RSS Sponsor: Boom →

Thanks to Global Delight for sponsoring the 512 Pixels RSS feed this week! — SH


Boom is a volume booster app for your Mac.

It increases the system audio volume to produce better-quality audio from the built-in speakers. The system-wide graphic equalizer can further enhance your Mac’s audio quality.

Boom won the Macworld Best of Show award for its simplicity, elegancy and well-crafted user interface. It is priced at $6.99 and can be purchased from the Global Delight Online Store or through the Mac App Store. There’s also a free 7-day trial.

Sponsorship by The Syndicate.

Priorities

Over the last few days, I’ve been tweeting about one of Josiah’s “little friends” who — without much warning — entered the final days of his battle with brain cancer late last week.

This morning, this little 3-year-old boy passed away.

(To make it hit closer to home, this kid had the same thing our son has, and they ended up at St. Jude after reading about Josiah and his diagnosis.)

Over the last 39 months, we’ve seen a lot of families come and go from St. Jude. Some kids respond really well to treatment and live cancer-free after chemotherapy and radiation. Other kids, however, don’t share that fate, succumbing to the disease, despite receiving literally the best care in the world.

We’re in the middle ground. Josiah will never be cancer-free, but so far, he’s staying ahead of it. It’s brutal to know that the pendulum could swing at any time. Watching other families go through what we might go through one day is gut-wrenching.

As I tweeted, this sort of thing makes it “hard to give a shit about text editors.”

Yet, the cold hard truth is that I do still give a shit about things like TextMate going open source, the next iPhone and what people are reading and linking to to my blog.

In the light of kids dying from cancer, I always feel like a massive dick about all of my other interests and concerns.

The reality is that this shit is complicated. Getting hit with a load of bricks like cancer changes a lot of things about a person. I know it’s changed me.

But tragedy — and the rage and sorrow that come from it — shouldn’t have the power to change some one completely. (I’m not Walter White, for crying out loud.) I still have the same interests that I did before my kid got diagnosed. I still worry about the same things, and have the same goals I did three years ago.

The difference is, I suppose, that the value I put on things has changed, and when things like this kid’s death come along, I feel them get jerked around even harder than normal, making me feel like a bigger dick than I already do most days.

A Quick Thought on App.net

I haven’t had a lot of time to play with the new site, but one thought has come to mind.

I don’t worry if it will be successful. I do worry that it will become successful and Twitter will bring down the hammer on App.net for blatantly ripping them off.

On Going to Mars — Or, How NASA Is About Steal Another Generation’s Childhood

Adam Mann at Wired has outlined seven plans that have been circulated over the years to get man to Mars:

As every space enthusiast knows, we will land people on Mars within 20 years.

Of course, we’ve been 20 years away from Mars for the last half-century. Between 1950 and 2000, NASA and various independent groups have come up with more than 1,000 detailed studies for manned Mars missions. Yet not a single one has come very close to fruition. At least on paper, Mars remains an eventual NASA goal, with their latest Curiosity rover seen in some ways as a precursor to human missions.

[…]

Despite this, Mars is not really on the agency’s radar. After their Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution (MAVEN) probe, set to launch in 2013, NASA has no concrete plans for the Red Planet.

(Wired has more coverage here.)

Oh no.

* * *

My parents were born in the late 1950s. By the time NASA put a man on the moon on July 20, 1969, my dad was 13. When I asked him about watching the news coverage, he simply said its something he’ll never forget.

* * *

I was born the day that the Challenger exploded, which to this day people still talk about. It shook America to its core. One reason is that the shuttle program had become routine. Boring. (Maybe even at NASA, according to the reports that came out of the investigation.) The world had taken manned space flight (if you can all a low-orbit mission that) for granted.

* * *

Earlier this week, we all stayed up way to late to watch NASA’s Curiosity rover land on Mars. Its two-year mission will surely give us more clues about the Red Planet and its history. As advanced as the rover is, we still won’t have samples of Mars here on Earth — the mission is a one-way trip, like those before it.

* * *

The problems I have with NASA run deep, but if I had to sum it up in one sentence, it’d be this:

The agency has lost its balls.[1]

Growing up in the early 1990s, there wasn’t much going on with NASA that was exciting to me, as a kid. While the beginning of the Shuttle program was something to behold, by the time I was old enough to pick a meme for my childhood, the space program wasn’t a cool option.

Looking forward, the same is true for my kids. My (almost) four year-old son is really in to cars, and I’d love to see him get in to space stuff,[^fn2] but NASA isn’t exciting. Yes, the new Mars rover is badass, but what we need is a set of heroes, flying equipment right up to the edge — and back.


  1. By balls, I also meant budget.
    [^fn2]: Space is super cool, by the way. The fact that we’re on a spinning ball of dust in one of innumerable galaxies is truly awesome.  ↩

Things 2.0 Lands →

Things, the GTD app of choice for many nerds has hit version 2.0. From the Cultured Code blog:

Today is a big day in Things’ history. It sees major updates for all our clients, as well as the long awaited Things Cloud release. Many of you have been looking forward to this, and I want to thank you for your patience. We have been working hard on these updates and we are truly excited to be releasing them today.

The cloud sync is really fast, but other than that, Things 2.0 is still basically the same app that version 1 was. And, after some time and dozens of projects, I felt that Things didn’t scale nearly as well as OmniFocus does. All in all, Things 2 seems pretty sweet, if you work the way Things wants you to. If not, there’s not much of a reason to switch back.

As a sidennote, with this announcement, many have been criticizing the company about the length of time since it announced Cloud Sync and actually shipped it. Here’s Shawn Blanc:

Only the team at Cultured Code knows why it took several years to ship their Cloud Sync and updates to their apps. Did they really need all that time to build their syncing engine? I don’t know; and without all the facts I refuse to criticize them for it.

TextMate 2 Goes Open Source →

Allan Odgaard:

I’ve always wanted to allow end-users to tinker with their environment, my ability to do this is what got me excited about programming in the first place, and it is why I created the bundles concept, but there are limits to how much a bundle can do, and with the still growing user base, I think the best move forward is to open source the program.

While Odgaard hasn’t declared this the death of the text editor, it doesn’t give me much hope about its future.