808s & Heartbreak by Kanye West
808s & Heartbreak by Kanye West. (@Musebin)
Take the music, condense to 4 songs, add 4 new for the additional lyrics, hire someone that can actually sing, and it might be interesting.
Ramblings of a Product Guy
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808s & Heartbreak by Kanye West. (@Musebin)
Take the music, condense to 4 songs, add 4 new for the additional lyrics, hire someone that can actually sing, and it might be interesting.
In a recent post, Hyperlink Manager, I discussed a hypothetical software tool I’d like to see. The goal is to have a better way to select the browser a link should be opened in.
Since that time, two solutions for Mac have popped up: Choosy and Highbrow.
I’ve been using Choosy for about a month now. While it doesn’t do everything I described, it does a very elegant job of what I need.
Here is how I have it set up. On clicking a link:
The only enhancement I’d really like to see is automated rules based on the URL.
Choosy is currently in beta and will be released as shareware eventually.
Highbrow came out right about the same time as choosy as a full-fledged 1.0 release. It costs $12. I haven’t used it, but it appears to be quite similar in function.
Know of any others or solutions for other platforms (Windows or Linux)? Let me know!
This is incredible! Make sure you scroll down to the video.
http://www.jonesbigasstruckrentalandstorage.com/
(via Timur)
I just imported many of my Pownce posts to here. My apologies if this causes my feed, FriendFeed, or anything else to go completely haywire.
Hi all,
As you may have heard, Pownce is shutting down as of December 15. It’s been fun! You can follow me on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com… . Cheers!
This is another tool I have not been able to find and would like to see out there. Know of something that accomplishes exactly what I’m looking for? Post a comment!
The default browser of my system is not always the browser I need to open a site in.
On my computer, my default browser is Camino. This is the browser that I do my day-to-day general browsing in, however some sites explicitly block Camino since their developers have probably never heard of it and are unaware that their site probably works just fine as long as they are testing in Firefox. In these cases, I use Safari instead since it is more widely supported.
While working, I keep Firefox open as it is our defacto supported browser for our internal applications. At my prior company, all internal applications were developed for IE6–a completely different environment, but the exact same challenge arises. Also, before putting the argument out there that I should just use Firefox as my default browser–I like my sub one-second launch time. Firefox (especially on Mac) is a beast.
Thus the challenge is when links are sent around, via email or IM. I want to be able to just click a link and have it open in the desired browser. Currently, I must copy/paste the URL from IM. Even worse, since Entourage (Microsoft’s very sub-par Mac equivalent for Outlook) doesn’t have a “copy link” contextual menu option, I must click the link, let it try to open in Camino, then copy the URL from the address bar!
This problem is especially magnified with the adoption of SSBs.
There is a nice Firefox plug-in for Windows users to solve this problem: IE Tab. This extension allows exactly what I mention about specifying URLs to render with IE, all from right within the Firefox window. This is neat, but still doesn’t account for SSBs nor does it help us Mac using folks.
The best way to solve for this would be to have an extremely lightweight application or script that is set to the default browser (instead of a “real” browser). Making the script or application fast is the absolute most important criteria.
This application or script has one job only: to “listen” for URLs, parse them, decide what browser is appropriate, and send them on their merry way. Thanks to SSBs, it needs the ability to set a different browser for each URL type. For ease-of-use, it should allow a user to just enter a domain (for example “www.chuckburt.com”) but for power users it would be great to accept a regular expression. This would allow some more advanced uses such as sending a link to media to a specific media player.
Though it has a niche user-base, there are plenty of people–power users–that would adopt it if it were free or very inexpensive. I doubt people would pay more than $10-15 for this functionality (if anything), but it might make decent donationware. I would certainly pay a modest fee for it.
Come enjoy some ribs, ‘slaw, and cornbread.
This is an idea that has been scratching at me for quite some time. The biggest reason: I need to find something like this!
Everybody has growing file collections. Some of us definitely have more than others—my photo collection alone is reaching 80 GB! A single recording session can easily reach 20 GB. Acquired media aside (purchased/downloaded music, movies, etc—as it’s replaceable), everyone has a need for an elegant solution to back up this data.
There are a number of products and services popping up that attempt a solution to this problem, but none do it quite right. I have to give Apple a lot of credit here—they figured out a way to make backup so simple, the masses can finally do the right thing! Time Machine is not perfect for everyone, but it’s a huge step in the right direction.
The purpose of this post is not to discuss software solutions, but rather the hardware that accompanies it. While the right software is what gets people backing up, it always requires the right hardware1 to make it work.
Online services (aka “cloud” storage) allow users to upload their data to online servers. Some of these include backup software and all tout the benefits of being failure-safe and secure.
Hardware solutions consist of external hard-drives, file servers, and more intelligent products such as the Drobo (which is extremely cool).
The cons of both online and hardware solutions exclude any one solution from being ideal for me. I am a heavy data user that wants fast access and redundant, off-site backup. There is nothing that easily and elegantly fills this need. Sure, I could purchase “cloud” storage and manually back things up, but that requires quite a lot of time. I want something I can set and forget in the Time Machine sense.
This leads me to what I think is the ideal solution to meet all of these needs. There would definitely be challenges in doing it right, but I think the need would make the investment worthwhile.
First, there is a hardware device that acts as the primary solution. This hardware device needs to redundant, easy to use, and smart.
Behind the hardware device, sits the ever-present protection of an online backup solution. It’s only for the event of a truly catastrophic event.
A solution like this—done correctly—would solve backup problems for some time to come. It gives users access to data quickly, redundant local backup, and off-site protection. The beauty is that the software is irrelevent: users can use any software solution they like, e.g. Time Machine, SuperDuper!, Retrospect, FlyBack, or anything else.
It might not be a product that everyone in the world would need, but it would be great for power users, professional or prosumer photographers, and just about anyone else that doesn’t have needs quite as high as video editor. Most importantly for me, I would buy one.
1 In this case, “hardware” can mean online backup services as well.
2 As someone that has woken up in the middle of a house fire and lived to tell about it, this is a bit of an ever-present threat in the back of my mind. A fire is a terrible thing, but losing all of your photos on top of it is icing on the suck cake. Plus, you never, ever, want to worry about grabbing things like that when evacuating. We are fortunate we live in a time where we can store things like photos off-site and still have access to them!
3 I swear, I’m not being paid for this. That said, offers are always welcome.
4 Obviously, it should be as forward-looking as possible. That said, if any potential future file-systems have specific hardware requirements that are unrealistic, they would have to be considered on a case-by-case basis.