Monthly Archives: August 2011

Hiding Facebook’s App Ticker

Facebook has rolled yet another obnoxious feature with no user option to disable it — the App Ticker. Apparently, some folks have seen it for a week or so now, but it only just showed up on my profile today. I’ve been using the wonderful Facebook Fixer script for the Greasemonkey addon to tweak the way my Facebook looks, but they haven’t rolled out an update to deal with the App Ticker. Fortunately, Facebook Fixer has a custom CSS area, so I used Firebug to identify and remove the elements of the App Ticker and the white space behind it. For those who also use Facebook Fixer and want to plug in the custom CSS for themselves, I’ll save you some time and post the code I used.

.fixedAux { display: none; }

.ego_wide .hasRightCol #contentArea { width: 1005px; }

You’re welcome.

Portal: No Escape

I love when some of my favorite video games inspire creative works of art. The world of Portal is such a strange place, so it’s always fascinating when people continue to explore it in their own ways.

Media Networks Cause Increasing Piracy

Fox delays Hulu availability, piracy surges. I can’t say as I’m surprised by this at all. I noticed recently that Fox had suddenly started delaying the publishing of their shows to Hulu from next day broadcast to eight days. They’re not the only network playing hard-to-get with Hulu, either. SyFy has taken to publishing only one or two episodes from the beginning of each show’s season to Hulu and then holding the rest of the episodes in abeyance until the current season is over. Similarly, networks like CBS and NBC publish only a few shows to Hulu and most never even make it online at all. (For those of us who are fans of these shows, it makes it extremely difficult to avoid spoiler information the day after broadcast.)

I understand, to a point, why the media networks do this. They have ratings to maintain to keep their advertisers happy, and so they hope, by limiting (or removing completely) online access to their shows, they can then increase their live viewership and continue to make money from the commercials they run. There’s just one problem with that scenario: we now live in a digital age. Live broadcasts, while not completely a thing of the past, are no longer the only — or necessarily even the best — way for viewers to take in their favorite shows. Technology has made it exceptionally easy to redistribute media through the web by a variety of means — network websites, third-party services like Hulu or Netflix, and yes, even through piracy.

What I think the networks — and their advertisers — are having trouble coming to terms with is the fact that the media industry is rapidly changing and, much like the newspaper industry, are fighting that change kicking and screaming the entire way. By cutting off online access to their programming and attempting to force viewers to watch shows live, they are, in a way, shooting themselves right in the proverbial foot. It takes almost nothing to record a show when it airs, strip the commercials out, and redistribute the show online through any number of means, torrenting being the most notable method. This is a practice that is not likely to stop anytime soon, and the more the networks fight against online distribution, the more money they’re going to lose in the process. People are always going to find a way to get around the system so they can continue to consume media on their own schedule and on their own terms.

Personally, I think the only way the networks are ultimately going to survive is by adapting to this ‘new’ media age and actually finding ways to distribute their programming online in a way that proves beneficial, not only for them but also for the viewers they are trying to reach. There are any number of ways to accomplish this, whether it be by including their own advertising with the shows, leasing them to third-party services like Hulu or Netflix who, in turn, charge a subscription fee for viewing, creating their own online subscription system (which I noticed HBO has already started doing), etcetera and so forth. TV as it used to be is becoming a thing of the past, and I think that online distribution is the way things are headed. It’s very likely that the two mediums can, and will, co-exist but until the networks figure that out, everyone is going to lose — except for the pirates. They’re going to do just fine.

Quitting IntenseDebate

That’s it. I think I’m done. I’ve had a pretty good relationship with IntenseDebate’s services on my various websites for quite a while now. Sure, there have been hiccups and periodic issues from time to time, but that’s the nature of online technologies, especially ones that are always under constant development. As WordPress has grown and become more powerful, so did IntenseDebate, and as one of Automattic’s services, I had high hopes that it would continue to grow and develop and become a tool as useful as WordPress always has been for me.

