Should be album cover art

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Lilach and white
Lilach and white,
originally uploaded by GuyTv.

My friend Guy took this terrific shot of his SO, he called it “Lilach and white”, and I think its an awesome shot. I finally met Lilach last week at the end of their visit to California. She’s a terrific, lovely woman–but no better than Guy deserves–and a big radio star in Israel.

My first thought was that the photo would make a great album cover, just some subtle typography in white at the lower right corner. Neat!

Book: Little Green Men

The mainstream cliche of aliens as little green men surely arose out of rubber suits worn in early Hollywood and Japanese sci fi flicks but where the idea of alien abductions (complete with anal probes) is a mystery to me. Humorist Christopher Buckley, as always, finds this Area 51 fertile ground for his biting wit focusing on the foibles of modern America; his visitors no more real then those of the silver screen.

All those claims of abduction are, here, real as far as the victims can tell but rather than aliens the perpetrators are employees of a secretive (of course) US government bureaucracy called MJ-12. Founded in the wake of WWII this agency has managed to keep its existence unknown for 50 years despite an increasingly large budget and media scrutiny of its activity but now one low-level staffer named Nathan Scrubbs might hae brought it all crumbling down out of sheer boredom.

A drunken Scrubbs is watching one of those Sunday morning Washington wonkfests hosted by the WASPiest men in the capital, John Oliver Banion, and decides the man needs a little shaking up. As do the agency higher-ups for passing him over for promotion or at least a little attention. Scrubbs tasks a team to give Banion the treatment and after waiting in vain for a mention on the show or an OpEd column sends them for a second, more invasive session that derails a highly paid speech to business execs.

Now Scrubbs gets the explosion because Banion’s tightly wound psyche cannot disbelieve what he’s experienced despite never once giving the idea of extraterrestrial lovers the least credence. The result is far more than expected–or desired–because the pundit is, after all, no slouch and in short order has whipped the extremely large believer community into a cohesion and political clout that cannot be ignored.

MJ-1 has taken notice too, which isn’t good for the forlorn grunt and Scrubbs’ best efforts to stay off the grid are nowhere near good enough. Everything crashes together when three million UFOphiles show up for a “Millenial Man March” on the Mall.

definitely recommended

Switched!

So the MacBook came yesterday morning and I’m having a fun struggle getting everything moved, new software installed and all of the dfferences learned. Some of it is easier than others, but I have a cadre of personal tech support to see me through. You know who you are.

I think I need to print out the keystroke command cheat sheet because the differences are the most annoying aspect of the changeover. My fingers’ memories are simply entrenched after 15 years of using Windows!

Blogger doesn’t work 100% in Safari either, missing the rich text edit control the team made such a big deal over when they announced it for IE and Firefox. I tried Camino, a supposedly Macified Firefox, but it doesn’t support Firefox extensions and may yet give Flock a shot after the next update.

Some of the apps I’ve downloaded don’t seem to work as I expected. They start, show up bouncing in the Dock, and then just sit there doing nothing. I’m sure its my misunderstanding but that doesn’t help me.

If it doesn’t kill you it makes you stronger.

Switching!

After playing the fields of Ruby on Rails for much of the last year, and seeing a buddy get a sweet one of his own from his new employer, I couldn’t resist and will be joining the anti-borg in the next day or two. Timing is up to FedEx now so don’t let me down!

Yes, I bought a MacBook, the (relatively) easy on the pocketbook white 2.0 GHz model. I am not quite so enamored to spend $150 extra just to get it in black or $4-500 to get the two inch larger (and aluminum) MacBook Pro. I will add memory, to the 2GB limit but from a 3rd party vendor for $200 since Apple charges $500 for the house brand.

The makers of several software products, Parallels and MacroMates and probably a few others, can expect orders from me too. I’ve been tracking a bunch of open source and shareware apps in anticipation, too. Tips and suggestions will be welcome, of course.

Posting may be somewhat crimped from time spent getting up to speed with all the newness. I’m sure you’ll understand. I can hardly wait!

Blogger: Still not making it easy

As I mentioned the Blogger beta transition is not a smooth course. In fact, I sent a help request in but other than the automated response have had no contact. The login issue remains a problem. Errrr!

The automated response–which seems to be standard policy from Google these days across consumer products–is to send a message which includes pointers to a few FAQ entries, not at all targeted at the subject of the help requests and ends with the somewhat irritating sentence:

If your question or problem is not addressed anywhere in our documentation, please simply reply to this message and let us know.

