My PocketRocket
January 30, 2007
No, it’s not what you think. My PocketRocket is a stove. A lightweight, powerful, handy backpacking stove. I bought it last fall and have been playing with it ever since. I got it primarily for camping trips, but I also toss it in my day pack when I’m just hiking. It’s handy to have with me for a pot of tea.
It also has its own cooking pot; in this case, a lightweight titanium kettle. In fact, I bought the two of them together as a package: it’s the PocketRocket/Titan Kettle Kit, from MSR. The whole package weighs less than 8-1/2 ounces, and a fuel canister only adds another 4 to 8 oz., depending on its size. It will boil a liter (4.2 cups) of water in under 4 minutes. That’s faster than the propane range in my travel trailer.
That’s why I’m writing about it, by the way. I live in my travel trailer (that’s a caravan, for you folks from the other side of the pond), and I use propane for cooking and heating. Last night I realized that I’m almost out of propane, and it was too late to go get more. Fortunately, the temperature is only dropping into the upper 30’s at night, and the trailer’s fairly well insulated, so I didn’t need to run the furnace last night. I did turn it on this morning to warm things up a bit–I’m not that partial to seeing my breath when I’m sitting at my computer–and I’ll be going after propane later this morning, But I also wanted my tea this morning, and decided I’d use my camping gear to make it–again, trying to save propane.
Once the tea was ready, I thought "Why not mention the stove on your blog this morning?" Come to think of it, why not talk about tea at the same time. (This blog is nothing if not eclectic.)
Tea is my beverage of choice. Oh, I drink the occasional cup of coffee, but I’m not the typical American Starbuck’s junkie. For one thing, I’m not about to spend on a single coffee drink the kind of money that can buy me enough high-quality tea leaves for a week’s worth of tea. Besides, I just like the taste of tea more than I like that of coffee.
Then there’s the ritual of tea. Too often our lives to
day move too quickly. A tea break is a pleasant way to slow down. The brewing ritual helps. Filling the kettle and putting it on to boil. Heating the teapot. Measuring the tea. Pouring the boiling water into the pot. Waiting the proper length of time for the tea to brew. It’s far more enjoyable than driving to the drive-through window at some coffee joint and asking for a tall decaf latté with non-fat milk to go (or, as my friend Pam used to call it, "A skinny transvestite on a leash"), and then driving off. Where’s the enjoyment in that?
I buy most of my tea from Peet’s Coffee & Tea. They have an excellent selection of high-quality teas, including my favorite blend, Irish Breakfast tea. But last week when I went to my local Peet’s store when my supply was getting low, I decided that I drink enough tea that it would be worth my while to buy it in 1-pound packages, rather than the 4-oz. tins I usually get. But when I got there I discovered that you can only get the 1-pound packages by ordering on their web site.
When I got home, I decided that since I was going to have to wait for my order to be delivered, and since I would also have to pay postage, I night as well see what other sources might be available. Now bear in mind that I am very fussy when it comes to my tea. It has to be of a high quality. In fact, I don’t even order tea in restaurants, since they don’t know how to make it properly. Well, I found a web site (teadog.com) that had what I was looking for: Irish Breakfast tea, loose leaves, in 8-ounce packages.
I wouldn’t normally buy tea without first tasting it, but in this case I made an exception for the simple reason that the brand of one of the teas that I found was Bewley’s. Bewley’s are located in Dublin—Dublin, Ireland, not Dublin, California—and have been importing tea into Ireland since 1835. Given those facts, and also the fact that the Irish drink more tea per capita than anyone else in the world, I decided to take a chance and order not 1 but 2 boxes of their tea. And I’ll also admit that my Irish ancestry might have predisposed me somewhat towards an Irish company.
My tea arrived from Dallas (where Teadog is located) less than a week later. It is a nice robust tea, with hints of citrus and malt. Irish Breakfast is blended with India teas, and is fuller and more pungent than ar English blends. I generally drink 4 to 6 cups of it a day.
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A New Blogging Tool
January 28, 2007
I’m writing his entry with a new tool: Qumana Blog Editor. I downloaded it last night and installed it this afternoon. When I configured it for this blog, it immediately went out and grabbed all of my recent posts & downloaded them to my machine. Nice.
Adding an image is as easy as it is in Windows Live Writer: just click on the Insert
Image button, browse to your image file, and select it. You then choose to either insert it in your current post and upload the image file immediately, or just insert it in your current post–in which case it’ll tell you you haven’t uploaded it, and will offer to do it for you. Very handy.
The editor isn’t quite so WYSIWYG as Live Writer, in that there is no web preview function. But it still displays images, fonts, colors, etc., as they will appear in the published version. You just can’t view any style you may have associated with your blog.
I can live with that. The Insert Image function alone makes this an editor worth investigating, as does the price: Zip. Nada. Nuttin’.
Another nifty function in Qumana is the Drop Pad. This is a nifty little feature that can stay on top of your screen while Qumana is running. Find a picture or an article on the Internet that you’d like to include in a post on your blog? Just highlight it, then drag and drop it onto the Drop Pad. It’s that simple. You’ve just copied it!
