Blog Yellek

The antidote to driving the best cars to nowhere

Archive for June, 2006

Synchronize Google Calendar with Windows Mobile, Palm, Blackberrys and Outlook

Friday, June 16th, 2006

Finally a two-way synchronization solution for Google Calendar! It can synchronize Google Calendar with all the latest Windows Mobile, Palm, and BlackBerry devices in addition to Outlook, Lotus Notes, Palm Desktop, and Groupwise applications.

read more | digg story

Daily Del.icio.us Links

Friday, June 16th, 2006

Daily Links : 1 links from del.icio.us :

» PragDave Interesting concept for improving your programming skills by trying small exercises and learning each time.

Next delicious load : tomorrow, same place, same time !

Daily Del.icio.us Links

Thursday, June 15th, 2006

Daily Links : 2 links from del.icio.us :

» O’Reilly Radar > Google Earth, Sketchup, and Second Life The new version off Google Earth and sketchup, a 3D modelling tool - really interesting
» Google SketchUp Free 3D sketching application from Google that you can use to model all sorts of stuff (like houses) ans apparently you can use to add building shapes to Google Earth

Next delicious load : tomorrow, same place, same time !

Running Faster

Wednesday, June 14th, 2006

Did a 5K run last night at fitness and managed to improve my time from 29:48 to 28:19, and all that without the Baton Assassin as my “motivation” :) . To put that in perspective the world record for the 5000m is 13 minutes flat so I’m not getting too cocky but still the improvement is nice.

[Listening to: Don’t Give Up - Chicane & Bryan Adams - Behind the Sun (8:23)]

Daily Del.icio.us Links

Wednesday, June 14th, 2006

Daily Links : 1 links from del.icio.us :

» Consumer-Driven Contracts: A Service Evolution Pattern Really interesting article on techniques for shema evolution to avoid breaking changes for service interfaces and also on service contracts

Next delicious load : tomorrow, same place, same time !

Megachurches and Freeloading

Sunday, June 11th, 2006

The RHCC Small Groups Blog raises an interesting point: Do people at megachurches take all the resources for granted and is this a problem?

The average church in Australia has a size of about 100 in the congregation. Paradise Community Church connects with something like 8000 people in Adelaide on a weekly basis. The resources available to a church of that size are just inconceivable to a ministry of about 100 people. Do people at Paradise take it for granted? Yes. Yesterday we had the chance to hear Dr Myles Monroe for 3 sessions for only $20 and again this morning. Tonight we have a multimedia presentation on the DaVinci Code. All of this takes place in an auditorium with TV facilities, lights comfortable seats, video screens and with a crew of over 100 volunteers for each serrvice. Having come from a smaller church I can definitely say that this represents more than the wildest dreams of many pastors around the country. Many people at Paradise, not having known anything else, tend to take this for granted.

Does that lead to a negative attitude when things are not provided the way people expect, a consumer culture? In some cases it does. The thing I find about those people is that they either change that attitude or they don’t last. Our job as leaders is to encourage people to come with an attitude of service to the vision that Ashley Evans our senior pastor puts forward. If people are not willing to listen then at some point they are going to get offended by something that happens. People get hurt by people in churches all the time. If the hurt is strong enough they will leave. Of course we can love them and encourage them to live in the grace of Jesus and accept the destiny in Christ that is theirs but if they persist in their stubbornness then ultimately God’s purpose will go on without them.

I don’t think this problem is unique to megachurches. I have seen it in smaller churches as well where people get familiar with the church and then offended when things change.

[Listening to: Sweet Butterfly - Charles Webster - Chillout Sessions 4 (5:16)]

First e-mail, then the web, now… RSS! - Why People Should Care

Saturday, June 10th, 2006

Over the last couple of years a quiet revolution has been taking place on the internet that is only just now entering popular consciousness and that revolution goes by the acronym of RSS. Although there are several theories about what the acronym stands for my favorite is Really Simple Syndication. In order to understand why RSS is important you have to go back a bit.

In the late 80’s when I first encountered the internet I was at university in Sydney. At that time the computer science department had an aging VAX system for undergraduates with green screen terminals for us to do our programming assignments. That system was my first introduction to one of the three key internet technologies I’m going to cover in this post e-mail. The terminals were located in the basement of the Basser building and it wasn’t uncommon for my classmates and I when passing the Basser building on the way to somewhere else to “just pop in and check our e-mail”, often to the bemusement of other friends who were doing other courses. Back then we were the vanguard who had caught the e-mail bug and, although we could only e-mail other students, had become addicted to this form of communication.

The second major turning point in my internet lifetime was the first time I saw the World Wide Web (before it became just “The Web”). My colleague Dan Baldry called a few of us over to the comms room in the IBM building in Darling Park where he had his Thinkpad hooked in to the fax line with his modem and showed us IBM Web Explorer running on OS/2 hooked in to the World Wide Web. I remember being totally blown away by this and quickly installing this on my own machine so I could do it too. For me the web revolution had begun. Back then, like before with e-mail, there were only a few of us who had caught the bug, a few who rapidly grew into many more.

E-mail and the Web are two ways of communicating online that are fundamentally different. With e-mail you have someone else deciding what you will find interesting. Sometimes that is welcome like when you get e-mail from your family and friends. Sometimes this isn’t welcome like when you get spam. In either case information from multiple sources is delivered to you in an easy to use interface, your e-mail program, where you can manage and deal with it either manually or automatically using filtering rules and the like. With the web you decide what is interesting to you by visiting the websites that you are interested in. The problem with the web is that for every different source of information you are interested in you have to expend time and attention to go to the web site. If you find new information this is well and good but often, you find that nothing has changed and you have wasted the effort you expended. Also the effort you expend means that keeping track of a large number of sites is difficult in today’s time poor society due to the time it takes you.

What if you could have a single interface where all of the updates to all of the websites that you decide you want to see could be delivered to you in one simple to use and manage interface like your e-mail client? That is what RSS is! RSS requires you to get a piece of software, like your e-mail client or your web browser, called an RSS reader or RSS aggregator. Similar to e-mail you can either use a web based reader like Bloglines or News Gator or download a piece of software like Omea Reader. There are even browsers like Firefox or e-mail clients like the new version of Yahoo Mail that include RSS readers alongside their other functionality. The way a reader or aggregator works is like this: Web sites that support RSS publish a special web page on their site that is designed to be read by an RSS aggregator and not by a web browser. Every time they update their site they update this special page (there is software that helps them do this) which has a copy (or a summary for some sites) of the information that has been placed on the site formatted so that an RSS aggregator (not a web browser) can read it. What you do is go to your RSS reader and enter the URL of this special web page which is called a “feed”. Your reader will then go and check the page for you on a regular basis and, if the information has changed since the last time it checked, give you a list of the new items. You can then either read the item right there in your reader or go to the website itself for further information.

How do you find feeds to add to your reader? Well most sites (including this one) will advertise feeds by including a special orange icon like the ones you can see over there on the right. Alternatively they might include a little orange rectangle with the letters XML in white over it. If you click on the icon your browser will go to the special page and you can then go to the address bar, copy the URL, and paste it into your RSS reader. Once you know about the icons you will begin seeing them everywhere you go.

RSS is just starting to emerge from the preserve of the few early adopters into wider adoption by the masses so now is a good time to get on board. Go on, it really is a very useful tool.

[Listening to: Viola - Tek^tonic Remix - Moogwai - 5 Wishes and More (8:16)]

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