But the honeymoon is over. After a couple of years using the service, I have become increasingly frustrated by the chronic problems with IntenseDebate. Comments that users, including myself, submit will sometimes randomly fail to display on my sites, despite showing up in my IntenseDebate dashboard. I have submitted scads of problem reports to IntenseDebate’s support, including direct links to the missing comments. Support will fix those comments, but then we’ll just end up having to repeat the process with random future comments. Months of reporting and dealing with this problem has yielded up no satisfactory solution from IntenseDebate’s developers.

To add insult to injury, I discovered lately that IntenseDebate will now no longer allow me to remain logged in to any of my sites so that I can reply to comments or administrate comments directly on my own sites. I started using IntenseDebate when Automattic acquired them exactly because it was such an easy system to use and it greatly enhanced my ability to have discussions with readers. Now, I’m finding it to be far more of a liability and a hindrance to said discussion than a help — and I’m getting zero satisfaction from IntenseDebate’s supposed support system.

Frankly, I think IntenseDebate’s developers have given up the project as a lost cause and just haven’t bothered to inform their users that they aren’t working on it anymore. This is unfortunate because I’ve always been pretty happy with Automattic’s various projects. WordPress has always been far and away my favorite tool for website development, and I use bbPress almost exclusively now for my forum system (when I use one), despite the fact that it hasn’t undergone any real major development in several years. (I realize that it’s now in a 1.0 alpha plugin form for WordPress, but that isn’t particularly useful to me at the moment.) Automattic also has several other services that are just fantastic, like Gravatar and VaultPress, so I had really hoped they would get their collective act together with IntenseDebate, get it under development again, and really iron out some of these bugs that have so plagued the system for so many months now.

Apparently, this is simply not to be. The only recent post on the “developers” blog has simply been an item on how to hide guest commenting. Yay, exciting.

So, I wash my hands of IntenseDebate. I’m done with it, at least for now and at least until someone decides it’s a worthwhile project to pick up again. Who knows? Maybe Disqus has put IntenseDebate out of business. I just wish they’d let us, their users, know so that we can actually move on.

Maybe it’s time to go check out Disqus. Are they actually still under development?

Receipts

And hey, while I’m on the topic of rants, a friend’s Facebook status inspired the following comment, and I felt like it probably deserved its own post.

I’ve noticed that store receipts seem to be getting longer and longer lately — and only 25-30% of the receipt lists the actual purchase. The rest is coupons, links for surveys, legal disclaimers, and other worthless garbage. It actually really irritates how much paper stores waste on such pointless minutia, particularly since very few people actually look at their receipts or keep them for much longer than it takes to get out of the store. A couple of stores have actually started printing receipts on both sides of the paper, but it still seems like an extravagant waste. Personally, I’d love to see more stores going to email receipts or some other similar electronic equivalent. I shudder to think how many trees we cut down every year just so people can toss them into the trash.

Credit Scores Are Bullshit

Credit Scores Are Bullshit“I used to think a credit score was all about your ability to pay, but it’s clear now it’s more about how profitable you will be to banks.” I have very little doubt about this. It became clear to me a few years ago that credit cards companies are really little more than legitimized scam artists designed to keep the maximum number of people in the greatest amount of debt so that CEOs can get rich off the backs of everyone else. It doesn’t make sense that the more wisely you handle your money, the lower your credit score gets, but that’s the way the system seems to be designed to work. Personally, I’d rather have a low credit score than be in perpetual hock to everyone and their uncle. (Source: BoingBoing)

Neil deGrasse Tyson On Tomorrow’s Dreams

I’m very much with Dr. Tyson on this one. I’ve felt for quite a while that our politicians don’t care about much more than maintaining their own positions in government and garnering more power (and larger salaries) for themselves. They’ve done this at the expense of science and exploration. It would be nice to see NASA get its funding back so that we can continue to explore the universe.