Archive

Latest Windows Live Writer update

There is a new version (at long last) of Windows Live Writer available. I’ve not tried it yet as I am just downloading it now. If you want to check it out go to http://writer.live.com/

As mentioned in a previous post, having tried nearly all of the various desktop blog editors available (paid and free) I considered Live Writer (the version I am typing in now) to be a close contender as the best one to use. Let’s put it this way, it’s currently the only one I bother to use. Hopefully the new version will fill out the various “missing features” I wanted. I’ll let you know.

Jonathan

The ultimate online application

The following is an outline of an Online Application I am 100% certain we’ll see available within the next 1-3 years. Let us say this is a look at the future of what is coming in the way of online applications. This, to me, is the next natural step.

I have forwarded this info to Google as a feature suggestion. Below is a copy of what I suggested to them. It was written very quickly in a small text box on their feedback page, so there may be typographical and gramatical errors, but I’ll leave it as it. (I’ll also leave in the first couple of non-relate features I suggested… just for the record)

Let me know if this is something you can envision using. Also, if there are additional features you would suggest.

To Google:

I’d like to suggest that Goodle make available a sync tool for Outlook (and Thunderbird — although perhaps there’s already one on Tbird).

There’s a plugin I use called GSynit which works well. Syncmycal also works well, but it’s $30. Gsyncit is $9.

What I would suggest is that Google put out its own FREE outlook plugin. There are a vast number of business outlook users out there, people who will not switch to Thunderbird for corporate reasons (I seem to recall Tbird has a sync plugin already?). I suspect many of these people would find Gcal far more attractive if it was a no-brainer to get Outlook and Gmail synchronising. If you don’t want to develop something from scratch, you could make the developer of GSynit an offer to buy his code.

Anyway, I really like GCal, but I must say I ONLY started using it once I was able to Sync with Outlook. Before that, I wouldn’t use it. And, as per some feedback I just sent, the free sms reminders is the #1 feature that made me want to use Gcal. That, and the fact that once I am on the road travelling (in a few months) I will quite likely use Gcal directly and skip the Outlook syncing because I can access Gcal from any internet cafe.

[THE FUTURE ONLINE APP]

Whilst writing the above, the following came to mind. I forward this to you because if it’s not something you’re already working on, I think it’s something Google should serious consider.

I’d suggest Google create is an online “time management system”. Google already has many of the core components of such a system in place. A basic to-do list would be a starter, although something more comprehensive would be more popular. No doubt Google is already working on the to-do list idea. Although, to be honest, basic to-do lists a somewhat a thing of the past.

Check out an application like “Mylife Organized” (google it!) and you’ll see what I mean. I am suggesting something that allows for setting up projects, sub-projects, and tasks within the projects. Also, take note that the book “Getting Things Done” by David Allen is very popular and again if you google that one you’ll see there are a lot of people looking at ways to apply the GTD principles with computers and task management programs. If you developed your task/project management system to be able to be set up as a GTD interface it would seen get out there.

Off the top of my head this would require the following feature sets:
1) The two already mentioned above. Projects, Sub-projects, and tasks (to-do lists) within these projects. Projects and tasks would have the option of assigning a data and time to them. Even a start and end date. Also reminders for the start and end.

2) An virtual “Inbox” tray — this is a dumping ground for ideas, thoughts, notes, bookmarks, sound files, documents, etc. Emails could also be moved into this. (It’s not an email inbox, rather an “everything inbox” to which emails could be sent if desired). I think your Google Notepad system would be the logical starting point for the “inbox”.

3) A good folder/filing system for the following items: Emails, notes (stuff from the “Inbox” mentioned in #2), documents, saved attachments, etc. It should be easy to send any item into these folders, from where ever they are normally stored (emails from Gmail, docs from Google Docs, etc.)

4) The ability to make any item something to be actioned. So, for instance, an email… I would be able to assign it to a project, and/or set up a task, and/or fire it through to my calendar as an appointment. Or things in the Time Management Inbox… again, I would be able to make them into tasks, appointments, etc. These action items would have a date and even a time assigned to them. A reminder would be available too.

5) Another great would be the ability to send items from my PC (and PDA) to an email address (a google one) which will place those items into the Time Management Inbox. So I could forward emails to it, forward images, forward documents, forward notes, forward voice recordings, etc.). Any attachment on this special email would be striped off the message and put into the Inbox.

6) The ability to manage much of this from the Desktop. Be that a ground-up desktop application or something that plugs into Outlook and Thunderbird (with the Sunbird calendar system installed). I think the later would require much less development overhead, and would suit the needs of anyone wanting a desktop interface for the above Google Time Management system.

