Author Archives: Steven

About Steven

Steven Jackson is a web developer based in the North East of England

Server Downtime

In order to replace a faulty disk in the server that runs Carsurvey.org and related sites, the server will be down for up to an hour at around 0:00 and 1:00 PST on Saturday 26th August (08:00 – 09:00 BST). This is the quietest time of the week for the site. Fortunately the server has a mirrored RAID array, so there should be no data loss, and I’ll be taking additional backups shortly before the disk change just to be extra sure.

Apologies in advance for the loss of service during the outage period.

My Next Mobile Phone

Now that all the major manufacturers have announced or released their major new mobile phones for this year, I’ve been having a look around to see what I should buy when my contract comes up for renewal at the start of November.

First, some details of my past few phones:

Treo 600

  • Positives: Battery life, keyboard, integration of PDA and phone features, SD card
  • Negatives: PalmOS has become rather limiting these days, poor voice quality, low screen resolution, poor camera

iMate Jam

  • Positives: Lots of Windows Mobile software, SD card
  • Negatives: Not very stable, no keyboard, poor voice quality, battery life wasn’t great, poor camera

Samsung D600 (with a Dell Axim X50v as a PDA), my current solution

Positives:

  • Small
  • Good battery life
  • Good voice quality.
  • Like the slider design
  • Narrow (46.5mm – important when you also carry an additional PDA in the same pocket)
  • Has a joypad (which I much prefer over a joystick)
  • Good camera and great video quality
  • Plenty of memory, and expandable through microSD

Negatives:

  • Texting is poor – it doesn’t handle capitalisation changes well
  • Doesn’t sync easily with other devices – my Mac or my Axim for example
  • Not a smartphone or PDA. Would prefer to carry my Axim a little less

With 3G data finally becoming reasonably affordable here in the UK, I want my next phone/PDA combo to be 3G (which the D600 isn’t), and preferably have some more Smartphone functionality. I’ve been looking around, and unfortunately it appears that all the possible devices have some pretty major flaws as far as I am concerned.

One problem a lot of them have, is that I hate small 5-way joysticks with a passion. I briefly owned a Sony Ericsson W800 and found it horrible to use.

The Current Contenders

HTC MTeoR:

  • Positives: Windows Mobile OS (so lots of software)
  • Negatives: Joystick control, 1.3 megapixel camera (wake up HTC, this is 2006)

Sony Ericsson K800i:

  • Positives: Great camera, small (47mm wide)
  • Negatives: Tiny joystick, not a smartphone

HTC TyTN:

  • Positives: Full Pocket PC (Axim not needed), huge keyboard, HSDPA 3.5G compatible
  • Negatives: microSD (this matters a lot on a Pocket PC as microSD only goes up to 2Gb at the moment. I currently have 6Gb in my Axim), not convinced about how good a phone it would be, would miss the VGA screen from my Axim

Nokia E70:

  • Positives: Series 60 smartphone, high res screen, large fold out QWERTY keyboard
  • Negatives: Apparently very short of RAM, a little too wide (53mm), joystick

Nokia N73:

  • Positives: Very good camera, Series 60 smartphone, large screen
  • Negatives: Joystick

Nokia N80:

  • Positives: Joypad, high res screen, slider design, Series 60 smartphone
  • Negatives: Large (50mm wide and pretty thick), battery life is not great

Unfortunately none of the above devices quite work for me. An N73 with a joypad, a slightly smaller N80, or a TyTN with SD (not microSD) card support would probably be good enough to swing the decision, but alas, those products don’t exist.

When I finally make my decision, I’ll write a post explaining my decision. If any mobile phone manufacturers read this – please bring back joypads and SD card support, as your current joysticks and microSD cards are just too small.

Update on the Spelling and Grammar changes

Over the last nine days, 176 approved visitor edits have been made to Carsurvey.org.

There have been a small number of malicious edit attempts, as I expected, but overall I’m very happy with how well things are working out. Thanks to everyone who’s taken the time to use this new feature.

