Dedicated to my late brave, beautiful and silly mummy, Debra Ross. I love you mumster.

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Category archive for rubenerd

Because archives are so much easier than having just hundreds of posts on the home page. I learned that the hard way.

Nitpicking open source and free… again

Despite really like Ruby and Perl, due to time constraints and other obligations I’m still reluctantly using WordPress and PHP on most of my blog powered sites including this one. Until I make the desperatly wanted switch, WP news still affects me and I take a somewhat interested view of what’s going on. Not exactly a glowing endorsement, but then again it is the middle of the day here in Mawson Lakes so if I started glowing it would be a bit of a waste of energy.

It seems the widely used Revolution Theme for WordPress has gone open source. From the Weblog Tools Collection article:

Brian Gardner’s Revolution Theme for WordPress is going 100% Open Source. All the themes that are currently on Brian’s Revolution site will no longer be available as or October 31st and will be replaced with a set of new themes that will be developed and released under the GPL. The original Revolution themes will continue to be supported for those who have purchased them in the past.

Now I hate to be a nitpicker and certainly I consider myself more practical than ideological when it comes to the great software debate, but isn’t this an example of something becoming Free Software and not just Open Source? Aren’t most applications written in interpreted languages Open Source by their very nature because you can read the files? If Brian Gardner is releasing his themes under the GPL, then wouldn’t that make them Free (as in speech as well as beer) instead of just Open Source?

I guess it boils down to disclosure; if you purchase a theme from someone instead of downloading it gratis, there’s probably a clause limiting your right to redistribute or share the code. Still, isn’t that more of an issue of the software not being Free, rather than it not being Open Source?

In any event I congratulate Brian for going down this path. I suspect he will be getting far more users and interest after doing this, and he deserves all of it.

And now I’m off for a Caeser salad. I’ve been having cravings for Caeser salad. Is that healthy?

9rules is not a manufacturer of luxury tape measures

Yesterday during one of my much enjoyed and looked forward to weekend coffee breaks with my MacBook Pro at the Boatdeck Cafe in Mawson Lakes, I posted a verbose, long winded, fun and largely ridiculous post discussing ways in which bloggers can help to maintain a regular post schedule.

ASIDE: I’m still holding out that if I mention the name of their establishment in almost every post I make, they’ll eventually start sponsoring this blog and my podcast. Flawless logic right? If they can’t afford to pay me, I’d just as happily accept a few free cups a day. Whatya say guys?

9rules leaf logoWhat I wasn’t expecting was a comment from none other than Mike Rundle not of our beloved Rundle Mall I discussed a few weeks ago, but of the selective 9rules blog community in the States. Who would have thunk it?

As it turns out, he was responding to an off the cuff remark I made under the "Caching Solution" heading:

To appear as though you’re more reliable to website alliances like 9rules that value regularity over quality, people write several posts a day, but release them over a period of days.

Mike was quick to correct my misapprehension:

At 9rules we value over quality over quantity any day of the week, and especially when we’re looking at blogs that want to join. If somebody split entries up over a few days just to look like they’re posting more frequently then we’d see right through that.

We’d much rather see a 9r member post great articles once a week or so then lesser quality articles every few days.

As someone who:

  • discusses his primary interest in computer software and lifestyle on his blog
  • posts only on a semi-regular basis
  • does it just as a hobby
  • enjoys grilled cheese sandwiches
  • isn’t even living in the same country as the time zone reported on the site half the time
  • posts as many multifarious, random posts as on-topic posts

… I would certainly never quality for 9rules or any other such site. It doesn’t bother me though because I’m clearly not what they’re looking for. Besides, it works both ways: I’m certainly not changing what I like to do to conform to another system!

I did appreciate Mike’s comment though and replied with a comment that looks quite like this one. Word for word almost, it’s uncanny.

Thanks for your comment Mike.

Rest assured I was mentioning your site very much tongue in cheek! That said, lets just say I know that on the basis of regularity (to say nothing of quality, and only talking about specific subjects) I certainly wouldn’t qualify, and I was making light of it.

