Archive for the ‘tech tips’ Category

Mar
12
    
Filed Under (geeky, leisure, review, tech tips, website) by Flash on 12-03-2007

In my household, the internet has replaced so many reference materials. If I want the definition of malapropism, phone number of my dentist, weather forecast for Abbotsford, map and directions from Vancouver Airport to the Pan Pacific hotel, today’s Get Fuzzy comic strip, to convert 500 milliliters into cups, or the latest news; I can find it quicker on the internet than the old print and TV medias I used to use. As a media that is constantly being update, the internet also has less chance of having become outdated.

The one reference material that we have yet to find a great replacement for is our television listings. Our two non web based alternatives are printed TV listings and our cable company’s listings on channel 2. Since television shows don’t follow schedules as tightly as they used to, with constant preempting, moving to alternative dates and times, and other annoyances; the printed listings are often inaccurate. While the cable companies listings may update, the ads they show on this channel take up most of the screen and leave room for information on three channels at the bottom, resulting in long waits to read the entire listings. It also only tells you what is on now; it’s no good for looking up when The Amazing Race will be on tomorrow.

The online choices all seemed to suffer from speed issues, as for each it takes quite a while for a web page with your customized listings in the grids we are all familiar with to be composed, and after if you wanted to click down to see higher numbered channels or to the left to see what is on later, you then have to wait again as a new page is created. Basically, all the sites offering North American TV listings are not yet Web 2.0.

That is why I have to share the website I found yesterday. I had envisioned almost exactly this site myself a couple of years ago, but I had predicted that it would be Google that would come out with it. Instead, it has come to life as Couchville.com.

Couchville is a free TV listings site that using Ajax to present the listings. What is Ajax? Well even those that are not too tech savvy have probably heard of JavaScript, which is a programing language that works within your browser and makes it so you can experience “special effects”, such as embedded video players, games, menus that expand when your mouse touches them, etc. Ajax is an improvement that combines JavaScript and other geeky items to make web pages that quickly update only the necessary portions of the page, and is what many of the current sites are using to present complex, updating information in what appears to be a simple form. A good example of it in use would be Google Maps, where you zoom in and out or scroll sideways with little or no delay.

Like Google Maps, Couchville’s listings grid can be grabbed by left clicking on it and then pulled in whatever direction you wish to go, with new results appearing almost as fast as you move the grid. There is a red line that represents the current time, which slowly scrolls across the listings as time progresses. Below the grid are navigation aids for getting quickly to places; such as a Jump to Current Time link that brings you back to the scrolling red line, and a drop down list of channels you can jump to if you are currently viewing channels 2 through 15 and want to get to channel 127. In the top left corner of the grid is the date and a calendar button to change to another date.

Any show on the grid can be clicked on to bring up more information on the right side of the screen, such as episode information. This will also show other stations and times that the show will be broadcast, each of which can be clicked on to quickly update the grid to show that time period. There will also be an Add To Favorites button that can be used to mark favorite shows that will then appear on your Favorites page that can be accessed via a link above the grid. Favorites are also starred on the grid, so that you can see shows you don’t want to miss at a glance. Each show’s pages can also be found by using the search box above the grid, and once on a page you are given the upcoming show times. Couchville even encourages linking to the pages of your favorite shows in blogs, such as pointing to their Doctor Who page.

In today’s environment of what seems endless repeats, I like that Couchville has chosen to mark fresh episodes of shows in the grid with New, rather than the standard Repeat marking on other sources. This focuses my eyes to things I am more likely to want to know, rather than drawing the eyes to items I’m likely to want to ignore.

Couchville is brought to us by Snapstream, a company that has been selling their digital video recorder (DVR) software for a number of years. DVR software allows one to add a TV tuner card to a computer, run a cable or satellite connection into the computer, and then use the DVR software to record TV shows to the hard drive or DVDs; much like a Tivo but with more control. You could use it on your main computer, burn the results to a DVD, and then watch a show on your standalone DVD player connected to your TV; or you could have a computer at the TV that is a dedicated multimedia machine. While the latter is an eventual goal in our household, I have not researched it enough to say whether Snapstream is a good or bad solution. Snapstream does have links throughout Couchville, such as Record this program in Snapstream links when looking at a particular airings information, and these links take those of use that do not have their software to a sales page; but the links are unobtrusive and only a small portion of the content, and so they combined with the few Google ads present are acceptable in exchange for this free resource.

The only negative thing I have to say about Couchville is that I don’t like that your settings are only stored in a cookie. This means that your settings are only on one computer, and more specifically they are only in one browser on one computer. Clear your cookies in order to try and solve an unrelated problem, and your Couchville settings are gone. Normally use Firefox, but using IE or Opera for some reason; your settings will not be there. Have multiple computers at home, or want to plan your evening’s TV viewing during you lunch hour at work; same issue. Most Web 2.0 sites realize that computers are now very common, and many of us are going to be often accessing more than one per day; and they therefore usually offer to let you also create a login to store your settings. I can understand why Snapstream is not offering such an offering, though; as they are trying to sell not a web-based solution, but rather their application that will keep track of those shows you want to watch and record.

