J.P.C. - Jason Clarke

Software, Hockey, and random ramblings.

This bass player is my hero

I liked to think that when I played acoustic bass with the Molestics, I was pretty animated on stage. Of course, I wish I’d seen this video clip - it sets a whole new standard for the term “animated bass player”. Plus, what’s not to like about an all female marimba band?

[Via A Welsh View]

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[Update] It seems Seth Godin agrees with me, at least that’s how I’m reading it. [/Update]

I’m sorry, but I don’t care in the slightest that Google doesn’t want people to use the word “google” as a verb meaning “to search” in general terms. In fact, to me it sounds a bit silly when spoken out loud. But their bellyaching (same link) actually makes me want to do it more.

Yes, you’re Google - at this point who gives a rat’s ass if your name remains trademarked? Everyone knows who you are.

I’m just not remotely feeling sorry for you.

Now excuse me while I go google some stuff using Yahoo’s search because I’m annoyed with Google.

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  • 0 Comments
  • Filed under: Geek Stuff
  • Jack Black on Piracy

    Jack Black’s new tongue-in-cheek public service announcement asking users not to be pirates (video embedded below):

    Via Jordan

    BTW, there are other funny Tenacious D clips available as well.

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  • 1 Comment
  • Filed under: General
  • So, guess what happens when one spouse (say, me) leaves a dish full of one part dish soap, one part water mixture in the sink with all the other dishes - without telling the other spouse (Fran)? Well, she decides to do the dishes, which I of course can’t complain about, and doesn’t notice the fluid in the dish in question as it’s put in the dishwasher.

    This post is just in case anyone else finds themselves in the same situation, with soap suds creeping out of the dishwasher at an alarming rate. (And so I have it archived somewhere, in case, you know… I need it again):

    Here’s the fix:

    • Dump all of your ice cubes into the bottom of the dishwasher to cool the water.
    • Sprinkle salt on the suds.
    • Pour some vinegar into the suds.
    • Scoop out as many of the suds as you can.
    • Turn your dishwasher’s knob (if it’s the old-school kind that has one) to the end of the last part of the cycle. It should be fairly straightforward to find the point where it actually starts draining the water. Usually this is right after the rinse cycle.
    • Once it’s empty, turn it all the way around to the rinse cycle, and let it rinse then drain 3 or 4 times. The first time or two, monitor things so that the suds don’t get out of control. If you did the vinegar and salt thing, it shouldn’t be a problem.
    • After about the 4th mini-cycle, you’re probably safe to do a regular load again to clean the dishes that are coated in dish soap. Again, monitor things, since the residue of dish soap on the dishes could cause a flare up of bubbles.
    • If you noticed dish soap bubbles, yet one more cycle might be in order to get the dishes clean.

    What fun!

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  • 11 Comments
  • Filed under: Funny Stuff
  • Public Health using podcast?

    We recently moved, and as always happens when you move, much of our mail has been going to our old address. We picked a stack of it up tonight, and as Francesca was going through it, she pointed out that we had received a notice from the North Delta Health Unit pointing out that chicken pox vaccination time was coming around for our oldest son.

    That’s not all that notable, but the fact that at the bottom of the postcard there was a large section that stated “Listen to a podcast with Dr. Monika Naus on Chickenpox at: www.bccdc.org” sure was. As Fran said, it’s not that long ago that they started using email and pointing people to their website. Now they’re using podcasts? Cool!

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  • Filed under: General
  • I don’t often promote my writing at Download Squad here on my personal blog, but today I need to point out a post I did about an upcoming web-based productivity suite called Scrybe. This thing looks incredible, and if it can deliver on the promises made in the promotional video, it’s going to be a hit. Check out the comments at Download Squad too - it’s almost unanimous that people want to try it.

    Here’s an excerpt:

    Scrybe is an online organizer that is grounded in one word: context. The user interface is designed to always give the user context relating to the data they are dealing with. So if you’re working in your calendar, you can fly up to a year view, or dig down all the way to a day view, and all of the related information is intelligently displayed so that you never lose track of where you are. Watching the video on their site, you immediately get a feeling of “that just makes sense”. Google Calendar is good, but doesn’t appear to be as good as this.

    Oh, and if you like it, please Digg it!

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  • 3 Comments
  • Filed under: Geek Stuff, News
  • Lego Ice Trays - I want one

    These are so cool - ice trays that make Lego bricks. Obviously they don’t actually work, since the backs of them won’t be properly shaped, but they’re still darn cool!

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  • 1 Comment
  • Filed under: General
  • FeedDemonBy far my favourite way to read RSS feeds is using FeedDemon on my laptop. While there tons to love in FeedDemon, there are a few things that I wish were a little different, and rather than submit them to the NewsGator newsgroup where they might get lost under the deluge of feature requests, I thought I’d outline my feedback right here on my blog. NewsGator has shown that they’re on top of what’s being said about their products in the blogosphere!

    So here are the things I’ve noticed that I think could use a little work:

    Bug: The Unread Folder View sometimes does not show all feeds with unread items in them. I think this happens when FeedDemon updates its feeds; the total unread number for the folder containing the feeds updates, but the feeds that went from no unread items to greater than one unread item don’t automatically show up. Quickly choosing the (all) Folder View then back to the Unread Folder View displays the missing feeds.

