T-Mobile T-Zones and MMS Problems

Thursday, 31 January 2008 15:14 by joelevi

We've confirmed through T-Mobile that as of approximately 2:37pm Mountain Time (01/31/2008) T-Mobile experienced an outage on their T-Zones and MMS data networks in the Western Region (USA).

The network was restored to functionality at approximately 3:10pm the same day.

If you experienced any interruption of service you may want to call 611 from your mobile phone and tell them you were effected and ask for a credit to your account.


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Five Attributes of Highly-Effective Programmers

Tuesday, 29 January 2008 17:50 by joelevi

Pepethecow (a.k.a Ben Watson) over at PhilosophicalGeek.com has published a very good article about what makes a good programmer.

  • Humility

  • Love of Learning

  • Detail-orientedness

  • Adaptability

  • Passion

 

Ben lists reasons behind each that I highly recommend you go read.

 

Thought of the day:

image

(Hat tip to Mike Dopp for both of these!)


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I'm going to MIX08!

Tuesday, 29 January 2008 16:35 by joelevi

My boss just called my co-worker and I into his office to inform us that we're going to MIX again this year. That's awesome! Last year, MIX07 was information overload.

We learned so much we development goodness that we've struggled implementing it all this year. We've put into practice most of what we learned there and are looking forward to

The challenge is going to be getting 5 projects that we're currently working on into testing before we leave.

I'll probably have bruised finger-tips by then. Thanks, Steve and John!


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Green your Home

Monday, 28 January 2008 06:54 by joelevi

Before you give me a lecture about using a color as a verb, read the post... then flame away! (Just use low-carbon fuel when you do, okay?)

My wife has been talking to me about wanting to sell our house and build a green house from the plans up. She'd like it to be super-energy efficient, well insulated, off-grid, and as self-sufficient as possible. We can't do that just yet, and likely, few of you can either. There are things you can do, however, to lower your energy consumption (and thereby your recurring costs for electricity, gas (natural gas, propane, heating oil, etc.), water, and waste services.

We started simply, replacing our failed incandescent bulbs with compact fluorescent's (CFL) where ever possible (we're still waiting for dimmable CFL's to become available in ceiling fan style enclosures), we've purchased some LED bulbs for specific task lighting, we added a timer to the room that the kids play in which will automatically turn the lights off after 10-60 minutes.

We bought a battery charger and rechargeable batteries, which we use in 80-90% of our battery operated "stuff."

We installed ceiling fans in our living spaces to move the air and reduce our heating/cooling costs.

We planted a garden. It started as a couple 4x4 foot raised boxes, which we've more than doubled. It's hard to use all the food that they produce, but we're going to start freezing and canning more this year as well. This will reduce our need to travel to the local grocery store to purchase items that had to be processed and shipped in from who-knows-where, also reducing our energy use and (in my opinion) increasing the quality and freshness of food that we'll be consuming.

We started a compost pile. That's easy! You just toss your non-meat/non-dairy kitchen scraps into a pile in your garden, turn it every once in a while, toss some soil on it every once in a while, and pretty soon you've got rich compost (and haven't had the city pick it up, truck it away, and bury it at the landfill).

We bought a hybrid car (yeah, that's a big expense and some would argue the "greenness" of it) and get 45 MPG around town and much much more on the highway). We traded in our old mini-van (which averaged 12 MPG for a newer model which has been getting over 20MPG).

We added a solar-powered attic fan to our top-most, South-facing gable vent to reduce the moisture and heat in our attic space.

Recently we had two of our windows broken (that kid's really got an arm... and likes to throw rocks). We had a local glass company replace the double panes (and fill the void with "special gas") on the panel that was removable, but, yeah, kid broke it again. So we replaced all of our lower-level windows (on the North side of the house) with brand-new Low-E windows. Thicker panes, inner membrane, more "special gas" and tighter seals. We can already feel the difference! And (if we can find our receipt and "special stickers") we can get a rebate from our power company (.pdf)!

Next, our dishwasher finally gave up, and rather than spending $280 plus parts to fix it, we got a new super-efficient model. It uses 3/4 less water and less electricity than our old model (yeah, I know!) and it qualifies for a rebate (.pdf), too!

Our other appliances are old, but they're still working well, so rather than getting rid of them (recycling or donating for re-use, of course) we're going to keep using them until we have a need to replace it, but when we do, there's a rebate for most of those, too! See http://www.homeenergysavings.net/utah/forms.html for forms and details.

