Bad news for iWeb

On January 10th, Steve Jobs of Apple announced at the Macworld Keynote a new program to become the 6th application in the iLife ’06 suite: iWeb

In the days before that, Karelia Software had been talking about and released their app Sandvox as a beta

I have not used iWeb, as I don’t have an interest in any of the other apps in iLife except for perhaps iMovie. But i have an old version of iMovie from when it was free, which fits my needs
However, I have tried out Sandvox a little, and today they sent an email that they’ve done a couple of updates (though not much), so I went to their site to check out the latest.
In the discussion forums, there is much talk about iWeb vs Sandvox – one of the links in there goes to the Ars Technica forum. Here they discuss iWeb, and it doesn’t sound good for Apple

Why? My initial suspicions have been proved true – the code looks Ghastly
Yes, it supports CSS, and is XHTML compliant, but (ignore the br tags at the top of each textarea – i haven’t quite figured out how to get rid of them):

To elaborate on the sort of HTML that iWeb generates, it pretty much violates the sort of semantic practices that the W3C advocates. It uses unordered and ordered lists where appropriate. But paragraphs are wrapped in…get this
and instead of using headers h1 through h6, it outputs something like this piece of crap:

To make matters worse, text size is not resizable, and if you even think about using a font that isn’t particularly common, it will turn the text into a PNG file
And it doesn’t stop there, it requires the use of PNGs for the images to achieve the transparencies & reflection effects – but you try viewing it on the most common Browser/OS setup IE6/Windows and it will look nothing like the original design. They’re 24-bit PNGs, so the images are huge!
Next, since the code is pretty much unmanageable to be edited manually, if you want to make a small change to one page you have to use iWeb, which will then reupload the whole lot rather than just what you changed
Finally, it has been speculated that Google will not be able to index any page created in iWeb because of all the bloated code it generates at the top of every HTML file – particularly the div tags as ppmax says:

I built a site once and couldnt for the life of me figure out why google would crawl the site but not seem to index it. Turns out that the pages werent structured logically: I had a bunch of div’s on the page with no structure…. Google will crawl these pages–but by using div’s there’s no way to interepret the relevence or importance of the content contained therein. Which means that you wont get well ranked, if at all.
That’s bad web design

Here is an Example of a webpage made in iWeb – it isn’t too bad with the code, but it has plenty of div tags.
Here’s another – the about me page’s code is particularly ugly to look at

This all links back to Sandvox when Recasse posts:

I’ve been trying out Sandvox, and that software outputs very clean HTML. In fact, when it is officially released, I may start using it to manage some business websites I need to redesign. I’m very excited about it. In its beta state, it’s quite buggy and unstable. Hopefully the 1.0 release will have these kinks worked out.

Well that just about sums up the discussion thread there – I’m gonna have another look at Sandvox now that I’ve seen the results that iWeb generates and compare.
I suspect iWeb will be yet another reason why I won’t be buying iLife

Graphics Card Woes & Strange Books

I haven’t posted anything new on my blog the past couple of days as I’ve been a bit busy
It’s my dad’s birthday this weekend, so needed to do a bit of shopping. He’s a very difficult person to buy presents for, but I can usually find something in the wonderful shop Borders Books – that’s the US site, as they don’t have a UK site, because they sell online through amazon
They have a couple of shops in Central London which are huge 4 or 5 floors full of books, CDs, DVDs, Magazines, Coffee Shop etc. and I always find something I want to buy there.
After about an hour wondering round on wednesday I found a good book on Italian Cinema which would do as a present, but I also found some extraordinary books in the Travel writing section, including several books written by skateboarding legend Tony Hawk which I can’t find a trace of online.
I also bought an intriguing book by Jonathan Margolis, a journalist from the Times newspaper called Mob_Log. It is a “book” showing scenes taken on the author’s camera phone, following his initial prediction when the first camera phones came out in 2002 about how they would change the world. The scenes are photos that nobody would take on a normal camera. The photos are funny, thought provoking, satirical and an insight into life. That probably gives it more credit than it’s due, but I ccouldn’t resist buying a copy at £5.99 (much cheaper than the list price).

Still in Borders book shop, I had a call from my agency to do some work at my old workplace – a different department, and pretty good pay. It’s only 3 days a week, but it should get me by until I can sort out a full time permanent job. I started there yesterday, and it’s a real mess, but I think I can handle it. It’s in the Psychology department, but with a bit of luck my interview next week should go well.

So I left Borders, and thought now was as good a time as any to get a new graphics card which I’ve been putting off for ages. Following the Stevenote on tuesday 10th January (the day before), I thought that I would be trading in my Frankenstein Mac for something newer, and the Graphics card will more than likely be the only thing I upgrade before I do so.

