Archive for March, 2008



End of contracting.. for now

Monday, March 31st, 2008

Changing Situations

Today (April 1st) marks the day that I start at my company as a permanent employee, and also that day that I cease to be a full-time contractor, at least for the time being, anyway.  It’s brought about an aura of uncertainty, not because I’m unsure of what I’m doing, but because of that fact that taking a paycut is often hard to justify.

I’ve had the choice though, to stay on contracting and miss out on possible bonus’s, promotions, as well as all the normal benifits like holidays, sick pay (hooray, I can take a day off again) and private health care.  I’m hanging on to the thoguth that whilst I was getting better money contracting (by no means, fantastic money, mind you), with the holiday and sick pay, I’m not that much worse off.  And I found about a fantastic little nasty called Employer’s Natiional Insurance Tax, which for some reason I was stupid enough to have been paying myself, missing out on the grand total of almost £1,000 cleared cash in hand per month.

Tie at work, the way of Permanent staff?

This is what I’ll be expected to wear to the office, now that I’m permanent

Renewed Motivation

But the worry at the change in career path has renewed my motivation to pursue out of work projects and whilst I’ve had a couple of fairly unproductive months, I think I’m well back on track down the path of success. At least I hope so, anyway.  So far I’ve:

  • 75% completed the first of the ShanCo projects, an experiment in collaboration, team work and fighting the good (SEO) fight to thrive for a win in this web world.  I can’t say too much because not only would that ruin the surprise, I’d be sure to dissapoint as well.
  • started to draw up plans with an old mate from University;
  • and done the same with some friends from work, thinking about a couple of huge ideas one of the guys came up with that could quite likely revolutionise the London Texas Hold’em scene as well as a couple of other ideas as well.  If I can help, that is!

Budgeting & Finance

Another thing I did, whilst fretting about the incoming financial situation was draw up a quick budget for the next few years.  I’m amazed time and time again, just how much money we waste, and how easy it would be to save a fair chunk if you put your mind to it and watch out on the frivilous bar rounds (£36 on five drinks on Saturday night!).  I’ve found in the past if I’ve had something that i’ve needed to save up for, drawing out a budget and clearly working out exactly much we needed to save, and exactly how much we can save if we stick to the money we intend to live on each week.

It’s probably a no brainer for most, and a sign of immaturity, but sticking to my money guide, which took me about 20 minutes to knock up in Excel should help in this matter, especially when I consider all the things we’re going to have to pay for in the next few months, such as the Big Event and the nicely priced Holiday to Russia in July.  Hell I’m going to enjoy my holiday pay though!

Ubuntu – Hardy Heron Approaching

Sunday, March 30th, 2008

Ubuntu Logo

As laid back, easy going and carefree that I am (most of the time, I’m realising more and more that I really like routine.  I like looking forward to an event in the future when I know the exact day in which it will occur.  Like Christmas, or a Birthday, I know exactly when it will occur, but I don’t always know what to expect at the date in which that event occurs.  And much like getting socks when you were hoping for tickets to the Superbowl (err, no), the ritual release of Ubuntu can bring both joy and/or dissapointment.

But unlike a Birthday, Ubuntu’s release cycle is biannual, so it’s twice the fun, if of course that’s the kind of thing that floats your boat.

Wind back 6 months to my previous posts on the last release, Gutsy Gibbon, I can remember being especially excited about the new release due to the hype surrounding the major release at the time, and I was by no means dissapointed.  It was incredibly nice to use a system in which everything just worked, no stuffing around with device drivers or compiling kernel hacks to get hardware working.  It really impressed.

Hardy Heron should be no different, though admittedly I haven’t heard near as much hype about its release which is surprising seeing as it’s an LTS (Long Term Support) release, in which a major release (once every 18 months) has long term support from the developers, three years on the desktop and five for the server release.  When Gutsy Gibbon (7.10) was released it included a lot of features which had been added, such as 3d/Compiz Desktop features, adding something significant to the user experience.

With the next release however (8.04), efforts have been made to make the system itself as solid as possible, obviously to make the job of supporting it easier over the next 3-5 years.  There does seem to be some changes to look forward to however:

  • A new theme (yes, Human is finally getting a face-lift)
  • Better support for compiz desktop effects
  • A complete redesign/refactor of the restricted drivers profile
  • Far better support/integration for dual monitors

My excitement got the better of me though, and I jumped the gun and updated my installation to the pre-release beta, and I felt like I’d taken a full step back. About 1 or 2 years back, that is.  Unfortunately my wireless card was unrecognised and I couldn’t even boot into GDM as my display settings (which worked only minutes before) didn’t work at all.  It took the better part of an hour to get things back to normal, but oh well thats what I get for installing pre-release software.  The new theme is far easier on the eye though, thank goodness.

