20110728
Restore Firefox's Default Smart Bookmarks Folders
Posted by
Joe Egan
at
10:47
0
comments
Links to this post
Labels: Firefox
20110405
MS Events Crash Android
I wonder why msevents.microsoft.com consistently forces my Android phone's browser to close. I just wanted to register for a May 3 webcast on the go. :P
Posted by
Joe Egan
at
02:09
0
comments
Links to this post
Labels: random
20100902
Eat Your Heart Out II
I finally posted a Yelp review of the deli that's been my favorite for nearly a decade - Eat Your Heart Out II in Poway. If you're ever in the Poway area and hungry (i.e. portions fit for a post-moto or post-surfing chow down), stop in at EYHO, and check it out for yourself.
Posted by
Joe Egan
at
07:48
0
comments
Links to this post
20100105
Mojave Road Trip in February (2009)
For just a pictorial summary of the trip, checkout my 2009 Mojave Road Trip album. For more detail on the ride, also checkout my related BikeBandit forums posts.
Posted by
Joe Egan
at
22:51
0
comments
Links to this post
Labels: California, riding
20100101
Highway 94 Ride in September
Since I've been riding so much, I'll try to share more as I go in 2010! Also, I'll share more of my 2009 pics and vids as I get through them - hopefully soon. :)
Posted by
Joe Egan
at
17:40
0
comments
Links to this post
Annual Check-In
Mostly I've been busy...
- ...working - lots of fast-paced e-commerce projects, ...
- ...being a happy new father, ...
- ...going to school, ...
- ...and riding dirt bikes - more weekends than not for the last year thankfully!
Posted by
Joe Egan
at
16:28
0
comments
Links to this post
20080719
Return to the Moon with NASA
Posted by
Joe Egan
at
22:42
0
comments
Links to this post
20080701
Vista Part Deux: "I'm Back, SuSE!"
The last year and a half since I purchased Vista – then a copy of XP Pro to "downgrade" – have dumbfoundingly been the worst in my 20+ years of personal computing – without a hint of exaggeration. (Ironically, I never had such a screamer machine the rest of the time!) Sorry, but it's the truth. Lord knows I would love to say otherwise. Tech nostalgia and zealotry just aren't me as much as simply calling what I see.
Posted by
Joe Egan
at
13:08
0
comments
Links to this post
Labels: Linux, Windows Vista
20080322
Happy Birthday, Captain Kirk!
Posted by
Joe Egan
at
11:31
0
comments
Links to this post
Labels: random
20080228
A Guaranteed Lesson in Customer Service
Then there's the sub itself!!! :-D ...more to come soon. ;-)
Posted by
Joe Egan
at
12:09
1 comments
Links to this post
Labels: business, high-end audio
20071030
This copy of Windows is not genuine? What!?
Tonight I came home and expected to continue fixing a bug for work. All I needed was Vista's VPN and RDP clients – nothing more. Well, not even that much works tonight because Vista tells me that my copy of Windows is not genuine!
I've read about this issue on Slashdot – caused by a recent (stealth) Windows update or simply updating a driver as I recall – but never figured it would happen to me. To be clear, the experience absolutely sucks. (...technical term for a "Was I just mugged?" customer experience, Microsoft.)
What to do? Well, I got so sick of Vista's 15-minute, likely-infinite loop of "Windows must be reinstalled to activate", logging in, and repeating that I'm running my Dell XPS's diagnostics for a calming distraction. ;-| ...pretty sad. However this plays out, I'll definitely share the Vista "experience" that awaits me!
Posted by
Joe Egan
at
21:07
4
comments
Links to this post
Labels: exceptions in the wild, Linux, Windows Vista
20070923
Championship Off Road Racing Rules
Ironically, CORR is often right in my back yard. A race is coming to Chula Vista soon, and many other CORR races I've seen on SPEED were held in San Diego too.
Enough. I'll look into attending a CORR race and seeing the power of these trucks first hand. When I do, I'll follow with a post and pics to share the experience.
In the meantime, I at least know who Carl Renezeder and Kyle LeDuc are. ;-D
Posted by
Joe Egan
at
11:50
0
comments
Links to this post
Labels: moto(r)sport
20070922
Winter 2008 SoCal Code Camp Dates Announced
Code camps are simply the most cost-effective (i.e. free), informative dev events I attend each year. They are for-developers-by-developers events, and this model produces great results in my experience.
The SoCal Code Camp gang organizes a code camp north of San Diego each winter, at Cal State Fullerton in the three years that I've followed them. They similarly hold one each summer in San Diego - usually at UCSD, although I've ironically attended fewer code camps in San Diego than up north. Go figure. (In my defense, summer in San Diego is a huge distraction!)
Wherever you live, if you're a developer, there's a likely a code camp in your area. Check it out if you never have. You'll likely find sessions of interest to you - from basic .NET, Java, and Ruby sessions, to architecture, test-driven development, SQL Server BI, and WCF sessions. They're infectious. :-)
I plan to attend and present at January's code camp at CSU Fullerton. SoCal Code Camp indicates that it will open its site in October to session submissions; and as I learn more, I will follow with details.
Posted by
Joe Egan
at
19:27
2
comments
Links to this post
Labels: news, San Diego, tech events
20070921
IASA San Diego ITARC Next Month
Plus, what a deal! ITARC registration costs no more than airfare to a typical conference.
San Diego ITARC's speaker lineup, including IBM's (and IASA's own) Scott Ambler, looks great; and its sessions schedule looks good too. I will comment on this post to share some of what I find.
Posted by
Joe Egan
at
00:14
0
comments
Links to this post
Labels: news, San Diego, tech events
20070920
Wait for 802.11n?
