Tuesday, June 29, 2004 - 14:30

Future blog topics

Sometimes I'm just overflowing with things I want to say. Other times, nothing. Guess which it is 5 minutes before I sit down to blog, and which it is once I've clicked the "create new post" button?

So just to remind myself, here are some things I want to talk about in future blogs:
  • The nature of blogging
  • Why Visio sucks
  • The GMail Phenomenon
  • Why do I never get around to updating my webpage?
And I'll probably think of more tonight, because that's when I get my best ideas (be they blog ideas, or work ideas, or anything else): right before I fall asleep. Just when it's too much effort to get up and write them down, or do anything about them :-)

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GMail

I've been using gmail for a couple of weeks now, and I've got to say that it's well worth the hype. It's got a nice, clean interface (I didn't appreciate how good it was until I logged into hotmail for the first time - eeeuuuww!).

The conversation threading is incredible, I don't know how we did without it for so long. Sure, sometimes it gets a bit confused, but it'll be even more incredible once they allow you to manually merge and separate conversations (which apparently is on the way).

And it does other cool things that are so natural and so right that you don't even notice, at first - like automatically hiding the quoted text in an e-mail. You don't really need the text, because the quoted text is right there in your conversation view anyway, but if you really want it back all you need to do is click the "show quoted text" link. And similarly to hide it again.

Their "reply" functionality is great, too - easy to get to, but out the way until you want to use it. And the best part is that because messages are grouped into conversations, you can reply to any message and have it automatically fill in the other person's e-mail address - even if the message you're ostensibly replying to is one you sent. For example, this is something I do frequently:
  • Message from Bob: I'll get back to you with an answer
  • Message from me: OK, thanks
  • Message from me: Oh, and don't forget ... (quoting the "OK" message).
In most e-mail clients, to get that third message you have to reply to the second one, and replace your e-mail address in the To: field with Bob's. But gmail's smart enough to figure out that you're more likely to be replying to Bob than to yourself.

This seems to be their overriding philosophy: cater for the most obvious, most frequently used situations, BUT make it easy to do something more complex as well. For example, when replying, there is no little box with the subject line - it just picks up automatically from the conversation headers. But if you want to change the subject line, it's not a problem: just click on the unobtrusive link and go for it.

One thing that takes some getting used to is that there are no folders: just labels. And predefined label views, so it works pretty much like a folder, except that a conversation can have more than one label and thus can sort of be in more than one folder at a time. If you know what I mean.

There are some bad points: while you can easily search through your messages, you can't sort your inbox or All Mail/Label views. And you can't search by label, so if I want to see all messages that have a "important" label as well as those that have a "critical" label, I can't. Unless I just haven't figured out how yet, which is not impossible. No POP3 access, but they're working on it and I've found that webmail is actually more useful for me anyway. Advertising: I don't even notice it, most of the time. It's there to see, and it's easy to click on something if you're interested, but it's not obnoxious at all. Legal issues: this is a more difficult one. There's a pretty good article about why it's an issue; I'll try to find it and link to it here.

So that's my opinion of gmail. And notice that I didn't once comment on the 1Gb of space ;-)

Go out and get yourself an account - if you can! Of course, that's another issue surrounding gmail. More on that tomorrow, though; now I need to go and earn a living.

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Monday, June 28, 2004 - 13:52

My new bike

I'm buying a new motorbike. I've been riding a scooter for about 6 years now, and it's fun (and waaaay better than driving a car), but I'm looking to move up the foodchain a bit. Only problem is, my licence only covers bikes up to 125cc, so unless I want to get a new licence (which I don't!) I have to stick to a 125 or less. And most 125s are pretty ugly.

Enter the Kymco Hipster. The absolute coolest 125 you've ever seen. It's a cruiser style bike, looks a bit like a Harley, lots of chrome. Yeah, it's not to everyone's taste, but I love it.



It's got lots of cool features, too - a digital fuel gauge, for one, along with a digital clock. And yes, it's going to take a lot of work to keep it looking good (again: lots of chrome!). But it's a bike I can be proud of, so I don't mind polishing it up every weekend :-) The one I'm getting is 2nd hand, but only has 1000km on the clock, and it's in excellent condition. I'm just waiting for the papers, and for it to have a service, and then it's mine!

Well, not quite. You see, I currently own a car (Toyota Corolla, 1985, white), a scooter (Kazuma Silver Fox, 2000-ish, gold) and now a Kymco Hipster (2003, silver and black). And I only have one teeny garage to put them in. I plan to get rid of the scooter, but because it's an automatic, which is what I'm used to riding, I need to get used to riding the Hipster, a manual, first. Which shouldn't be too difficult, hopefully. But right now, I can't keep all them because I just don't have the space. So the Hipster is going to be staying at my parents' place, which is only about 10 minutes away. What I should have done is waited until I got my car licence (no, I don't have that yet either), and then I could have sold the scooter, used the car until I got used to the hipster, and kept both of them in my garage. but it's going to take me a while to get my car licence (aargh! K53!), and I really wanted the bike now. Plus, I didn't know even there'd be any good 2nd hand ones going when I wanted one, and this one is a really good deal. Did I mention it's winter? And that winter here is cold, and rainy? Not a good time to be travelling by bike, never mind learning to ride a new one ...

Ah well, I'm sure it'll be fun nonetheless.

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