The previous week I’d gone into the Apple Store in Regent Street for the first time and asked around to see if anyone there could make any recommendations without much joy. They suggested Micro Anvika – a computer store that has a few branches in the area. They’re an apple dealer, but also sell PCs. They sell a lot of accessories, and I’ve bought stuff from them in the past.
Armed with a bit of info on what I was looking for – an AGP card that supports Core Image on OSX 10.4, and a preference for ATI, I thought that a Radeon 9600 would be a good card and fit the job.

Micro Anvika have two shops opposite each other, the first one I went to said they do the card but didn’t have one in stock, however, the other branch did. The assistant in the 2nd shop was very knowledgeable, and asked the right questions. He helpfully told me they had one on returns, and would get me a discount because it had been opened, but was still brand new. The customer who bought it before didn’t realise his PowerMac G5 had PCI express, so it hadn’t even been fitted to a computer. Everything looked good, £150, a good spec Radeon card, AGP, supports Core Image. I was excited, and soon I would get some better video playback performance in quicktime, take the load off my ageing processor. I got home, shut my mac down, pulled the old card out, and straight away I saw a problem… the new card would not go into the slot as it did not have an extra notch in it, even though they were both AGP. I looked at the manual, which was helpfully for the old version, the 9600 Pro Mac Edition. The one I had bought was the Radeon 9600 Pro PC & Mac Edition. Unbeknown to me, and due to lack of adequate research, ATI had seriously messed around with the specs inbetween. This card was a 4x AGP only card, unlike the previous version which was 4x/2x AGP. My AGP slot is 2x – and after much exhaustive searching, it seems that the higher spec card, the Radeon 9800 Pro Mac Edition is 4x/2x AGP, but Micro Anvika do not sell this one. It’s probably also more expensive.

Irritated, and having put my old graphics card back in, a GeForce 2mx with 32mb VRAM, I booted my mac up. While i was looking at the innards of my mac, I’d pulled out my extra USB ports PCI card and forgotten to put it back in, so shut the mac down again to put it in. Everything back together. Pressed the power button – nothing – PANIC!!! What had I done. I changed the mains cable – again nothing – more PANIC!!! Those who have read about how I built my mac up will know what a mess it is inside with custom wiring – anything could’ve happened. I realised pretty quickly that the power supply was not at fault as when i plugged and unplugged the power cable i was still getting a little spark which was good news, as I do not have a spare. My immediate suspect was the dodgy wiring, and that in setting everything back up i’d dislodged something. Straight away, I pulled out the dodgiest part – the logic board power extension cable which I had used initially to allow the use of an ATX power supply. Once again I tried to power my mac up, with no joy. In a moment of inspiration, I remembered that when I came back from holiday the clock had reset itself to the default January 1 1972 or whatever it is – and that in some mac models, if the clock battery fails, it will sometimes refuse to allow you to boot up. I pulled the battery out, and for no real reason put it back in, pushed the power button and it started up. A sigh of relief! I was back to where I had started, but will probably need to buy a new clock battery sometime this week.

But, I still had the problem that I had spent £150 on a graphics card that wouldn’t work. I couldn’t get back to the shop that day, and decided that I would go back on Friday (today) after starting work on Thursday. So, this morning before I went back I did all my research, and even though the shop assistants were knowledgeable, I hoped that they would give me a refund. I spoke to the assistant who had sold me the card, and he seemed baffled as to why it didn’t work. I explained the problem referring to the manual which did show a card that would fit, especially after I explained several times that my mac had an AGP slot, and was a G4 as the system requirements said – it fitted everything on the box.

Here’s a site on AGP compatibility which shows the importance of the AGP key.
The important diagram is this one:
AGP Keys
AGP 1x/2x runs at 3.3V or 1.5V and requires cards with both notches, while AGP 4x runs at 1.5V or 0.8V and only needs the one notch (the 0.8V uses the 1.5V part). AGP 8x runs at 0.8V, again requiring just the 1.5V notch
Wikipedia summarises it quite well on thei Section on AGP Compatibility
I think I am now an expert on AGP formats!

He then got his boss who initially appeared very knowledgeable wearing an Ixus t-shirt he was clearly showing off all the skills he was trained in. He was nearly onto the right track, but was convinced, like I initially believed, that AGP 2x and 4x were the same type of slot, and suggested that it was only AGP 1x that was really different. The only other Mac AGP card they did was the Radeon X800 which was much more expensive and very definitely only AGP 8x. I could tell now I was gonna get my refund as I started mentioning cards like the Nvidia FX5200 and they said they didn’t do them for macs. The assistant who I originally bought it from now blamed Apple for putting some strange connector on my motherboards that wasn’t a proper industry standard and gave me a full refund. Success! Great relief. I’m not sure if I’d just walked in and said I bought this card and it didn’t work because my board is 2x and the card only supports 4x that I would’ve got my refund.

