also started a set of journal pages, including an Apple journal page appropriately named “Infinite Loop.”

Tiger Ship Day

Barring a successful injunction from Tiger Software — interesting that they waited until Ship Day Eve to sue! – Tiger, Mac OS X version 10.4 goes on sale officially today. The news sites are filled with interesting insights:

Pitting Tiger Server vs. Windows Server. After a week of non-stop Longhorn news, it’s time for Apple Computer to let the big cat out of the bag. The next version of the Mac client and server operating system is set to ship today. [Microsoft Watch from Mary Jo Foley]

Apple sued over ‘Tiger’ name. Apple is being sued by U.S. e-commerce site TigerDirect.com for infringing on its trademark with the launch of the latest version of Mac OS X, code-named “Tiger.” [Computerworld News]

Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger. The time period between the release of Panther and Tiger (Mac OS X 10.3 and 10.4) has been the longest since Mac OS X was first released in 2001. During that 18-month period, Apple has been busy adding new features to the OS. They run the gamut from the readily-apparent (e.g., Spotlight and Dashboard) to under-the-hood tweaks (like improved support for metadata). By news@arstechnica.com (Ars Technica)

Shipping is a feature…

Slashdot notes Rave Reviews for Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger. druid_getafix writes “The first mass market reviews of Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger are trickling in with a big thumbs up for the release. Walt Mossberg of the WSJ says ‘Tiger Leaps Out in Front’ but complains about slowness of some applications – notably Mail. David Pogue of NYT says ‘But with apologies to Mac-bashers everywhere, Spotlight changes everything. Tiger is the classiest version of Mac OS X ever and, by many measures, the most secure, stable and satisfying consumer operating system prowling the earth.’ In related news Mossberg also covers the rising incidence of spam/virii in the Windows world and says ‘…consider dumping Windows altogether and switching to Apple’s Macintosh…’. Previous reviews of Tiger were covered on /. earlier.”

OSNews reports *Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger: A Review*. “OSNews reviews Apple’s latest OS upgrade. Is it an overpriced, glorified point release or a truly worthy upgrade with major new functionality? Is it a Longhorn killer or just more of the same? We’ll take a look, and try to see what’s on the surface as well as what’s under the hood. Read more on this exclusive OSNews article…”

I’ve reserved a copy at my local Apple dealer, Available tomorrow at 6 PM.

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