Flash + Data = ?

Macromedia links Flash apps to data.

My thoughts as I’m reading this: Sounds good, sounds good, sounds about right, hrm,, no direct MySQL support, sounds good, sounds good, ColdFusion? People still use that? Sounds good, sounds good… $999 price tag for Flash Remoting? Good luck, Macromedia.

Just as they always do, Macromedia comes really close to getting something.. then just leaves you feeling screwed. To use PHP/MySQL, you still have to go through the still-required extra steps of taking MySQL data into XML, and writing your own ActionScript parser just so you can get nifty vector animations along with your dynamic data in the same compiled binary file.

Macromedia’s latest efforts would have you (if you feel like paying a ton of money instead) buy a ColdFusion license for at least $1299, or as much as $4999 (depending on the level of quality you need), buy a MSSQL Server license for at least $4999/processor, buy Windows 2000 server for $1199 to run the entire thing on….PLUS the $999 for Flash Remoting.

On the other hand (back to PHP), you could just write some XML-parsing code in ActionScript and some MySQL-XML translating code in PHP. Run it on Linux. Licensing fees? Nada. Massive development environment? Nope. Expensive production environment? Perhaps, but still not on-par with the Windows/ColdFusion world.

Or you could just use XHTML, forego the animation and buzzwords and get your files down to like 4k instead of 400k. Skip the XML step and get dyanamic data in its native form into your native code.

Why was I excited about Flash again? Oh, right. Because it takes 3x as long for me to produce so I get paid 3x the amount. Right.

Too many Windows

Microsoft at has 9.5 million different versions of Windows.

By current count, Microsoft offers about a half-dozen different versions each of Windows XP, Windows Server 2003 and Windows CE .Net. Microsoft also considers Windows 2000 still to be a “current” product. Including the 64-bit editions, Microsoft also offers about six different Windows 2000 versions, bringing the total to about 24.

I’m still waiting for Windows RG, the one that’s supposed to work.

Also, previously forgotten until now, I was at the movie theater here, where pre-purchased tickets over the internet are redeemed at little stations placed in the lobby. When I went to use my credit card to have the machine print out my tickets, I was greeted with a nice little Windows CE logo combined with some insipid tagline on how great my life was going to be now that Windows CE was in it. Under which was an also-informative message that Windows CE had encountered a general protection fault error and needed maintenance. Of course, this meant I had to speak with an actual person, after waiting in line with actual people, which is never a pleasant experience.

Okay, who sneezed?

This amazing commercial is actually basically entirely real except for one part where they had to splice together the shot becuase they couldnt fit it all in one warehouse at one time. I thought at least the tires going up the ramp was fake but apparently they were weighted with lugnuts or some such thing. In total, it required 606 takes over 4 days.

HDD100 < iPod

Philips HDD100:

  • Ripoff of the iPod interface? Check.
  • Ripoff of Apple’s brushed metal interface on website? Check.
  • Using a transfer protocol half the speed of FireWire without power capability? Check.
  • No contacts or calendar functionality? Check.
  • Probably a lot cheaper than the iPod, in both actual price as well as look and feel? Check.

"QuarkXpress 6 will be expensive and late"

Daring Fireball: Translation of Selected Portions of Last Week’s ‘QuarkXPress 6 Feature Overview’ Announcement from PR-Speak to English



The many improvements to the QuarkXPress Web features make it even easier for publishers to create Web designs and re-use print content on the Web. Print layouts can be converted to Web layouts in a matter of mouse clicks, or designers can create new Web designs using the familiar QuarkXPress tools and interface.

We are plowing full steam ahead under the delusion that our users want to use a print-oriented page-layout program for web design. By placing extra emphasis on these unwanted web features, we hope to distract your attention from a certain upstart page layout application, which is focused squarely and solely on page layout.


Shameless Groveling

Okay, so I the last time I wanted to go to a show that was sold out, a reader piped up (the next day) that he had an extra ticket I could have had if I’d wanted it.

Well, Tai and I really would love to go to the AFI show here in Denver on April 9th. If any generous readers out there would happen to have 2 tickets they aren’t using, we’d gladly take them off their hands for a relatively reasonable fee.

Califuckinfornia

Some notes about California:

  • Santa Barbara is gorgeous. Just beyond any expectations I may have had
  • Seagulls like apples and I like throwing balls at seagulls who try to steal apples
  • I can eat authentic mexican food every day
  • Fuck LA
  • Clients who know what they want and understand what you can do for them are great
  • Coming in to San Diego from SB at 10:30 PM felt more like I was coming home from a foreign place than coming back to a different foreign place.
  • Did I say fuck LA? The 405 is worst freeway ever
  • The beach is a very, very good thing. The kids love it, and if you don’t go to a state beach on Coronado, it’s free
  • Cruising down Haley St. while listening to a song about it is the perhaps one of the dorkiest things I’ve ever done. But I had to do it. “You’ll never know just who you’ll meet on Haley…”

Ah, yes. California. And in 12 hours I’ll be heading back to Denver, with its 16 feet of snow. Sweet.

War Programming

The timing of this war is all wrong. By programming the war against the NCAA Basketball Tournaments, Bush, Jr. really cut into the war ratings. It’s surprising he doesn’t understand that. You think people will be paying full attention to the war when they’ve got their attention focused on Pittsburgh and Wagner?

