Monthly Archives: February, 2005

Who’ll win the Microsoft v Google war?

John Naughton’s Sunday column asks a pertinent question which may help provide the answer.

Perestroika

I flew home from Moscow this afternoon.

When I was last in Red Square in 1981, the guards were goose-stepping up and down in front of the Kremlin wall.

Yesterday, not only could I go inside the Kremlin, but a guard inside was feeding the birds.

Inside the Kremlin

Very different memories…

Machiccup

(Just to maintain a bit of balance after the last posting…)

My Mac let me down in public today. It was only a minor flaw, but it was notable because it’s the first time I can remember such an incident in my three or four years of using Macs.

I was about to give a talk, and had been looking forward to using the new features of Apple’s Keynote 2 presentation software. It has this nice ‘Presenter Screen’ on the built-in display which can show you, amongst other things, the currently displayed slide, the next slide (or the result of the next animation), your notes, and a timer, while your main presentation is shown on the second screen or projector. You can customize this screen layout, and it’s very cute.

Everything was set up and ready to roll a couple of minutes before the talk, when I made the mistake of trying to see if the projector would do a higher resolution. It wouldn’t, but it didn’t tell the Mac that, so it displayed a blue screen while my Mac happily carried on thinking it was driving the projector as its primary display. And unfortunately, when it thinks the display is working OK, then the settings dialog for the display pops up on that display, so I couldn’t change the projector settings back. (You see, it was really the fault of the projector!) What I could do was set the screens into ‘mirroring mode’, meaning that both displays showed the same thing, but whenever I set it back to dual-screen mode, the Mac helpfully restored my previous display settings (a feature I normally love), so giving me the blue screen again. There was no network access, so I couldn’t go the dearly beloved macosxhints.com site and find out how to fix it.

I’d kept the audience waiting long enough, so I had to use it in mirroring mode, which meant I didn’t get the cool Presenter Display. This meant that I didn’t have my notes (and I don’t believe in putting much text on my slides). Nor did I know which slide was coming next, because I’d reordered some of them just before starting. I had no printout of the notes or slides. Things didn’t flow quite as smoothly as they might have done!

Ironically, I think the answer might have simply been to reboot. I so rarely need to reboot my Mac that I didn’t even think of it, or assumed that it would restore the previous settings. But I have read of other Mac users who have been stuck in exactly the same way and fixed it by restarting. It’s what I would have tried first on a Windows machine. But the moral of the story is never to place too much faith in any technology. Even if it’s a Mac.

Why does Windows still suck?

An article by Mike Morford asks,”Why do Windows users put up with it?”

Why you should buy your iPod Photos two at a time

Thanks to Dave for this link.

Greetings from Russia

Well, I’m in Nizhni Novgorod for a workshop on Proactive Computing. We came through Moscow on the way here, and the airport looks very different from when I last visited it in pre-Perestroika 1981.

Some aspects of Nizhni airport still have the good old Soviet feel, though.

Hide Your IPod, Here Comes Bill

This nicely-written Wired article by Leander Kahney talks about the popularity of the iPod at Redmond:

Employees are hiding their iPods by swapping the telltale white headphones for a less conspicuous pair….
But at the Windows Digital Media Group, which is charged with software for portable players and the WMA format, using an iPod is not a good career move.

Thanks to Dave Hill for the link

© Copyright Quentin Stafford-Fraser