A Life Lost

On this day, 43 years ago, one of my friends decided that he’d had enough. Around 4pm the phone rang with the news that he had removed himself from his and everyone else’s life. At barely 21 years old, he was through, finished, kaput. This talented aspiring writer was known for a variety of remarkably silly stunts. The last of which was leading a disheveled group of us in a chorus of some song I can no longer remember as the others left my house in the morning after a night of raucous drunken revelry. The New Year Eve’s events and how ten of us ended up sprawled all over my parent’s house with them IN residence, are its own story, as is this remarkable kid’s life. In addition to being a friend he was my first nemesis, which is yet another story, later to be told.

bookRick Schettler didn’t leave this life in anonymity. He left published in a book sometimes used to understand the tumultuous times known as the 1960s. Two of his essays were published in How Old Will You Be In 1984?: Expressions of student outrage from the high school free press, by Diane Divoky in 1969. Give it a read if you have time.

My Amazon Services LLC Associates Program Link: How old will you be in 1984?: Expressions of student outrage from the high school free press

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Spring Fever and Photo Workflow Madness

Spring is around the corner and here are a few shots to jump start your fever. The process used to edit these photos lies below the gallery.

In the first four photos, a juvenile Robin has a seriously hard time wrestling mulberries out of my tree. S/he just couldn’t manage to eat without flapping its wings wildly about to steady him/herself. Don’t you just love the color and texture of its feathers?

In the second three, we see a juvenile Baltimore Oriole who needs a bib for its meal. It has accessorized its normal yellow color by adding some red dye to its chest feathers. What a mess!

Please click the photos to see the larger images.

The Workflow Madness Back Story
To participate in the #SongBirdSaturday photo theme on Google+, I set out to process 10 Robin photos using the ColorChecker Passport software, Adobe Lightroom, and some plug-ins. I only finished the four Robin shots you see here, due to update madness.

Continue reading

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Fix Your Apple Neck – Motion Doctor iPad App Review

Tuesday I published an article on MacMost.com, “Your iPad and Your Neck,” about the potential physical problems inherent in using your iPad. Neck and back strain are a major component of using an iPhone, iPod, iPad, or any other handheld device. As a companion to that commentary, I’d like to give you a solution to help reduce potential pain while using your portable devices. To that end, I evaluate the Motion Doctor iPad App, a physical therapy program with exercises to help stave off future or present problems. If you currently experience what one young reader on MacMost calls Apple Neck or if you sit most of your day in front of a screen of any sort, the app may help you iron out some of those kinks.


Product: Motion Doctor iPad App (version 2.2)
Company: Blue Whale Apps, a division of Blue Whale Web Solutions, Inc.
Price: $14.99
Link: iTunes Previewmotion doctor icon
Facebook page
Recommended: Yes with cautions.

Good Junk:
Simple video demonstrations.
Categorized by body part, sport, activity, and occupation.
Includes commonly recommended exercises and stretches.
Can tag favorite pages to create your own routine.
Bad Junk:
Does not walk you through or suggest a typical routine for different types of problems.
Does not act as a guide while you do the exercises.
Does not count for you or have a clock to use as a timer.
List of physical therapists by state is a waste of space.
Did not find a way to play music while exercising.
Expensive.


I received a request to look at Motion Doctor from Blue Whale back in late June. At the time I socked it away because I didn’t feel adequate to evaluate the app. For one, it’s been a few years since I wandered through college as a physical therapy major (which I abandoned) and two, I had no recent experience.

About a month later, my car was broadsided by a moron picking his phone up off his car floor instead of stopping at the red light in front of him. Unfortunately, I was driving my car at the time. If I’ve said this before, I’ll apologize now, but that accident threw me for a loop. A routine of physical therapy has enabled me to function better, but I fear one of my knees will never be quite the same. The bright side is that now I do have recent experience with physical therapy treatment, so that I feel up to the task of evaluating Motion Doctor.