Look out for this release!

Nokia N95 – GPS & Maps Application Comparison

Saturday, March 22nd, 2008

With the huge choice of applications available for Symbian hardware and the N95 it’s often hard to find the perfect tool for the job, and GPS apps are no different. So like my previous articles, I’m going to try to report the pros/cons of each of the GPS/Navigation applications I could find for the Nokia N95 & S60v3 platforms. There seems to be an enourmous amount of applications that all do approximately the same thing which makes finding the perfect one especially difficult. Do you trust one of the older players in the GPS market like Garmin/Tomtom, the kings of the internet map sites Google Maps & MGMaps (Google, Yahoo, Microsoft, etc) of finally one of the other mapping applications, like Nokia Maps or Map24Mobile.

1. Nokia Maps

Availability: Free (Comes with Phone)

Seeing as this is the default maps app that comes with the N95 it seems like a logical place to start, and with it’s voice navigation (a paid addon) and great integration it may be hard to top. That is, until you use it and try and get it to point you from a to b. It,s not that it does a terrible job, it,s just so slow at everything.

Standing in full view of all the eyes in the sky (read: satellites) from starting the app until it had located my position it had taken about 45 seconds to a minute. It,s just not responsive enough to warrant whipping it out of your pocket when your late for a meeting, but you can’t for the life of you remember where Ord Street North is, let alone trying to get it to give you directions whilst behind the wheel.

On the other hand, it has access to a decent point of interest database and standing in front of Westminister Abbey i found the map littered with places to see, eat, etc.

Pros
  • Default app that comes with the phone
  • Well integrated into nokia’s gallery & other phone features
  • Great points of interest database with clear icons
  • Has Voice Navigation (like in-Car Sat Nav Systems)
Cons
  • Slow as a dog (bad boot time, slow map responsiveness, etc)
  • No Terrain/Aerial/Satellite Maps

2. Mobile GMaps

Availability: Free

MGMaps is (I believe) a joint effort to bring maps from a range of providers (Google, Yahoo, Microsoft, OpenStreet, Ask, etc) to give the maximum choice for finding the perfect map for the required situation. There’s the usual Street Map styled map, through to aerial/satellite and a hybrid of the two, terrain maps (for hiking I presume) and specialised maps with monuments, points of interest clearly marked.

Map with Tube/Underground Overlay

The real beauty with this app, however, comes with the map overlays and addons. Venturing in the the addons menu unlocks a host of options like Traffic reporting, Metro/Underground/Transport Maps, Wikimapia (user built Point of Interest database which is constantly growing) and a few other things that I didn’t really understand. Some of the overlays include geographic position, altitude (approx), speed & direction of travel, which can all be quite useful although can interfere due to the small amount of screen real estate.

Aerial/Satellite View

And where Nokia maps failed due to its slowness, and lack of usability, MGMaps shines, it’s quick and easy to use, the maps are drawn quickly, and the direction/guidance mapping seems accurate and didn’t get me into trouble once.

I won’t go into detail on the mobile version of Google Maps as pretty much everything you can do in Google Maps you can do in MGMaps, but also a lot more. I’m not sure what the exact story is, but I’m assuming Google has otherwise stopped development of its Mobile maps app and is participating in the newer better App.

Pros
  • Free
  • Huge choice of maps and map types
  • Nice selection of overlays/addons
  • Good Direction/Place finder
Cons
  • No Voice Nav

Tom Tom Screen

TomTom: Simple, yet as a navigational tool whilst driving. Perfect

3. Tomtom Navigator 6

Availability: £87 (at time of writing) from http://www.tomtom.com

As I stated in the introduction, if it’s a navigation tool you want for driving and direction finding then look no further, Tomtom is the package you want. Everything is smooth, from the search/menu panel, quick bootup, routing, clear map (showing only path you need to take) and by far the best implementation of the voice navigation than I’ve seen on a phone/PDA yet.

Directions

Despite driving a small car, we found it ever so difficult taking the Walking Route

Like the In-car GPS unit you get to sit on your dashboard, if you’re driving and you really want a clear way from getting from point A to B without having to constantly have a hand on the unit this is the way to go. It’s as simple as typing in a destination, and following the prompts:

  • Take the third exit at the roundabout
  • In two miles follow the shoulder toward the M5
  • Calculating Route (when missing a turn off)
  • Arrived at Destination, Thankyou

And so on… And whilst your on your way you’ll get an annoying *beep* sound every few minutes, or so I thought at the time, until I realised Tomtom was warning me of approaching Speed/Redlight Camera and Dangerous spots in the road

Tom tom Trip Overview

 

The Trip Overview/Planner

The Tomtom navigator is, without doubt, the best drivers friend, its a no frills tool that serves a purpose, and one purpose only. What it lacks in maps, addons and features it more than makes up in usability (and I actually feel safe using it whilst driving, Mobile GMaps took far to much configuration and watching of the screen to be considered safe for driving).