Need to edit your post’s HTML directly? Just click on the Source View tab and you’re there.
Spell checking is also built-in. So is Live Writer’s. But with Live Writer you have to click on a button to run the spell checker. Qumana can be configured to check your spelling as you type, highlighting your errors immediately. For someone like me whose laptop has stiff keys, that’s a big help.
Dislikes:
Okay, so nothing’s perfect. There’s no choice for me to use my favorite font, Comic Sans. But I can work around that by simply editing the HTML by hand.
Qumana runs under Windows and Mac OS only. There’s no Linux version. I’d love a Linux version. That’s my only complaint.
I’m going to continue using Qumana for this blog, and Live Writer for all my others. We’ll see which one I end up staying with.
I like this program.
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The Beat Goes On
January 27, 2007
One of the problems with blogging is that to keep whatever audience you may have. you have to be consistent about posting to your blog. Let’s face it: Americans in general and younger Americans in particular have short attention spans. Al that TV, you know.
So if there’s not something new on a web site or a blog, they’ll go somewhere else. Eventually—say, 2 or 3 days with nothing new—they’ll stop coming back.
Anyway, that’s what I was thinking this morning over tea. But after further reflection I decided “So what?” Who cares?
After all, one of my biggest gripes about web sites in general and blogs in particular is that many of them don’t really have anything to say. Look at movies: how many movies have you seen lately? How many of them held your interest? And of those that held your interest, what exactly was it that held you? Plot? Characterization? Or special effects?
It’s the same thing with web sites: I can’t tell you the number of web sites I’ve visited that use special effects (Flash, Shockwave, JavaScript, etc.) to hide the fact that they really don’t have any useful content.
Case in point: I recently visited a corporate web site to find out information about a particular product. It was a beautiful presentation, complete with high-quality animated graphics. The mood conveyed by the graphics was one of serenity and relaxation—just what one looks for in a cup of tea. But nowhere on the site could I find information about the particular product I wanted. I know the product exists, as I was drinking a cup of it!
Now, had the web site belonged to, say, a web design company what wanted to show potential clients some of their work, it would have been a perfect fit. But for a company that sells tea, there was too much sizzle and not enough steak. Or, as we used to say about a certain kind of cowboy when I was living in Texas, “All hat and no cattle.”
So there’s another potential blog problem: posting an entry when you really don’t have anything to say.
Which, I guess, is one of the beauties of RSS feeds: by subscribing to a feed, the information gets sent to you whenever it changes or is updated. You don’t have to waste your time checking back to see if anything has changed.
So that’s my resolution for my blogs: if I don’t have anything to say, I won’t say it.
And Now For Something Completely Different…
January 24, 2007
I drink tea. A lot of tea. It’s partly because I just like the taste of tea, and it’s partly because I like ritual. Oh, not the formal ritual of a religious service, where every movement was so carefully choreographed so very long ago that now no one even remembers why it’s done this way.
I mean harmless, informal ritual.
That’s why I prefer tea to coffee: the ritual of boiling the water, warming the teapot, measuring the right amount of tea. Pouring the boiling water into the pot and letting it steep the prescribed amount of time.
For many years my favorite blend of tea has been Irish Breakfast, or IB. And until this morning, my favorite IB was from Peet’s Coffee & Tea. But when I stopped in at my local Peet’s outlet last week in search of a pound of loose IB, they told me that I had to order it on their web site. So I returned home with just a 4-oz. tin I purchased.
Peet’s has IB in loose leaf form for just under $24 a pound. I decided to see if I could find a better price than that, so I Googled “tea” to see what was out there. One of the hits was teadog.com, in Dallas, Texas. After a few minutes, I found what I was looking for: Irish Breakfast tea, loose leaves, in 8.8-oz packages. So I ordered 2 boxes. With postage, the whole thing came to about 50 cents more than what I would have paid at Peets—and Peets’ price didn’t include shipping.
The tea arrived today, and I immediately opened it and brewed a cup. Oh, my! Bewley’s Irish Breakfast tea. Imported from Dublin, no less. Oh, Peets is still an excellent tea, and I’ll continue to buy it when I can’t get Bewley’s, or when I go to a Peets outlet.
But now i have a new favorite IB:Bewley’s Irish Breakfast.
Linux Counterparts to Windows Programs
January 22, 2007
Of course, there’s really no sense in switching operating systems if you can’t run the programs you want or (in many cases) need.
And it’s true: there are a lot more commercial applications for Windows than there are for Linux.
