Oct, 2008 (2008-10-09 13:15)
Has there been better advice given to anyone trying to accomplish anything?
Over at flexbandit, donkeybandit was discussing how his blog helped advance his career, which is an interesting enough topic in itself.
But he linked over to an article titled Quantity Always Trumps Quality. While I’d argue that always is a dangerous word and balance is probably in order, there was a great excerpt about making it happen.
Check out this excerpt from the book…
The ceramics teacher announced on opening day that he was dividing the class into two groups. All those on the left side of the studio, he said, would be graded solely on the quantity of work they produced, all those on the right solely on its quality…
Well, came grading time and a curious fact emerged: the works of highest quality were all produced by the group being graded for quantity. It seems that while the “quantity” group was busily churning out piles of work – and learning from their mistakes – the “quality” group had sat theorizing about perfection, and in the end had little more to show for their efforts than grandiose theories and a pile of dead clay.
Sep, 2008 (2008-09-30 21:10)
I recently noted that I’d tested out BlogJet to some success. After using it for a few weeks, and seeing a reply from Alec Satin, who has an excellent blog on Project Management and being a generally pleasant human being, I wanted to post a couple updates.
BlogJet has worked well, though I find that I have to jump on the web and make edits occasionally after posting. It lacks a couple key elements that would make it a real times saver:
- No way to insert symbols—though this dash, which I use constantly, shows up automagically, and you can add auto-replace rules for some things.
- It occasionally inserts formatting using span tags over the entire post, overriding the blog’s default styles, which is oddly annoying and unnecessary.
- Tags don’t work. It has an option to use ‘native tags’ instead of technorati, but that never works. They always show up as links at the bottom of the post instead of actual tags in WordPress.
Blog Jet is nice in that I don’t have to visit the site, log in, and click on post. So generally, when I have an idea I want to jot down and develop later, I write it in BlogJet and save it as draft on the site.
But if I’m going to post all the way through, I don’t see a point, since I have to log into the site and edit the tags anyways : ( I’ve put in a request to BlogJet to fix this feature; hopefully they’ll have an ear for my feedback.
Sep, 2008 (2008-09-16 22:36)
Argh, trying this program was a test in patience.
I downloaded the ScribeFire plugin for FireFox and tried it out. Everything about it is wrong, imo. Which is surprising considering the large following it has. I suppose of the free alternatives its, well, really the only one besides BlogDesk that looked up to par.
But ScribeFire proved buggy, hard to use, hard to understand, and poorly designed. And while it had keyboard shortcuts, they weren’t documented and I didn’t intend to spend hours figuring them out to forget them later.
Their search feature fails if I put an = sign into the search (such as searhing the html for class="bold") So I ended up moving this post over to BlogDesk to finish writing it, which went buggy.
So now I’m back to BlogJet, who will be getting my $29.95 for a licence and a bit of peace of mind.
Sep, 2008 (2008-09-16 22:26)
I tried out BlogDesk today. I tried to use it to write a review of ScribeFire (coming next). It didn’t go so well.
The interface is decent, not great but not horrible. Keyboard shortcuts and decent formatting. Most of the standard blogging features. No search and replace; typical.
However, after a while the program “glitched” and I was unable to edit the content of a post anymore.
The focus, even when I clicked on my text, seemed to go somewhere random, like the category list. So BlogDesk gets the thumbs down.
Sep, 2008 (2008-09-15 22:44)
I tested out BlogJet ($29.95/free trial) for posting to my blog from a desktop editor. Very sharp and polished so far. When I opened it, it suggested I send this post, though it had some really silly text for the content.
It did, however, have this spiffy quote:
“Computers are incredibly fast, accurate and stupid; humans are incredibly slow, inaccurate and brilliant; together they are powerful beyond imagination.” – Albert Einstein
I’ll also be trying out BlogDesk over the next few days, which is freeware. But I have a suspicion it won’t live up to BlogJet’s polished UI and nice set of hotkeys…
Sep, 2008 (2008-09-13 19:41)
I downloaded Google Chrome today and tried it out. All I can say is wwwOwww. Fast. Fast. Fast.
Everything about it was fluid and quick, down to the scrollbars, which move like liquid lightning.
And easy to use. Simple and clean; exactly what a browser should be. And it’s compatible with every page I tried, including standard js libraries and advanced banking apps.
The only things missing, imo are:
DOM inspector — found the dom inspector; it works like safari, have to highlight something on page and right click to ‘inspect’ it
- Keyboard shortcut for bookmarks — for mouse haters like me, this is a necessity. It’s way to slow to go clicky through menus when you view a couple hundred web pages a day (that translates to over an hour of clicking). I can type
alt+b,c,d,1 lightning fast to open a login to my favorite app
- Greasemonkey — greasemonkey is essential for serious web users, it allows me to tweak nearly any page to my needs
If you’ve been thinking about trying Chrome, or updating your browser, head on over for a quick and painless install. Find out what fast web pages look like.