I suppose a good number of users write in without attempting to find any answer in the support material first. Some of us, however, do but the automated nature of the system means we need to take twice the action. That’s not how I ran things at NetDynamics.

Copperfield hits the midlife crisis, hard

SCI FI Wire is reporting that magician David Copperfield will turn 50 next month and has announced the discovery of the Fountain of Youth. The real one, that Ponce de Leon and others searched for, on one of the islands he bought in the Caribbean recently. I know losing a hottie like Claudia Schiffer can be a terrible blow to your ego, Dave, and I’m no stranger to the horrors of realizing one will not, actually, live forever.

“I’ve discovered a true phenomenon,” Copperfield told Reuters in a telephone interview. “You can take dead leaves, they come in contact with the water, they become full of life again. … Bugs or insects that are near death, come in contact with the water, they’ll fly away. It’s an amazing thing, very, very exciting.”

Seriously, I hope this is just a publicity stunt for an upcoming TV special. But then I checked Google News and the story is being reported far and wide. In which case I hope Copperfield has invested wisely because this might be the end of his performing career, though you never can tell with the American public these days.

A few handy EPL team facts

With opening day nearly here, I grabbed a few key pieces of information about all 20 teams from a BBC preview to have handy. Note how small some of the stadiums are, which is presumably due to the up and down relegation experience. Of course some clubs never really go down (famous last words!) and so build bigger. My beloved Liverpool, in fact, is building a new facility that will increase the seating to the 60,00 level.

Team Nickname Grounds Capacity
Arsenal The Gunners Emirates Stadium 60,000
Aston Villa The Villans Villa Park 42,593
Blackburn Rovers Rovers Ewood Park 31,367
Bolton Wanderers Trotters Reebok Stadium 27,879
Charlton Athletic Addicks The Valley 26,875
Chelsea Blues Stamford Bridge 42,449
Everton Toffees Goodison Park 40,170
Fulham Cottagers Craven Cottage 22,000
Liverpool Reds Anfield 45,362
Manchester City Blues City of Manchester Stadium 48,000
Manchester United Red Devils Old Trafford 68,210
Middlesbrough Boro Riverside Stadium 35,049
Newcastle United Magpies St James’ Park 52,193
Portsmouth Pompey Fratton Park 19,179
Reading Royals Madejski Stadium 24,045
Sheffield United Blades Bramall Lane 30,936
Tottenham Hotspur Spurs White Hart Lane 36,236
Watford Hornets Vicarage Road 22,000
West Ham United Hammers Upton Park 35,056
Wigan Athletic Latics JJB Stadium 25,000

This is my entry for the ProBlogger Group Writing Project, so please do consider adding it to your personal ‘best of’ list!

Bachin’ It

I’m writing this post at the time we’re usually at the gym huffing and puffing because, instead, I just got back from dropping TS1 at SFO. She’s off to Florida (Tallahussee) to visit her best friend and matron of honor for a few days. The 28–a nickname for the Metaverse’s board of directors–didn’t help much by blasting Missing You on the ride up!

It feels funny. Any time we’ve been apart overnight before I’m the one who traveled, to Seattle, Southern California, and staying at a hotel made me feel less strange. Now I’ll find out what she felt sleeping in our bed alone. OTOH, the odd feeling could just be the lack of sleep from getting up at 4:30; at least the drive was early enough to miss any traffic on 101.

Ladies, don’t get your hopes up–this isn’t an invitation of any kind!

How not to migrate users

I’m thrilled that Google is finally releasing an update to Blogger that adds serious new features, not that infrastructure improvements are nice but, face it, Blogger is so far behind other platforms it stopped being funny a year ago. I was even happy to see I was invited to beta test the new version.

But… the beta currently doesn’t work for users who have Pro accounts and publish via FTP to their own server (i.e., not a BlogSpot blog). Raise your hand if you have a Pro account. Raise your hand if you publish to your own server.

(Both my hands are up and nose-typing is really slow!)

One of the skills Google has certainly mastered is databases, in pretty much all the different forms they can be made these days. My meaning? Shouldn’t the G Men and Women be holding off the invites for folks like me until they resolve the problems blocking these uses? The information is readily available in the blog settings.

While I could create a new blog just to test with, frankly I’m not that interested in using my time that way. This wouldn’t be a big deal or worth it to me to write about except that I just wasted 10 minutes trying to log in after clicking the invitation page link to NOT skip for now.

