Archive for the ‘Find Cate Tiernan’ Category

Zoomit.exe is fabulous

Friday, September 5th, 2008

In all my presentations, I’ve added ZoomIt as a display tool.

After every session, inevitably I get people who ask about the tool.

It’s amazingly simple, and it’s free.

for that tip)

  • up|down arrow keys change the pen size (larger or smaller for drawing and typing
  • Note to presenters (ReadMe.txt) ….

    I’ve been using ZoomIt for about 6 months now, and I think I’m just getting to the point where I’m really good at using the utility, and not more confusing my audience with the zooming and drawing.

    You can get zoom and draw happy to a point where I think it might actually take away from the effect.

    I think "Less is More" wins here. If you have a really important presentation I wouldn’t use ZoomIt unless you have had ample time to practice with it - maybe a few dry runs with the tool on your presentation.

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    Glimpses of China’s inner workings

    Sunday, August 31st, 2008

    The Beijing Olympics have come and gone, and despite all the wall-to-wall television coverage, I’m not sure I have a clearer view of China than I did before the Games began. “Business As Usual: New Video From China,” featuring the work of Cao Fei and Yang Fudong, now up at the Massachusetts College of Art and Design, offers much more to chew on than the fluffy features about Chinese tumbling schools and monks who practice martial arts that aired during the Olympics.

    Those were gauzy postcards home from bedazzled travelers. The three videos in “Business As Usual,” organized by the Arizona State University Art Museum, are stoked with ambiguity, angst, and sometimes hope. Yang’s two works, “Honey” and “City Lights,” and Fei’s triptych, “Whose Utopia,” focus on young Chinese people divorced from tradition by a new economy, hard at work but emotionally adrift.

    It’s not that these people can’t find themselves; in Yang’s videos, at least, they don’t even know to look. His is the bleaker view. “Honey,” in particular, piquantly depicts an aimless though lushly beautiful roundelay in which a young woman garbed in fishnet stockings and fur stoles wanders the streets, smokes cigarettes, and plays cards with implacable young men in Mao suits. It’s as if all the young men’s sublimated sexual energy has burst forth in the form of this femme fatale to taunt them, and still they don’t act.

    The comic “City Lights” features two identically dressed young office workers; their suits and ties signify that they’re part of China’s new middle class. One carries an umbrella; the other, shadowing the first, mimes carrying an umbrella. They do the same with a pistol, and then again dancing with a woman to the loud strains of a bossa nova.

    Fei turns the factory into the backdrop for a fairy tale. Everyone has a dream, perhaps especially young people trapped in perennial drudgery, and in identifying the dreams of some of these workers, she saves them from faceless anonymity and restores their dignity.

    The heart of the video is its second part, “Factory Fairytale,” in which individual workers act out their dreams on the factory floor: A man dances among the assembly benches, a ballet dancer pirouettes in wings and a tutu, a fellow strums his guitar. This passage ends mournfully, with a young woman gazing out of her dormitory window at rows and rows of other drab buildings.

    Fei’s final chapter, “My Future Is Not a Dream,” features portraits of these people posing solemnly at work. An essay by co-curator Marilyn A. Zeitlin reveals that in China, even kings were not shown in portraits until the 18th century. Fei addresses a portion of China’s national identity, its historical focus on the greater good over individual aspiration, and here gives faces to the faceless masses.

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    School for fanatics of film rolls into town

    Sunday, August 24th, 2008

    It is a short walk to the Fox Studios soundstages where The Matrix trilogy, two Star Wars episodes and Wolverine were shot. Even closer is the production house where the animated Happy Feet came to life and where the director Baz Luhrmann chose his office while making the epic film Australia.

    And right out in front are two cinema complexes and a dance school that is crowded with hyperactive youngsters in leotards after school.

    The new headquarters of the Australian Film, Television and Radio School - on the site of the old Babe set at Moore Park’s Entertainment Quarter - is smack in the middle of Sydney’s film heartland.

    After two decades in the grounds of Macquarie University in North Ryde, it is a big move in every way for the national film school. Instead of an awkwardly laid-out building that was remote from the industry, the new base is open, airy and feels refreshingly like it could encourage creative work, which it will need to do if the country’s filmmakers are to get rolling again.

    In the early weeks at its new home, the school is being reinvented under its director, Sandra Levy, a long-time film and television producer and former executive at the ABC and Nine Network. Just about everything except the name seems to be changing, and even that was briefly considered.

