Monthly Archive for November, 2007

Two Years As A Mac User

Apple logoIt was a little over two years ago I made the “switch” to Apple for my main computer with the purchase of a G4 Mac mini and I have not really looked back. As a technologist, I pretty much keep my eyes open to every bit of technology out there. Until Mac OS X came out I did not give the Mac a serious look because in all honesty, the “Classic” OS sucked. It was slow and it seemed to struggle with multiple applications running concurrently.

Well, that is a long time ago now and Mac OS X is on it’s fifth cat now with Leopard coming out last month. Leopard seems like a whole other world when looking back at that shitpile they called OS 9. With Apple’s migration to Intel hardware it felt like it was a good time to upgrade and besides, I have been using the same Dell Inspiron 8000 laptop for about 7 years now so I decided to kill two birds with one stone.

Enter my new 17″ Macbook Pro that recently arrived. I named it Aries and it is a pretty sweet machine. I got this sucker loaded up with the 2.6ghz processor, 4GB ram, 200GB 7200 RPM hard drive.

A lot of my free time the past couple of days has been spent setting it up my way. You know how that goes, you get a new machine and you have to tweak the hell out of it, install your favorite applications, and iron out any kinks to reach that point where it feels perfect.

From my many many years using a Windows computer as my main machine I had a set of apps that I had grown accustom to and would always make sure they are installed. Well, on the Mac it is the same, except when I made the switch I had to spend some time figuring out what applications that did not have Mac versions and what replacements that were comparable to what I used on Windows. Luckily it seems more and more organizations are making their products multi-platform. I already have Microsoft Office, Adobe Photoshop, Thunderbird, and Firefox on the Mac, but not a day goes by anymore where you don’t read about other application being ported.

Here are some of my favorite Mac apps:

skEdit
On the PC I was a HUGE fan of UltraEdit - I still install and keep it updated on my Windows machine at home. skEdit is not quite as good as UltraEdit, but it is very close. When I first made the switch to Mac, I tried TextWrangler and a few others that had the ability to do editing/saving over SFTP connections. skEdit does the colored syntax, WebDAV, and even has a plug-in to work with Subversion repositories which is cool.

Adium
Adium is like the ULTIMATE instant messenger on the Mac or on any platform for that matter. The closest thing to it is Pidgin which is my favorite on Windows and Linux. It took me some time to discover Adium. When I first made the switch I was using AOL’s AIM client for Mac OS X which by the way sucks and has not been updated in YEARS. I kept seeing Adium mentioned on TUAW and decided what the hell and gave it a try. Good call - it is very customizable, supports pretty much every IM protocol, and is a very solid app.

Cyberduck
In the Windows world I never did find an FTP/SFTP client that really clicked for me. I often switched between WS-FTP Pro and SecureFX - both commercial options and both decent. Thankfully on the Mac I found free options that I happened to like better. I first started off with Fugu, but unfortunately Fugu does not seem to be maintained any longer and it still a PowerPC app. So I started using Cyberduck and it has proven to be a great little program. Not sure why but the Mac seems to have many more good FTP/SFTP options that on Windows. Perhaps it is because of all the web designers that work on Macs. Who knows?

What I am looking for now is a good replacement for HyperTerminal. Yeah I know it is not a great app, but when I need to connect via serial console to a router or firewall the options on the Mac don’t seem to be as mature yet.

Here’s to the next year of Mac goodness :)

–Jon

What The Hell Is Wrong With These People?

Last night on CNN I saw this beauty of a report and now I found it on the web. After watching the report, and reading it on the web I am at a loss for words.

So apparently if you are a woman who is gang-raped in Saudi Arabia, you are guilty because, well, you are a woman?

Here is a nice tidbit about our “friends” treatment of women:

Under Saudi law, women are subject to numerous restrictions, including a strict dress code, a prohibition against driving and a requirement that they get a man’s permission to travel or have surgery. Women are also not allowed to testify in court unless it is about a private matter that was not observed by a man, and they are not allowed to vote.

Also note that 15 of the 19 hijackers that attacked us on 9/11 were from Saudi Arabia as well.

Saudi Arabia’s wealthiest STILL continue to fund terrorist organizations that are against us, and other Western nations.

Despite all of this, Bush himself has said that they are our “friends” and considers them a strong ally while we funnel them BILLIONS of dollars a year for oil and aid. Meanwhile they take our money and invest in some of the biggest American corporations. Citigroup’s (Citibank - the third largest bank corporation in the US) largest individual shareholder is Saudi Prince al-Waleed bin Talal. He also owns substantial stakes in HP, Kodak, Ebay, and Amazon.com. So the more oil we buy from our “friend” the more our nation’s largest multinational corporations are owned by these people who represent a culture that is diametrically opposed to our way of life.

This is just mind-boggling to me - that we can ally and be “friends” with this nation of islamic fundamentalists whose very ideology goes against the values that the United States was founded upon - a country that is constantly ranked as among the worst violators of human rights in the world by Amnesty International.

Meanwhile here in the Western hemisphere we still have a boycott of Cuba for being communist….

Maybe it is time for a top-down review of all of our policies, foreign and domestic. I strongly believe that ALL of our policies should be able to be reconciled with the values of the country as a whole, not the benefit of the top 1% of the wealthiest people in the world.

–Jon

“Give me Liberty, or give me Death!”

