silverorange is looking for a sysadmin

We’re looking for a system administrator to join us at silverorange. Dan, our CEO, explains the position:

silverorange is hiring once again. This time around we’re looking for someone who has an interest in managing the systems behind the web systems we build. You’ll be in charge of running, installing, and managing our servers, managing our network (both server side and workstation side), and doing many things hardware related. You’ll also get a free cell phone! (so the servers can message you at 2am about a problem).

As the job description states, don’t call us. If you call us, you’ve failed a basic comprehension test.

 

Starcraft 2

Starcraft 2 -  Hell, it's about time

 

and now this…

I don’t like to have all this negative energy hanging on the home page of the site, so here’s something a bit more pleasant:

BeatBot
 

Tim Banks

A good friend of mine, Peter Rukavina, has been writing on his Ruk.ca weblog (in various incarnations) for about eight years. I’ve always enjoyed reading what Peter writes. Over the years, Peter has written a variety of posts about Tim Banks. Tim is the President and CEO of the APM Group, a development and construction company.

While the things Peter wrote about Mr. Banks were seldom flattering, they were not unreasonable. In November of 2005, Peter wrote about how Banks had asked the Mayor of Charlottetown to remove Councillor Kim Devine from a planning committee because she had what Banks called an “obstructionist attitude.”

Last month, a few of us were on our way to a public meeting about a downtown development plan hosted by the City of Charlottetown. On our way to the meeting, Peter snapped this photo of an illegally parked vehicle that was easily recognized by most of us as Tim Banks’ car (the vanity license plate bears the company name, APM). As a courtesy, Peter did not include Mr. Banks’ name when he posted the photo. Many locals would recognize the vehicle, but without a name, it wouldn’t show up if people were to search for Mr. Banks’ name online.

Apparently Mr. Banks was not pleased about this. As Peter recounts in some detail, Mr. Banks walked up to him in a coffee shop, confronted him about the car photo, and then “took a swing at the full cup of coffee in my hand, spilling it across the counter and over my newspaper and breakfast.”

Peter notified the police about the incident, which is completely appropriate. I’m saddened to see a good friend and good writer have to fear this kind of repercussion to having written online. If a traditional newspaper journalist had published the photo and was similarly assaulted, this kind of behaviour wouldn’t be be considered acceptable, nor should it be in Peter’s case.

This may not be of interest to many readers, being a local incident. However, I do think it should be of interest to anyone concerned about the ability of people to write and publish without fear of intimidation, no matter the degree.

 

Barack Obama requests presidential debates released to public domain or Creative Commons

 

Word is like a drug

An interesting quote from an article about the legal battles surrounding government adoption of open document formats in the US:

“Microsoft sees what’s coming. Things like Word and Excel are sort of like a drug now getting ready to go generic.”
— Florida Rep. Ed Homan

Of course, no one dies if they don’t get their monthly dose of Microsoft Word. Still, the comparison is interesting.

 

I took the Web Design Survey and so should you!

 

Boring Questions About Gmail

I’m considering moving some of my mail to Gmail, but have a few concerns with changes in the way I deal with storing organizing mail.

I’m wondering about two issues in particular:

  1. Is it possible to import a large archive of mail (about 1.5 GB currently in IMAP), organized in hierarchical folders and not lose the folder information? I understand that gmail labels are not hierarchical and don’t mind losing that aspect of categorization, but want the folders to map to Gmail labels.

    As far as I can tell, the only way to do this is to import mail one folder at a time (import, label, repeat). I could do this, but it would take days.

  2. Is there a keyboard shortcut to label a message and archive it in one action? I’ve been doing this in Thunderbird with the Quickfile extension.

I’ve been using Google Reader a lot, and Gmail much less. I’m struck that the interface is similar, but different enough to be a bit disconcerting. Google Reader uses “tags” and Gmail uses “labels”. It’s all about nomenclature man!

 

Apple, Mozilla, and Opera have jointly proposed to the W3C HTML Working Group that they adopt WHATWG HTML 5 spec as a starting point.

 

The YouTube quality doesn’t quite do it justice, but Money City Maniacs by Sloan is one of my favourite music vidoes. Circa 1998.