Aug 27 2009

Running Snow Leopard (Mac OS X 10.6): a First Run Quick Review (updated)

Category: apple,tech opinion,tech reviewsjmacofearth @ 11:00 am

Screen shot 2009 08 16 at 11.44.37 PM Running Snow Leopard (Mac OS X 10.6): a First Run Quick Review (updated)

Update 3-2-09: iStat Menus 2.0 is now available. Download.

Update 3-1-09: Cyberduck has a beta working with SN.

Update 8-28-09: SHIPPED. Here is ZDNet Update on the 64-bit kernel questions and CNet's review with video overview.

Update 8-27-09: SHIPPING TOMORROW: Gizmodo has a nice benchmarking review on Snow Leopard. YES IT IS FASTER.

Update 8-24-09: ZDNet Reports Snow Leopard will ship this Friday, August 28th, ahead of schedule. See report.

Update 8-23-09: Okay so the shut down, start up and sleep times are amazingly different and BETTER. For the most part the machine drops off to sleep in about 5 seconds where it used to think about it a bit longer before. (Don't get me started about Windows suspend timing. Yuk!) And here's a funny one. It seems that Snow Leopard isn't running the 64-bit kernel out of the gate. You actually have to start-up with the "6" and "4" keys held down. (WTF?) I know this is a developer license, but that seems odd. Something about troubleshooting and some apps that might not be ready for the full 64. So I've been doing the "64 finger salute" and noticed no real difference. Again, no crashes, and not amazing new features all add up to be… 100% good. Just not overwhelmingly GREAT. So now I'm looking for the killer app or something that's gonna give me the jazz I was imagining from Snow Leopard. It just works.

Update 8-18-09: Other than the few apps that quit working after installing Snow Leopard I haven't run into any problems. At the same time, I haven't really noticed anything. So if you are waiting to see exciting new features, I kinda was, you're gonna be in for a bit of a bummer. Nothin to it, but also, nothin to it.

What in the world possessed me to install snow leopard today I don't know. I was working on a complicated WordPress migration project for a client and something just called to me. It's kind of like a collision course: work to do and a Sunday afternoon with time to burn. And in spite of my own knowledge that things would break and time would be lost, I still pushed the install button. After a full time-machine backup I must add. But once you're committed there's no turning back.

45 minutes later it's all done. Seems pretty much the same. And if you look at Apple's page about the new version of OS X you will see that it's all about performance. So that's the reasoning for me. I want to be the first, or at least after the golden master is available, to get top-speed performance. [grin]

So here's what happened.

Several of my favorite apps and widgets broke right off the bat. Nothing major, but one of them set me back another hour.

First off my favorite widget that adds amazing statistical data to the menu bar, iStat Menus, has not been updated for Snow Leopard yet.

Screen shot 2009 08 16 at 11.55.55 PM Running Snow Leopard (Mac OS X 10.6): a First Run Quick Review (updated)

So nothing really important. But I miss my real-time display of the temperature of my Core 2 Duo chip and the speed of my fans. Real geek stuff. I can do without. But did change the preference in the iStat application to check for updates on a daily basis.  Update 8-31-09: Here is the beta of iStat Menus.

The second app that failed was Cyberduck. Now this one is critical path for the work I do on the web. It is free FTP client for the mac. So when I was needing to make some root changes to the files controlling my blog this afternoon, post upgrade, I clicked and clicked on Cyberduck but it failed to launch. Somehow the ducky knew he was not ready to run with the Leopards.

Screen shot 2009 08 17 at 12.01.24 AM Running Snow Leopard (Mac OS X 10.6): a First Run Quick Review (updated)

And in searching for a replacement app, I didn't really want to pay for something else. So I downloaded an old friend Fetch. Now a commercial app, but with a 15 day trial. [wOOt!] I was in.

Screen shot 2009 08 17 at 12.04.52 AM Running Snow Leopard (Mac OS X 10.6): a First Run Quick Review (updated)

But then the snag. All my preferences and settings and … ug … passwords for the sites I manage. Well, it didn't take that long, but I was sooooo set with Cyberduck that I kicked myself for about 15 minutes as I reconfigured for Fetch. And then I had to rewire the editing preferences for my code changes to go my favorite uber-editer TextWrangler.

Screen shot 2009 08 17 at 12.10.25 AM Running Snow Leopard (Mac OS X 10.6): a First Run Quick Review (updated)

So what TW from BareBones does so well is what is known as round-trip editing.

From within Cyberduck Fetch I can double click on a file, in this case a troublesome .htaccess settings file, and it transfers to my temp code folder and opens in TextWrangler. When I "save to server" it saves the file back up to the remote server and overwrites the original.

And the last issue I encountered was my bluetooth keyboard lost it's way until I used the bluetooth preferences and reset the connection.

