Archive for January, 2007

OPML Workstation Now IntelligentTeams

31 January 2007

I guess I missed it, but at some point in the past few months OPML Workstation relaunched or rebranded itself IntelligentTeams. Maybe it was a soft launch? I don't know. Maybe I'm just not as tuned in anymore.

IntelligentTeams looks like a LAMP-based OPML Community Server (but I have no idea what the underlying technology is). It's pretty rough around the edges -- a lot of new windows opening, jarring full page refreshes, links to external site to provide certain functionality -- but it's workable. Check out this page from John Palfrey.

Another Outlook feature disabled by Microsoft

30 January 2007

After deciding that we are too stupid to be permitted to receive certain kinds of attachments in Outlook, Microsoft has also decided that one the most important features offered by Outlook, saved searches, are too dangerous to be permitted.

Welcome back to 1995!

Alex King on WordPress Theme Development

25 January 2007

tecosystems Redesign | alexking.org: Another good post by Alex King, this one about developing a new theme (and also about mixing business and friendship).

Rhapsody Rabbit Realization

24 January 2007

Rhapsody RabbitI've always loved the Bugs Bunny cartoon Rhapsody Rabbit and wished I had a recording of Liszt's Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2 performed by the pianist who performed it for that cartoon. Well, today I went down the rabbit hole searching for an answer.... And I found it. The pianist was Jakob Gimpel. I also found this fascinating story by Gimpel's son in which he hypothesizes that the pianist in "The Cat Concerto" (the Tom and Jerry version of Rhapsody Rabbit that won the Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film for 1946) was Shura Cherkassky. (See: The Cat Concerto Controversy (Mystery Solved?).) Now, to find a recording....

What is a podcast?

9 January 2007

Mike Arrington recently reignited some discussion about the definition of a blog.

I have a related question: What is a podcast?

I'm really only concerned with two technical questions:

  1. Does each feed item need an enclosure? If not, what ratio of items with enclosures to total items makes a feed a podcast?
  2. Does the enclosure need to be in a dedicated feed element, or is it okay to just put a link to the enclosure somewhere in the feed description? For example, is this a podcast? The publisher, a big RSS technology company, seems to think so.

There are other debatable points, too, such as whether Public Radio feeds are really podcasts, but I'm more interested in the technical points.

Superhero Meme

4 January 2007

As seen on Scripting News and TechCrunch (among other places)...

Your results:
You are Hulk

Hulk
80%
Superman
65%
Spider-Man
60%
Green Lantern
60%
The Flash
55%
Iron Man
50%
Robin
45%
Catwoman
45%
Supergirl
35%
Wonder Woman
30%
Batman
25%
You are a wanderer with
amazing strength.
Hulk

Click here to take the Superhero Personality
Test

Without an analysis of why I was characterized as Hulk, I think this gimmick lacks social punch. Of course, I know what the questions were and what my answers were. So, I can understand being Hulk, but unless you take the Superhero Personality Test yourself, you'll have no idea why this post is at all interesting.