- Visual Poet: Good, but buggy idea
I'm not paying for it now, because as this review makes clear, it's not quite yet fit-for-purpose, but I want to check back in on this one later.
Mail Filtering
This will make no practical difference to any of you, but I’m posting it partly so I’ve got a record of what I’ve set up and partly because the odds are, I’ve forgotten something obvious, and I’m hoping that one of you will say something like “Alasdair, you idiot, if you keep doing it that way, it’s going to fuck up like this….”. (And partly because I’m feeling a little impressed with my own cleverness right now, which is usually a bad sign.)
OK, so up until today, my email was managed like this:
I had an inbox folder that contained about 250 messages. Anything over that 250 threshold that was also over a month old got moved into an “old messages” folder. That was basically it. I used to have a few rules for thing like LJ comment notifications, and some mailinglists, that shunted those into their own folders, but I found that that meant they rarely got read.
Instead, I had an inbox and a massive and unwieldy “old messages” folder that was half-clogged with unread messages and undeleted spam, that was taking an increasingly ludicrous amount of time to search when I want to refer back to something. This was not, by anyone’s definition a winning organisational strategy. So here are my new rules.
I have compiled a database of every email address I have replied to in the last three and a half years. (New addresses that I reply to will automatically get added to this database.)
Emails from these addresses that are over a week old get sorted into folders by year and month. As do emails with any of the following keywords in the subject : “order” “payment” “receipt” and “confirm”.
Anything else at all gets deleted after a week, unless I have flagged it, in which case, it will remain in my inbox until I un-flag it, at which time it will get deleted. (Unread messages will also remain until I have read them.)
That’s it.
So my question is this: can anyone see any sort of email that might get deleted, when it probably shouldn’t (assume that I will, at some point, forget to flag something important)? Should I add some other keywords to my auto-archive filter? Is there any reason why seven days is too short a time? What have I not thought of, when designing these rules?
Bookmarks for July 30, 2010
- Urbanized
The next film by the guy behind Helevtica and Objectified.
Bookmarks for July 29, 2010
- erwtenpeller – War of the Worlds – SoundCloud
Dubstep remixes of Jeff Wayne's War of the Worlds.
- Google Alarm | F.A.T.
Ever wondered just how much Google is learning about you? Turn this on, and see. I'm not posting this as a dig at Google, but rather just in a "be informed about what information about you goes where".
- Ping Pong Battle for iPad on the iTunes App Store
Requires an iPad and 2 iPhones to play. Suspect that it's not going to be set-the-world-on-fire exciting, but it's worth a look, I think, if nothing else than because it's a reasonable innovative idea that is bound to have other applications.
- Cool Tools: The Best Magazine Articles Ever
I've been Instapapering stuff ever since I got my iPad for weeks now, and not quite finding the time to get it all read – to the point that when I'm done with my current book, I'll probably spend a week or two's commuting time catching up on them, rather than picking up another book. So obviously, what I need to make my backlog truly huge is a trove of excellent instapaper fodder. (If you are an iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad user who isn't making use of Instapaper, you're missing out on one of the best things about them.)
Bookmarks for July 28, 2010
- aardvarkonsea.com/letterpress
My boss turned this up on a routine vanity search for our company name (Aardvark Media), and immediately ordered a couple of the posters, from of all this, a Tea room in St Leonards-on-Sea. I am quite tempted to order one of them for myself for home as well. Any manifesto which begins "Kill your TV" and includes "Make Stuff", "Drink Tea", "Bake Cake", "Grow You Community" and "Champion the Underdog" is kind of tailor made for me, and, I would imagine, a number of other people reading this.
- Daring Fireball: An Improved Liberal, Accurate Regex Pattern for Matching URLs
I bookmarked Gruber's previous efforts on this front, and I will move to using this improved pattern in the future.
- Fish in a barrel – Neven Mrgan's tumbl
A comparison of Apple's iMac website with the websites for Dell and HP's primary desktop machines. I'm genuinely not posting this to cheerlead for Apple, I'm actually posting it as a reminder to self in a "what not to do" kind of way, because I suspect a lot og my work falls closer to HP and Dell than Apple.
