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Newsweek’s Daniel Gross explains the Consumer Price Index (here’s the official BLS site) in a very simple video. I could do without the goofy sound effects, but it’s a good, 2 minute explanation of how the government tracks inflation.

Per David Simon’s Berkeley talk, though, the video doesn’t go into why this matters. Perhaps they’ll cover that in the next installment of the Economics 101 series.

(via @newsweek, Newsweek’s Twitter feed)

2:42 pm | leave a comment
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Spotlight might be really cool, but the first thing I ended up doing after starting up Tiger was put together a list of folders for Spotlight to avoid indexing (you can set this up via the Spotlight preference pane in System Preferences). I was a bit wigged out by the possibility of having my sister search for something on my computer and then having her find a personal or particular candid IM message in the search results. Unlikely? Yeah, but it only needs to happen once…

John Batelle highlights an article talking about the government’s concerns along these lines. For a particularly amusing example of this, try typing in the following search terms:

  • Credit Card
  • MasterCard
  • Visa
  • Social Security

See what documents come up… Then, think about how many (or few) search terms you would need to have on, say, 100,000 compromised computers to garner significant numbers of credit card numbers or social security numbers. A significant security compromise will appear for Macs soon enough and we’re going to have to deal with this question…

(as an aside, it always drives me nuts when companies “protect” your credit card number by omitting the last 4 digits instead of only showing the last 4. Now, someone just needs one hit from each type of receipt and they’ve got your number)

2:05 pm | 1 comment

A couple of notes about Tiger… Damn you Apple for making Spotlight exactly like the little bastard cousin of LaunchBar, then using the same UI paradigm and activation key. I’m going to try keeping Spotlight with the default Cmd-Space hotkey, but that means retraining my brain to hit something else to get LaunchBar… which I now do almost reflexively (today, after installing the new LaunchBar, I hit Cmd-Space to launch LaunchBar… and wondered why nothing happened.)

I’m switching back to Safari on my machines at home, just to see the new features and play around with the RSS integration. I’m curious if Safari is better in this release, but I’m also looking forward to the next update which claims to be ACID2 compliant. Not even Firefox can make that claim, so I’m curious to play around. With some of the DHTML things we want to do at work, I’m hoping we have a solid platform to work off of.

Quick links of things to look at:

More on this later. So far so smooth. I did have trouble installing the update on my iMac. Turned out there was minor filesystem corruption on the computer that Disk Utility couldn’t fix (incorrect number of thread records). In fact, the installer just choked and said something like “Installer encountered an error. Please retry installation ” or something. I ended up running Disk Utility off of the installer DVD manually where I saw that Disk Utility was choking on this error. I suggest running Disk Utility and verifying your disk manually if the installer wigs out.

Luckily, I have a copy of DiskWarrior around from my iSight troubles and I was able to use that to fix things right up. BTW, if you have the downloadable copy of DiskWarrior, it’s tough to actually use it because you need to boot from something else. Making a bootable CD/DVD is just annoying enough that I found it easier just to boot my iMac into Target Disk Mode (hold T while booting your Mac). The computer then behaves like a big firewire drive. Just run a firewire cable between the iMac and my PowerBook and I can run DiskWarrior from my PowerBook. After about 30 minutes or so of chugging along, I had a working disk and the installer got moving past the disk check.

Spotlight took a LOT of hours to get through my disks… I have over a half-terrabyte attached to my iMac now (530 GB per mfr), and it’s about a third full. My PowerBook only took a few hours to get indexed, though.

On the whole, though, big thumbs up for Tiger. I’m busy with my own projects right now, but I hope to dive into Automator and the new SDKs soon.

11:55 pm | 5 comments