Netscape Navigator is going away

According to the Netscape Blog, on February 1st support for Netscape Navigator ends. I switched my primary browser from Mosaic to Netscape in 1995 and used it almost exclusively up until Internet Explorer 5.0’s release in 1999. Although I have rarely used any of the Netscape versions since Phoenix (1st version of Firefox) came out in 2002, I still think it’s a bit sad that the Granddad of the Mozilla/Firefox/SeaMonkey lineage is gone.

Hat tip to John at Stranger Fruit

FCC wants to make Do Not Call list permanent

Conformity Magazine pointed me to this December 4th notice from the FCC. The commission would like to eliminate the automatic expiration for the Do Not Call registry. I think every US citizen who is not employed in the telemarketing industry would like this rule change to go through.

The statement of Chairman Kevin J. Martin sums up the commission’s decision:

TodayΒ’s action tentatively concludes that telephone numbers registered in the National Do-Not- Call Registry will not expire after 5 years. The Commission continues to move forward to protect consumers who have registered their telephone numbers on the Do-Not-Call list. Consumers expect their telephone numbers to remain protected under the Do-Not-Call list until they have cancelled their registration or their telephone number is disconnected or reassigned.

Instant Media is dead, long live Miro

My regular reader πŸ˜‰ may remember that I’ve recommended Instant Media (I’M) as an alternative to Joost in previous posts. Over the last 6 months or so I basically only used it for automatic downloading of DL.TV and Cranky Geeks (linked under Netcasts on the right). While I had noticed that the I’M guide wasn’t working back in September I hadn’t bothered to find out why. This week I looked around and found some information in these blog posts.

Instant Media Gone Bust? Feeling the Web Video Bubble Burst

Instant Media, Miro Competitor, Leaves The Net Without A Trace

Instant Media Grinds to a Halt

Those posts speculate on what happened and the last one linked above does have a fairly definitive answer from one the the former developers.

Scott Blum, the eccentric billionaire that was funding our company, decided to scuttle it mid-July

This was a little puzzling, why did the I’M web site stay online until September when the plug had been pulled in July. This blog post gives me an idea of why, the company tried to sue Microsoft and get a preliminary injunction over Microsoft’s use of their trademark, I’M. That seems like the reason to me, I’M had to stay up on the web until the court decided, once the courts ruled against I’M in the middle of August I’M had no further incentive to stay around.

Since I’M was gone I decided to look around for an alternative and I found a great one, Miro. This is an excellent program especially since it’s open source and cross platform. I installed it on my OpenSuse 10.3 PC and setup a Samba share so that my Media Center PC can play the videos. One feature I hope to make good use of once NerdTV starts season two is Miro’s support for Bittorrent. I like the idea of be able to easily to give some of my bandwidth to NerdTV to help defray the distribution costs (PBS doesn’t have very deep pockets).

Processing my digital photos part 1

Over the past month I’ve been revising the work flow for handling my digital photos. With the purchase of my first digital camera back in 2000 I soon realized the need to develop a methodology that kept my photos safe while being easy to find and backup. Keeping the flow simple was important to ensure that I would keep using it for years to come without needing major revisions.

Although I’ve been trying for forty years now, I have never become a really good photographer. The advent of digital photography and scanning of old film and slides to digital formats has been a lifesaver. I can, and usually need to, retouch my photos without spending hours per image in the darkroom. With the easy retouch capability of today it is all too tempting to simply fix the original photos and just save it. This is tempting for its simplicity but my experience has shown that with any original data I regret this choice later on. Once you have overwritten original data you can’t go back so, for all types of digital data I enforce a policy on myself of only modifying copies never the original.

The next consideration is the compression used in many digital image file formats. It is not uncommon for me to go through many retouch iterations before I am satisfied with the result. Being all too familiar with the way PC’s tend to crash at the worst possible time, I like to save my work frequently while working on images. To prevent the loss of image quality I prefer to use a loss-less file format for images while editing and then export to JPEG after I’m finished.

These considerations led me to setting up the first part of my workflow back in 2000. When I add images to my collection, I start by creating a subdirectory under my main image directory. This directory is named with the original date of the images using a year-month-day format of YYYY-MM-DD. I then create two subdirectories below the dated directory, one named Originals and the other named JPEG. The directory structure looks like this:

D:My Pictures
              2007-12-25
                          JPEG
                          Originals
              2008-01-08
                          JPEG
                          Originals

Now I copy the images to the Originals directory and set the files to read-only using normal file management tools. By setting the file attribute most programs will automatically prohibit overwriting the original image. The few programs I regularly use that will overwrite read-only files at least give a warning message when I attempt to overwrite the file.

That’s just about all I want to write up for part one of this series of posts. The final thing to cover is how I’ve automated the directory creation process. It only took a few weeks of using this procedure back in 2000 until I tired of manually creating directories. First I created a simple batch file but it was a messy solution so I whipped up a simple VB application. The app prompted for the date name with the current date preset but editable. Then simply clicking OK created the date named directory and the two subdirectories underneath it. I used that app for many years until I started using the open source, GPL licensed, AutoHotkey scripting language.

Here’s my current directory creating script:

; Create dated directory structure for images
; By Paul Hutchinson released to the public domain 2008
; Revised 1/9/2008

#SingleInstance ignore
#NoTrayIcon

; Assign the full path to the root of your picture directory to RootDir.
; Be sure to include the trailing backslash!
; e.g. C:Documents and SettingsusernameMy DocumentsMy Pictures
RootDir = D:My Pictures

InputBox, DirectoryDate, Create new pictures directory, Enter the date to use for the directory name (YYYY-MM-DD), , 375, 125, , , , , %A_YYYY%-%A_MM%-%A_DD%

if ErrorLevel ;User pressed cancel
ExitApp

; Create the new directory and subdirectories
FileCreateDir, %RootDir%%DirectoryDate%
FileCreateDir, %RootDir%%DirectoryDate%Originals
FileCreateDir, %RootDir%%DirectoryDate%JPEG

ExitApp

I'm back

I’ve been away from the blog for a month now due to flu, snow (read as aching body from removal), work obligations and the holidays. There have also been a bunch of personal projects that I had been putting on the back burner for over a year that I had to get to work on. I’ve been learning the wonders of the JPEG EXIF data un-standard (un-standard = a standard with so many options and variations it’s practically impossible for a single program to handle all the existing implementations). Quite a bit of the software I’ve been using for years is so far obsolete that I knew I had to make an effort to switch to modern open source replacements. Then there’s my adventures in Linux that has been a decade long continuing journey that I keep plugging away at. Hopefully over the next few weeks I’ll get a bunch of posts up detailing these items.

Of course during the past month I’ve tried to keep up with all the great writing from the blogger’s in my blogroll (it’s over in the right column). As always there has been tons of good stuff on those blogs and a number of issues and news items that I want to comment on from the past month (my drafts folder has never been bigger). In particular I’d like to single out two blogger’s who kindly tagged me with memes during the past month. Greg Laden and Tyler DiPietro tagged me with memes that I hope to follow through on, no promises though, so much I want to do and so little free time. I also want to thank Tyler for the nice comment he left on my last post, kind words are always helpful in making me feel better.

Finally, I missed my blog celebration of some Giant Birthdays. The science greats I missed are:

Ernst Werner von Siemens December 13th

Antoine Henri Becquerel December 15th

Joseph Henry December 17th

James Prescott Joule December 24th

Sir Isaac Newton January 4th

I’ll have to plan ahead next year so that I don’t miss these again especially since it’s the words of Sir Isaac that inspired me to name the feature Giant Birthday in the first place.