August 2009 Archives

Maine has a program in the schools called Maine Learning Technology Initiative that provides laptops to middle school and now high school students. The program began with iBooks and progressed to MacBooks. The computers have a lifespan in the schools, and apparently with the stimulus package, are getting replaced sooner than expected in some school systems. The upshot is that there are many of these white MacBooks are available if you know where to look.

I have been struggling with how to get Arthur and Rori into Intel Macs, and the opportunity presented itself with a couple of these machines. Arthur can now use CS4 Master Collection and write Flex 4 code. We also want to write iPhone apps, and the old G4 Powerbook wasn't up to the task.

Thanks, MLTI.
Enhanced by Zemanta
When we bought our iPhones, we had phones with AT&T that were not on a contract. We had accumulated about 7900 rollover minutes over the years we had been with AT&T. We wanted to be able to keep them, so we tried to simply add iPhones and a 2 year contract. Apparently, the result was that we got:
  1. A new AT&T account for the iPhones;
  2. The old account was cancelled;
  3. The minutes were left behind.
Unhappy with losing the minutes, I called and learned that the old account was a business account and the new one was personal. Regardless, I argued, I should be able to keep my minutes. Without any hesitation, the lovely gal on the line told me that she could give me 1000, but she'd have to ask her manager about more. She text messages her manager (I kid you not) and the result is that we got 4000 of the minutes restored. Better than zero, and there's more. 

Because of the large number of accumulated minutes, I wasn't paying much attention to the minutes on the phone. Good thing I did, though, because the counter was reading low near the end of the month. I knew that we had called everyone we knew on these new gadgets, and that I was using it for most of my business activities, so I figured that I needed a plan with more minutes. I changed to the 1400 minute plan with minutes to spare, and forgot about it. I got the bill, and it claimed that I had gone over by ~150 minutes! The same call got the charges refunded.

I must say that the experience was pleasant and very rewarding, for me, anyway, and AT&T gets a thumbs up from me.
Enhanced by Zemanta
After the severe electrical and wind storm and subsequent power fluctuation and failure last night, the furnace controller would no longer ignite the furnace. We didn't realize it until this morning, when the showers were very cold. I decided to take matters into my own hands, so I removed the defunct controller, took it to Home Depot, got the closest thing I could find, and installed it. $73 later, and hot water again.
Enhanced by Zemanta
Followers noticed that the blog was slowly disintegrating. Actually, it was the hard drive on the XServe, which has now been corrected. Hooray for Retrospect and TechTool Pro.
Enhanced by Zemanta
http://www.proficiografik.com/2009/08/03/save-custom-pdf-output-template-in-adobe-bridge-cs4.html

Very handy tip for creating PDF output templates for use in in Bridge CS4.

Enhanced by Zemanta
XMPie uDirect 4.6.1 finally supports InDesign CS4. I installed the update without incident this afternoon. It is very nice to be able to now be able to use CS4 for variable projects. I can't find an announcement on their site, so talk to your sales rep. I am sure they will be demonstrating heavily at Print 09 in September.

I have always liked the XMPie workflow and its ability to make variable campaigns accessible to designers. Too often, variable workflows depend on a key programmer who works in proprietary applications, and often must disassemble a campaign piece in order to build it back up again. uDirect allows the designer to drive the process, providing either ready-to-run applications, variable print streams (via PPML, VIPP, VPS etc.) to the presses, or composite PDF or Postscript. In either case, the designer can see and accurately proof the results of campaign decisions directly in InDesign.

CS4 support in XMPie uDirect will certainly drive more marketers finally to upgrade their Creative Suite licenses. Adobe should be happy with this silent upgrade.
Enhanced by Zemanta
On July 28, the US Post Office announced changes to its distribution system. According to a letter from Rick Coughlin, the Customer Relations Manager for Northern New England, the Post Office mail volume in 2008 was down "...9.5 billion pieces, and [they] project an additional 12 billion piece decrease this year." In response, they have "...realigned [their] transportation and delivery network to remain financially viable."

The upshot for mailers is that the hours during which a mailer may enter mail into the system have been reduced at the end of the day, which is the exact opposite of what would be more efficient for the mailers themselves. Mailers now must push their production back a day in order to meet the new, shorter insertion windows. At a time when the post office is struggling to remain relevant, effectively adding a day to the time to deliver mail is absurd.

The Post Office is not new to regulations that are convenient to themselves and detrimental to the customer. Recently, they changed the rules about how booklets were to be tabbed. Previously, tabs (tape circles that close the open edge) along the open long edge of the booklet were sufficient, but now, the booklets must have tabs on all three open sides. This triples the processing time and expense for mailers, since most mailers will send the piece through the tabber three times rather than invest hundreds of thousands of dollars in new tabbing equipment.

If the US Government wants to stimulate the economy, how about taking a look at the Post Office and how it seems to be working to make themselves the least convenient, least reliable, and least accommodating service available. No wonder email marketing is kicking the Post Office's behind.
Enhanced by Zemanta
I am installing Adobe Creative Suite 4 Master Collection from DVD media. Of course, because I deal in disk images through Adobe Licensing, it's a little more complicated. It's easy on a Mac; just mount the images and go. Since Windows wants specific paths, mounting all of the images leads to confusion and incomplete installation, at least for me. Writing these DVDs proved to be more of a challenge than I had anticipated. The images are all UDF images, and I am a Mac guy with Parallels. Toast will write UDF DVDs from images, but apparently it doesn't like it if the images are mounted over a network. I cooked a few drink coasters before realizing that, and then it was off to the races. If the race was between a snail and a slug.

I started the process yesterday afternoon, let it run overnight, and here it is almost noon, and we're finally on disk 4. I can't wait until the updating process begins! I suppose that the reward for my patience is that I can use MC CS4 on my Windows personality, which is necessary for some of the work that I do. I wonder if a new Windows laptop would be more convenient?
Enhanced by Zemanta

About this Archive

This page is an archive of entries from August 2009 listed from newest to oldest.

July 2009 is the previous archive.

September 2009 is the next archive.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.