USB2/Firewire PC Card adapter that doesn’t stick out?

Does anyone know if there is a PC Card (PCMCIA) with USB2 and/or Firewire ports that doesn’t stick out of the side of your laptop? Something that ads the ports but stays flush with the side of your laptop so you can leave it in all the time.

 

A little Firefox has been spotted at Yahoo, Microsoft, and Google.

 

Tech support for the iPod, off-shored to Prince Edward Island

 

Notes from the Gnome Summit in Boston

Photos from the Gnome Summit in Boston

I drove down to Boston this weekend for the Gnome Summit. I have posted my photos from the trip and collected some rough notes on the experience:

  • The who/what/where/when/why/how of marketing open source software to normal humans (non-developers) is uncharted territory. I’m skeptical that we should worry ourselves much about marketing at all.
  • It takes about 10 hours to drive from Charlottetown to Boston
  • Americans like to express their partisan politics with bumper stickers. Some stickers noted on the I-95: “Veterans for Bush”, “Veterans for Kerry”, “Veterans Against Bush”. There was no “Veterans Against Kerry” – but I guess Massachusetts is a blue state.
  • The Stata building at MIT (photos) is fascinating, compelling, and beautiful. However, it strikes me as architectural masturbation.
  • MIT has really nice projectors in the class rooms
  • Harvard is bustling with culture and diversity. MIT is eerily sterile.
  • The Gnome Summit was held in the William H. Gates building. I was please that this was not the subject of as much mocking as I had feared.
  • Where my hos at, biatch? (translations: “Open source software is suffering from a significant gender bias that will hinder the long term prospects of the movement. Biatch.”)
  • Geeks can be really set in their ways. I met people who still think the classic Mozilla browser is “more usable” than Firefox because it has more options and someone (you know who you are) that thinks Gaim sucks (it doesn’t). The hard-core geeks were in the minority now. There is a growing respect for artists, usability-dudes, and general well-roudnedness.
  • I met my first AIBO.
  • My father drove down with me to visit some friends and relative in Boston. It was fun and strange to travel with my father as two adults. He said it was the first time in his life he’s been on a trip and one of his children has paid for the gas.
  • People were nice to me.
 

Tod Maffin does a piece for CBC radio about personal web audio “podcasting” – including some references to our audio work

 

At the Gnome Summit

I’m at the Gnome Summit at the Frank Gehry designed MIT Stata Center in Boston until tuesday. Check out the floorplan.

Gnome Summit logo
 

The Internet Is Amazing

Since many of us use it every day, it is easy to lose sight of just how remarkable the internet can be. This morning, I had a quick chat with my friend Peter, who is usually downstairs in the building our companies share. Today, though, he is in Croatia.

Screenshot of an IM conversation
 

Need a place to stay in Boston this weekend (got one!)

I’m driving down to Boston for the Gnome Boston Summit this weekend. I’m looking for a place to stay near the MIT campus in Cambridge on the nights of Friday (Oct 8) to Monday (Oct 11) – leaving on Tuesday morning.

Hotels are booked or foolishly expensive (short notice, I guess). Anyone have any hints, pointers, or places to stay?

Update: I’ve got a spot now. Thanks.

 

If you have Norton Personal Firewall installed, help me out

I’m looking for some help with an issue I’m having with the Mozilla.org website and the Norton Personal Firewall product.

If you have the Norton Personal Firewall installed and a bit of knowledge about web-browsers (knowing what a web browser is should suffice), and are willing to help me test a fix, please contact me. It should only take a few minutes and a few emails back and forth.

Thanks.

 

A lot of people are downloading Firefox