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Trigger-Bloggers

Are you one of those trigger-bloggers? You know, you see something on some web site you think is wrong, or you just don’t like, and you post! post! post! as fast as you can, pointing out the errors of someone else’s way…

The latest I’ve seen is the bit about the podsafe music network and the crazy licensing terms brought up by Boing Boing. Now, Adam Curry responded about the changes they made, and this is good, he says:

This is a great example of how the web works; it started with a post on Boing Boing and was followed by a host of pile-jumpers. Although a personal email would have been preferred, it certainly got my attention.

All good, yes indeed, this is how it should work. I think the problem between public finger-pointing via weblogs and private-griping via email is that you leverage the power of the people when you create a post that others can read and point to and amplify. I’ll write up and send an email because I still have my own feedback on the terms, but there’s a chance it will fall into a black hole and I will never get a response.

Now, I’m not saying we don’t need trigger-bloggers, it helps to keep us all honest and on the level with each other, but weigh the options. Sure, everyone wants an email first but everyone also enjoys a good show…

Most importantly, if you do pull the trigger on someone, and they change their ways because of it, please mention the enlightenment you bestowed upon them and the resulting good times that followed. As of my writing this, I still await the post on Boing Boing mentioning the changes PodShow made.

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Nostalgia Fuel

Ahhh, I miss the good old days (of 5 years ago) when gas prices were a reasonable $2.00 per gallon.

I may need to revisit my idea of getting to the office via canoe, I’m pretty sure I could get there on the Bark River, though my commute time would increase quite a bit…

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SSH Killers

My head hurts, but it’s alright now… I can stop banging it against my desk!

See, I use SSH a lot. All day long. I connect to many different remote machines. Life is good. Except for one thing. At home I like my network, and I can stay connected to remote machines for days and weeks on end. At the office this is unpossible. Connections that sit idle for more than a few minutes get killed.

Oh sure, I tried to search for ssh, keepalive, timeout, and idle, all to no avail. It seems you can set things on the server to fix this, but not the client. Or so I thought!

See this Mac OS X Hint on router timeouts during ssh sessions. Specifically the comment by bill_mcgonigle on Thu, Jun 17 ’04 at 08:41PM. A quick trip to the OpenSSH site for a newer version of OpenSSH and the addition of a ~/.ssh/config file with ServerAliveInterval 60 it in and all seems well with the world…

Thanks Mac OS X Hints and bill_mcgonigle!

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DNDS Full Time

Congratulations to Dawn and Drew for taking the next (big) step with DNDS. See Drew’s post: fulltime podcaster.

Remember kids: Podcasting, it’s the wave of the future!

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Adium

Ok, since I had to talk about IM clients, Bill had to mention Adium to me, as others have, and I figured it was time to take a look.

So far I’m really liking Adium. There are a few things I think Fire does better, but I’m willing to give Adium a try, especially since I can use more than one account per service, which was my biggest complaint with Fire.

(Oh, they’re both GPL‘d as well, which is a big plus.)