The title of this post is a quote that is often attributed to Patrick Henry in 1775. Despite the fact that there is some controversy over the accuracy of this quote, the meaning behind it rang very true with the founding fathers. They felt that freedom and liberty were more than words, but ideas that were so important that they were worth fighting for. And often dying for. That the founding fathers would choose to die rather than to give up any freedoms says something.

There is also this quote that is often attributed to Benjamin Franklin though as with the quote above it is possibly mis-attributed:

“Those who would give up Essential Liberty to purchase a little Temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety.”

Again, this illustrates the thinking of the era - that freedom and liberty were the ideas and values and were paramount to everything else, including security.

This idea is even enshrined in the preamble of the United States Declaration of Independence:

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.

In 230-plus some odd years we have done a 180 and now the attitude seems to be “give up your freedoms and liberty and we will make you safe from terrorists” which ironically plays right into the terrorists’ hands. The goal of terrorism is not to kill - that is a means to achieve the desired end result - which is to strike fear into an opponent to get what you want.

In fact, here is the definition of terrorism from the dictionary:

ter·ror·ism — the use of violence and threats to intimidate or coerce, esp. for political purposes.

Since 9/11 we have seen assorted legislation and actions in the name of security and almost every bit of it sacrificing the very freedoms our forefathers died to give us including the suspension of Habeas Corpus via the Military Commissions Act.

While watching the Democratic debate on CNN last night they touched on this concept that you have to choose human rights or security and cannot have both. They did not get into it too much, but I thought Barack Obama nailed it when he said that “The concepts are not contradictory.” which is pretty much how I feel about it. They are not mutually exclusive concepts.

I personally believe that we as a nation have lost our moral compass and we need to get it back. There was a time where other countries looked up to us because we practiced what we preached. Now we imprison people indefinitely without right to legal counsel in the name of security.

“But but but, we are only imprisoning the terrorists!” is what you will always hear. Yeah, the majority of the people in Guantanamo are suspected terrorist douche bags, but not every person that is detained is necessarily a terrorist. Mistakes are made and sometimes the wrong people are detained. And by denying these people legal representation, and in some cases torturing them we are acting in a manner that is inconsistent with the values that this nation was built upon.

By allowing this meme to permeate the American lexicon, it has had a cascading effect on the world. Countries that once feared us mock us. Some countries like Iran feel emboldened. Most of our friends now keep us at arm’s length and do not trust us.

Another often overlooked side effect of our behavior is the old golden rule - “…do to others what you would have them do to you…” - now when American troops are captured in battle they are even more likely to be mistreated because we have set the bar lower.

So the question is, in another 200 years what type of nation will the United States of America be? If there was a way for our forefathers to come back to life, would they be proud or full of shame?

I honestly can’t tell you. I have no idea where this is going. But I can tell you this - we are on the WRONG track and if we don’t get on the right track soon, the American dream may well perish.

–Jon

Habits That Are Hard To Break

We all have our vices. For some it’s TV. Others it may be alcohol or drugs. Some people even get so addicted to video games that it ruins their life.

What’s my vice? None other than Starbucks. I never really gave much thought about going to Starbucks on the way to work in the morning and plunking down four bucks for a venti mocha.

But it was not just the morning. I would also get one around lunch time. And if it was one of those slow days I would get yet another. At an average of four bucks a pop, that is twelve dollars spent per day.

Do the math over the course of a week, and then over a month, and then over a year. It is amazing how quick it adds up.

It finally registered for me when I was looking at my bank statements online and saw this pie chart for my expenditures last year. There was this relatively small slice of the pie that was there nonetheless - it was Starbucks. Sure enough, over the course of 2006 I managed to spend over $2,200 dollars just buying mochas! Needless to say I was displeased when I realized this. Think of what you can do with an extra $2,200 a year. Four bucks here, four bucks there, and damn - the little things DO add up, painfully hehe.

Empowered with this knowledge I have since started scaling back. I went down to two a day a couple of weeks ago, and now I am doing about 1.5 a day averaged out. Hopefully by next spring it will be an occasional “treat” as opposed to a staple of my diet.

Here is a sample of what last week looked like:

A week worth of mochas

So yeah, take my advice. Sometimes making a seemingly small change can make a big change down the road. Money saved from less mochas will lead to a new laptop for me :)

–Jon

The Obligatory “First” Post

Welcome to Jon’s Journal.

Well, this is my like my third try at putting a blog up. You all know what they say about “third time” so I will leave it at that and hope for the best.

I attempted to write a blog back in like 2002 when it was the “new” thing, but never really got into it. Perhaps it was the shitty blog sites out there, or the lack of motivation. Whatever it was that deterred me seems to have passed.

So what’s changed? Hell if I know, but I am a rather opinionated person and I have a lot of shit to say these days. Figure the frequency of updates on this site will depend on how busy I am at the moment, or if there is something that catches my attention that I feel like writing about.

For example, if I get home from work, nothing really happened, nothing really keeping my attention at the moment I might not post jack. But say that idiot Bush does something dumb (ok, so I might be updating the site quite frequently lol) I might come on here to rant. Or maybe I will watch something on pay-per-view that I never saw and feel the desire to write about it.

Either way, this will be my place to spill thoughts on technology, politics, news, entertainment, eating, life etc. I am leaving commenting enabled in case people feel the urge to discuss what I post, or to tell me to go to hell because they dislike what I wrote.

Let’s see how this thing works out.

–Jon