The Motion Doctor iPad App, created by Dr. Desirea D. Caucci, PT, DPT, has four main areas from which you can choose. The topics include Body Parts, Activity, Sport and Profession. They cover all the most common sports, (18 of them) and nine general occupations that put undue stress on our bodies. I recommend every portable user to check the neck and hand exercises in the Body Parts section or in the knitting activity section, because there is not a typing activity or sport listed. (Typing could be a sport, couldn’t it? :::: grinning and ducking::::)

Landscape View - Routine List

Landscape View - Routine List

A human demonstrates each exercise and from my knowledge they are accurate and helpful. All of the knee, neck, and back exercises assigned to me over the past few months are included in the app. My physical therapy staff seemed quite impressed with the range of activities included in Motion Doctor. A FAQ page explains what is Physical Therapy and gives some helpful advice. If you have a physical therapist or are under a doctor’s care, then you know which exercises you need, and this app is a good exercise companion to a point.

Most of the activities include a video, a text explanation, and a rationale for the exercise. The rationale briefly explains the purpose of the movement. Some of these explanations are too brief though. For example, do you know what are your wrist flexor muscle groups or your which muscle is your trapezius? I know these things from studying anatomy and physiology, but not everyone has this knowledge and I think these terms should include an explanation or a picture of where they exist.

Hand Exercise

Portrait View - Hand Exercise

My issues with Motion Doctor are minor, assuming you know what you’re doing. First, they do not cover which exercises are safe for what type of injuries. That means if you have back problems and just jump in you could hurt yourself or make your problem worse. Blue Whale needs to add more text as to what each exercise does or ancillary body parts affected and whether you should get a physician’s ok to do a particular exercise. For example, I would not start with the one below, even if I sat in front of the TV all day. So, you need to use your own judgement as to whether you can do an exercise safely.

Exercise for TV Enthusiasts

Exercise for TV Enthusiasts

Second, they do not make it clear the sequence of exercises you should use to strengthen or stretch a particular area. If you choose activities based on body part they appear in a sequence from easy to hard, but I know from personal experience that not all of the activities are recommended, depending on your previous injury history.

Third, I have discovered that it is almost impossible to figure out time when told to hold a position for 10 to 20 seconds without a timer of some kind. It’s very easy to underestimate how long you do something. When I started using the app, I expected it to walk me through each movement like an exercise video or CD works. In most exercise CDs, they count for you, and the leader does the exercise with you. That helps reinforce the quality of your own movement and adds that extra bit to make sure you hold postures or do a movement for the specified amount of time. Minimally, I would appreciate a clock that counts out seconds to use along with some of the movements.

Neck Exercises

Neck Exercises


I also think Motion Doctor would benefit from added posture advice in each exercise. For example, a sentence that reminds you to stand straight with your shoulders back or to keep your knees bent or straight would help. That all too important reminder to breathe regularly is also missing.

A list of physical therapists by state is another feature of the app, but it is woefully incomplete. For example, there are at least four PT offices in my town alone and none of them are listed, even though one company has branch offices in multiple towns. I think that a link to a web site that licenses physical therapists would be much more useful. For example, Health Guide USA provides a state lookup service for licensed therapists, while Physical Therapists.com only lists practices by name.

If Blue Whale reduced the price to $9, I could recommend this app with less reservations, but for $14, I think the app needs more advice, explanations, and recommended routines. The exercises it shows you will help with hand, neck, and back strain, but I recommend you talk to a physical therapist first to decide which exercises are best for your situation or pain.

ilene’s machine is endorsed by Bare Bones Software, The Omni Group, Marketcircle, and iGame Radio. The opinions expressed are my own.

Posted in Product Reviews, Software | Tagged , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Ziff Davis Enterprise – A Trusted Source Sold

This news came as a surprise when I read on Feb. 3rd and Feb. 8th that Ziff Davis Enterprise has been sold to QuinStreet, Inc. A company whose tagline says: The Leader in Vertical Marketing and Media Online. (Notice: Marketing first, media second.)

The VAR Guy reports:

Quinstreet paid $17.5 million to acquire Ziff Davis Enterprise assets, including eWeek, Baseline, CIO Insight, Channel Insider and other IT media assets, according to a February 7 SEC filing….

Eric Wittlake at B2B Digital Marketing clarifies the assets sold and notes that this does not involve PC Magazine, owned by Ziff Davis. ZDNet, owned by CBS, who also owns CNET, is also not involved.

I like some of the Ziff publications and have subscribed to CIOInsight and eWeek for years. It seems much of the staff is not following the company to their new home and there are reports of many layoffs. That is disappointing.

Read More
QuinStreet, Inc. Press Release. “QuinStreet Acquires Ziff Davis Enterprise Media Assets.” QuinStreet, 2/6/12.
The VAR Guy. “Ziff Davis Enterprise, Channel Insider, eWeek Sold: Now What?” 2/3/12. (Includes short history of Ziff Davis.)