Thanks to Fox News, CNBC, CNN and others, I feel superinformed. CNN has their screen split into four segments, replete with banners, graphics and a news blurb streamer. Fox News keeps us primed with a big “WAR ALERT” bordered in orange, along with a ticker at the bottom with the latest sound bites in type. Fox also has a constant reminder that the “Terror Alert” is High, along with the ongoing “WAR ALERT”. Do you think they’re trying to scare us? So, what defines a WAR ALERT, and why aren’t the other networks telling us about it? I guess Fox has the inside scoop thanks to their White House connections.

I didn’t know following this new war was going to be so exhausting. We have live cameras on the battlefields with announcers talking about what the troops are doing, saying, and thinking. Like the basketball announcers, they fill the airwaves with a lot of speculative prattle. It’s the latest popular sport.

I still haven’t figured out why the networks keep showing a live shot from Baghdad that’s nothing more than a blurry, black and white satellite shot of a building or tank at night with nothing going on. I get it– Still Life. It’s the latest popular art.

The latest news from Wall Street is that the new war is great for the market. I can hardly wait for the war manna to trickle down. I’m sure it will. Just stick my share in the mail.

Until this war, I had never before had an embedded reporter in my living room. So is there a trade off between access and honest reporting, or is this just another liberal myth? We get live action of buildings blowing up and explosions in the background, with the added attraction of announcers commenting on “the awesome display of military power.” And they say it with a real sense of awe and deference in their voices. The studio anchors really love these embedded guys. They build them up and swoon over them like Ernie Pyle has risen from the grave.

The bad news is that the troops haven’t reached Baghdad yet, and they’re already tired. They’re also concerned about having enough fuel left to fight the battle when they get to Baghdad, and sleep deprivation among the troops. Fox News even said so, and that’s the Bush Network run by their old boy Roger Alies. It makes me wonder if they’re going to have a “rest day” before the invasion of Baghdad. I hope no one sneaks up on us on rest day. That wouldn’t be fair, but nothing is in love and war.

But over all, I hear, the war is going swimmingly. Entire divisions are surrendering, we may have actually killed Saddam, and we’re way ahead of projections. Now that we’ve got the market humming again, it looks like this new war was just what the economy needed.

So, if Saddam might be dead and there are already wholesale surrenders, doesn’t that mean we’ve accomplished the task and we can all go home? I guess Saddam’s demise means a new vision and new set of goals for Iraq from Bush Jr. That will come in a few days.

And how come nobody else calls him Jr’ It seems to me that’s a good way to distinguish him from Bush Sr. Now we know why Bush Sr. chose Dan Quayle as his Vice-President? because he’s so much like Jr.

So where’s Country Joe and The Fish when you need them? Probably somewhere worrying about their kids being marched off to battle like so many parents everywhere.

Now, we have a whole new wave of celebrity generals. Norman Schwartzkopf has a regular gig with NBC. So the other networks are rushing to acquire their own resident generals. I just love expert opinions. I find them so reassuring.

Some networks are cheerleaders and others actually seem a little skeptical or cynical at times. I wonder if Bush Jr. knows about that. They probably have somebody watching.

This is the ultimate boy movie’we have at least five networks of “All War, All The Time.” And we get it complete with split screens, most of which show nothing going on, banners and streamers with the latest of what they’re not talking about, and what Donald Rumsfeld thinks.

I tell you, it’s information overload, but Rummy’s thoughts matter. After all, this is his and Dick Cheney’s project. Bush Jr. is just a puppet, kind of like Robert Redford’s character in the movie, The Candidate back in 1972.

Now that Dick Cheney, he’s one smart cracker. Got his Halliburton millions in a blind trust, but by gosh, who do you think gets a big chunk of the contracts to rebuild Iraq’ Would believe me if I told you it was Halliburton? He, and an elite group that includes Rummy, Paul Wolfowitz and others been planning it since 1997. That election thing in 2000 was crucial to the plan. Thanks to 8,000 disqualified voters in Florida, several hundred elderly Jews in Miami who voted for Pat Buchanan, along with a Supreme Court and Kathleen Harris, who decided time was up, the plan worked.

I just can’t believe our president underestimates the popularity of basketball like he does. And the Texas Longhorns are one of the favorites. But then, he’s a baseball guy. I hear at one time he bought a share of the Texas Rangers with his dad’s money, and parlayed it into the governor’s job in Texas. Look where that got him. Who says a Gentleman’s C ain’t worth nothing? I mean, isn’t worth anything.

War makes the world so much smaller. At least this one does. Why, just today, one of my local radio stations gave the weather report for Iraq right after the local one. They’d never done that before, so this tells me something really special is going on. Even more special than the last war.

Some of these news anchorwomen are really pretty. They make great cheerleaders for this real life boy movie of ours. Network news is all about packaging. And pretty women are an important part of any entertainment package. But why do all the men on local TV news have the same haircut? The younger the reporters are, the more haircut-intensive they seem to be.

Please understand, I’m sacrificing important basketball-viewing time in order to offer these observations. So like the troops, I too, am making a sacrifice for the war effort. Or maybe it’s because of the war effort. In any case, there are other things I’d rather be doing. Heck, I just missed almost all of the Pitt-Wagner game’ This war’s got our priorities all screwed up.

If the siege of Baghdad draws out past the end of the basketball tournament, expect the ratings to go up. The troops will probably get the day off for the Opening Day of baseball season. The enemy would never sneak up on us on Opening Day. You heard it first right here.

H. Scott Prosterman


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