Safari Transparency

I accidentally found this “hidden” feature in Apple Safari 2.0.1 while messing with the “Debug” menu. For whatever reason, there’s a “Use Transparent Window” option under the Debug menu. In between page loads, the entire window goes transparent — a pretty cool effect.

To get to this feature, you first need to enable the Debug menu, which is hidden by default.

1. Quit Safari.
2. Open a terminal window.
3. Copy and paste

1
 % defaults write com.apple.Safari IncludeDebugMenu 1

4. Launch Safari. You will find the new “Debug” menu option at the far right side of the menu bar.

You can read more about the Debug menu here.

Safari Transparency 1

Safari Transparency 2

Singing the Opera

After having to endure Safari’s short comings, I applied some remedies to address its most noticeable problems — memory leaks and abrupt crashes. But I made my last draw yesterday after its memory issues affected the rest of the computer again.

I have been looking into using other browsers full time, namely Firefox and Camino, both from the Mozilla Foundation, a spin off of good old Netscape (well, actually, Netscape has sucked for the past few years). But they suffer the same problem as to Safari — extremely poor memory management. If you open more than 5 or 6 tabs at the same time for a day or two, you can notice the whole computer slow to a crawl, or worst yet, they crash without saving sessions on the existing tabs.

A few weeks ago, I took advantage of Opera Software and its free download offer and kept the serials just in case. I have used Opera before and it sucked. But it’s been a couple of years, so maybe things have changed.

Indeed, things HAVE changed.

For the past day or so, I have had eight tabs or more open at the same time, and I have not experienced any slow down to my aging PowerBook (knock on the wood). What’s even more impressive is its memory foot print hasn’t creeped up like all the other browsers. Furthermore, Opera came with features that I have had to download extra plugins/tools for with the other browsers (draggable tabs, saved sessions, easier to manage bookmarks… etc). Opera has some user interface inconsistencies. But I’ll happily live with that and just zip through web pages the way I want to — lots and lots of tabs.

I am not ditching the other browsers just yet…. will still need them for testing and such. But Opera is going to be my primary browser from now on.

Mail Bouncer

Apple Mail Bounce Every morning when I fire up my favorite email client, I usually get in the neighborhood of 30 to 40 spam messages. And they just continue coming throughout the day. The upside is my mail server was setup so that 90%+ of the junk mails are appropriately labeled as “:SPAM:” in the beginning of the subject line by the time they reach me. And at home, I setup my Apple Mail to filter everything with “:SPAM:” in the subject to go directly to the “Junk” folder. It’s a nice setup. But It’d be nicer if the junk mail can just simply stop coming.

Recently I’ve been painstakingly using Apple Mail’s built-in “Bounce messages” feature. It bounces emails back to the sender, tricking it into thinking my email address doesn’t exist. The effort seems to be paying off. Now I get no more than 10 junk mails in the morning. And I have been experiencing a reduction of spams throughout the day as well.

Now only if Yahoo, Google and Hotmail can catch up and develop something similar, that would be great (in the voice of Lumbergh from “Office Space” ).

The Joy of Steve Jobs Stanford Speech

I finally came around to do a quick grep of all the log files since I put up Steve Jobs speech at Stanford. The total tally came only 3,000 shy of 50,000 downloads. Impressive.

Last time I checked, I am still the first site that shows up on Google with a downloadable speech.

Let the inspiration spread.

RSS Subscriptions to WiredAtom

Just out of curiosity, I pulled the access log from the server to see how many people subscribed to RSS feed to my blog. I was surprised at the result — a whopping 1,400 RSS feeds were served just in the past 4 days alone. I could probably write a shell script to weed out the duplicates to see how many of those feeds are from unique visitors, but I think I am content with just that. I remember pulling the same log and found only 2 feeds a couple of months back.

I hope my thoughts, ideas and day-to-day news are entertaining.