I guess being a member of the "Ruben Schade" blogging network is enough work as is, right? :-)

You can find 9rules (surprising thought it may seem) at http://9rules.com/. For what it’s worth, I did manage to find Dan Lockton’s fascinating sustainable architecture website through them, even if he’s no longer a member.

My sophisticated blogging system
My very sophisticated blogging system! Photo from my Flickr account

My sister Elke now has a lettuth weblog

For those interested, my fabulous sister Elke has not only started using Twitter again, but she has started a weblog of her own over on WordPress.com. The embarrasing thing is she’s doing a better job than I am already.

You can find her at http://lettuth.wordpress.com/. The name was inspired by her favourite image from I Can Has Cheezburger. I’ve been told that site has images of cats, or weasels, or other furry animals having serious intellectual discussions.

Ah Hath a Lettuth

How do you curb weblog sporadic-ness?

Let the rambling of a blond guy begin!
Let the rambling of a blond guy with illustrations from Clannad begin again!

A more public aspect of my personality which I think I share with more people than not (or at least I hope so) is the way ideas tend to come out of my brain in spurts rather than continuous streams. Have I lost you yet?

What this means in the context of podcasts and weblogs is that certain days I literally have dozens of ideas for shows and blog posts, and other days I have trouble coming up with more than one. Today would be an example of the former; I have no less than 30 blog post ideas and over 50 show ideas I could ramble on about for paragraphs and hours respectively, when on Tuesday this week I was completely fresh out of ideas.

This raises the inevitable question: in a 24/7 medium such as the Internet, how best do I overcome this problem? There are several solutions I’ve been able to observe, but none seem to have worked as well for me as I would have hoped. One wonders why I call them solutions then! As usual in a situation like this I like to break out the ol’ reliable definition list:

The Frank Nora Notes Solution
Frank Edward Nora hosts the long running Overnightscape New Time Radio show and podcast with the help of carefully written notes and ideas that he jots down during the course of his day to discuss at night.

This method would work wonders for someone as intelligent and astute as Frank, but for me it doesn’t work as well; especially for recorded audio; because the initial enthusiasm I might have for an idea that I hastily jot down might have passed by the time I record. Another problem is I tend to fall into the dreaded trap of over-thinking a problem or issue which causes me to bore people with posts that go on for hundreds of lines or shows that ramble!

The Empty Post Solution
A trick I picked up when I first started blogging a few years ago was to create the heading for a post, leave it as a draft and fill out the content later. All that I ended up with after doing this for a few months were a couple of well thought out entries in a sea of drafted posts with titles that I couldn’t understand!

This could work sometimes, but I must learn not to rely solely upon it.

The Caching Solution
I would consider this a form of cheating even though I’m sure many bloggers employ the tactic. To appear as though you’re more reliable to website alliances like 9rules that value regularity over quality, people write several posts a day, but release them over a period of days.

I consider this a problem because it defeats the purpose of a 24/7 internet entirely, what’s the point of releasing something current and interesting if it’s already a few days old? Perhaps some types of posts are more suited to this approach than others, but for now I personally prefer to release posts after I’ve written them.

Are you following anything he's written here?
Are you following anything he’s written here?

The Optimist Solution
If posting at random intervals somehow makes me appear less professional, then why don’t I just quit now while I’m ahead? Because some posts that are well thought out and some that are just plain silly are still better than none at all!
The Jim Kloss and Dave Wares Solution
While accepting a reduced roll to understandably accomodate other interests, when people think of Whole Wheat Radio they probably still think of the personality of Jim Kloss. His self depreciating humour doesn’t mask his warm personality and strong character which shows through everything he does. When he writes or speaks about something, nobody cares if it’s late or sporatic because it’s just that good.

Dave Wares’ photo gallery blog is another example of this. I don’t get angry if he doesn’t post for a while, I look forward to when I get to see his latest work because it’s just so damned good, even if it does put my photography to absolute shame! This would differ from a news site which if it didn’t update I wouldn’t use them anymore.

The Rampler Unplugged Solution
Another idea from the creative genius Frank Nora, the idea behind a Rampler show is that you record it and upload it online with minimal or no post production. This means you maintain the original mood and atmosphere of the recording, plus it takes much less work which inevitably leads to more material being uploaded which benefits everyone!

