Dan's BlogHaving got the car back, everything was going smoothly for a few months.. I've been running Eclipse PDT for my PHP work for a while now, and during my down time discovered how to get it working with XDebug. Back from Bali, to 21 degree, wet days in Brizzy. B's back at work and I've got a week before I start at Blue Dog, so I'm thinking of things to do to take up the time. Brisbane to Singapore went reasonably well. B lasted most of the flight but the travel sickness caught up with him in the last 10 minutes, so he's taking time out in one of Changi's many chillout zones while I wander around the terminal. In swotting up for my Zend Certified Engineer exam, I decided that I should really knuckle down and learn a bunch of design patterns if I'm ever going to consider myself a true OO coding professional. I picked up my first Mac, a 15" Powerbook G4, in 2005. In recent times however it's been feeling a little long in the tooth - especially compared to Brian's Macbook and my iMac. It's been a great laptop though, and being out of work at the moment I prefer being out and about to sitting at my desk. So I wanted to give it an overhaul. I've had a Leopard family license since November and have already upgraded the other machines, and yesterday finally wiped the powerbook clean and ran the upgrade. Definitely a good idea - the machine's a hell of a lot zippier. I'm not sure how much of that is due simply to having a clean disk and how much is the OS upgrade itself, but I was surprised. Eclipse runs really smoothly on the 1.5 Java install (again, not sure if Tiger had 1.5 but it's definitely faster now), and after you run through a couple of reboots due to the installation of all the accumulated software upgrades in the last 6 months, the GUI is definitely nice and snappy. I'm currently waiting for Macports to install Apache - the raw compilation process of course takes as long as ever on the G4. Time will tell how zippy the AAMP stack is after installation. The list of software I've installed:
A couple of configuration touches I like to make: Keyboard shortcuts (System Prefs -> Keyboard & Mouse -> Keyboard Shortcuts): Disable the "Hide and show Front Row" shortcut Application Keyboard Shortcuts -> All Applications: Select Previous Tab: Cmd - [ Select Next Tab: Cmd - ]
Application Keyboard Shortcuts -> Safari: Google Search... -> Cmd - K (just like Firefox) Downloads -> Cmd - J
After stalling for months, I got online yesterday at 2.30pm to find a couple of mounting brackets for my old GPS, after I broke the old bracket in February. After a quick bit of Googling, I stumbled upon Calculator King, in Melbourne, and ordered the parts. Cut to lunch time today, and the postman brings me my kit. That's a 21 hour total delivery time! Outstanding work guys - I thoroughly recommend them next time you're looking for a phone/PDA/GPS or accessories. Since I've changed blog addresses, I need to get this blog re-established with Technorati. Here's the link to my Technorati Profile. Finally, a practical use for CoverFlow! I found this little CoverFlow history plugin included with the latest release of SafariStand. Really helpful for finding websites you've visited by look, when you can't remember the exact name or URL of the site.
WTF?!! For the first time today, I turned the ignition key in my trusty 307cc and it turned over but refused to start. That, and the strong smell of petrol alerted me to the fact that something must be wrong. I got out of the car to discover I was standing in a fresh pool of petrol. Opening the bonnet, I quickly discovered the problem: a rat had chewed through the main fuel line, my windscreen washer fluid reservoir and other plasticy bits! I've never heard of this before - WTF?! I wonder how much this is going to cost me... So, I'm finally getting my act together and building a real website for myself that contains a little bit more than just a blog. I've done a lot of work with Joomla lately, so it seemed a pretty simple choice to use it to build my site. At first I thought about keeping WP around for blogging, and Joomla for everything else, but getting the same template working under both systems was too much like hard work, so the next choice was to add a blog to Joomla. Mojoblog sounded like the best option, as it basically gives you Wordpress inside Joomla. Only problem is, she don't work with Joomla 1.5, which is what I'm using - having met with the honchos from the Joomla team last week. Apparently, its author is working on a 1.5 version, but there's nothing out there at the moment. Hence I've had to look around for an alternative, and I found it in Jooblog. It's got pretty basic functionality at the moment, but it looks like the author's fairly actively developing it. So, I've decided to gamble on it becoming feature-complete enough to use going forward. In the meantime, the old blog will sit at my old site until I can find a convenient way of back-importing the articles into this system. Lots of news this week, professionally and travel-wise, but as I sit here watching Die Hard 4 with a big glass of Shiraz Malbec, frankly I'm too tired and emotional to write about it at the moment. Stay tuned! |
