Greatest Comedy Sketches Ever

Sunday, April 13th, 2008

Over the weekend, I came across a really great resource, if you want to call it that. The Nerve is listing The 50 Greatest Comedy Sketches of All Time, and there are some gems to be sure. Some of the ones that made the cut are amazing, including:

  • “More Cowbell,” Saturday Night Live, 2000
  • “Ass Pennies,” Upright Citizens Brigade, 1998
  • “Celebrity Jeopardy!,” Saturday Night Live, 1996
  • “The Pre-Taped Call-in Show,” Mr. Show, 1997
  • Citizen Kane - The Kids in the Hall
  • Wycked Sceptre Party Tape - Mr. Show
  • He’s Rick James - Chappelle’s Show
  • The Racial Draft - Chappelle’s Show
  • “The Idiot in Rural Society,” Monty Python’s Flying Circus, 1970
  • “Dead Parrot,” Monty Python, 1969

My major complaint is that while one of my personal favorites (pre taped call in show) did make the list, some of the best Mr. Show sketches didn’t. Ah well. I guess I am a Bob & David fanboy.

Anyway, I hope you have an hour or more to kill, as this is quite an extensive list of great comedy sketches. If you can think of any that were left out of the list, feel free to add it in the comments.

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Posted on April 13th, 2008 | 3 Comments »

Applications.

Saturday, March 1st, 2008

Keith Robinson (not that Keith Robinson), has written an article recently that caught my eye. In the article, Keith lists the applications he’s been using lately, and noting that there are some redundancies in his day-to-day applications. In a moment of vanity, I figured that I’d make a list of programs that I use on a daily or semi-daily basis. Some are more self-explanitory than others, of course, but away we go!

Communications and whatnot

  • Apple Mail
  • Apple iCal
  • Anxiety - this little app sits in your menubar and allows you to quickly add and check off to-do items. The great thing is that it syncs with the system-wide to-do lists, so you see the same list you’d see in iCal, Mail, or elsewhere.
  • iChat / Adium - iChat for file xfers or video stuff, but my day to day choice is definitely Adium.
  • Twitterific - Seriously, go get it. Now.

News, blogs, browsers and more

  • NetNewsWire - The best RSS newsreader is now free. And since you can sync your feeds with .Mac or Newsgator, it’s a snap to keep your feeds up-to-date on any machine you use.
  • MarsEdit - I started using this app recently, and I’m now hooked. It’s the best weblog editing software out there, bar none. Offline apps generally work better for me than the web-based editors of apps like Gmail, Wordpress, etc.
  • Safari
  • Camino - Camino is the lightweight, gecko based (Firefox) browser that’s a solid competitor to Safari. It’s really been coming along nicely over the past few years, and it’s a great alternative to Safari or Firefox.
  • Netflix Freak - As I mentioned above, I love applications that allow me to interface with web apps. Netflix freak is a program that lets me organize, queue, search, and even save lists of my Netflix queue.
  • Bookit - I use a lot of browsers. If I didn’t have a program like this, I’d be sunk. Bookit compares your bookmarks in all of your installed browsers and shores up any and all differences you may have between the sets. This way, you are using the same bookmarks on Safari, Camino, Firefox, Omniweb, etc.