As I previously stated, I had already envisioned a site very similar to this, and I had imagined that we would see it from Google. Google’s mission is “to organize the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful”, and I think a site similar to this one would allow them to fill in a major information gap that they have yet to address and yet is on everyone’s tongue each day, namely “What’s on TV?” As a Google product, I could expect my settings to be saved as long as I was signed into Google, and then I could have my favorite shows and others I marked as wanting to watch appear in my Google Calendar, have an RSS feed of today’s shows to view in my Google Reader, and choose to have a daily summary emailed to my Gmail each morning. There is a lot Google could do with such a product, and Snapstream would be wise to implement as many of these ideas as possible before Google creates a similar product. Alternatively, I could see this company, and thus Couchville, as the perfect acquisition for Google. Google, are you listening?

So Couchville will now join that list of sites that I visit daily. To sum up in a single word why they have become my online TV listings of choice when there are many alternatives… speed. An online tool in today’s world is not worth using if I feel like I’m still using a dial up modem. Couchville finally brings the speed I expect from all my other reference sites to TV listings.

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Feb
12
    
Filed Under (Technorati, ramblings, tech tips) by Flash on 12-02-2007

This weekend has been a busy one as I work on several computers, wiping them all and then setting them up fresh; but I do have time to get online as I sit waiting for various installations to finish.

I had posted previously that the website Technorati would not index this blog. Technorati is a site that keeps track of every known blog, and allows you to create a list of those blogs you follow so that you can read them all in one place. It also ranks blogs based on links from other blogs, frequency of posting, popularity, and other criteria I don’t know. Therefore, adding a blog I visit often to my favorites there lets the author(s) know I appreciate their work.

One of the main reasons for my previous postings is that I found when searching that a lot of people reported problems with Technorati indexing their blog; but not many ever said what was the solution. I therefore promised that I would follow up with my posting, just in case someone came here as a result of searching when they had issues.

I’m happy to report that my issues with Technorati are fixed. Sadly, I cannot say how they became fixed. I had emailed Technorati support, who promised to get back to me and even stated that if I hadn’t heard from them within a week, I could then request an update as to when they would be able to get to me. Reading the experiences of others indicated that often support had fixed the issue, but that sometimes it took weeks of reminders before support looked at their issue. I had decided to give it about 10 days before I bothered them again, and right about then the issue suddenly resolved itself. I had made no changes on my end that should have helped, and since Technorati never got a hold of me, I have no idea if they did something that resolved the issue on their end.

However, I have since noticed poor performance on their part in other areas. My wife’s blog will sometimes be listed in Technorati as not having been updated in five or six days, even though she has made at least two posts a day. This will be despite the fact that we can see the Technorati spiders visiting her blog’s feed multiple times a day. According to Technorati, my sister-in-law’s blog did not even exist until I manually pinged it today, after which it immediately said not only that the blog existed, but that it had already noticed when looking at three other blogs that they linked to it. I would think that a site that tries to index all blogs would notice one on Blogger, and especially notice it if it was linked to in other blogs it has indexed. Similarly, my stepson’s blog existed in their index, but Technorati had not noticed any updates in it for 77 days until I manually pinged it today.

So it appears that perhaps Technorati is suffering pains from the ambitious task they have tried to undertake. It is a good thing that I am not too concerned with my ranking there, or these would really get to me.



Jan
27
    
Filed Under (prices, tech tips, vista, windows, windowsvista) by Flash on 27-01-2007

Windows Vista is due out in a few days, and there is much debate as to whether to switch. Eventually most computers will use it simply because it will be what is offered with most new computers from this point forward. Whether your looking to buy it or even if you are just curious, here are the prices on both the Canadian and US Costco sites. You can even order Vista already on the Canadian site, though with our dollars so close in value to each other right now, it looks like it might be worth it to import a copy from the US, as the price differences are much higher than they should be if it was just the exchange rate making the difference.

Canadian prices

American prices

We aren’t considering upgrading here simply because our computers are not powerful enough to run it, and upgrades are not in the budget right now. However, even it was, I’d likely hold for a short bit and let the “average” computer become even stronger, so that it is not struggling in a few years with the combination of Vista and programs designed to run on Vista. Our current computers we’re built just as Windows XP was being released and ran it with lightning speed at first; but now that we have Service Pack 2 installed and the latest versions of Office, Photoshop, Firefox, etc., we are desperately wishing we could afford those upgrades now.

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Jan
27
    
Filed Under (tech tips) by Flash on 27-01-2007

Many of you probably don’t know what a feed is, and explaining it is for another post. Let’s just say for now that this blog and likely any blog that you might have set up automatically come with a simple feed, which then allows people to subscribe to your blog and read your posts in a feed reader. Some sites have tried to simplify feeds, if you’ve ever seen “Add to My Yahoo” or “Add to My Google”, that’s the simplified ones for the non-geeks.

What kept me from posting yesterday was that I was working on a new feed, as I wanted to hopefully get that set up before anyone subscribed to the old one. Being a new blog, I doubt that I have subscribers; however, if there is actually anyone else out there that has subscribed to my feed besides my wife, please be aware that I have changed the feed. You are, of course, welcome to continue with the old one, but there will be more features if you sign up to the new one. The new feed will also let me see how many people are reading me that way, which will provide motivation to keep posting.

You can add the new feed by going to my blog and adding the feed as you always do, and then deleting the current feed you are using. Alternatively, my site now has some feed buttons and links that point to the new feed, or you can click on this link Click here to show detailed map in single view.Click here to show detailed map in single view. Click here to show detailed map in single view.Click here to show detailed map in single view.



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