And that was pretty much the fix, thus far, that I've had to work through in my 5 hours or so running Snow Leopard.

And I am not noticing too many differences. I know there are a ton of them, but they are mostly under the covers. Here are a couple screenies of two things.

Screen shot 2009 08 17 at 12.15.53 AM Running Snow Leopard (Mac OS X 10.6): a First Run Quick Review (updated)

The dock's click-hold preferences have more options

and

Screen shot 2009 08 17 at 12.10.44 AM Running Snow Leopard (Mac OS X 10.6): a First Run Quick Review (updated)

Screenshots have unique names based on date and time

So that will keep things a bit more organized. I shoot a lot of screenshots during the course of a week. Now I can drop them into my "screenies" folder and they won't overwrite "image 01.png" and so on.

Seriously, that's all I've noticed thus far.

Screen shot 2009 08 17 at 12.22.34 AM Running Snow Leopard (Mac OS X 10.6): a First Run Quick Review (updated)

Oh, wait, there was one more thing. Once the install was ready to go, it started overwriting my current 10.5 install without any major reboots. There's a blurb about the new install process:

Screen shot 2009 08 17 at 12.25.29 AM Running Snow Leopard (Mac OS X 10.6): a First Run Quick Review (updated)

And this…

Screen shot 2009 08 17 at 12.25.43 AM Running Snow Leopard (Mac OS X 10.6): a First Run Quick Review (updated)

So Snow Leopard is actually giving you back 6 gigs of space. Having just upgraded my HD to a 500 gig 7200 rpm seagate I wasn't too concerned about that, but… Here's to an upgrade that is smaller and faster and more reliable. And a lot cheaper than WIN7. But gosh, I sure hope WIN7 is better than Vista, cause we could really use a healthy tech sector right now to help us mosey on out of this recession.

I'm about to test one of the touted features right now, but I'll have to let you know about it tomorrow.

Screen shot 2009 08 17 at 12.22.19 AM Running Snow Leopard (Mac OS X 10.6): a First Run Quick Review (updated)

Faster to shutdown and wake up.

Shutting down now.

Updated the next morning: Okay so it does shut down much faster! And I'd say the reboot is quicker, but not noticeably so. But sleep and wake-up are much better.

@jmacofearth
permalink: http://bit.ly/snow-leopard-quickie

Gizmodo has a nice snow leopard benchmarking review:  Snow Leopard Review: Lightened and Enlightened

See also: iStat Menus Beta, up and running in Snow Leopard.

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Aug 24 2009

Culling the Spammers from My Twitter Followers: TwitBlock.org Rocks!

Category: social media,tech opinion,tools,trust & reputationjmacofearth @ 4:44 pm

Screen shot 2009 08 24 at 3.55.45 PM Culling the Spammers from My Twitter Followers: TwitBlock.org Rocks!

Days later the trend continues.

Screen shot 2009 08 26 at 3.04.53 PM Culling the Spammers from My Twitter Followers: TwitBlock.org Rocks!

I think I'm beginning to like this. Deleting spammy followers hurts my following, but once you get the hang of it, it really is fun knocking off the quote-spammers, the check-me-out-online spammers, the SEO-spammers. Heck, I think my spammer count has gone UP because I keep mentioning spam, spam, spam, spam, wonderful spam, wonderful spam. My count above, Added since yesterday: -1. Average growth per day: -20. Oh my. I was so close to 7,100! And for what? I may sink forever in a torrent of spammy tweeters. Oh whoa is me and my flock.

From a high of 7,093 I have aggressively BLOCKED spammy followers using TwitBlock.org, my new favorite tool. [I'm not sure how I got spam listed by 9 twitblock users, but I have some suspicions. Oh well. If you're in the neighborhood and would like to "whitelist me" as not spam I'd appreciate it.]

Well, my aggressive unspam blocking has resulted in a drop in my follower count to 6,870. Seems like the Tweespammers are aggressive about unfollowing unfollowers. I say if you're gonna blast crap quote spam, MLM marketing messages and sexcam solicitations I think you should be blocked. Perhaps those folks can figure out who blocked them and block back?

Screen shot 2009 08 24 at 4.20.56 PM Culling the Spammers from My Twitter Followers: TwitBlock.org Rocks!

No worries. Seems like the value of a tweet just got a little more easy to spot with Twitblocker. Two great things about this tool.

1. It shows all your spammy followers on one screen allowing your to unfollow a lot of people at once. And the spammers are easy to spot, believe me. Especially when they are all lined up together like a police lineup.

2. As the tool gets more users and more accounts are rated as spam, the ratings will get better and the tool will be better at pulling spammers out of your flow.

Here's a sample output as TwitBlock began scanning my followers:

Screen shot 2009 08 24 at 4.41.10 PM Culling the Spammers from My Twitter Followers: TwitBlock.org Rocks!