So, my next challenge is should I look further into whether there is still a graphics card that I can buy which will fill the purpose, or concentrate on what my next computer should be, as that will come with a top spec motherboard, graphics card and everything I want. I still can’t decide what that computer should be

Sandvox from Karelia Software

While everyone eagerly awaits what his Steveness (aka Steve Jobs) is going to announce at the keynote tomorrow, rumours have been circulating about one of the items
This item has encroached on the territory of another developer Karelia Software and their new product, Sandvox:

Sandvox

The app requires OS X 10.4 Tiger, and is a Web Site Creation app which makes it very easy to make good looking well coded sites

…Sandvox makes Web site creation elegant, intuitive and fun. It’s the Macintosh way — the way it should be: drag and drop content, watch your site take shape as you create it, and publish. Sandvox makes it easy to keep in touch via the Web with friends, family and customers. …

Now, here’s the part I’m trying to get to – please click the download link and download a copy – because the more people that download from this link, the more I get to save when it comes out on full release, as this is still a beta version. And from that you too can save money by recommending the software to others

This is all so that when Apple release their program tomorrow, lots mac users can then have tried Sandvox aswell. We will have to wait and see which will be preferred, but we have to give the little guys a fair shot

Apple Store & New Keyboard

I finally got round to going into my local Apple Store in London’s Regent Street
Expecting it to be amazing I came out with mixed emotions
Of course I couldn’t walk out of there without buying something, so I bought a new keyboard to replace my existing replacement one. I broke the original USB one a couple of years ago after trashing it at uni – spilt too much beer on it and it got thrown around the room a little bit too much! Replaced it temporarily with my old ADB Apple Extended Keyboard II – arguably Apple’s best keyboard… except that it’s not USB, so I had to connect it with an ADB to USB adaptor

But back to the store… my initial impressions were: this is not a shop, it’s a showroom!
I felt like I needed to be wearing an iPod and talking about the latest airport extreme accessory to use it to listen to my music from two rooms away!
But my mac isn’t like that! I don’t own an iPod, and don’t have any intentions of owning one in the short term – am more likely to buy one of the competitor’s options
I also felt that this wasn’t a computer shop because there were assistants everywhere except whenever you wanted them – I had to fight to talk to someone to ask advice about upgrade options and then where I could find a keyboard that wasn’t a bluetooth one. Eventually one assistant offered to look to see if they had any in stock, and it was pretty good value @ £19 including VAT
On my way out I asked someone if they were going to be showing the Macworld keynote next week, to which the response was as if to say “what’s a keynote” based on the expression. This was followed by a more official “We don’t show Keynotes” – that was the icing on the cake – why not!?!

Back home, the keyboard seems good, though it crashed my mac a couple of times – teething troubles i guess with all my hardware, and i don’t like the left ctrl button or the slopes, but at least i can drop into open firmware, single user mode, the boot manager and zap the pram again. It’s also good to be able to type the “~” key again which seemed to disappear when I upgraded to 10.4 – dunno why, but now I’ve got it back! Oh, and the eject and opt-eject keys now open the correct DVD drives – on the old keyboard, they both opened the slave on the IDE bus.
The arrow keys seem a bit weird, I do miss the power key which is now the eject button, as now I have to use ctrl-eject to bring up the shutdown/sleep/logout dialogue box. Haven’t even tried the volume keys – they look a bit weird. Also, as many have commented, it’s a shame the F-keys don’t have spaces every 4 keys like the old keyboards. And again, the downward slope on the bottom row (command, ctrl, spacebar, etc) is very weird, and upward slope on the F-keys will take a bit of getting used to
I liked the nice touches in the packaging – the USB extension lead, and the covers for the plugs on the leads which I will be keeping for my other USB cables – very well done and that they give you a nice bag that you can carry on your shoulder

Also on my way out I picked up the event schedule which looks really good if I had the time to practically live in the apple store covering a different topic every hour. You can follow what’s going on using Apple’s Event Widget (requires dashboard ie OSX 10.4 Tiger or equivalent)
I’m waiting to find out when the really local Apple Store in Brent Cross, London will be opening – have walked past it several times, and would be really convenient. Having said that, I can’t not add how disappointed I was by the range of products and how overpriced everything felt. Nothing felt like it was a bargain (except for the keyboard! and that wasn’t even on the shelves). USB card readers for £30, DVD-Rs for £4 each, Firewire drives £70 for 40GB – none of it felt like something I wanted to buy, and more like something I might write down and go online to find somewhere cheaper.