One of the changes in the new system is that everyone will need to use a Google account, and the old Blogger ones will go away. (Didn’t Yahoo just have this headache over Flickr?) Again, no big deal except that I use the personalization features of Google News and so am signed in for that as well. I use the browser Google recommends so I can have multiple tabs open all the time. UH OH, cookie conflict.

In fact, I’m kind of nervous that since I just logged in to News in another tab this post won’t get published when I hit the orange button. Better take a copy, just in case.

After Publish: Glad to report no issues with the push. Still, one would really hope the folks at the ‘Plex could have done a tad more testing before pushing this beta out.

New Reds take home season’s first silverware!

In a well-played match, new additions to the club made major contributions as Liverpool opened the English season with a 2-1 victory to bring the 2006 Community Shield to the Anfield display case over everybody’s target Chelsea today.

John Arne Riise opened the scoring with a scorching blast from distance in the ninth minute after racing up the field by himself off a poor corner kick and Peter Crouch (no sign of the RoboCrouch celebration dance) headed in the winner 10 minutes from time off a sweet cross by Craig Bellamy, both left inexplicably in space by Paolo Ferriera and John Terry. Andriy Shevchenko, Chelsea’s $60 million signing from Milan, had a nice goal just before halftime in one of the few times the Reds’ defense broke down. Mohammed Sissoko was man of the match, completely ruling the center third all day.

Jose Mourinho can mouth any excuses about his players not being match fit and that this is just another warmup for next Saturday’s EPL kickoff but since Mr. Arrogance has the highest payroll of any club in any sport, including the New York Yankees–not to mention the half a billion dollars of owner Roman Abramovich’s cash he’s spent on transfer fees–I expect the Blues to field a solid XI every game. The only quibbles he could have with his starting lineup are missing keeper Peter Cech and winger Joe Cole through injury (the latter suffered last weekend when the English champs took on the MLS All-Stars) and the non-contact hip injury Michael Ballack picked up in the 25th minute. Though since the German captain was replaced by another of the big money summer signings, Saloman Kalou…

Frankly, the only Chelsea player who really seemed to have his head in the game was Shevchenko and maybe Geremi, fighting a battle for playing time against the possibility that Ashley Cole will move across London for nearly $50 million this week. Michael Essien and Didier Drogba had good work rates and Shawn Wright-Phillips did well after coming on for the last 20 minutes but mainly through individual effort as they showed little connectivity with their teammates. Lampard, John Terry and Arien Robben appeared to be still thinking about their last competitive matches, when England and the Netherlands crashed out of the World Cup.

Today was Liverpool’s 14th consecutive win in competition after beating Maccabi Haifa in midweek to open the Champions League campaign. Since capturing the FA Cup in May the team has added striker Craig Bellamy (17 league goals for Blackburn last season), left back Fabio Aurelio, winger Jermaine Pennant and young center back Gabriel Paletta, gotten Mark Gonzalez a work permit after signing him last summer and have Boudewijn Zenden back after an injury kept him out his first season with us.

Bellamy, Pennant, Gonzalez and Zenden all made big contributions today and Aurelio occupied the left side of Chelsea’s defense after replacing Gonzalez for the final half hour. And though he’s clearly not ready to replace Sammi Hyypia as first choice to partner Jamie Carragher at the back, January arrival Daniel Agger stood up well to the high-powered attack for 90 minutes.

Two strikers are gone–constantly controversial Djibrille Cisse has been loaned out to Marseille, which presumably will be made permanent after he recovers from the major broken leg he suffered in pre-World Cup training and Fernando Morientes, a prolific scorer elsewhere who never settled in for us–aging midfielder Didi Hamman, surplus with the emergence of Momo Sissoko, went to Manchester City, Djimi Traore was sold to Charlton and Jan Kronkamp, Harry Kewell, or Neil Mellor may yet move on.

Club president Rick Parry says there are still signings he’s chasing, though the longterm pursuit of Dutch striker Dirk Kuyt seems off, with the latest rumors focusing on Germany and Werder Bremen forward Miroslav Klose. Crouch, Bellamy, Luis Garcia, Florent Sinama Pongolle, Robbie Fowler and Klose would make a strike force to scare any opponent. A great start to the season and the first of several trophies!