Note: Screenshot didn’t seem to want to work while Tomtom was open, so I’ve used others screenshots

Pros
  • Perfect Street guide, Driving Navigation Tool
  • Seamless Voice Navigation, Traffic/Camera alerts
Cons
  • Lacks all the cool features, like points of interest, overlays and different map types

4. Map 24 Mobile

Availability: Free from www.map24mobile.com

Really not much can be said about this app, it’s not useful for driving/navigation, and it’s speed, ease of use and features are nothing to write home about, but it is in early development. Map24 Mobile does have one interesting feature though, point it to a location and it knows where everything, and I mean everything, is. From my front door for instance, it tells me where the Shell station is, the library, 4 or 5 pubs, the police station and various other shops and restaurants are straight away.

Granted, I’m standing on my front porch, I can clearly see the Shell sign, two pubs and the side edge of a library and restaurant, but I can see it being a life saver when the apocolypse hits and I need to emerge from bunker 714 in pitch darkness and dense radioactive fog, so I’ll keep it on hand, anyway.

“3D View” – I couldn’t find a use for it

Pros
  • Map24 knows retail, it really does
Cons
  • … pretty much everything else

Like the IM Client article, there are honestly too many different apps to try and each would have its own set of pros and con’s, and quite often its own price tag, but I’ll list a few anyway:

From the point of view of the occasional user Mobile GMaps is definitely the one to go for, its very well put together and a full package without a lot of depth. And for the driver/navigator don’t look past the TomTom Navigator client, but I can see where all four apps would quite often come in handy so its probably quite handy to keep them all on at once, as really, you never know when you might need them (where is that Shell Station again?).

Bloody Genius

Sunday, March 16th, 2008

It’s not often that show stopping ideas come about, especially from the mind of Shannon. But in a manner that is sure to knock even the greatest minds (Newton, Einstein, Tesla, Edison or Torvalds) off their truly great pedestal, I think know I’ve done it. Like many before, an invention doesn’t have to be ground breaking, it doesn’t have to save lives, clean your house, or do anything in particular, it does need to make its mark though. Without further ado, I introduce the Bloody Genius.

Tabasco

Like the bastard child of Bloody Mary, it’s a new mix for the avid Guinness drinker who wants something more, and whilst the words Bloody and Guinness can never be muttered in the same sentence together, a small play on words was used to come up with the title.  And when the fad grows, the title will no doubt propel it in success.  The idea came to me when participating in the ultimate brain storm, down at Guinness Thursday’s at work, a small one to three hour period that takes part every Thursday.   It’s proved to be a valuable team building experience where many an idea has been born, and buried soon after, and much cod s*#t has been talked.

The worst thing an inventor could do would be “invent” something thats already been created, but a quick search of the most reliable source in the world, Google, returned nothing but an entry in the Guness Book of World Records to a clever Australian who set a record for drinking two full bottles (120ml) of Tabasco within 30 seconds.  A smart move, to be sure.

So, go out get a Bloody Genius, the delicious son of Mary, and enjoy.

Work Changes

Tuesday, March 11th, 2008

I got into work yesterday after my week long holiday and by 9:00am I was back over at the old office (the <insert exploited minority here> Wallet making Sweatshop, aka Casa Bolton) working on a couple of things for another of the company’s projects. Within two hours I’d been told to grab my PC and all the contents of my desk and move back to that office (Casa Bolton).  I knew it had been coming for a while, as I was never permanently placed there in the first place, but it was all very sudden anyway.

The weird thing is within the time span of that morning I’d gone from Shannon, C# extraordinare (not really) to a completey different role, that being to build/commission a group of Redhat/Oracle servers for the new production environment.  I’m not sure if its a step forward, or a step back, but its definitely something new and breaks up the monotony of the last few months work.  The good thing is, it’ll give me an extra insentive to get this ShanCo work up and running, as I feel much more inclined to put in the required hours to get said projects up and running, especially as I don’t want to get rusty.

This afternoon, office politics took over, and the wrath of an over zealous trigger happy manager got a little tacky and crackheaded on my ass.  but thats a story for another day.

I still don’t know what I was waiting for
And my time was running wild
A million dead-end streets
Every time I thought I’d got it made
It seemed the taste was not so sweet
So I turned myself to face me
But I’ve never caught a glimpse
Of how the others must see the faker
I’m much too fast to take that test

 

Ch-ch-ch-ch-Changes
(Turn and face the strain)
Ch-ch-Changes
Don’t want to be a richer man
Ch-ch-ch-ch-Changes
(Turn and face the strain)

 

- Changes