mac apps

August 23rd, 2008

Whenever I touch someone else’s computer or talk to someone else about their mac, inevitably I say something like, oh, you don’t use _? And they often say something oh, I didn’t know about that, thanks! And then they say, have you tried _? and I say no, I should check that out.

So, I’m going to write a few posts about different mac apps I like and use, like growl and quicksilver, and then I’m going to show you how I use them together during my day like how I use those two with itunes to listen to music or do my taxes or make me toast. I’m all about leveraging technology to make my life easier. I’m going to tell you how I do it, and then you can tell me how you do it, and then we’ll all be happier. My mom will probably read them at least. She likes telling me I’m cool and not a nerd.

P.S. I’m only going to cover mac things. Three years ago I bought my first mac (I had ALWAYS used windoze before that) and I’ve never looked back, except for when I want to play warcraft II (and now there’s vmware for that). It just works best for me.

The driver has to work harder than anyone. He’s the first to show up and the last to leave. When his teammates are all out drinking beer, he’s up in his room studying pictures of turns. You see, a driver must remain 100% focused at all times. Not only is he responsible for knowing every inch of every course he races, he also responsible for the lives of the other three people in the sled. Do you want that responsibility?

- Cool Runnings

Read it again but put “leader” in place of “driver.” Leadership is like that I think, and it can be lonely. Sometimes you just want to have fun instead of having the responsibility. Which is why you have to want it.

TLC Followup

August 17th, 2008

I had a great weekend at Alpine camp both with some of the kids I met and the rest of the band, who were a lot of fun on top of being great musicians. The experience also was a good chance for some personal reflection, and I think I’ll touch on some of those topics in some upcoming posts.

We arrived Friday night and setup, ate dinner, and tried to rehearse a little bit before we went on. It was a little frustrating for me because we didn’t sound as good as I wanted with so little rehearsal and after it became clear a couple of songs needed to be removed :), but we made it through. The highlight of the night was a guy named Tim who came and shared his testimony through words and song of how he was abandoned by his parents, eventually fell into a life of drug dealing that landed him in prison, and wound up following Jesus. It was really cool to see the kids connect with Tim. The second night after zip lines and other camp shenanigans we had more worship and a nooma video titled luggage that spoke about dealing with the hurt in our lives. We ended that night just worshiping with the acoustic guitar for longer than I could think up songs to play because they didn’t want to stop.

It was also lot of fun to see how the responses of the kids changed so much over the short weekend. Here’s some of the feedback we received:

One camper wrote: I loved the video especially the part of forgiving people and I loved the music especially “nuttin but the blood of Gesus”

Another wrote: I liked the music it made me feel closer to God and even made me cry, I loved the weekend it was amazing and everyone was cool

Another wrote: I liked the video and the speaker and learned that I am not the only one that needs to learn about forgiveness before this weekend I thought I was the only one who have had bad things happen to me. Camping at Alpine was or is the best thing I have ever done.

Another wrote: I liked the speaker he told about his past and that is very hard to do, the video told the truth and everyone needs to see it. On a scale of 1-10 it was a 10 the best camp I have ever gone to.

It was really a blessing to hear how the kids were touched, and I made some new friends.

holy ghost

August 6th, 2008

aaahahahahaha

TLC

August 5th, 2008

I met my fundraising goal, thanks to some last minute checks. Thanks so much to everyone who gave. Camp is this weekend, so I’ll post on how it goes afterward, but I’m excited. The band has come together and it’s going to be greate. Here’s my original post in case you missed it about what I’m doing.

traffic

July 22nd, 2008

so, just for fun every now and then i go and look at how many people are visiting my blog. Tonight, I noticed something interesting:

Turns out if you google “jared iphone”, this post is the #1 result, and apparently people were googling “jared iphone” on july 14.

Hilarious.

why i love amazon mp3

July 16th, 2008

Ever try to play a itunes song outside of itunes? Oh, you can’t. Ever want to send an itunes song to a friend to check out? Oh, you can’t. Ever want to convert a itunes song to mp3? Oh, you can’t. Ever want your audio in higher quality? Nope.

Amazon MP3. Still one click to buy and add to itunes. MP3 Format. 256 kbps. DRM Free. Oh, and cheaper than itunes.

iphone apps

July 15th, 2008

So I’ve installed the iphone 2.0 software (on my non 3G iphone, for now) and have some thoughts about the iphone apps and the app store.

I think that while the app store is going to be the defacto hub for distributing apps for the majority, it has some downs.

First, as the number of apps continue to grow, the app store just seems awkward for navigating and finding new apps. Also it’s becoming increasingly hard to tell the crap from the good, with the only aid being the marginally helpful user reviews. I think the blogosphere and word of mouth are going to play a huge role in the success of iphone apps. Seeing and hearing how an app has been useful for someone else is so much more credible when trying to decide what to invest time in installing and trying out.

Second, I have a hard time seeing myself paying for any iphone app, ever. The only exception is perhaps something that I’m already invested in. Are iPhone apps just supporting cast members? I vote yes for a couple reasons. I think the greatest value of a mobile app is the greater accessibility that comes with mobility, and it’s just not worth $10, especially when there are iphone web interfaces and even more so once the jailbreaked installers take off. Also, if I were a software developer, why would I want to limit my audience to only iphone customers? I think these factors are contributing to why you see many more “iphone versions” of apps and iphone interfaces for existing apps, than pure iphone-only apps. I’d put money on the iphone app market continuing in that direction.

Some Independence Day Fun

July 3rd, 2008

Independence day ecards at somecards.com – “when you care enough to hit send”

“The Harriet Tubman of Fireworks”

twitter auto links

June 30th, 2008

I like having my twitter on my website. I use the standard supplied twitter javascript badge code to do this. One thing I don’t like about it is that it doesn’t create html links from the links in the tweet. So took a minute and made one that does.

Everybody stand back. I know regular expressions (although it’s just a baby one). It could also be improved to be much more flexible (https, not relinking already linked urls, etc), but it’s simple and working for my cases for now.

Here is the updated blogger.js file, just download it, upload it to your web space, and use it instead of http://twitter.com/javascripts/blogger.js

Links in your twitter badge now are clickable. Neato.