Book: The Ghost Brigades

Having moderately enjoyed John Scalzi’s Old Man’s War a couple of months ago, there was no reason not to grab sequel The Ghost Brigades from the MVPL shelves the first time I noticed it. My two main critiques of this few hundred years in the future starfaring society were that the Colonial Union–the governing agency for all off-Earth humans–treated Earth as little more than a ranch for breeding stock and an absence of a how things got this way explanation.

So I’ll open by saying that in this novel he begins to answer those complaints and does so in a way that adds to the overall series plot. Yes, I used the ‘s’ word–from Scalzi’s blog I see that a third novel, The Last Colony, will be released in May 2007. Friggin’ lead times! But at least Ghost Brigades doesn’t suffer from trilogyitis.

At 300 pages he doesn’t have much room for that kind of bloat, this book is definitely not a pumped up novella. It’s also better written the first, which was pretty decent mind you, but to give a concrete indicator I was a half hour late to work Friday for not wanting to wait until after to finish reading.

OMW followed John Perry, a retirement age American widow, through his first couple of years as an enlistee in the Colonial Defense Forces, with the Special Forces soldiers (nicknamed The Ghost Brigades) playing only a small part. The one surviving soldier from that unit of any significance, Jane Sagan, is a lead character in this story.

To recap: Humanity has spread to the stars and found there are many races competing for the relatively few planets suitable for our kind of life. Competition for them is violent, almost without exception, and there is no United Federation of Planets to intervene or encourage peaceful negotiations. For reasons that aren’t clear, Scalzi has only included one race significantly more technologically advanced than us and the other 600+ races we know of and the Consu (another carryover from OMW) believe advancement towards salvation comes only through battle.

Besides faster than light stardrives (Skip drives), humans have also developed nanotech that enables sophisticated genetic engineering and integrated computing devices. CDF recruits only enlist at age 75 and are immediately given new bodies–into which their consciousness is transferred–better suited to war. BrainPals, integrated computers with high bandwidth encrypted wireless connectivity, and smart blood, nanites that carry more oxygen than normal blood and can be controlled by the BrainPals, are two examples, plus green skin. If a soldier survives the 10 year service term, she’s given yet another body, this one more like the original. Though since not a single character in either book has reached that point and become a colonist I’m not really sure if that’s correct.

Special Forces warriors are a bit different. CDF recruits sign up at their 65th birthday and give a tissue sample which is used to create their future body; consciousnesses can only transfer to a body that has a mind that is equivalent to the original and clones take a bit under two years to grow to physical maturity. But of course not everyone alive at 65 is still there at 75 and so some of the tissue of those who don’t make it is used to grow Special Forces bodies, which develop their own new selves.

Ghost Brigades is the story of Jared Dirac, a ghost warrior grown as an experiment. Charles Boutin, a top Colonial Union scientist, has turned traitor and is helping an inimical, powerful alien race. Before leaving, Boutin developed software which can store–but not run–a consciousness in a computer and left a copy of his on file. The military command decides to grow a Boutin clone and see what happens when the stored copy is transferred to it. Though scans show the transfer succeeded, there are no signs it took control of the body, so Dirac was trained and assigned to Sagan’s squad as if he was a normal soldier.

Meanwhile months go by and Dirac survives a number of battles. Gradually the clone connects with Boutin’s memories and emotions, a little at a time, and is sent to Military Research for study. When he realizes where the other must be, Dirac returns to active duty and is sent with Sagan and the rest of his squad to confront and capture the traitor.

Scalzi himself confronts a number of prejudices and cliches embedded in his creation, which I think makes the book much better. For instance, early on Dirac gets a ride from a “realborn” shuttle pilot who tells him a joke (which is a new concept for the hour-old) and when he retells it to his training mates they don’t see the humor, pointing out that most jokes rely on one of the characters being stupid. Later the warriors confront the fact that they’re essentially slaves, created specifically to be soldiers and not given a choice in the matter, though none goes so far as to refuse to fight.

Scalzi ties off the Dirac/Boutin story nicely, gives Sagan a reward for her success and sets the stage for the next book (according to his blog) to cover the bigger, political picture.

recommended

aLinks 1.0 released

Props to Sean Hickey, the Head Zookeeper, for getting aLinks 1.0 out the door. Don’t miss the plugin module for RawSugar! aLinks is a free WordPress plugin that takes a set of phrases you commonly use and turns them into links whenever you include them in a post. With the RS module you can make a list of words and phrases which, whenever used in a blog post, are automatically linked to the search for the word/phrase at RawSugar either in your directory or all of RawSugar. Very cool.

