Is anyone else as eager as I am to try out this massage technqiue? Personally, if I give massages I have someone lie down and I have to essentially sit on top of them. I don’t have a massage table! So, I don’t know… picture it and draw your own conclusions.
Author Archives: Devin Reams
Sleep Cycles
I admit, I got a little burned out at work today (8 hours in front of the monitor, no lunch, pretty tough). So, I took a break and read a bit about polyphasic sleep on Steve Pavlina’s blog. I then dug around more and more and read some wikis and all sorts of articles. I’ve decided to embark on Glen Rhodes’ bi-phasic sleep pattern and see how it works for me. I’ve never been much for sleeping a lot, but I’ve never really understood why I’m tired one day and just fine another. I’m looking into how I can schedule a routine 90-minute nap every day and then get 6 hours of sleep every night. The sleep cycles seem to make sense. If I get up at 6:30 every morning I could probably get a lot done in a day. Look out breakfast, I’m making a come-back..
Xoogler Argues Against Arabic
Wow, I’ve been keeping up with the Xoogler blog lately and, well, wow. Immediately after 9/11: “The thing I did that I regret most was arguing to remove the Arabic translations from the Google site.” Ron definitely has some interesting stories to share.
Brilliant Marketing on YouTube
What’s the fourth most watched video on YouTube? It’s this one.Who posted it? Some cool dude named ‘Nikesoccer’. Um, looks like someone is ahead of the curve. Someone “gets it”. Oh, and most clicks are from myspace.
No Such Thing As A Blogger
BoingBoing points out an awesome point: there is no such thing as a blogger. I do think of myself as a writer. I do it every day. I even find myself getting better every once and a while. In fact, my first class of the semester is tomorrow: business writing. I feel like the hardest part of the class will be the whole 8am part.
Bibliography Generator
A while back, Seth posted on ‘stuck systems‘. Seth talked about turning a list of ISBN numbers into a fully functional bibliography (and more). I figured, ‘that can’t be too hard’ so I made a quick page to demonstrate how simple it is. He agreed it was pretty simple by showing the world my quick creation.
So what’s the problem?
Unfortunately, concepts like bibliographies are too far engrained in our behavior that any kind of change seems nearly impossible. Making an idea like this ‘stick’ with people is the real marketing challenge. Unfortunately, as he mentions, it’s hard for anyone to readily accept this concept.
But, I’ve always loved a challenge.
That’s why I’d like to take my ~100 line script and turn it into a fully functional resource. I’ve run into another student, Jonathan, who has already embarked on this (ThatsCrazyHot.com) and it’s a good start. I hate the name though. Sure, it’s one thing to be radical but the name does nothing for anyone. It tells us nothing, it sounds sopohmoric and I don’t see many people embracing it to begin with.
So, I’ve decided to start developing this project a bit furthur. I think, as with any service, it has to be exceptionally easy and fully functional. No logins, no forms, just add the ISBN and go.
The biggest problem I’ve run into is getting all of the required information. Sure, Amazon.com has the publisher and date.. but almost no one has the publisher’s location. I’ve found a site but it doesn’t allow automatic scripts to load their page. Anyone else with it requires you to license their content. This should be fun to get around. My only thought right now is load the available data I can into my own ‘ISBN database’ from Amazon.com and allow users to either comfirm or edit a located ISBN’s information.
I was thinking I’d take that aforementioned site and load it in a frame below the page. This page will have already loaded the correct book (apparently that’s allowed) but then the user will need to enter the publisher’s location manually. In other words, there is an input box at the top that says ‘Location’ and a page loaded at the bottom that says ‘Location: New York’. Keep in mind, this is just at the beginning as the database is populated.
I don’t know, I keep tossing the idea around. I wish the information were more readily available. That would certainly solve the ‘easy’ issue.
Then, and only then, could I even consider marketing this product and making it, as Seth said, “viral”.
…but I guess the product itself should be viral.
Hmmm…
SSOTD: Breckenridge.Snow.com
I’d like to introduce you all to The Shoddy Site Of the Day: Breckenridge.Snow.Com. Overall the site is pretty nice. Very informative. I popped online last night to figure out the conditions for today. I can find everything I need on this site…
Except a useful map.
Seriously, at a ski resort, your product is the mountain. Why do you force me to look at what you’d like to call a ‘new interactive trail map‘. People are not so dumb that they need a drop down to show them what a trail is. I’d guess its all that space inbetween the green tree-looking stuff. I wish I knew what that stuff was… but it’s not labeled on the interactive trail map. Sigh…
Seriously, I have to look at this thing first to then realize what I really came for is a little link at the top of this window.
You be the judge: stupid, useless, busy, and animated map or practical, even printable, trail map.
This is a classic designer’s case of ‘I can do it so I really should’. I find none of this to be useful. If I want to find the black trails, I look for the… black colored trails? Honestly. Look at the compass in the bottom corner. If you hover over it the compass blurs.
What the hell? Why? It does me no good to see a blurred compass!
“Hey Mark, look, its called ‘onmouseover’, I should really make it do something!” “Yeah man, since you can you really should.”
…and that is why I call this my Shoddy Site of the Day.
Hidden Facebook Connection
While busily checking up on friends today I decided to snoop around on Facebook. Long story short, I found the following options (hidden) from everyone’s friends details. These two options aren’t currently accessible but are definitely in the ‘facebook code’ under ‘Met Through Facebook’: Is a Facebook whore, Never spoken in real life. Interested in more random Facebook facts? I found a whole bunch of good ones over at TheBillyGoatCurse.com. Yes, I do have a problem…
Complainers, Men v Women
Scott Adams yet again puts life into perspective. The following gems should sum up his latest post. “Complainers rarely mate with other complainers” and “Statistically speaking, if your mate is upbeat, there?s a very good chance that you?re a huge pain in the ass”. If you’ve missed out, the latest acronym out there is BOCTAE, meaning, ‘but of course, there are exceptions’. Try it out, impress your friends.
Quickly Open Websites
I don’t remember where I stumbled upon these little tricks but I’ve found myself quite the nifty habit:
Whenever I want to pull up a website (ie, www.devinreams.com) I just type ‘devinreams’ in the address bar and hit Ctrl-Enter. Both Firefox and IE fill in the http://www. and .com for you!
Think of all the time saved!
Bonus: Firefox does the same for .net and .org with Shift-Enter and Alt-Enter, respectively! Reason #1837 why Firefox is so much better!
…ah, who am I kidding? I can’t think of one top-level site I visit daily that isn’t .com.