While large enterprises and small businesses face difficulties that may warrant waiting (lots of distributed resources and limited resources respectively), the increasingly common wisdom that everyone should wait on 802.11n perplexes me. I've been happily using 802.11n since January; and my Cat-6 cables are out of sight unless I want Gigabit Ethernet for something particularly intensive. I just consistently enjoy a 130+ Mbps link with no wires. Fast Ethernet is done on my network.
Interoperability issues? None. Downshifts to 802.11g speeds? Nope. Surely I use only one manufacturer's products then, right? No, I'm using a mix of a few random vendors' draft products. Try as I have, I just haven't been able to stub my toe on any of the concerns I've read. Frankly, as I near a year with 802.11n, I can't imagine going back to cables, 802.11g, or (Lord, help me!) 802.11b. ...would never know it from all that I've read since I took the plunge, though! :-)
To large enterprises waiting on the sidelines, follow the progress of the few that are already playing. Network World's article on Morrisville State College's 900-AP rollout is a good place to start, and Morrisville isn't alone. However, to individuals and small businesses with the knowhow to configure anything 802.11 already, who are sick of cables to get decent mobile performance, who may already have an occasion to add wireless gear (a (couple) new notebook(s), a long-overdue broadband router - whatever), waiting on 802.11n doesn't make a lot of sense to me.
Posted by
Joe Egan
at
13:29
1 comments
Links to this post
Labels: networking
20070919
Halo 3 Launch in Irvine, CA
Posted by
Joe Egan
at
00:12
2
comments
Links to this post
Labels: random, tech events
20070918
Portugese Grand Prix and AMA at Laguna Seca
MotoGP
Why MotoGP reportedly has marketing problems is beyond me, certainly judging by the Portugese Grand Prix. Sunday's race was fast (of course), twisty, and full of great sweeping camera views across drool-worthy elevation changes; it was competitive; and riders pushed the limits of their world-class equipment. I like watching drag and oval-track racing, but come on - and without the protections of a five- or six-point harness, a chassis, and a cage no less! Whatever the problem is, I don't think it's MotoGP's product.
Plus, this season boasts a classic underdog story. I don't particularly root for Valentino Rossi, but I was cheering for him at the top of my lungs when he won on Sunday. After his cursed 2006 season, he effectively entered 2007 with underdog status in my mind; and that's enough for this American. (Plus, go Yamaha!) ;->
Anyway, here are my limited impressions of Sunday's Portugese Grand Prix:
- Dani Pedrosa
- smooth inputs judging by his on-board camera – like he was yawning at 40 MPH, only nearer 200 MPH
- looks like he just uses his middle finger to brake – interesting because someone suggested middle-finger braking to me recently
- s~q~u~i~r~m~y bike during turn entry :-|
- Valentino Rossi
- dizzying at times to watch braking, aggressively lifting his rear tire (My Lord!)
- bike agile as heck through the chicanes (Yep. ...sounds like an R6.) ;->
...more to come regarding AMA Supersport and Superbike at Laguna Seca. ...must sleep. :-D
Posted by
Joe Egan
at
22:51
0
comments
Links to this post
Labels: moto(r)sport
NetBeans 6.0 Beta 1 Ready
Posted by
Joe Egan
at
11:02
0
comments
Links to this post
20070916
Blogstipation
Posted by
Joe Egan
at
14:12
1 comments
Links to this post
20070529
Embrace the GIMP
Posted by
Joe Egan
at
11:42
3
comments
Links to this post
20070423
Doubling Gmail Contact Groups?
Basically, my contacts' displayed groups frequently double:
Any ideas, Gmailers?
Posted by
Joe Egan
at
23:08
0
comments
Links to this post
Labels: exceptions in the wild, Gmail
20070413
End of the Innocence?
As if this wasn't already (heck, inherently) obvious, it's abundantly clear that Google's brainiacs are bloodthirsty for profit just like Evil Bill and his cronies. Forget the cover of OSS and being the underdog that rose to the top. This is how enterprise works. Get it, über angsters?
I say God bless 'em! DoubleClick is a smart move for Google; their shareholders are well served; and, hey, there's always Internet Junkbuster. ;->
Posted by
Joe Egan
at
19:48
1 comments
Links to this post
20070406
MIT Me Please
Thank you, God! :-D
Posted by
Joe Egan
at
16:24
0
comments
Links to this post
Labels: news
20070320
Holy Fox!
A conversation about naming controls made me think of FoxPro because a VFP 6 project happens to be the worst example of controls naming (try none) I've ever encountered. For months after said project, I had nightmares about Text31. ;) (Its meaning is as obvious to you as it was to me I'm sure!)
This led me to briefly define VFP, or rather its forgotten role in Microsoft's portfolio. Wikipedia does a better job providing all the details; but I essentially explained that VFP's role is (was) to slowly bleed features into other Microsoft tools, look alive by absorbing occasional hand-me-downs, and retain its loyal developer base.
Well, the charade is finally over after all these years. As irony would have it, I learned Monday that Microsoft announced it will release VFP to CodePlex, making VFP 9 the last Microsoft release. Amen. Long may ye run, FoxPro!
Posted by
Joe Egan
at
09:36
0
comments
Links to this post
20070221
Reflections on Coke
This reminded me of my random fountain-drink recipe for the world. Forget "Coke-ness" coming from restaurants quickly making room for Coke Zero and the like. How many restaurants have the nozzle real estate? My solution is simple – and works for Diet Pepsi too. (Shhh. Don't tell the folks at Coca-Cola.) Fill up 90% with Diet Coke or Diet Pepsi, as your current restaurant's allegiance allows; then simply top off with Coca-Cola Classic or Pepsi respectively. Adjust percentages to your liking, and enjoy! :-D
Posted by
Joe Egan
at
07:06
1 comments
Links to this post
Labels: random