Sean has apparently rebuilt HeadZoo.com using CakePHP in the couple of weeks since we worked together on the module. Beyond being a bit surprised, since the site is all about WordPress plugins, I’m impressed to see that Cake has finally reached a useful state. I remember seeing the initial announcement early last year and trading a few emails with original developer Michal Tatarynowicz before other folks got involved and Michal found himself crowded out of his own project. The project’s basic idea is to recreate the magic of Rails in PHP but as far as I’m concerned that isn’t possible. Despite this the smart folks carried on anyway, as well they should.

Bruce make BillSaysHesSad

In the news this week are reports that Bruce Springsteen will release We Shall Overcome: The Seeger Sessions with five new songs as the American Land Edition. While I’ve seen this kind of make more money marketing crap from overtly commercial acts and the practice is extremely common in movie DVDs (special editions, limited release extended editions, director’s cut, 10th/20 anniversary editions) I’m honestly shocked that my all-time favorite musician would do it.

Bruce has always portrayed himself as a man of the people. Heck even these songs are reworked folk anthems. For some time now, though, I’ve been wondering if the portrayal is more of a role than the real Bruce, or perhaps its who he was originally, before all the success, and then hardened into something he kept like a comfortable suit. Populism never goes out of style.

Other clues for me are that the E Street Band was never inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and his off-the-grid lifestyle is fairly consistent with any other American multimillionaire. When Bruce was voted in to the HoF in 1997, the first year he was eligible, the reason given for the E Streeters not being included was that his first record was credited solo, meaning the band hadn’t reached the required 25 year mark. The Wild, the Innocent and the E Street Shuffle was released in 1973 and so the band became eligible the next year; even if one wanted to wait two additional years so the classic Born to Run lineup then they should have gone in with the Class of 2000. Six more years have come and gone with no sign of Steve Van Zandt, Gary Tallent, Roy Bitten, Danny Federici and Max Weinberg on the VH1 celebration.

Now I don’t begrudge Springsteen the money. Compared to performers who’ve probably racked up far bigger dollars (I’m looking at you, movie stars and producers) he’s certainly produced far more quality entertainment. But there are a number of incidents like this American Land Edition crap, typified by this paragraph from the Reuters story on its release: “In a nod to fans who have already purchased the album, the bonus tracks on the new version will be available as single-song downloads via iTunes.” So instead of paying $13 or so for a second copy, we can get the new songs only for $4.95 (99 cents x five songs), wow, what a bargain!

Bruce seems, in retrospect, to have reached some kind of turning point after the commercial, critical and fandom failure of the Lucky Town/Human Touch double releases and the instant sinking of the Plugged live CD. Starting with the latter in 1993 there have been 12 official releases–and only four of them have been newly recorded music. All the rest have been live performances, hits packages or unreleased archives. Three of the four new CDs, admittedly, have come in the last four years but overall I’m disappointed and now, perhaps, a little disillusioned.

Book: The Years of Rice and Salt

Kim Stanley Robinson‘s The Years of Rice and Salt is alternate history science fiction novel but different from the typical Harry Turtledove/Eric Flint books. While the normal changed event is something in America’s (or at least Europe’s) past Robinson bases his story on the idea that the Black Death kills 99+% of the people in Europe. In reality the plague, which originated in Asia and was transmitted into Europe from the Mongolian Empire’s commerce system, only killed about 30% of the inhabitants.

The author also uses the Asian conception of reincarnation as a core factor, with time on Earth intended to follow the Buddhist path to nirvana. Interludes between lives are spent in the Bardo and souls are each part of a jati, or family, which are reincarnated together and then meet up in the Bardo to evaluate the previous life. The deities who control existence require everyone to drink a forgetting potion just prior to rebirth.

The jati which is the focus of the story has three main members, with a couple of others in much smaller roles. Their personalities are consistent while names change each lifetime (but always start with B, K and I) and I’m guessing each of the three represents an archetype. B is (almost) always the peacemaker and facilitator, K is aggressive and a leader, and I is inquisitive, a scientist; sometimes they’re men, sometimes women, sometimes a mix.

The novel begins just after the Black Death makes its final pass through Europe. In this life B is a trusted lieutenant of Tamerlane (Temur the Lame) and encounters the vast emptiness while scouting the next battle, in or near Hungary. He soon ‘meets’ K, who is a 10 year old African taken as a slave by the Arab traders who already have him.