- Quantum time machine 'allows paradox-free time travel' – Telegraph
My brain hurts. Of possibly it will hurt in the future, and the quantum-level changes have moved back in time. In any event, I eagerly await being given a quantum supercomputer to play with.
Bookmarks for July 26, 2010
- rotonic for iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad on the iTunes App Store
Horrifyingly addictive little game – I downloaded it, and then when I looked up, it was hours later.
- Insufficient data – Charlie's Diary
I'm actually more optimistic about what "Big Society" can potentially achieve than most people I know, but I recognise that actually, most of what it can achieve is (significant) optimisation of already-funded and already-managed programs that are set up with the correct social tools. Which is why I found this such interesting ready: Charlie Stross, in the course of wondering about how many people you'd need to send to Mars, ably demonstrates why society is already far too large and complex for "Big Society" to ever work past a certain limit.
Bookmarks for July 23, 2010
- Janet Fitch's 10 rules for writers | Jacket Copy | Los Angeles Times
Actually, these aren't half bad, and if I could make more of an effort to remember them, it'd probably lift my writing quite a lot.
- Wayward Alzheimer's patients foiled by fake bus stop – Telegraph
Architectures of control, right here. Nice.
- The ever-arrogant Apple « Observatory
I admit to coming off like a bit of an Apple fanboy, but still, this piece really nailed something for me: if Apple are sometimes arrogant (and I don't think there's a dispute about whether or not they are) then it's because they've earned the right to be by leading the way in personal computing on a technology level for decades now. They may not have been the most successful financially, but they've been the game changing-innovators since before the iPod, never mind the iPhone and iPad. And if someone comes along that can humble them, then I will sincerely welcome them but it hasn't happened yet. The reason I buy Apple products is that they're the best on sale at the moment, and as soon as someone comes along that offers me a better experience, I'll switch.
- Stuart Roebuck: Mobile Proxy Cache content modification by O2
I'm a little fucked off about this, but not quite willing to throw my toys from the pram over it – not least because I can't, having just signed up for another 18 months. But it's one to keep an eye on, and one to be professionally aware of, at least, as more clients start asking up for iPhone/iPad tailored content.
Bookmarks for July 22, 2010
- Why it's never too late to be a lesbian | Life and style | The Guardian
Fascinating article on the fluidity of sexuality – the idea that people, particularly women, can, in fact, switch from hetero- to homo-sexuality in different phases of their life – that it's possible to be sincerely heterosexual, and then later, sincerely homosexual without ever being bisexual, and without devaluing one's previous sexuality.
- America's Joyous Future
I laughed like a drain.
- Bookshelf Porn
I love my iPad – I'm carrying so many books around with me these days, and it is very liberating. But I also love my bookshelves. One day, I hope to have space for my books, but I accept that this may be a fools dream, and I may have to resign myself to an iPad-based future. In the meantime, I shall stare at this with envy.
- danah boyd | apophenia » MySpace and Facebook: How Racist Language Frames Social Media (and Why You Should Care)
I've been following boyd's research for a few years now, and have been particularly interested in her data regarding class/race/gender divides in social media use, and I really hope the rallying cry that she's putting out here has some effect, because I would really like to see people stop arguing over the scope the problem, and start talking about what can be done about it. "On the internet, no-one knows you're a dog" is both a triumph *and* a tragedy, and we need to start addressing that.
Bookmarks for July 21, 2010
- Fantasy Flight Games [Chaos in the Old World] – Leading publisher of board, card, and roleplaying games.
I freely admit, I'm a massive nerd. But I haven't bought a GW related product in some years, and this looks like it might be the one to get me back…
- Thoughtful Games – Montsegur 1244
This looks very interesting. Must pick up a PDF edition when I'm at home.
Bookmarks for July 19, 2010
- russell davies: this is facebook. this is the internet
"It's good to know what people think, even if you don't approve. " This 12 words, right here, is why I love the internet.