This year we hope to build a chicken coop and raise 6-8 chickens for eggs (and fertilizer for our garden), plant a small grove of fruit trees in our backyard (to reduce the need to bring in fresh fruits, and we'll use natural pest control), buy and install a supplemental solar water-heater. We also plan to plant a small bamboo grove to provide us with building materials for trellises and other outdoor projects.

What have you done to green your home? Share your projects, thoughts, rebates, discounts, incentives, and ideas here!


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An Easy way to Drop PayPal's Donate feature into your xhtml

Wednesday, 23 January 2008 17:45 by joelevi

Since I first added a donate button to my web site long ago, I've gotten a total of $0 in donations -- that's right, zilch.

Not one to be easily discouraged, I found an even easier way. With this code (and a valid Paypal's account) you can make ANY link (graphical or textual) into a donation link! Wahoo!

https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_xclick&business=Joe%40JoeLevi%2ecom&item_name=www%2eJoeLevi%2ecom&amount=&no_shipping=0&no_note=1&tax=0&currency_code=&lc=US&bn=PP%2dDonationsBF&charset=UTF%2d8

Let's break that down:

  • "item_name=www%2eJoeLevi%2ecom" is the escaped line item for the invoice, in this case "www.JoeLevi.com"
  • "business=Joe%40JoeLevi%2ecom" is your Paypal's account's registered email address (again, escaped)
  • "currency_code=" is the two letter (caps) currency code (US for US, which I think is the default, I left the value blank in the hopes that it would default to the Paypal's user's default currency, but I'll need someone to verify this for me)
  • "amount=" is the amount of money to be donated (I left mine blank, so Paypal's will ask you for the amount to be donated)

That's it. You can get more fancy by using a form where the user can customize their amount and currency, but for this post, it's just a link.

You can thank me later.


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Using Windows Live Writer with BlogEngine.NET

Wednesday, 23 January 2008 17:32 by joelevi

imageAs my last post infers, I've made the proverbial leap from my previous blog engine, to BlogEngine.NET.

Since I use Windows Live Writer for most of my blogging, I had to set it up to work with the new blog. Perhaps I'm getting ahead of myself.

Windows Live Writer is a free program just out of beta that is part of Microsoft's "Live" suite of tools. It's a Windows application that provides spell checking, an open plugin-architecture, online and offline draft support, and basically makes blogging a whole lot easier (and faster!). What's more, it can connect with virtually any blog engine (including many of the free, hosted solutions). If you're not using this software by now you owe it to yourself to get a copy and check it out.

imageNow, on to the guts of the post... I needed to add my new BlogEngine.NET blog to Windows Live Writer (WLW), to do so, fire up WLW, go to the Tools menu, choose Accounts, then click Add.  You'll notice that BlogEngine.NET isn't in the list, don't let this worry you, just choose "Another weblog service" and click Next. Fill in the information requested on the next page, and click Next.

There is where the openness of BlogEngine.NET begins to shine. From the list choose "MetaWeblog API", then supply your Remote Posting URL (this is the URL that WLW will interface with when posting your articles, for BlogEngine.NET it's going to be something like this: http://www.yourblogsite.com/yourblogdirectory/metaweblog.axd). Finish up the configuration wizard, if this is your first blog in WLW, you're done; if this is another blog that you're adding (yes, you can post to any of multiple configured blogs from WLW) you just need to make sure you're blogging to the right blog (click on the Weblog menu to change between those that you have configured).

That's it.

You can thank me later.


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The dawning of a new day

Wednesday, 23 January 2008 15:44 by joelevi

I've always felt a little "dirty" using WordPress as my blogging backend (no offense to WordPress, it's a nice product and getting better every day). You see, I'm a .NET guy.

So today I made the leap, I went and installed BlogEngine.NET. Based on my own experience BlogEngine is a much faster engine than WordPress (which should help all of you when landing on my site).

For the time being I'm grandfathering all of my old posts at their current locations (rather than migrating them to the new engine) to keep bookmarks and pageranking intact. That means this blog may look a little "thin" on content while I bulk it up, but I write 3-5 quality posts per week, so it shouldn't be too long before you've got pages and pages of information to browse through. If you run out you can go to my old blog at http://www.JoeLevi.com/blog


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