Would I go back to the Regent Street shop again? Not unless I was in the area and had some time to kill – like I say, it felt more like a showroom than a shop
Accessories were stacked underneath showroom iPods, Scanners, and iMacs. Even Powermac G5s seemed to be pushed into the background to show off the consumer products
It’s a shame, but perhaps I had too high an expectation of it

I’m Back!

I’ve been on holiday in Italy for christmas, and back today so that I can spend new year at home
Since i haven’t been updating my blog you’re in for a bit of a special as is always the case after i get back from a holiday

I’ll start with Desert Island Discs which is a radio show in the UK. We got talking about a variation on the theme where you get to choose 4 tracks, 3 films, 3 books and a luxury.
We came to the conclusion that this is very difficult for younger people as I said I would probably choose 4 different tracks for every day of the week. Fairly sensibly, it was suggested that perhaps the best books would be ones along the lines of “How to survive on a desert island in 200 easy steps”, and I added one though i couldn’t remember the name at the time, but it’s The Worst-Case Scenario Survival Handbook. It includes things like how to get out of quicksand, and wrestle an alligator with just a stout pole
Suggestions for the music and films varied from ones that you enjoy the most already to ones that you’ve never had the time to watch/listen to and would get the most out of.
But the general consensus was that the most interesting choices were those that had a good reasoning and reminded the person of something in the past.
Being under 30, I don’t think I’m old enough to have had that many moments to reflect on

Onward we go – I was thinking about animals that have become extinct and how often they are ones that don’t appear to be missed that much by the layman. But i thought i’d turn it around into what animals would you be more than happy to have extinct which really would make a difference to the layman. My first suggestion was the Mosquito – they’re ugly, a pest, suck blood and some species carry malaria and dengue fever, yellow fever, west nile virus (amongst others). I am not an ecologist, but as far as i’m concerned the mosquito is better to me dead than alive – the World Health Organisation did declare war on the mosquito and largely failed when trying to rid the world of Malaria. I can’t think of any other suggestions i came up with, but would be interesting to hear a few more.

Last but not least, in the in-flight magazine coming back I saw an advert for a piece of software called OnSpeed. It makes some pretty amazing claims for a piece of software and is charged at £24.99 or €39.99 in Euros per year.
It must be more than just an internet optimiser since you have to renew the subscription annually, whereas an optimiser would do the changes and that would be it. It’s won lots of awards, and has mac support (except for email optimisation). It doesnt seem to make a lot of sense though, and it’d be interesting to see if it actually works.

Till next time…

Frankenstein Mac

My Powermac G4 Case Mod from 2003
I was talking to MacHeadCase yesterday about future computers, and we were comparing what each of us had. It was then that I realised that I’d never talked about my Mac on this website and/or blog. So I got my digital camera out, a Sony T-1 and built a little page about my Mac and what i did to the case.
It’s a bit of a mishmash of a computer now – many of the components have been upgraded, and being the first tower case computer i’ve owned, am reluctant to give it up, and want to upgrade it as much as possible.
It’s quite old though now – bought it in August 2000 as a 1st generation Powermac G4, with a 450MHz processor, Zip Drive, DVD ROM, 20Gb Hard Drive and 128mb RAM.
It now has a 2nd hard drive: 120Gb Maxtor, a DVD±RW in addition to the DVD ROM, 640Mb RAM, and no Zip Drive. I’ve added an extra 4 USB ports, and a wireless network card. The original ATI rage Pro graphics card was replaced 4 years ago for a NVidia GeForce 2MX, but that is now due for replacement – i think a Radeon of some description will be the best.
At some point i will want to replace this mac, possibly with a Powermac G5, but they are expensive, and don’t have dual optical drives which drives me nuts. Perhaps I’ll go for a cheaper 2002 edition of the Power Mac G4 Desktops or as I’ve threatened for many years buy a Windows Computer because it’s cheaper and easier to upgrade.

DVD Writer

Yay! I finally bought myself a DVD writer for my Mac
I’ve been stalling for about a year or so because i could decide which one
And after all that i’m not convinced i got the best deal, but it was getting stupid. So this morning i went to my local PC World and from the budget section had a look. For just under £40 they had a Liteon SOHW-1673, though i probably should’ve gone with the LG GSA-4163B
However, it’s done, and i’m frantically burning 20 DVDs worth from my Hard drive so i can free up some space and maybe get round to doing some video editing again