You can see I have not blocked sxpanel, but I am about to block Schwartz632. It's easy to spot the spammers, but TwitBlock makes it really easy to find them all in one place.

What we need perhaps is a kick ass Tweeter list. I've been wanting to build a matrix of folks I follow in different fields. Like a verification or a seal of approval for some folks I think are awesome. Starting with my very few #FF #followfriday nominations and Mr. Tweet recommendations, I'm sure I could produce a shortlist of recommendations. That will be my next task.

In the mean time keep it clean and add your account to Twitblock.org and get blocking. The twittersphere will thank you and together we can reduce the noise.

@jmacofearth
permalink: http://bit.ly/twitblock-inaction

NOTE: If you think I'm spammy please let me know. I'd be happy to understand how I can provide more value for you. My motto is WIIFY (what's in it for you). And an ON NO: In unfollowing so many peeps I just upset my follow/follower ratio and I can follow no more people. Gotta get out the wackin tool again. ARRRGGH!

See also The Twitter Way, the collected posts about Twitter and Doing Twitter Right

A funny post from Mashable on the Top 25 most spammy Twitter Avatar images.

Latest Twitter Posts

My favorite twittertools:

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Aug 22 2009

Visualizing the Web: Personas (Metropathologies) by MIT's Aaron Zinman

Category: career,social media,teaming & leadership,tech opinionjmacofearth @ 11:05 am

Personas

Is a very interesting visualization experiment that takes internet mentions of someone's name and runs the scads of data through an analysis that produces a virtual persona map. Here are a few I ran of myself and my various "personas" on the web.

First up is my most simplified name: John McElhenney (plenty of opportunities for inclusion of an civil-war era Presbyterian minister Rev. John McElhenney D. D., pro football Hall of Famer Hugh McElhenney and Hollywood writer and actor Rob McElhenney)

This is one of the screens of analysis as the program is working it's magic. Interesting how #1 and #3 are about my musical career, and #2 is about someone else, unless my 6-yo daughter has something to tell me.

Screen shot 2009 08 22 at 10.01.08 AM Visualizing the Web: Personas (Metropathologies) by MITs Aaron Zinman

After the program chews away for a while here is the "persona" it generated for John McElhenney:

Screen shot 2009 08 22 at 10.03.03 AM Visualizing the Web: Personas (Metropathologies) by MITs Aaron Zinman

Interesting words pop out. Accident, religious, aggression, committees. Hmm. I might imagine the "religious" one could be attributed to the crossover with the honorable Rev.

I also ran one on my web persona, JMacofearth and here is what was generated:

Screen shot 2009 08 22 at 10.04.31 AM Visualizing the Web: Personas (Metropathologies) by MITs Aaron Zinman

And finally, the less ambiguous John Oakley McElhenney:

Screen shot 2009 08 22 at 10.05.23 AM Visualizing the Web: Personas (Metropathologies) by MITs Aaron Zinman

Interesting how as the persona is more refined, or directed at my "online" content, the online section begins to take over the graphic.

I have no idea how "military" is even in my persona, but okay.  Education, social, religion also cross over strongly. It's an interesting way to see what your online voice might look like.

I also ran two major industry players who's contrasting "voices" I thought might shed some insight into the process behind the application.

First my former employer and 15-year tech business connection, Michael Dell:

Screen shot 2009 08 22 at 10.09.18 AM Visualizing the Web: Personas (Metropathologies) by MITs Aaron Zinman

And the current tech visionary and leader, Steve Jobs:

Screen shot 2009 08 22 at 10.14.28 AM Visualizing the Web: Personas (Metropathologies) by MITs Aaron Zinman

I don't understand much of what's going on here, but some interesting notes.

Management: MD > SJ (2X)
Fashion: SJ > MD = 0
Aggression: MD > SJ=0
Professional: MD > SJ (5X)
Movies/Music: SJ > MD (7X)
Illegal: MD > SJ (2X)

I think it would be cool if we could stack the share of voice from Most to Least. Perhaps I'll send Aaron Zinman a request. Or perhaps he'll see this post and linkback to his tool. (grin)

And here let's see how Aaron shows in his own tool.

Screen shot 2009 08 22 at 10.58.40 AM1 Visualizing the Web: Personas (Metropathologies) by MITs Aaron Zinman

His entire persona was generated from this block:

Screen shot 2009 08 22 at 10.58.28 AM Visualizing the Web: Personas (Metropathologies) by MITs Aaron Zinman

It was disintegrated? The Social Media Group was DISINTEGRATED! Holy cow. Well I hope Aaron still gets his degree completed. [Aaron Zinman, if there's anything I can do, let me know.]

@jmacofearth
permalink: http://bit.ly/metropathologies

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