My First Drive

Driving The Volvo

The first time I ever drove a vehicle by myself was a study in “Fake it until you make it”. I had never driven before I got to Drivers Training and I was the first elected to hop in the driver’s seat and get the group underway. Suffice it to say there wasn’t any real teaching, pretty much just hop in and drive. The learning curve apparently wasn’t noticeable by my fellow students and I did quite well considering I was a snot nosed kid.

Quite a bit afterwards I started to refine my driving skills with my parents and my father taught me to parallel park on the left, which only happens if you happen to be on a particular one-way divided residential parkway in Syracuse, New York. My father remembered his driving test and the examiner had this as his secret weapon. I aced parallel parking on both sides, ambidextrously I suppose. When I took my driving exam in Syracuse My examiner lead me right to where I and my father practiced the parallel parking and had this haughty expression, “Park on the left, hah!” and so I did. I got my perfect 1″ square and centered parking task complete and I smiled sweetly at him and he told me to drive the car back to the DMV and he gave me a grudging 100% score. Without that ambidextrous parallel parking training I would have been hard pressed to get the score I did.

The last real lesson I learned with driving I also picked up from my father, and that is to be very careful when swinging your arm backwards to look behind you in a pickup truck. I accidentally belted my father in the face and it was the only time I hit him. I had to park afterwards because I was a basket case.

The things you remember when digging up the past… Wow. 🙂

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QR Codes

Today at work I was playing around with my new Verizon iPhone 4 and found a suite of apps related to scanning QR codes. These codes are square speckled two-dimensional bar codes that can contain a surprising amount of information.

I found a great site and discovered that it had a paired iOS app:

QR Code Creator Site: http://bit.ly/dziTfL

QR Code App: http://bit.ly/h97j6H

If you have an iPhone or iPod Touch, you should check them out!

So that got us started on possibly weaving QR codes in a lot of our promotional materials. Some of the ideas I’ve entertained revolving around these codes are:

  • History of a building, photos of its construction, where the funding came from and some of the neat things about the building that people might like to know.
  • Raffle codes on the back of WMU game tickets, we insert a random QR that people have to SMS or Email to enter a raffle to win a prize, or something.
  • If these codes are up on billboards, we could provide a full vCard for WMU including admissions, our website, and other contact information.

As I got to thinking about the QR codes, it’s an avenue to enable printed material to have a digital effect, in a way it completes a round-trip for information. The path from digital to physical is usually via printers, and this is a way for physical to cross back into digital. The information technology, marketing, and pure geek factor are all very high – it’s very exciting!

Ringtones & People – Update

It’s too funny to let the turkeys get me down. Here are the assignments so far:

  1. Scott – Katy Perry Firework
  2. Mom – Rhythym of My Heart
  3. Norm – Imagine
  4. Jeffery – Buggles “Video Killed the Radio Star”
  5. Dad – Imperial March
  6. Little Chris – Guster’s Center of Attention *inside joke*
  7. Sister – Fur Elise
  8. General Ringtone – Aflac’s Goat “nah, naah, naaaah”

 

Assigning People to Music

Here are my top ten played tracks on my iPod “Be A Jackass”:

  1. Hero – The Verve Pipe
  2. Homage to Patagonia – Lemon Jelly
  3. Hooked on Bach – Hooked on Classics
  4. Puttin’ on the Ritz – Taco
  5. Would You…? – Touch and Go
  6. Video Killed the Radio Star – Buggles
  7. Some Fantastic – Barenaked Ladies
  8. Hooked on Classics Part 3 – Hooked on Classics
  9. Hooked on Mozart – Hooked on Classics
  10. Hooked on Song – Hooked on Classics

The first track is easy, I’ve always associated that with Dennis Skinner. I don’t know why. As for the rest, I’m going to have to give them some serious listens in order to find where people belong. I really should find musical selections for every one of my friends and family. So far I’ve got my Mother, my Stepfather, and my Sister. I’ve got to assign music to:

  1. Scott – Glee, Jonatha?
  2. My Father – Something patriotic
  3. Scott’s Mom – Something classical
  4. My Boss – Dar Williams perhaps
  5. Andy Med
  6. Jeffery – Something from the 80’s
  7. Sean – Star Trek Theme
  8. Jeramiah – That section of remix in german
  9. Justin – Maybe a section of Homage to Patagonia
  10. Matt – “I Will Survive” perhaps
  11. Max

And perhaps more people if they ended up calling me.

Ringtones, Music, Themes… People.