—-
Some of the above mentioned is simply about tying together the systems Google has already developed (Notebooks, Gmail, Calendar, Google Docs). Some of it is about adding new feature sets to help tie it all together in useful ways and to provide the ability to organise the information in two ways: Projects/Tasks, and Time (dates, times, end times, reminders, finish times, etc.)

I’d greatly appreciate hearing back from someone regarding the above mentioned. These are quick notes off the top of my head, so if you’d like more input let me know.

Having worked professionally in the IT sector since I was 12 (20 years ago) and with a really good handle on people and what the social trends/wants are, I am entirely certain that if Google is not the one to come out with something like what I’ve just outlined, some one else will. I guarantee it. In my mind, Google might as well be the one to do it.

A name for the above?
Google Organizer
G-Time
G-Life
Google Life Planner (GLP for short)

Just some thoughts.

With my regards,

Jonathan Evatt

Opensource Groupware Applications

The following is a list of Open Source / Free online groupware applications. There are many of them out there and this list represents the more appealing ones I have come across. At some time I might update this list with more information on each groupware solution. For now, however, this list is to simply serve as a starting point for finding the right open source online groupware application for you and your organization.

If you have any suggestions of other good systems not on this list please leave a comment and let me know.

  • Hipergate — http://www.hipergate.org/
    hipergate is an open source web based application suite.
    It’s mission is to cover a full range of technical requirements in any organization. All applications are addresses from Internet Explorer, without needing any other additional software in the client computer.
    This suite is multi-company capable, and can be used in a single company, a corporate group or working as an ASP solution capable of serving an unlimited quantity of single customers.
  • PHProjekt — http://www.phprojekt.com/index.php?&newlang=eng

    PHProjekt is a modular application for the coordination of group activities and to share informations and document via the web. Components of PHProjekt: Group calendar, project management, time card system, file management, contact manager, mail client and many other modules. PHProjekt supports many protocols like ldap, xml/soap and webdav and is available for 38 languages and 9 databases.

    • eGroupware — http://www.egroupware.org/
      I am not entirely sure if this one is able to be installed a run in a purely web based environment, but it otherwise looks very good.
    • Group-Office Groupware — http://sourceforge.net/projects/group-office/
    • Centraview — http://www.centraview.com
      Provides more than just Groupware functionality.

      CentraView is a leading Open Source Centralized Business Management (CBM) solution that delivers an ideal combination of Contact Management, Salesforce Automation (SFA), and Customer Relationship Management (CRM) functionality and much more, all through a standard web browser. CentraView is much more than just CRM or SFA. We offer a comprehensive business management suite that reduces the need to purchase many different software applications that don’t talk to one another. Ultimately we provide you with that all important “Centralized View” of all your customer information.

Error 429 ActiveX component

Recently I’ve been getting Error #429 when trying to run certain VBS scripts that attempt to make an ADODB.connection to a database on a Windows XP SP2 machine. The exact error I was getting was this:

Error #429 - Microsoft VBscript Runtime error
ActiveX component can’t create object: ‘ADODB.Connection’

I tried many things to fix this. What worked was the one of (or a combination of) the following, and perhaps it will fix this issue for you too.

TIP 1

  1. Open a DOS command prompt. START –> RUN –> Type in “cmd” (without the “”)
  2. Type in:  regsvr32 C:\Program Files\Common Files\System\ado\msado15.dll
    OR
    If that file is not found then try:
    regsvr32 C:\Program Files\Common Files\System\msado15.dll
  3. If the above file is not found then go hunt for it manually in that Common Files directory and its sub directories.
  4. Restart your computer once it is successfully registered.

TIP 2

Another thing to try:

  1. Use regedt32 (from START –> Run –>) to find HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Internet Settings\Zones\0
  2. Once there find the value 1201. If it is set to “1″ then change it to “0″

Check whether the registry edit is or is not what fixes this for you. If it does not then I recommend changing it back to 1. This 1201 setting is for allowing windows to “Initialize and script ActiveX controls not marked as safe” in the Local Computer Security Zone. If it is set to 1 it is meant to prompt you. If you set it to 3 then this is disabled completely. Setting it to 0 opens it right up which should not be an issue on a clean computer with a good virus scanner and the like.

TIP 3

Some people also found that “regsvr32 scrrun.dll” (at the DOS prompt) helped.

TIP 4

You may also want to try installing the latest Windows Scripting components from Microsoft:

Windows Script 5.6 for Windows XP and Windows 2000
Windows Script 5.6 for Windows 98/Me/NT 4.0

Repair MDAC 2.8 XP SP2

If you are looking at a way to repair an installation of Microsoft MDAC components (2.8 SP1) on Windows XP SP2 you may have found out it’s not immediately obvious how one can do it. In fact it appears to be impossible without uninstalling SP2 and then reinstalling it. Time consuming.

