Kyle D. Skrinak

Archive for November, 2009

More web2project goodness

by Kyle Skrinak on Nov.28, 2009, under Technology

I blogged earlier about my move from dotproject (dp) to web2project; (w2p) read more there for background. The goodness continues. Whereas using dp allowed me to integrate my project tasks with company info, I have now eliminated  the need for slimtimer, a web app for tracking hours. Slimtimer is an excellent web app for tracking hours to activities and has excellent reporting features and I continue to highly recommend it. What bothered me with using slimtimer was cost and project integration. While it is free, the programmer fairly asks for donations. there are a number of alternatives (Quickbooks for example) that I can use to track project hours for free; while slimtimer is a solid, well-programmed application, it wasn’t worth my making a donation. Alas, I didn’t feel I was quid-pro-quo with the application’s programmer. Secondly, and more importantly (as it turns out) is the integration of task hours, task description against the specific task in my w2p application.

web2project login screen for SCIWhere w2p doesn’t offer the same detailed start/stop hours tracker, the time recording offers “just enough” data to be usable. However, the integration of task hour recording with description and project info is critical to making it much more informative in the context of the overall project. Whereas I lose start/stop times, I gain recording the specific activities I executed ,which also allows me to make the project’s tasks more generic, thus reducing the documentation overhead while keeping the data relevant for billing and project summary documentation.

Score another point for w2p. The beauty of w2p is that it’s model has made project management for my company more easy to manage. The redesign by the w2p team has helped to reveal functional aspects that might have been available in dp but now make sense in the broader context of usage. I recently wowwed a client by setting up a project site for one of his projects in 30 minutes, with milestones established and gantt-charted. He immediately requested his internal IT guy to set up w2p on their internal server. There’s more functionality that I haven’t accessed (yet) but does seem very useful depending on the client and project requirements (forums, file storage, calendaring), although I rely heavily on Google’s Calendar; maybe it’s time for a rethink on that?

If you’re looking for a project management application, with excellent support for a small core team; check w2p out.

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vi key-binding in lftp (on Mac/Leopard)

by Kyle Skrinak on Nov.14, 2009, under Technology

I presume this is a fairly portable tip; but it is awesome, thatnks to the vi wiki.

If you put the following into your ~/.inputrc file:

set editing-mode vi
set keymap vi

You will then have vi keybindings in lftp (and apparently other programs that support readline editing)

Good-bye annoying emacs keyboard commands in lftp!

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QuickSilver is now Google Quick Search Box

by Kyle Skrinak on Nov.08, 2009, under Technology, mac

I made the switch about a month ago; from QuickSilver to Google Quick Search Box. I did so when I read that QuickSilver’s developer had dropped the project but resurrected it as an apparently re-factored project over at Google. Except for the “Google-In-Your-FACE” UI, it’s the same great utility that QS was, only now it’s maintained, and some new goodness added. Check it out.

One big change (for a small utility) is the way it handles typing your command. QS would “forget” if you paused for, roughly 4 seconds. GQS doesn’t forget, in the same way gnome-do doesn’t forget. It felt clumsy at first, but after the “what will QS ‘guess’ I’m trying to type” coolness factor dies down, I find I prefer the memory permanence. Sometimes eye-candy can slow down pragmatism.

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Upgrade-install to Karmic Koala (re: check the switch before googling)

by Kyle Skrinak on Nov.01, 2009, under Technology

When Canonical released Karmic Koala, I didn’t hesitate to do the update-manager distribution upgrade. In the back of my mind, however, I knew that I was going to carry forward a bunch of cruft that had built up. The upgrade was successful, but I saw very little difference in basic features. so I decided to scrap the original and reinstall the Karmic as a new installation. I went with the 32-bit version (I’ll wait until a 64-bit flash binary becomes available for the 64-bit OS) I already have a /home partition separate from my main / partition. However, I switched from ext3 to ext4 and the conversion deleted all existing data (none of it was critical) I probably could have saved the data by doing an ext3 -> ext4 conversion independent of the installation.

So I hit a snag after the clean install: no wireless on my Broadcom 4311. I did what I always do when this happens. I checked Google and found various wild hairs, but no answer. Then, words of an old friend came back to me; “When the toaster isn’t working — check to see that it is plugged in.” Of course, there’s Occam’s razor, but enough analogies. The Dell 1520 laptop has a switch that toggles bluetooth and wifi, for power savings. The darn switch was off. I turned it on and there it was: WiFi.

After that, no problems yet. I’m experiencing much better overall performance. The hit was so bad that I’ve basically stopped using this laptop. There was something to how I configured MySQL and lighttpd and probably some other stuff — I’ll follow my own advice and do my LAMP stacks as VirtualBox machines, not on this machine itself. Now onto zsh, Adobe Air/TweetDeck, gvim, and so on.

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