    “Suddenly the school is part of the business, whereas it wasn’t at North Ryde,” Levy says. “Being so far out of town, with the building laid out in an isolating manner, it was not a great environment for the sort of organisation that needs to be creatively charged and full of excitement and contradiction.” Levy says the school is taking a new attitude to training, which involves new courses and new types of students, so it can become “a major contributor to a generational shift in Australian film”.

    Its biggest successes include the Oscar-winning cinematographers Andrew Lesnie, who shot the Lord Of The Rings trilogy, and Dion Beebe, who shot Chicago and Memoirs Of A Geisha. The school’s claim to have “an international reputation for excellence” is also backed by three Oscar nominations for short films in the past seven years.

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    NBC Silverlight Install End User Experience

    Friday, August 22nd, 2008

    The whole process was less than 90 seconds, which is great, because Flickr video maximum time in 90 seconds. Lucky me.

    Once the vide player / Silverlight engine was installed, I was amazed at the clarity of the streaming video. it’s amazing. In fact the streaming video footage, it better quality than the commercials I saw, which were all pretty grainy. Probably due to the way they were originally encoded.

    I’m excited to watch the Olympics online this year, because I’ll get to watch what I want, when I want, with much MUCH more coverage. I won’t be locked into what scheduled in TV guide.

    I wonder if the Archives will stay online after the Olympics are over?

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    iPhone Community Feedback on UserVoice.com

    Friday, August 22nd, 2008

    account to get an accurate count of what people think. Or, maybe my 2400 contacts and I are a minority, and this isn’t really a big deal to the iPhone population.

    Is it cool for an End User to start their own support site, for a product that they want to make better?

    The thing that makes UserVoice.com so great is the voting. You don’t need an account to vote, you can do it anonymously. You can also add suggestions, bugs, and feature requests without an account. There are features you may want to sign up for (free) like email notifications if others comment on your item, or the item get’s fixed.

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    San Diego ASP.NET SIG User Group

    Friday, August 22nd, 2008

    Here is the code sample I used last night to show off and talk about the ASP.NET AJAX Functionality that is built into ASP.NET 3.5.

    This project has been built over the years with samples that I’ve created for conferences, and users groups around the world.

    If you were in San Diego for the user group, or are just interested in checking out tons of examples, this is a small 2.5 meg download. The project has been upgraded to use Visual Studio 2008. A Visual Studio 2005 example of (not all but most of) this code is available on

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    Running Baby Smash Offline

    Friday, August 22nd, 2008

    Last night Cameron and I , and how much fun we were having with it. This morning I was trying to show some folks the app, but I was offline.


    Knowing how the technology works, I was able to find the local storage, and still run the last version of the program. I thought this may be helpful for others to see, so I screen cast it, while I was opening the file to show.


    The file structure will be different for XP vs. Vista (this is Vista) but somewhere in your profile you’ll find Apps\2.0\ …….


    Enjoy the 90 second screen cast.


    I was in a hurry to post this, so I didn’t do the pan/zoom but I think it’s good enough to get the point across.


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    Family meetings a surprising success

    Monday, August 18th, 2008

    About three years ago, I took a parenting class that came highly recommended by several friends. It was free to the public, informative, and quite a lot of fun.

    I worked hard to put into practice much of what I learned there. One suggestion made by the teacher - the implementation of a weekly family meeting - sat on the shelf in my brain until earlier this year. I don’t really know why I waited so long.

    Those of you clearing your throats as if to say, “Ahem … it’s because you were a control freak who didn’t want to switch to a democratic parenting style” can just be quiet right now.

    Whatever the reason for the delay, I got over it. In March of this year, the kids and I had our first formal meeting and haven’t missed a week since. Now, I find I’ve become one of those overzealous crazy people on a quest, and that quest is to get the word out on how cool family meetings are.

    Once they start having family meetings of their own, I won’t seem nearly as annoying, because they’ll be out annoying all of their friends too. An outline of a typical family meeting follows:

    Spotlights: This is the feel good portion of the meeting. Everyone gets a chance to spotlight someone else for doing something right. At our first ever family meeting last spring, Miriam spotlighted Ray for helping her get things down from high shelves. Three year old Michael often spotlights the first person he looks at for “being nice.” At a family meeting in the weeks following our wedding, my husband spotlighted himself for “being so lucky.” (Yes, I know that was a completely gratuitous bit of cuteness. At this week’s meeting, I’ll be spotlighting myself for using the word gratuitous.)