Here are some examples of Linux equivalents of common Windows programs:
Windows Program: Linux Equivalent:
Microsoft Office OpenOffice.org
Microsoft Internet Explorer, Epiphany, Firefox,
Firefox, Netscape, Opera, Galeon, Konqueror,
etc. Lynx, Mozilla,
Nautilus,
Netscape, Opera,
SeaMonkey
ICQ, MSN Messenger, AIM Trillian, Gaim,
(AOL Instant Messenger), Gaim Mercury,
aMSN, KICQ, Gabber,
Centericq
Microsoft Netmeeting Gnomemeeting
WS FTP, Bullet Proof FTP, GFTP, KFTP
CuteFTP (KFTPGrabber),
Kasablanca, FireFTP,
Konqueror, KBear
Outlook Express, Outlook, Kontact, Evolution,
Thunderbird, Pegasus, Lotus Thunderbird,
Notes Sylpheed-Claws
For more examples, check out http://wiki.linuxquestions.org/wiki/
Linux_software_equivalent_to_Windows_software
And that’s all for tonight!
Another Linux Distribution
January 22, 2007
As I mentioned yesterday, I was looking for another Linux distribution to recommend to my Windows-centric friends and relations. I found it in PCLinuxOS.
PCLinuxOS (or PCLOS, as its aficionados generally call it) is built upon Mandrake 9.2 (and I apologize in advance to all you propeller-heads out there, but that’s about as technical as I’m gonna get. For the nitty-gritty, see the PCLOS homepage at http://www.pclinuxos.com/news.php Sorry, but I’m trying to gear this towards beginners).
As with most major distributions these days, you download the ISO image and burn it to CD. Once that’s done, leave the CD in its drive and reboot your computer. This way your computer will boot to the LiveCD that you just created. The idea behind the LiveCD is that you can load it up an have a chance to play with Linux and the programs with—without having to install it on your hard drive. That way if you decide it’s not for you, simply remove the LiveCD and reboot your computer. Your original Windows installation hasn’t been touched, and no files have been created on or removed from your system.
But if you decide you like it and want to use it, you still have a few options. You can simply continue running the LiveCD (which is pretty silly, because you won’t be able to save any work you create), you can install PCLOS and tell it to use your entire hard drive, or—and this is what I recommend for Linux beginners—you can install PCLOS as a dual-boot system. In plain English, this means you tell the installation program to only use some, not all, of your hard drive. Once you’ve installed it, whenever you boot your computer you’re given a choice to either use it as a Windows or a Linux system.
Dual-boot is also what I recommend if you have a lot of money invested in high-end Windows programs. While The GIMP is a very powerful graphics and photo-editing program, Adobe Photoshop still has it beat.
But why would anyone even consider Linux? Well, aside from the safety issues—for all practical purposes Linux is virus-free—it’s a great operating system for extending the life of older computers. Windows Vista is about to be unleashed upon an unsuspecting world, and a lot of users are going to be very disappointed when they learn that their 2-year-old or older computers won’t run it—the hardware’s simply not up to it.
Linux, on the other hand, will run on just about anything with a 386 processor or better. (Again, in plain English, this means that if you have a machine that’s still running, say, Windows 3.1, you can pretty much rest assured that it can handle PCLOS—and probably with better performance than you’re getting from Windows.
So if you’re considering Linux—either as an alternative to Windows, as a way of extending he life of an older computer, or because you just want to see what the fuss is all about—you can’t go wrong with PCLinuxOS.
So What’s It All About, Anyway?
January 22, 2007
I used to post my Linux Journal here. I kept it up for a while, then completely forgot about it. Then I got a new toy for Christmas—a Microsoft LifeCam. It’s a nifty gadget, but it doesn’t work under Linux.
I played with the camera for a while, then went online to see what information I might be able to find about it. I found quite a lot, actually. And one of the links Google turned up was Windows Live Writer.
Live Writer is Microsoft’s contribution to offline blogging. Using it, I can create & edit my blog entries to my heart’s content, then upload them to my blog.
Adding pictures is easy. And unlike some other similar tools, LiveWriter uploads the pictures automatically.
Writer is a great client for Windows Live Spaces but also works with other weblogs including Blogger, LiveJournal, TypePad, WordPress, and many others.
Writer supports RSD (Really Simple Discoverability), the Metaweblog API, and the Movable Type API.
In fact, I used LiveWriter to create this entry.
But let’s get back to the camera for a bit. The reason my dad sent it to me is that he lives in Pennsylvania and I live in California. Before we got together in Seattle last September for my daughter’s wedding, we hadn’t seen each other for almost 3 years. That’s too long. So now we can have video chats whenever we like, thanks to its built-in microphone.
The LifeCam is, first and foremost, a web cam, designed to work with Microsoft’s Windows Live Messenger, which is the replacement for Microsoft Instant Messenger. But the camera will also take snapshots, record audio clips, and record video clips (although at 1.3 megapixels, it won’t be replacing my 8-megapixel Canon). Once you’ve snapped a picture, the camera software can upload it to your blog on Windows Live Spaces, or launch your email program in compose mode and attach the picture to the message. All you have to do is address it and send it.
So I’ve got several blogs I’m using to test LiveWriter. There’s this one, obviously, but there’s also the one I have at Windows Live Spaces. I’m also going to play with it on the blog on my web site. That blog is still Not Ready For Prime Time, but I’ll post a link here when it is.
STILL TO COME: How I’ve made peace between Windows and Linux.