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Suck Your iPhone

rubberband hands free

Where the Rubber Meets the Head (source unknown)

 

Do you remember the hands free phone joke shot that invaded your mailbox circa 2000 or earlier? You carefully slipped a simple rubber band around your head to secure your phone to your ear–pain notwithstanding. Ya, right.

 

 

Or how about this bra-enabled hands free device holder that appeared around the same time?

bra hands free

Unsupported Use of Bra Technology (source unknown)

 

Now, I often watch TV when I eat my meals. It’s my downtime, so I like to “go somewhere else” for that restful repast. While I prefer movies, the other night some ABCNBCCBS station was on and I thought for a second I was watching Saturday Night Live. A commercial assaulted my eyes that almost made me choke with laughter! My first thought: OH MY GOD, someone actually made that?

GoJo hands free1

Screen Shot from GoJo Video

 

 

 

A company named GoJo has released a product that almost mimics that old hands free joke, called the Hands Free Headset. It needs no batteries, no wires, and works with all phones. This head piece sits on you like any microphone headset. It uses a high density suction cup that just sticks to any phone, so that you can go hands free anywhere, anytime. If there is a cancer risk from using phones near your head, this solution scrambles your cells nice and close up. (Beware the shipping costs too.)

gojohandsfree2

Actual Screen Shot from Gojo Video

I’m not recommending this thing, because I have not actually used it. But seriously, do you want to chat on your laptop with this device? What on earth would make you want to secure your laptop to your head?

 

 

 

Well, now that these handy device driven inventions are coming to a web space near you, how long do you think it will be before this (yet another email joke) ultimate home office becomes available? Ohhhhhhhh, that it would!

Ultimate Home Office

Flowbie Sent This to Me While a CCC on eWorld (Source Unknown)

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Troubleshooting Friday – Security Update 2012-001

Apple released a new security update this week, Security Update 2012-001. It probably popped up in your Software Update window, which you can open from your Apple menu. As the trusting sort I am, I just installed it onto my iMac running Mac OSX 10.6.8 without question. WHOOPS! Various items on my iMac starting acting a bit wonky, most notably printing. These problems seem to crop up if you are using Rosetta to allow you to run PowerPC-based programs on your Intel Mac, which means that Lion OS X 10.7 users are not affected.

Well, today Adam Engst of TidBITS issued a tweet and released an article warning users about this security update. The article, “Security Update 2012-001 Kills Rosetta Apps,” warns users not to install this update.

The venerable site MacInTouch, a long-standing staple in the Mac troubleshooting community, has no less than 50 problem reports from users. A number of problem reports also appears in the Apple Support Communities.

These articles and posts detail problems with Quicken 2007, Microsoft Office 2004 applications, AppleWorks, older versions of Filemaker, and printing problems.

If, like me, you just installed the damn thing without checking, there is hope. Joseph Morris, an IT guy at a school in Nebraska, published a fix on his blog. “Rosetta Issue after Security Update 2012-001,” includes a downloadable file you can install to replace the files that Security Update 2012-001 “fixed.” He states:

This fix MAY NOT resolve your issue, if it doesn’t, let us know what application you are using and what the problem is using [their] “contact” link at the bottom of [their] page.

Use at your own risk. I have not tried this fix yet.

Update around 6:30 pm ET: According to MacInTouch: Apple has released Security Update 2012-001 Version 1.1 for Mac OS X 10.6.8, but it is only available through Software Update so far. No info. on how well it works yet either.

Related Resources

  1. Apple security updates
  2. Apple. “About the security content of OS X Lion v10.7.3 and Security Update 2012-001.” Feb. 1, 2012. (Don’t be fooled by the Lion title, there is also information on Snow Leopard Mac OS X 10.6.x here.)
  3. Kuehl, Julie. “Apple Issues Security Update 2012-001 for Snow Leopard.” The Mac Observer, 2/1/12.
  4. Intel-based Macs: Forcing a Universal application to run with Rosetta.” Apple, 6/10/08.
  5. Mac OS X 10.6 Help: If you need to install Rosetta.” Apple, 2011.
  6. How to enable Entourage syncing to iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch” (Requires Rosetta).  Apple, 11/16/2010.
Posted in Mac OS & iOS Help | Tagged , , , , , , | 2 Comments