I’ve started the Rubenerd Unplugged series as my own take on this solution, and plan to start just as soon as Rubenerd.com appears again. I seem to be having hosting problems just like Frank did… perhaps there really is a conspiracy going on here!

The Bromothymol Blue Solution
Get it? Get it?
The Obsessive Solution
If people associate regularity with professionalism, then give them what they want! Sure the posts you write when you don’t have much inspiration or interest will be dull and not worth reading, but at least they’re regular! I mean, what’s the point of having a hobby like a weblog or podcast if you just do them to relax, present ideas and enjoy yourself?

I’m not a fan of this solution!

Are you following anything he's written here?
I think Ruben just needs to get out more: that’d solve everything!

In the end, I’ve decided to take a bit from each of these solutions and use one I’ve thought of myself. I’ve decided to call it the Fresh Coffee Solution because it reminds me of the feeling you get after having an especially good cup. Cliche? Never!

My solution bases itself on the fact that sometimes I might have interesting things to talk about or post here on, and sometimes I might not because I’m human!. To maintain quality instead of buying a 1 kilogram of instant coffee that would last every day, I’ll instead focus my energy here when I do have something worth saying, and not when I don’t. Again sites like 9rules that state that they look for regular bloggers as one of their conditions might not like my approach, but I prefer to think of the internet as an alternative to a traditional media model where one-size-fits-all rules.

If this post made absolutely any sense to you at all, or if you have another solution you’d like to share, or if you’ve figured out a way to eat electronic fibre to somehow keep your websites more regular as it were, feel free to comment below! I’d love to do a follow up to it at some point either here, or on my show.

Wireless networking and podcast musings

Well here we are once again with another useless (or at least somewhat useless) Rubenerd Blog Musings Post. As I’ve mentioned previously, the justification for this category of posts’ existence is that I don’t have my audio recording and production equipment with me to record my Rubenerd Show podcast, audio magazine new time radio show, or whatever it is the kids are calling them these days. I’ll be going to the city later today and purchasing a headset, a far cry from the mixers and other fancy riff raff I’ve got back in Singapore, but it’ll let me get on the airwaves again and possibly even get Skype up and working again to hopefully interview some people. If the audio quality is less than stellar, I’ll be able to encode it with LAME at a lower bitrate, saving space and upload time which here is a more important consideration now that we have usage quotas!

ASIDE: I’d better be careful, this is a Rubenerd Blog musings post but the previous paragraph had a sliver of substance to it.

When I was a kid in early primary school I used to pronouce "silver" as "sliver". I also had trouble remembering which ones were elbows and which ones were shoulders. Good things I can pronounce silver now at least.

The front of the Boatdeck Cafe using Google Maps street view
The front of the Boatdeck Cafe using Google Maps street view

I’m once again sitting at the Boatdeck Cafe in Mawson Lakes once again (including this bracketed area, I’ve said once again three times) having some pancakes and a Betty Blue Sea of Espresso. If you live around Parafield or other areas around north Adelaide, make your way over to Mawson Lakes in the morning for brekkie here, the view of the lake out the huge windows and the food are just fantastic. I’m so poetic I could stanza myself. Stanza myself?

Unfortunately for me the WiFi doesn’t seem to be working today. If you’ve listened to any of my shows you’d know how much I loathe wireless networking for the simple reason that it’s even less reliable than regular networking! I can remember back to 1999 when we first got broadband interent (SingTel Magix, anyone from Singapore remember that?) and I had visions of 2010 where every coffee shop and cafe would have a wired Ethernet port and a power socket on every table. I guess I didn’t realise wireless was on the horizon!

Nagisa Furukawa with coffee and breakfast
Nagisa Furukawa with coffee and breakfast :-)

Despite the WiFi revolution or whatever the kids are calling it thesedays, at home I refuse to use it: the computers in Singapore and here in Adelaide are connected through Category 6 cables to gigabit Ethernet switches. This means when a network connection fails (and it rarely does) I can figure out what the problem is much more quickly. I think it comes down to control: I’m more in control with cables because I have control over the transmission medium. I said control three times in that last sentence, four times including this sentence.