So now that I can create custom ringtones, I want to assign custom ringtones for everyone I know. This is rather tricky. What musical-person pairing should I select? I have the pair for my sister down pat, but for the rest of my friends and family?

This is going to take time.

I’d like everyone to please give this some thought and volunteer what you think your theme song might be. Please share in the comments or if you want it private, email me.

Thanks!

The difference between iPods and iPhones

Now that I have my new iPhone, I’m thrilled to have it and using it is wonderful. While I’ve been working with it I’ve run into a strange oddity and a workaround for it. The oddity came when I tried to create my own iPhone-compatible ringtones. The creation of iPhone custom ringtones are in themselves needlessly fussy procedure. First you find the music you want, trim it to 40 seconds, then convert it to AAC format. Then you tear it out of iTunes, change the extension from m4a to m4r and then insert that back into the device for assignment.

What gets me about the ringtone creation is how involved and outrageously fussy it is. It wasn’t meant to be this way, the design clearly points to strict control. When Apple makes something easy, it’s ridiculously easy. This is something different. This is capitalism. Apple went a long way to make this obfuscation stick and the proof is in the obnoxious lengths that you have to go through if you don’t want to buy a ringtone from the iTunes store.

I ran into another issue with my new iPhone. I plugged it into my MacBook and tried to add the newly manufactured ringtone to the device. Then I discovered a rather new and odd limitation. An iPhone apparently fixates on the iTunes library that it first sees, it is with this library that you can turn on “Manage Manually” mode with an iPhone. Any other library locks the phone out but offers you the option of continuing by wiping your device and re-fixating on a new iTunes library. I quickly came up with a great way to beat Apple at this oddity, I created a new iTunes library from scratch (just the directory structure and some key files) and placed it on my Dropbox. Then using the option-key goaded iTunes to start from a different library, pointed it to my Dropbox-iTunes folder and now I have a work-on-any-machine-Manual-Manage iTunes skeleton that allows me to insert homemade ringtones into my new iPhone.

What a long way around for something that should be simple. Apple, if you are listening, the solution is only lengthy and annoying. It’s been paved by your own software and the only piece missing is either a USB memory stick or Dropbox. How easy would it have been to design this with the same vigor that you designed everything else? Eventually your customers find ways around this sort of thing, doesn’t that inevitability mean it’s not worth pursuing in the first place?

Humph.

Being Without

This past weekend I was without my Blackberry as the number port took through Verizon and the phone was in a box en-route to Kalamazoo through FedEx. It was an odd feeling, being potentially connected through the fail-a-licious Blackberry and then suddenly not having anything. No phone, no sms, no alerts, no twitter. It was rather humbling. There were some seriously good moments of comedy that I was going to share but couldn’t, some of them were:

  • At the GR B&N, they had a sign up for Black History Month and right underneath it a load of product from the BBC.
  • The Apple Store at Woodland Mall in GR, a packed madhouse! It was if it was a fresh release day and people were starving for the sleek and shiny.
  • Scott’s test drive of the car that has caught his eye, the Nissan Juke.
  • Browsing the Pioneer Wine Trail, which runs north and south of Jackson, MI.

Of course, throughout all of this I’ve been impatient for the delivery of my new iPhone. Waiting has been uniquely annoying, especially since FedEx doesn’t really update their package status as well as UPS does, so for the past few days the shipment has been cooling it’s heels in Grand Rapids, until just a few moments ago when it turned out to magically appear in Portage.

I did enjoy myself immensely this past weekend however, got in a lot of mallwalking, bought a few bottles of very good (and cheap!) wines from the Pioneer Trail region, saw the Juke which was exceptionally cute, and had a chance to spend time with friends.

 

What does an Apple Mouse and a Blackberry have in common?

Today has a bright note of happiness all of a sudden. One of my coworkers came in complaining that her Apple Wireless Mouse couldn’t scroll up any longer. We’ve for the longest time noticed a slow and subtle failure of these Apple Mice over time, suddenly they won’t scroll up any longer, no reason, just bloop, that’s it.

While I was thinking of solutions, out of the blue a fix I remembered for PITA Blackberry Curve and Pearl devices popped into my head. In those devices the pearl can become contaminated with skin oils and hair and whatnot and start camming and eventually cease working altogether. The solution for the Blackberry is to turn the Blackberry face-down, lay it gently on a fresh piece of paper and then roll the hell out of the ball against the paper. This apparently cleans the pearl ball of oil and grit and junk and the Blackberry returns to proper function.