Robinson moves the group around, through China, India, Iran, Firanja (Islamic Europe, resettled 100 years after the plague) and a North America where the native tribes weren’t conquered by Europeans and were able to largely fight off the Chinese and Muslim invasions of the West and East coasts respectively.

He covers the 600 years or so from the time of the plague until today–this is no shortshrifted or puffed up book but a solid, dense 700 pager. In his history the major powers are a consistently authoritarian China and a fractious, but much larger territorially, Dar es Islam, with a small but smart South Indian league taking a significant role. Robinson consistently picks interesting spots to set down the jati; generally close to, but rarely in, positions of power.

definitely recommended

Bonus Links
Years of Rice and Salt: Trivia and Study Guide
Years of Rice and Salt: Timeline

EPL matches: An Open Letter to Fox Soccer Channel

I just read about the deal FSC made with Setanta on EPL broadcasts. I think this is a terrible decision, coming on the heels of fairly good ratings for the World Cup.

I think this is bad not because I might have to spend $150 to see the games but because Setanta has such limited availability in America that I won’t be able to subscribe at all! The limited PPV your channel has had in the past was annoying but bearable but this deal will cherry pick even more of the best games.

I suppose fans of Bolton and Middlesboro will be happy since so many more of their matches will feature on FSC but for fans of the big teams–I root for Liverpool–it’s simply terrible.

I was thrilled when FSW turned into FSC but now am decidedly unhappy.

I understand that letters like mine are not going to change things any time soon but your executives should understand how badly they messed up this time!I just read about the deal SC made with Setanta on EPL broadcasts. I think this is a terrible decision, coming on the heels of fairly good ratings for the World Cup.

At WordCamp 2006

Since our WordPress plugin is finally available (but with an update due in a few days!), the timing of the informal WordPress gathering is great. I’m writing just after the lunch break and so far the day has been pretty cool.

Me pontificating

Quick Highlights

Lowlight: Lunch was also very meaty, a BBQ buffet, and so not at all vegetarian-friendly. I walked around the corner and got a veg burrito. On the silverlining side, coming back I ran into Beau, who I haven’t seen since the fall, and had a chance to catch up as we went for a coffee.

Scott Beale is here taking many photos, as he always does–he was even doing it up at Gnomedex!

View from the balcony

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Are You on Craig’s List?

I have a Google Alert set up for NetDynamics, which most frequently shows me articles where former colleagues are mentioned. This morning, though, I got one for this FastCompany interview with Craig Newmark. I scanned the article trying to see where a company that died over six years ago would be relevant and at the very end he mentions my old peer-to-peer support forum as a sample of a commercial site with real community. Cool, but that forum closed years ago. Then I looked at the top of the page and noticed the article is from the November 2000 issue! How funny, what a timely alert Mr. Google.

I always enjoy it when a holier than thou falls

Mel Gibson, who earned a permanent spot on my blacklist with his hateful movie, got busted for drink driving in Malibu and then cursed at the cops and, of course, blamed the Jews. We’re all out to get him, you see. Frankly I think his religious views and booze combined with the megalomania natural to any huge star and the success of Passion of the Christ so that now Gibson thinks he’s the Second Coming. At least after knocking back a few.

Krugle Visit

Yesterday I went to the Krugle office to meet Steve Larsen and Mel Badgett, respectively the CEO and VP Product Management, for coffee–and to pick up my iPod–and we had a really great chat. Their open source code search engine is pretty early days but already delivers the goods.

One thing I really appreciated was how interested Steve and Mel were in my feedback. Not surprisingly a few of them are already in the works, like an Eclipse plugin, but Mel was taking copious notes. I try to do the same when speaking with people using RawSugar and hopefully do as good a job.

We also looked at RawSugar and I was glad to see that both were impressed with a number of our features including the powerful multi-level tagging system, that tag auto-complete works in every field where one can type in a tag, and that advanced search help is available right next to the search field (but one click away). So it was a two way exchange.

The Nano is black, if you’re curious. I never had one, or really looked that closely at them, before and the reputation Apple has for designing every part of the experience definitely came through. Even in the packaging: the plastic wrapping of the iPod itself, for instance, had a small unglued tab so removing it was smooth and easy. Didn’t need to use scissors except for the shrinkwrap the box itself was in or tear any wrapping other than the packet containing the foam cover for the ear buds. How did Steve miss that one?

Now of course I have to explore the humongous world of iPod accessories. Any of you care to share favorites?