Web apps

  • Basecamp - I use this at work and in my own work as well. Basecamp is a great way to keep track of client communications files related to a project, to-do lists and so much more. Without it, I’m sure I’d be a disorganized mess.
  • Mint (banking) - Mint is a great online money-tracking system that allows you to add all of your banks, lines of credit, credit cards, investments, and more to one central database. With this linked information, the site gives you an analysis of your spending trends, how much over/under budget you are, and it’s all automatic — it pulls the data from the web sites, so you don’t have to enter anything.
  • Mint (web tracking software) - Mint allows you to view information about visitors to your site. This does what a lot of the leading software does, but it not only looks a lot better, but allows for customization above and beyond Google’s offering. You can add many plug-ins that give you blog-specific info, and it’s themeable. Although it’s absolutely beautiful as it is, so I don’t see a need.
  • del.icio.us - The de-facto social networking website. A great way to keep track of the tons of great sites I come across every day at work or at home.
  • Tumblr - Tumblr is what powers the front page of my site, and is a very easy and fast way to get a tumblelog up and going. Tumblr basically lets you add videos, photos, text snippets, quotes and more to a chronological sequence of ‘micro blog posts’. Some people find this a better way to share what they’re looking at daily, rather than verbose blog posts.
  • Wordpress - Wordpress powers the articles section of my site, and is one of the best open-source blogging engines out there. It’s easy to set up, easy to use, and easy to extend. There are tons of great plugins and themes which definitely helps the new folks get going.
  • Newsgator - Newsgator owns NetNewsWire, amongst other things. The great thing about this ownership is the tight integration between the online newsreader (and by extension, the iPhone application) and the NNW app. This means that my feeds & their status is synced online and back to my home/work computers instantly. This makes it very easy to read a feed when I’m bored and on my phone and have it automatically mark said feed as read on my home Mac.
  • Chyrp (coming soon) - Chryp will soon power my entire site. It’s a very lightweight blogging/tumblelogging engine. It just needs to support MarsEdit first.

Media

  • iPhoto
  • iMovie
  • Adobe CS3 Suite
  • Coda - Coda, while rough around the edges (in my humble opinion, mainly in the text editor areas), is a great app for web designers. Finally, we have a lightweight, stable, site-centric editor that combines all of the good things about Dreamweaver and none of the bad. For the price, it’s highly recommended.
  • Textmate - Although I just gushed about Coda, TextMate is still the grandaddy of them all in the text editor galaxy. There are too many amazing keyboard shortcuts to name. However, it should be noted that it saves me tons of time every day. Great, simple app that does exactly what it is supposed to — only flawlessly.
  • Transmit - The best FTP client ever made. No questions asked.
  • Delicious Library - The highly popular app for organizing movies, books, games and more. I love being able to simply scan the barcode of a book, dvd, cd, or game and have it automatically add it to my catalog. On top of that, you can scan it again and ‘check it out’ to people. Very cool.
  • iTunes

Utilities and such

  • Font Book
  • Parallels Desktop - Parallels allows me to run Windows or Linux from within my OS X desktop. I’ve heard others sing the praise of VMWare Fusion, but I find parallels to work flawlessly for me. Maybe I’ll give VMware a chance one day, but right now I’m totally happy with the latest version of this app.
  • iWork 08
  • iBank - iBank is a ‘quicken killer’ for the Mac. It’s lighter weight than Quicken, but it delivers on all of the functions that I need, and I actually am happy that it’s not a bloated mess. Makes keeping track of my expenses a snap.
  • Skitch - Skitch is a neat little app that lets you take screenshots, manipulate photos, and upload them to flickr, .Mac, or your FTP server. It lives up in your menu bar, so it’s only a click away at any time. I’ve learned to love this little guy.
  • Handbrake - DVD ripping done right.
  • Onyx - Onyx is a general-purpose maintenance application for the Mac. With this bad boy, you can change hidden preferences, clean font caches, repair permissions, and make sure your Mac is running smoothly.

Some of these programs cost money, but most are shareware and cost under $50. The amazing thing is that all of this sotware (with the exception of CS3) probably costs under $300 for the whole lot. That’s not a bad deal for the amazing amount of functionality that is added to my Mac from these great indie developers.

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Posted on March 1st, 2008 | No Comments »

Bookit.

Wednesday, November 14th, 2007

book_0711.jpg

I saw a similar post on another site, so I figured I’d post the books I am reading right now. From top to bottom:

They’re all pretty good, but The World Without Us has so far been my favorite. I have a few more books on the deck, but are much more technical in nature. Maybe every few months I’ll throw up a list of what I’m reading … or maybe just put this in flickr-land from now on.

Posted on November 14th, 2007 | No Comments »

Convergence.

Thursday, July 26th, 2007

iphoneDid you guys hear? Apple came out with a phone!

A few weeks ago, I said I wouldn’t be getting an iPhone on the day it came out because I wanted to have some questions about the UI, data speeds, and a few other nagging issues sorted out before I took the plunge. It took me a week and a few trips to the Apple store, but I went ahead and got the 8gig iPhone the Friday after it came out. Overall, I’m very impressed with the device, and it has met all of my expectations save for a few minor issues.