So, would this work for these Apple Mice? The pearl in the Blackberry is nearly identical to the ball in the Apple Mice. So I grabbed one of the “Broken Apple Mice” and got some paper and made it squeak. It actually squeaks, so adorable! Then I plugged it in, and voilà, works like a charm!

So the solution to fixing a scroll ball in an Apple Mouse is to get some paper, turn the mouse upside down and roll it vigorously against the paper for a count of say 10 to 15. Works like a charm!

Enjoy!

Facepalm to Headdesk

I’ve been doing the same thing for about a dozen years. I’ve seen personalities come and go. They have grand designs in the beginning but almost always end up doing some rendition of a perp-walk at the end. I started in what could be described as a maelström of confusion and a general state of DIY-clunkiness. Now I’m not going to actually name anyone or any definite thing, those that know me and know my long-standing straw-men will know exactly what I’m talking about in this article, it’s a metaphorical story after all. If you take an exception to what I write here, then perhaps you should do some of your own personal introspection. Something is rotten in the state of Denmark.

Imagine buying a car, the place where you buy it has only one dealership in the entire world and you are in luck, it’s only a mile away. Everything you could ever need is hosted by the car company, by the dealership – everything! They’ll sell you the car, they’ll service it, they’ll help you find things to stick to it to make it better – it looks wonderful on paper.

When you walk into your new apartment, you see the car in the driveway and it looks quite unusual. It still has a car-like shape but the fresh weld-points where unusual non-car-like things and things that perhaps might go on a car if designed by a desperate mechanic appear. You find out that the paperwork from the dealership is burnt in some places and has unthinkable stains in other places. The car runs, sort of, but every once in a while it shocks the passengers and makes them visibly tremble. Years go by, you trade in the DIY wreck and over time you get the impression that even after buying a new car from the dealership and agreeing to play by all their rules that they really are quite occupied doing other things. One day you wake up, blink and rub at your eyes and notice that there are lots of other cars parked in your neighbors driveways. You’ve fought tooth and nail and you’ve got a premium luxury vehicle that carries your passengers on a cloud of happiness and you are quite satisfied as long as you only see your driveway. If you look around you notice Trabants and Yugos and Horizons littering your neighbors driveways and you don’t understand how so many people can fit in such awful vehicles and you just stop thinking about them. You have faith that somehow life goes on for everyone, whether they are being stuffed into a Trabant or a rusted-out Horizon.

Your dealership has expanded now, not only does it do cars, but everything else. Not only should you use the dealership, but your told you must use the dealership. You notice a crack developing in your driveway, and the new paving company is the dealership. You let them know the crack is there and growing and then you don’t hear anything from them. Years go by, four of them, and then after having enough you walk down to city hall and you complain about the dealership, the next day the entire crack is gone, and you notice the color of the pavement is different and then that feeling sets in. Something is wrong. You are finally happy so you shut your trap and hope you don’t have to wait another four years for help.

Over the intervening years you go to the dealership, you suffer little wounds each time you walk in their doors, after a while, and since nobody else is yelling loudly, you imagine that the rather lousy dealership is just how things are and your dissatisfaction melts into a kind of muddy attitude. Your once springy step is now pretty much a dreary trudge. Life goes on. The dealership remains standing tall, and then you notice that your sink trap, which you’ve asked to have looked at, has remained ignored for three whole years and some time. You’ve made do, you’ve gotten your work done, the sink does work but not exactly how you’d like it to. The dealership really doesn’t have doors anymore, it took wire cutters to its phone lines and the postman has no idea how to get in to make deliveries. The only way that you can communicate with the dealership now is with a tattered clutch of semaphore flags. When you grab your manual and your flags and try to get messages to the dealership, you feel foolish and that perhaps you’re just wasting your time. You’d put the flags in a foot locker and forget all about them, but you need the dealership, so you continue to make foolish motions knowing that nobody is probably looking at you or your flags.

I used to be angry with the dealership. I used to rail against them, question their professionalism. I’ve even entertained the thoughts in my own head that perhaps the dealership is just simply incompetent and they can’t help themselves. Now I just find myself alternating between facepalm and headdesk when face to face with the dealership.

Somewhere deep down, with all this nebulous awfulness, you suspect that caring too much, being too involved will eventually make you sick. You start fantasizing about getting in your luxury car and never leaving it again. Never thinking about the sink trap, never thinking about the driveway, just losing yourself in the light-blue-and-smiles happiness of being inside your luxury car. That if you wait it out long enough in the utopia of your own making, that somehow the dealership won’t be there anymore and you can get out of the luxury car and start making progress again.