Saturday, May 17, 2008

Party Photos

We had a small get-together last night to play some Rock Band. Alex took some awesome pictures:

Brian (Rock)

Harold, Jason, Greg, and Brian

Greg


The rest of the pictures are available here.

Tuesday, May 6, 2008

Twitter, BrightKite, FriendFeed, and IWantSandy

I've run across a few new (to me at least) online services lately, and I thought I'd talk a bit about what they do for you, and what I like about them. All of these services are free, and I don't think any of them took more than 5 minutes to sign up, so give them a try if they sound interesting.

Twitter


Andy got me hooked on Twitter about a year ago, and I use it quite a bit. I have a hard time explaining what I like about it, but the basic idea is that you can post short updates ("tweets"), and they are broadcast to anyone who is following your feed. The idea is pretty simple, but since it is so loosely defined, a lot of different uses have emerged. My circle of Twitter friends uses it somewhat like a persistent chat room, so there ends up being quite a bit of back-and-forth conversation. A lot of people use it as a micro-blog, throwing links up as they see them. Also, quite a few conferences are using it as a simple way to throw together a news feed without having to set up an RSS feed: here's MOSSCamp and MIX08.

BrightKite



BrightKite takes the Twitter idea a bit further. Rather than just allowing textual posts, BrightKite lets you "check in" at a specific location, and ties your posts to that location until you check in somewhere else. They also let you post photos, which is kinda cool, especially since they are automatically geolocated using your last check-in. On the backend, they run your check-ins through a geocoder (basically a web service that looks up addresses and place names and returns lat/long, geonames.org is a good one.), and store your current location. There is an iPhone app that was just released that takes care of checking in for you, but there are some fairly nifty things you can do even if you don't care to shell out for an iPhone. You can use SMS to check in: just text @ to their service, and it will check you in. If you're out at a restaurant, and want to check in, you can text ? and BrightKite will respond with a list of possibilities near your last check-in.


I like the idea that your location is an implicit part of each post, rather than having to be encoded in the message. Both Twitter and BrightKite have a 140 character limit on posts, so handling locations behind the scenes saves some overhead. BrightKite seems like a small improvement in functionality over Twitter, but I'll be interested to see where people take it once the BrightKite developers open up their API.


FriendFeed


Twitter and BrightKite both provide a new channel for publishing information. FriendFeed is a bit different. FriendFeed consumes feeds from your other online identities (Pandora, LinkedIn, Twitter, Blogger, etc.), and re-publishes the data through a uniform presentation layer. There isn't any huge technical leap there, although pulling disparate data feeds into a single application is non-trivial... The thing that they did right was to make it really easy to add common services. I know I never remember to check my friends' Flickr feeds. Even if they Twitter that they posted, I rarely click through. FriendFeed puts everything in a single place, and I like that.

I Want Sandy


I saved my favorite for last. I don't remember how I stumbled on to it, (possibly BrightKite -> GetSatisfaction -> IWantSandy) but it has made my life easier. I Want Sandy is an email-based personal assistant that will remember appointments, to-do lists, and notes for you. Once you sign up, you get a unique email address that you can use to send in things you want to have remembered. There is some rudimentary text processing going on, so if you send "Remind me to mail that package tomorrow", you'll get a reminder at 7:00 in your email the next day. Everything can be manipulated via email, Twitter, and SMS, so you don't actually need to sign in to the web site to retrieve information. My short-term memory has been entirely replaced by plots from Stargate SG-1 episodes, plural forms in languages which I don't speak, and the Dewey Decimal number for American Fiction (813.54), so I find it incredibly useful to get a text message on my way home from work reminding me to pick up the mail.
I can't really explain how useful I find I Want Sandy. I think you just have to try it out to see if it works for you.

Thursday, May 1, 2008

Photos

I took a couple days off at the end of last week, and I took a long hike through the woods over at McDowell Grove. I took my camera with, and took something like 300 photos while I was out. I posted quite a few to my Flickr account, but I thought I'd put up a few of my favorites here.

I walk across the the flood gates for the DuPage river to get into the forest preserve from the back, and I came across this cool stump right near the path.
DSC_0702

Here's a macro shot of a fallen tree I saw in the woods on my way over to the dam. I almost moved the piece of wood leaning against the log when I came upon it so I could get a clear shot down the length of the log, but I changed my mind, and I think this came out really well as a result.
DSC_0718

This is a macro shot of a ladder up to the controls for the flood gates on top of the dam. The ladder looked like it was welded up prior to installation, and then galvanized, which created a really cool pattern on the steel.
Ladder

I spooked a couple of deer walking through the woods, but I managed to switch to my long lens without scaring them off, so I got some good pictures. I was in a pretty dense area, so there's a bit of clutter in the foreground. I managed to clean a bit of it up by applying some sharpening to the images. Next time I'll have to be a bit less noisy so I can get some clearer shots.
In A Thicket

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Code Monkey

One of the guys on my team linked me to this video. It is a claymation video set to "Code Monkey", by Jonathan Coulton that his younger sister made. I'm friggin' impressed.

Update (April 30 - 6:01 PM UTC):
Indeed, as Colin mentions in the comments, the creator is his sister, and not Jonathan Coulton's. Scope resolution is easier when you can see the curly brackets.