Until I have the capability to create micro-wormholes that my wireless networking beams can travel through without being interrupted by furniture, concrete walls and stale grilled cheese sandwiches, I feel more comfortable with wired Ethernet. Part of me also is concerned about security: the experts claim the WPA encryption standard is unbreakable, but as I recall the previous WEP (wired equivalent privacy!) standard was told to be just as secure. With cables, static IPs and a whitelist of approved MAC addresses, everything just works faster, more reliably and hopefully more securely.

The front of the Boatdeck Cafe using Google Maps street view
View of the lake from the Boatdeck Cafe using Google Maps street view

ASIDE: I had no idea that this post would turn into a rant about why everyone should stop using WiFi at home. I mean, wired ethernet is the solution to everything: people only complain when they’re houses become jungles with tangled weaved cables running through every hallway and room. I love it, it makes our house look like a place where work gets done! Nothing says "I work my arse off on computers while you sit around doing nothing" than a tangled mess of cables running along every walkway.

Pink Ribbon On a more serious note, I’ve been thinking about mummy a lot more again lately. A few days ago I was at the Boatdeck Cafe enjoying a Betty Blue Sea of Espresso while doing some light programming and having a great conversation with a friendly woman about life the universe and everything. She was about the age of my mum and had gone through the rigamarole of breast cancer treatment herself. She couldn’t believe that mummy had gone through over a decade of almost non-stop chemotherapy and radiation treatment; most people call it quits and move on after the second course. Upon talking about it, I remember one of the things that stuck with me the most when she passed on that my dad told me: he said the reason why she went through all that pain and suffering for such a long time was that she wanted her kids to have memories of her. Had she passed on after the first round back when we still lived in Australia, Elke and I probably won’t have remembered much about her. I’ve been coping better with the colossal void in my life she’s left over the last half year, but talking about it brought back the emotions again. I really, really do miss her.

Another thing I know though, and it is cliche, but the last thing she would want would be for me to still be wallowing in sorrow now. Chin up, moving on! What is it that the gym owner from the Brittas Empire always used to say? I forget, never mind!

The front of the Boatdeck Cafe using Google Maps street view
End of the Bethel Island road, by Varmint Al

I was originally going to talk about the Olympics finishing up and how grateful I am for the fact, but I’m going to save that for a separate post. I learned something about the Aussie Olympic team that just irritates the hell out of me, though in hindsight I shouldn’t have been surprised.

This musings post will be ending now because it’s the end of the post, and the best place to end something is either when it’s finished, when you’ve worn out your welcome, or if you’ve lost the interest of the people who were reading your material. I think I qualify for all three in this circumstance.

Cleaning out accumulated FTP crap

Accumulated FTP crap!

Doing some serious cleaning on the back-end here, so the site might be slow for the next few hours. Note to self: delete things you haven’t used for 2 years on a more regular basis!

Is WordPress news not anymore?

WordPress users, have you noticed how the "WordPress News" section on the Dashboard page seem to contain less news stories, and more sensationalist comparisons and attacks on other blogging software these days?

WordPress News on the Dashboard

You don’t need to advertise or convince us to use your blogging software, we clearly are already if we can see these!

This useless 810th post has the ID 1337

I’ve known for a while now that post ID numbers don’t correlate with the actual number of the post. For example, this post is the 810th published post but the internal ID is 1337. It seems the gap between the actual post number and the ID seems to be widening even faster now that WordPress keeps history of posts as well, as I understand it.

Aside from a few lingering problems, I can’t wait to move over to my own rolled eruby system, it’ll be great to be able to reference a post with the number it actually is! Imagine it: I could tell people to look up post number 810, and it would actually be post number 810 not 1337!

And because this post is 1337, here’s an obligatory picture of people wielding swords:

Yagami Kazuma and Kannagi Ayano from Kaze no Stigma
Yagami Kazuma and Kannagi Ayano from Kaze no Stigma. They both look really angry for some reason: nice colours though!

RichardDawkins.net