On related news, the Steve Jobs Stanford speech download is still popular. It seems like the downloads have been growing quite rapidly. There are almost 1,000 downloads in the past 4 days. I should do a tally and update the “total downloads” figure on that site. Besides, the page is totally ready for a make-over. Maybe I’ll do that when my homework from SCAD isn’t quite as crazy in a few weeks.

Vienna the RSS News Reader

It’s been a while since I wrote something technology-related. But then again, it’s been a while since I last read technology news and really have the time to reflect on it.

I discovered something today that’s blog-worthy. An open source RSS news reading application, Vienna. Its interface and functionalities are almost exact replica of NetNewsWire, except it’s free.

I just love having one app where I can gather all the news I need and just quickly glance through them every morning (or at least I used to prior to Bryan’s arrival).

via [TUAW]

Between Apple and Jef Raskin

I was reading the wrong section of the required reading from SCAD’s online class; but the reading turned out the be a pretty cool section on how users interface with keys. And then the author (Jef Raskin) mentions something about the rationale for his design of one-button mouse:

My design for an interface based on a one-button mouse was refined and extended in discussions with many coworkers… and many adjustments were made based on observations made during user testing and during subsequent development. Some users do have difficulty both holding down a button and simultaneously moving a graphical input device… In the Macintosh deign, the problem was alleviated by having only one large button on the mouse, with low holding force and good tactile feedback. (p. 209)

So there we have it. A design from the 80s was effectively (and stubbornly) carried out well into 2005. But here’s the fun part: even though the book was published in 2000, Jef Raskin had already conceived many of the ideas in the new mouse that Apple introduced earlier this year.

A better mouse might have two buttons on top… a “Grab” button on the side that is activated by squeezing the mouse… Some mice at present have a wheel on top that is used primarily for scrolling. Better still would be a small trackball in that location. The mouse would control the position of the curser; the trackball could be used, for example, to manipulation objects or to make selections from menus that float with the curser. (p. 209)

Sound familiar? Here’s what Apple says about their mouse:

Meet the mouse that reinvented the wheel. The scroll wheel, that is. At $49, Mighty Mouse features the revolutionary Scroll Ball that lets you move anywhere inside a document, without lifting a finger. And with touch-sensitive technology concealed under the seamless top shell, you get the programability of a four-button mouse in a single-button design. Click, roll, squeeze and scroll. This mouse just aced the maze. ((c) Apple Computer)

Somebody give me $500,000 so that I can take the rest of the ideas in Jef Raskin’s book to market! I promise I won’t put all eggs in one basket.

Another interesting fact is something I learned from the database class last night. Apparently the idea of a “database” was conceived by E.F. Codd at IBM in the 70s. He published a paper that pretty much defined how all relational databases behaved today. But IBM didn’t really think the paper was worth the effort to development upon, so they simply shelved the idea (and there simply wasn’t enough computing power to run such design). So in the 80s, some guy came along and decided to implement the ideas in E.F. Codd’s paper, and Oracle was born. And Oracle’s been kicking IBM’s ass in the database market ever since.

Having good a idea ahead of its time is a bitch.

Switcher’s Friend

Outlook2Mac image If you or know anyone who’s considered switching to the Mac but was held back because they couldn’t figure out what to do with their gazillion emails and attachments, Outlook2Mac is the answer.

A while ago at my last job, I had to look for a solution to easily transfer everything from the CEO’s dying Sony Viao laptop to her spanking new 12″ PowerBook. It took me a while to exhaust all solutions on the Outlook (and the attachments) issue. Finally I broke down and bought Outlook2Mac. It’s one of those life-saving specialty softwares you think you’d never use.

All that work, though, went to waste. She soon switched back to an IBM Thinkpad and just didn’t see the usefulness in her PowerBook. She claimed that it was an unreliable piece of metal. But I think its unreliability may have something to do with her knocking it against walls/tables/grounds a few times.