    Usability issue: Another issue I’ve found is when a feed update occurs while I’m reading a feed in “river of news” mode, (i.e. click on the feed’s title and all unread posts are showing), if new posts show up for the feed I’m viewing, it’s not made immediately clear to me that I’m not seeing everything available for that feed. Obviously clicking the feed title again will show the new stuff that just showed up, but the problem is that if I don’t notice an update has occurred, I will blindly press the hotkey to mark everything in my feed as read, thinking that I’ve actually read everything in the feed when I haven’t. So then I’ve just marked posts as read that I actually haven’t even yet seen. I’m not sure what the solution to this is - I hate dialog boxes, but maybe that’s the way to go - if you happen to be reading a feed in “river of news” mode and that feed is updated, maybe a dialog box needs to notify you that you’re not seeing everything for that feed. Actually, a better alternative might be to ensure that pressing the “mark feed as read” hotkey only marks items read that have actually been displayed on the screen. I’m sure this is the more difficult solution, but it’s definitely the most user-friendly approach.

    Feature request: Hotkey support. For better or worse, I’ve come to know and love the hotkeys used by Gmail and (gasp!) Bloglines… and for that matter, Google Reader. It drives me crazy that I need to hold down modifier keys to do almost anything in FeedDemon. I want to be able to move from feed to feed with the “J” and “K” buttons, instead of “Ctrl-Space” or some other multi-key combination. Ideally, the focus would remain on the reading pane even when using the hotkeys, so that for example I could press “J” to move to the next feed, and use the space bar to page down as I read, then hit “J” to move to the next item. (Like how it works in Gmail, etc.)

    Feature request: As a future enhancement I’d love it to see Nick take a page out of Bloglines’ book and implement the ability to scroll between posts in the “river of news” view. I prefer reading one document top-to-bottom like this, but it drives me crazy that I can’t easily skip a long article that I’m not interested in - I have to scroll down, down, down. I should be able to jump to the next article with one keystroke. Like “J”! :-) Even better, it would be great if I had the option of marking each post that I put the focus on as read as I arrive at it (or leave it), similar to how the new Google Reader does it.

    Nick and the rest of the NewsGator team, please take my feedback as it was intended - I’m hoping to add value to the product and help steer it in a direction that will benefit all users (as well as myself). And for anyone else that has read this far and doesn’t understand how great FeedDemon is, and why you really should pony up and pay for a great news agreggator, take my word for it - FeedDemon is awesome, and combined with NewsGator’s synchronization engine is simply unbeatable. And Nick Bradbury’s blog (he’s the creator of FeedDemon) is my favourite developer-written blog. He writes for the rest of us, while still managing to discuss the challenges he faces as a coder, while striking that hard to find balance between topic-specific posts, and regular life / family stories.

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  • 3 Comments
  • Filed under: General
  • Taylor Pyatt

    Good Lord, this is one of our newest Canucks?

  • 1 Comment
  • Filed under: Hockey
  • Wine all the Time

    My brother-in-law Scott has started a blog focused on his adventures in the wine industry up in the Okanagan. He’s gone through all of his winemaking courses, and is now a winemaker’s assistant. Right now he’s bottling after pulling some nasty hours during the crush. If you’re at all interested in wine and the art and science of wine making, check out Scott’s blog.

    As a side note, I’ve never personally been much of a fan of wine, but Scott’s managed to help me find a few varieties that I quite like. Pinot Gris, Pinot Blanc… good stuff. Speaking of Pinot Blanc, we had a bunch of it while setting up Scott’s blog, and let me tell you, working on a Mac (which I never do) and drinking wine does not make me at my most productive. But it sure was fun! :-)

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  • 0 Comments
  • Filed under: General
  • Caffeine has a half-life?

    Wow. According to How Stuff Works caffeine isn’t out of your system in 4 hours, as I’ve always heard. Instead, it has a half-life of 6 hours, meaning that if you ingest 200mg of caffeine at 9:00 AM, by 9:00 PM when you’re trying to wind down, you actually still have 50mg of caffeine left in your system from that morning java.

    So now, if you look forward to 9:00 AM of the next day, you actually still have 12.5mg of caffeine in your system from the previous day. Then you have your typical 200mg more of caffeine, and by the time you’re winding down at 9:00 PM again, you’ve got 53mg of caffeine left in your system instead of just 50. Obviously this cycle gets worse as time goes on.

    No wonder coming off of caffeine is so difficult and uncomfortable. But maybe it’s even more worth it than I previously thought.

    Note that I’ve determined I’m a “slow caffeine metabolizer“, compared to some people I know. *Cough* Francesca… *Cough*

  • 6 Comments
  • Filed under: General
  • The Official Canucks Blog

    Most people reading this will know that I’m a huge Vancouver Canucks fan.

    This is the second year that the Canucks will have had an official team blog, and they seem to be taking it more seriously this year, with more frequent contributions from varied sources, including some “super fans”. Unfortunately, they just recently went from full RSS feeds to partial feeds.

    Unsubscribed.

    [Update] I just showed this post to my wife, and I think I should probably clarify my point.

    The Canucks are doing a blog for the purpose of engaging their fans. They want us to think about the Canucks as much as possible. The only reason to turn off full-text RSS feeds is to force readers to come to their site and read the content there, rather than being able to read it in the news aggregator of their choice.

    Since I read most of my feeds offline regularly, a feed that is not full-text offers me very little value, and basically just annoys me when I realize I’m actively being excluded from that content.

    So, as a blogger (who gets paid for it) who’s words get given away in full-text feeds every day, I have a hard time stomaching the awful decision someone in the Canucks PR department has made. So I’ve unsubscribed.

    I’m their prime demographic.

    Their loss.

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  • 2 Comments
  • Filed under: General