    Calendar: This section of the meeting is pretty self explanatory. We pull the calendar off the fridge and fill in appointments, activities, and other events we need to remember. I want the world to know I was fastidious about adding Underwear Day during our family meeting two weeks ago. We observed it with a *cough* brief moment of silence. No, I will not apologize for the corniness of that pun.

    Planning: We’re currently working on our plan to make a family flag. The first planning session brought with it the task of choosing our family colors. If you’re ever planning on making a family flag, I suggest you come to the meeting with three or four colors, and let them choose two. I made the mistake of asking everyone to submit a color for vote. Our flag will now be red, gold, green, blue, yellow, clear and hot red. I don’t know what hot red is, but Michael is passionate about it.

    Issues: The issues portion of family meeting is a chance to work out the nuts and bolts of family life. We make rules, decide on consequences and settle arguments. Everyone has the right to raise an issue, whether it’s Ray’s recent motion that we make Sunday nights “Taco Night” - it was unanimously approved - or Miriam’s passionate plea to reinstate family prayer time. The thing I’ve learned about issues time is that I’d better be ready for complete honesty from my kids. How well I remember the meeting in which Cate pronounced, “Mommy, you yell too much.” Fortunately for me, I was rewarded two weeks later with her spotlight of, “Mommy, thanks for not yelling so much anymore.”

    This week, I’ll be unveiling the new “Extra Chores for Cash” incentive system, and I’m pretty sure one of the kids wants us to vote on a fair Playstation 2 schedule. We’ll be looking over the sample family crests I printed from the internet, and we may start breaking down the costs of going to Disneyland next summer. All in all, I think it will be a fun and productive meeting. I’m especially excited for spotlight time.

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    Man hit by car following attack

    Saturday, August 16th, 2008

    A 20-year-old man was dragged almost 400 feet by a car Thursday that struck him in a hit-and-run near Brunswick High School during a chase his brother said began when they were attacked at a discount store.

    Josh Carlisle of Brunswick was listed in stable condition at Southeast Georgia Health System’s Brunswick hospital, a spokeswoman said.

    He was run over about 4 p.m. on Habersham Street and dragged beneath a blue Nissan Altima to Cate Street, said his brother, Daniel Carlisle, who cradled his brother in his arms until police and emergency personnel arrived.

    “He was conscious but crying and yelling in pain,” said Daniel Carlisle, whose clothes were stained with his brother’s blood.

    Josh Carlisle has head and chest injuries and one of his legs was broken, his brother said.

    He apparently became trapped behind one of the tires as the vehicle rolled over him, police said.

    Police were searching for the Altima, which had its windshield broken by Daniel Carlisle, who said he threw a piece of metal at the car to try to distract its driver from his brother.

    No arrests had been reported in the case Thursday night.

    Danielle Carlberg, 24, and Daniel Carlisle, 23, gave this account of the chase and hit-and-run to the Times-Union:

    Carlberg and the brothers were at the Dollar General Store, 4999 Altama Ave., when a woman, accompanied by two young children and a man, accosted Josh Carlisle. The woman began punching him in the face while her male companion accused him of burglarizing her home.

    Carlisle denied the accusations then got into Carlberg’s car with his brother, and the three of them drove away from the store. The woman, children and the man got into the Altima and gave chase.

    Carlberg drove through several residential neighborhoods in an attempt to elude them and to find a police officer for help. When they got to the school, Josh Carlisle jumped from the car and started running toward the building to get one of the school’s resource officers.

    The man in the Altima jumped out of the car and chased him on foot. Carlisle slipped and fell down on the pavement at a driveway leading to the rear of the high school. The woman then stopped and picked up the man.

    “As soon as Josh fell and her boyfriend got in, she floored it and ran over Josh,” said Carlberg, who described the woman as laughing.

    Police found brass knuckles at the scene.

    Two students told the Times-Union they saw the car hit him, and their accounts of the incident were consistent with what Carlberg and Daniel Carlisle said.

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    Now playing

    Saturday, July 26th, 2008

    The Pevensie siblings return to Narnia only to discover things have changed since they ruled the magical kingdom. Now threatened by an evil king who seeks to destroy the surviving Narnians, the child monarchs are forced into action alongside a virtuous prince named Caspian, who seeks to regain the throne stolen by his uncle.

    A sprawling drama from German director Fatih Akin that is so carefully constructed that if feels small. It concerns a Turkish immigrant in Germany who moves in with a prostitute, with tragic results. The immigrant’s son and the prostitute’s daughter continue the story, everyone moving from Germany to Turkey and back and just missing their connections: it’s a movie about coincidence and also about the way it can change and redeem us.

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