Archive for March, 2007

Read then Reply

Wednesday, March 28th, 2007

I never reply to an email without first checking my inbox for related emails; replying without reading ahead is a pet peeve of mine that people do all the time. Here’s a common scenario:

I send an email to my fraternity list to schedule a Greek Week practice and then quickly receive an email from another captain saying that they scheduled a practice for that time but forgot to use the calendar to let everyone else know. So I send an updated email to the list with new information. Inevitably I will get emails from at least 4 people telling me that I made a terrible mistake, we can’t have practice then, and I’m crazy. Each of these people will then send an apologetic email exactly 2 minutes later.

Like I said, it’s just a pet peeve and not a huge problem but it’s such an easy fix; just read ahead! Plus, this is good practice for the real world when you definitely don’t want to do this at work; it makes you look like you aren’t organized and are out of the loop. Google helps me out here with a feature in Gmail that notifies you if an email thread you are currently replying to gets another email added to it. Someone may have been just a little faster than me so I always read the new reply before sending my own.

Heading for New York City

Saturday, March 10th, 2007

Megen and I are hopping on a plane tomorrow morning headed for New York City. This is our last spring break and we wanted to enjoy it together in our favorite city. We’re staying at the Milford Plaza which is just one block from Times Square. We plan on hitting up every museum, seeing a Broadway show, eating dim sum every morning, checking out the night life, and doing plenty of shopping. Expect photos and updates when we get back on Thursday.

Case provides OpenID server

Saturday, March 10th, 2007

Jeremy Smith just announced that Case will be providing an OpenID to, I assume, anyone with a CaseID. I’ve been using OpenID through MyOpenID. I signed up quickly because, if this thing catches on, I want to have benjamin.golub just like my email and website. In case you aren’t aware of OpenID here’s a scenario:

You want to comment on a friends LiveJournal but don’t have an account for yourself. You could write an anonymous comment (if it’s allowed) but then you lose some credibility; how does your friend know that it is really you commenting? You could sign up for an account, but you you just want to make a comment and have no need for the blog that comes with creating an account. OpenID solves this problem by creating a decentralized authentication system. It could potentially be used for more secure, sensitive applications like banking but at the moment it’s only been implemented in blogs, wikis, and other social websites.

How does it work?

You login to a site like any other method; by providing a username and a password. Your username is your OpenID identity page url. Mine is http://benjamin.golub.myopenid.com but I have http://benjamingolub.com delegating to the longer url so I only have to remember the short one. I do this by placing the following into my header:

<link rel="openid.server" href="http://www.myopenid.com/server" />
<link rel="openid.delegate" href="http://benjamin.golub.myopenid.com/" />
<meta http-equiv="X-XRDS-Location" content="http://benjamin.golub.myopenid.com/xrds" />

When you provide a website with your “username” you are redirected to your OpenID server which asks for your password. You only have one password that you can use on every site that uses OpenID. The OpenID then tells the original website who you are and you’re good to go! You’ll also never have to tell those sites trivial information like your time zone or preferred nickname because those can be set in your OpenID account.

Why is this totally sweet?

OpenID support hasn’t reached critical mass yet but it’s getting there. AOL gave every single member (63 million) their own OpenID. Digg plans on adding OpenID support. WordPress hosted blog users have their own OpenID. The list goes on and on. I’m sure it won’t become as pervasive as something like an email address is but it is certainly growing in popularity rapidly.

Everyone hates creating an account on a website just to access one little feature one time only and then worrying about collecting spam for the rest of your life all because you wanted to make a claim on Jyte. How do you know that it’s really me posting a comment on your blog? OpenID can solve these problems and removes the need to remember multiple usernames and passwords.

How great is it that Case is getting involved?

I commend Case, especially ITS, for providing this service. This is cutting edge stuff and Case is right on top of it. We’ve even got our own Jabber server. I, like many other computer dorks, love new and exciting technologies. Thanks Case!

Contact Lenses

Saturday, March 3rd, 2007

Today I finally got contact lenses. I’ve had glasses for as long as I can remember and never had much of a desire to get contacts; I liked the way I looked with glasses and didn’t like the idea of poking myself in the eye every morning. But there were definitely times when I thought to myself “I wish I had contacts”. I don’t do it often anymore but playing sports was always a challenge because I’d have to hold myself back for fear of breaking my glasses. Riding a roller-coaster at a theme park required me to stuff my glasses in my pocket where they would inevitably get crushed by the harness. Laying my head down on a pillow to watch TV late at night meant my glasses would become slightly bent. But these issues weren’t enough to change my mind.

Then, about 2 weeks ago, I broke my glasses. They had been bending back and forth relatively easily in the last few months and I guess they finally had enough and decided to snap. Instead of buying another pair of glasses I decided that it’s time to grow up a little and wear contacts.

This is my first day with them and so far I’m liking it. I don’t have any trouble getting them in but I’m not so great at taking them out. They haven’t hurt or irritated my eyes at all. The only problem is that I’m having difficulty getting used to them. I can focus on distant objects very well, but it takes me a minute to focus on something close up like a book or my monitor. Once I look away at something in the distance I can quickly focus but then have to spend another minute focusing on the close object. It’s getting better though; at first I couldn’t focus on close objects at all!

Another bonus: Megen says I look better without glasses. :)