First of all, activation was not a problem for me like it was for some. I got the phone, drove home, plugged it in, and within 5 minutes the phone was activated and ready for use. Once this part of the process was done, it was a matter of getting my ’stuff’ onto the iPhone. This was also easily accomplished from within iTunes. I’m still not so sure how I feel about iTunes being the center of my iPhone/computer interaction, but at the same time, I’d rather use that than another standalone app. My contacts, calendar, music, podcasts, email accounts & photos were all loaded onto the device, and I was good to go. I spend the better part of that weekend playing around with the iPhone UI and the apps.

It really does seem like a lot of thought went into almost every decision that was made about the interface of this device. I think almost anyone can instantly get used to how this device works, and easily navigate it’s applications. I think those iPhone commercials were a great idea, as everyone I have let play around with my iPhone try basically the same actions displayed in the ads (play with coverflow, use google maps, pinch and zoom photos). People instantly know what the iPhone is all about, and that gives them a big advantage over Blackberry and other competing phones in the market.

Some of the things that have jumped out at me over the past 3 weeks of owning this device:

  1. Battery life is great. Even using WiFi and browsing the web, I get the advertised battery life. In a normal day (taking a few calls, sending a handful of text messages, checking a few web sites, listening to music for 5-6 hours at work) I only seem to use about 25% of the battery. Even with heavy use, I haven’t gotten much below half in one day.
  2. The phone is a near perfect size. It feels very solid in your hand, and it really seems well-built. It freaking better be, but still … feels great.
  3. EDGE isn’t great, but it works for basic tasks that I use - email, rss/news, twitter, google maps, things like that. I was on vacation last week with my family and got a chance to really put the data network thru it’s paces while I was on the road, and it got the job done … although it was frustratingly slow every once in a while. Overall, I get somewhere between 125-150kb/s in good areas … and something much, much slower in others.
  4. The Google maps app is outstanding. We had to use it a few times to find some places in Orlando, and while it doesn’t have GPS, the driving directions with it’s ‘turn-by-turn’ feature is good enough … especially in a pinch.
  5. Using the WiFi for internet access is ideal, but I have left it off most of the time unless I’m at home, work, or a friend’s house with WiFi. It seems to affect battery life marginally, but I’m not sure turning it off while driving and such makes a huge difference either way.
  6. The touchpad isn’t perfect, but I’m really fast at it now. You really do get used to trusting the software to auto-complete even the most obscure terms, and 99% of the time, it works wonderfully. I have sent out a few emails I didn’t re-read in a pinch, and it included some interesting wording, but for the most part, it’s been great.
  7. No AIM is a downer, but I’ve just had IMs forwarded to SMS and that does the trick. Also, for now, FlickIM fills the actual AIM issue pretty well. Perfect? No way. But hopefully we’ll see an update eventually from Apple that allows me to chat it up on my phone when killing time or in a pinch.

Now, of course the iPhone isn’t perfect. There are a handful of glaring issues - some that can be fixed with software, some that cannot - that annoy me to differing degrees. The ringer is pretty quiet, and I have missed a few calls already when walking in a public place, and the vibrate function is a bit weak as well. Additionally, while the camera phone quality isn’t bad at all, the interface for the camera app itself is pretty abysmal, and in my opinion, counterintuitive. There is one button for taking pictures, and it works when you RELEASE the button, not when you press it. I can understand the logic, since the camera is on the opposite side of the touch screen. If you’re taking a self portrait or something along those lines, the best way to take photos is to place your finger on the button, turn the camera to where it needs to go, then release the button … but I just find that odd, as every camera ever has used the opposite action. A cool option to add would also be to have, say, a 2 second hold of the home button automatically take a photo. This way, no fumbling around finding buttons, no ambiguity. But I doubt we’ll see anything like that - nor will we see an added button to a 2nd gen iPhone for the camera.

The ‘notes’ application, which ostensibly will be updated to work with Apple’s improved Mail application that’s coming out with Leopard, is god awful right now. There’s no way to synch it with anything, so you can create to-do lists while on the go, which is helpful, but you can’t easily get it onto the computer since there is no cut/paste functionality on the iPhone (yet). If there were cut and paste, you could at least email yourself the list.