As far as I know with XP SP2 the MDAC components can not be uninstalled nor can they be reinstalled. It appears they are “built into” SP2, in that they are no longer treated as a separate component from the end users point of view. Trying to install the latest MDAC download from Microsoft.com will result in an incompatibility error something like “MDAC 2.8 RTM is incompatible..”

For various reasons you may wish to reinstall/repair MDAC. Perhaps you are finding certain MDAC dependant programs / scripts are not running or generate errors that indicate MDAC is faulty… or perhaps it’s something else troubling your PC. Anyway, repairing them is possible afterall.

Here’s a little tip I found for repairing the installation of MDAC 2.8

  1. Locate the mdac.inf file in c:\windows\inf
  2. Right click and select install
  3. When prompted for a location, point to c:\windows\servicepackfiles\i386
  4. Next when promtpet for the Windows XP cdrom, either load the cd or point to c:\i386
  5. Hey presto, this should have reinstalled / repaired MDAC 2.8

Please let a comment here if this helps you so that other people know of the results.

Super Video Viewer Encoder

I’ve just stumbled upon a fantastic video viewer / encoder / converter. It handles what looks like every video format/codec known to man. It’s entirely free. SUPER is an acronym for Simplified Universal Player Encoder & Renderer

If you’re looking for a super video handling application then check it out on http://www.erightsoft.com/SUPER.html

Here’s a breakdown of what it does, as written at the SUPER web page:

  • SUPER © IS UNIVERSAL as it supports a wide variety of input/source file format to play
    or encode (to & from) without any additional third party software.

    Supported input source file formats are:

  • Video format: 3gp/3g2(Nokia,Siemens,Sony,Ericsson) asf, avi (DivX,H263,H263+,H264,XviD,MPEG4,MSmpeg4 etc..), dat, fli, flc, flv (used in Flash), mkv, mpg (Mpeg I,Mpeg II), mov(H263,H263+,H264,MPEG4 etc..), mp4(H263,H263+,H264,MPEG4), ogg, qt, rm, ram, rmvb, str (Play Station), swf (Flash), ts (HDTV), viv, vob, wmv

  • Audio format: aac, ac3, amr, mmf, mp2, mp3, mp4, mpc, ogg, ra, wav, wma

  • AviSynth Script Files: avs. Let you specify advanced encoding commands using AviSynth scripts!

  • SUPER © supports the conversion (encoding both ways, to & from ) of ALL the listed formats.

Excellent Wordpress Plugins

There is a great list of Wordpress plug-ins over at the ditii.com web site. You’ll find them here. (http://www.ditii.com/blog/2007/04/11/dtwl-best-wordpress-plugins/)
I think most of my favorites are there, along with numerous other plug-ins many people will find useful.

Email blacklist checking

If you have noticed your email is not getting through to some people on a consistent basis it may be that your outgoing email server has been blacklisted.

To check if your email domain has been blacklisted use the following online tool:

http://www.mxtoolbox.com/blacklists.aspx

http://www.emailtools.co.uk/tools/blacklistcheck.htm

For more information www.emailtools.co.uk also has some helpful tips on how to get off email blacklists. Check it out here: http://www.emailtools.co.uk/tips/blacklists.htm

Nice AJAX File Manager

Here’s a nice AJAX file manager. It’s still pretty slim of features in my opinion. For instance, it does not support compressing files and directories in a zip/gzip file before downloading, which is particularly what I was looking for. Otherwise it’s a nice to use file manager for web sites.

http://ecosmear.com/relay/

MySQL Desktop Management Tools

MySQL is a popular database system used in the backend of a huge number of web applications. Just about every database driven PHP application I have seen has MySQL working alongside it. There are various tools available (usually provided by your web host) for managing MySQL databases online (phpMyAdmin for instance). I have found that having a desktop manager can be very useful. I’ve found it particularly useful when I need to manually edit data within a range of tables and records.

The following tools are worth checking out if a desktop MySQL manager is what you want:

OPEN SOURCE

  • HeidiSQL (formally SQLFront — an old favorite of mine)
  • HeidiSQL is an easy-to-use interface and a “working-horse” for web-developers using the popular MySQL-Database. It allows you to manage and browse your databases and tables from an intuitive Windows® interface.

    With HeidiSQL you will also be able to

    • generate nice SQL-exports
    • synchronize tables between two databases
    • manage user-privileges
    • import text-files
    • export table-data as CSV, HTML and XML
    • browse and edit table-data using a comfortable grid
    • batch-insert ascii or binary files into tables
    • write queries with syntax-highlighting (next version will have also code-completion)
    • monitor and kill client-processes
    • and much more Smily
  • MySQL Administrator and MySQL Query Browser (from the makers of MySQL)
    Avaialble for Mac, Windows, and Linus
    I find the Heidi system to be easier to use

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