I’ve just made a number of small changes to this functionality, to make things work even better:

  • The “Fix spelling and grammar” link is replaced with an “Edit awaiting approval” statement when an edit has been submitted, but not approved. This is intended to provide feedback on where edits have been received
  • The “Thanks for improving the spelling and grammar” page you see when you finishing making an edit, now has a link that takes you back to the original review or comment

The next step is to add this functionality to the Members Area, so that spelling and grammar errors can be corrected before the reviews and comments are even published.

Spelling and Grammar on Carsurvey.org

Whenever I see spelling or grammatical errors in a piece of writing, I find it rather uncomfortable to read. The same is true for writing that is not broken up into reasonably sized sentences and paragraphs.

To date, I’ve tried to help contributors to Carsurvey.org by providing some advice during the submission process, and spell checking of any contributions before they’re submitted.

I also do quite a lot of manual editing, to fix spelling and grammar errors that I personally notice. This unfortunately is limited by a problem that I like to describe as “Steven doesn’t scale”. There’s only so much time in the day that I can spend doing that sort of work.

I’ve now added a new feature to the site (inspired by the Wikipedia). Now anyone can edit a review or comment on the site (using “Fix the spelling and grammar of this review/comment” links), and then I get check out the changes they’ve made. Reviewing these changes will be much faster than actually making them myself.

Changes to spelling and grammar are what I’m looking for, but sensibly breaking up long sentences and paragraphs is also encouraged. Anything that changes the review or comment in other ways (additions or deletions for example) will be rejected. Adding a comment or submitting a deletion request are the appropriate tools to use in those situations.

Thanks in advance, to anyone who uses this feature to improve the quality of the site.

The Mac mini’s Killer App

I mostly bought my Mac mini for Front Row, and while that hasn’t disappointed me (especially since Apple added the ability to shuffle music by playlist), the real killer app has turned out to be something different:

YouTube

The ability to play almost any music video, movie trailer, comedy clip etc through my TV has proved to be a really great feature. If friends are round and something comes up in conversation, such as the new Portal Trailer, I can have it playing on the big screen within about 30 seconds, with no need to hand round a laptop, or get anybody off the sofa.

My Favourite CSS Site

Just thought I’d take the time to mention Position Is Everything.

Since moving my sites over the CSS layouts instead of tables, I’ve found this site to be incredibly useful for helping to diagnose and workaround inconsistencies in how different browsers handle CSS.

Most valuable is the Explorer Exposed! section, which documents the various issues with Internet Explorer.

Carsurvey.org Member’s Area Improvement

As I’ve been using the Member’s Area a lot myself recently, I noticed a significant omission in the features offered. There was no way to see how many reviews or comments were left for a member to vote on.

I’ve now fixed the problem by adding this information to the top of the reviews and comments pages in the Member’s Area. No more guessing whether there are 27 or 47 comments available for you to look at.

Carsurvey.org Comments Queue – Update

The larger comments queue has been of some help, but the queue is still filling up rather too often.

I’ve now added a link at the end of each comment thread (last post only), mentioning that the very latest comments are available in the Member’s area, before they appear on the main site.

The plan is that this will make more visitors aware of the Member’s area, and so reduce the number of times when the comments queue fills up.

New Valve game trailer

Portal Trailer at YouTube

I was really impressed by the Gravity Gun in Half-Life 2, but this Portal Gun looks like it could be even more fun.

Apologies for the lack of embedded video. I couldn’t seem to get it working properly, and as this was supposed to be a quick lunchtime blog post, I didn’t want to spend hours sorting out the problem.

Carsurvey.org Comments Queue

Recently the comments queue has been filling up very quickly. This is mostly a good sign, as it shows the site is getting lots of contributions.

However, it’s sometimes happening so fast that the queue will fill up completely, before members or myself can clear the queue. To try to buy a bit more time before the queue jams up, I’ve just increased the comments queue size from 100 to 150 comments.

I want to take this opportunity to thank everyone who helps out in the members area. This change isn’t intended to create more work for any of you, but it hopefully will smooth out the large flutuations the comments queue has seen recently. The reviews queue max of 50 seems to work well (the site gets about 30 reviews a day), but the comments queue max of 100 seems to have been causing problems when the site is getting about 100 comments a day.