Finally, the YouTube application is a great idea, but currently there are almost no worthwhile videos on the ‘quicktime version’ of YouTube. Therefore, other than a few great clips of Family Guy, it’s a complete waste of my time.

Mr. Zeldman wrote an article recently about how the iPhone is the only thing that has ever really ‘forced his hand’ and had him switch over to many of Apple’s default OS X apps. I have made a similar transition, away from Google Reader, Google Calendar, and gMail in favor of NetNewsWire pro + NewsGator (which now syncs items between the online & desktop apps so I can read unread RSS feeds on my iPhone and have the same list at home, work, and online), iCal, and IMAP/Apple mail/Address book. There are certain benefits to making this switch, but it has been a process getting used to new habits, workflow, and ways of storing/using my data.

I’ve used the Apple apps on and off over the years, but generally have sought out the best product for each task, not always the default app. Now, due to how easy it is to get all of that data (not to mention it being the only way right now) into your iPhone if you use all of the Apple apps, Using Mail/Address Book/iCal/iTunes/Aperture is a no-brainer.

Overall, I’m nothing short of floored by the iPhone. It’s rare a ‘convergence device’ works as well as this does - it’s a fine iPod, a great phone, and a very useful PIM / web browser as well. Apple hit this one out of the freaking park. Not only that, I really feel it has changed the way I interact with computers and the web. I actually spend less time online, as in a pre-iPhone world I would sit down to check email, then get sucked into AIM, then start reading RSS feeds, and next thing you know, it’s 2am. No more. I’m more accessible to others, yet I spend far less time actually being in one place waiting for this interaction to take place. I definitely text more now, as well. If/when we see iChat for the phone, it’ll be over.

Simply put, the iPhone is the nicest piece of consumer electronics I have ever used. It meets all of my needs in the personal and professional realm, is fun to use, and the best is yet to come. With software updates on the horizon from Apple, you can only assume this product will improve over time. Is it for everyone? Of course not. But it’s a fine device that has ‘enough’ storage to let you throw your contacts, photos, music, videos and calendars onto an easy to use, great looking phone that’s an absolute pleasure to use.

My site is now ‘iPhone optimized‘ as well: the default zoom level & page width have been adjusted for the viewport attribute.

Posted on July 26th, 2007 | No Comments »

iPhone.

Thursday, June 28th, 2007

I just heard Apple is releasing a phone tomorrow! Some of the reasons I won’t be taking the day off work to buy one:

  1. AIM/iChat Support. I send IMs more than I talk on a phone. I’ve seen some nice proof-of-concept AIM chat ideas that use the web, but I’d like to see how the IM scene pans out.
  2. I’d like to see how slow this web browsing experience really is. I’ve heard EDGE is pretty bad.
  3. While the reviews of the touchpad are pretty solid, I’d like to give it a go myself before taking the plunge.
  4. No copy/paste of text…
  5. No MMS (picture messages) - I’d like to also see how easy it is going to be to take a picture with the iPhone, then email it to, say, my flickr account. Hopefully things like that are a fairly painless process.
  6. No voice dialing
  7. I’d like to see how easy it is to be playing music, browsing the web, then decide you want to change tracks. I’d think you’d have to go ‘home’, then open iTunes, then change the track, then go back to the web. Does Safari stay open? hmm.
  8. No Flash support
  9. Little details like, do I sell my current iPod? Do I have my iPhone and my iPod?
  10. I already have a phone. Yep.

Note: I will own an iPhone very shortly, don’t worry about that. These are just some of the reasons I’m not one of the hordes of folks camping out to get my hands on a phone. I’d like to wait for the second generation, or at least give it a shot in person to see how much I like it. If I can hold out until they switch over to a higher-speed network, I think that’d make the decision to purchase a lot easier. Tomorrow, and really this weekend in general, is going to be nuts. I pity any Apple store or AT&T employee.

Edit: More anecdotal evidence of improved EDGE speeds before the iPhone launch. This could definitely sway my decision.

Posted on June 28th, 2007 | 6 Comments »