Thinkcage

Hi. I'm Jason Zimdars a web designer in Oklahoma City, OK and this is my website.

Archive for the ‘Technology’ Category

Blockbuster Online

Sunday, November 18th, 2007

I’ve been a Blockbuster Online subscriber since the early days of the service. It hasn’t been perfect but does offer a good value and decent selection. The recently added in-store exchange was a nice touch, adding a lot of new value without raising prices. That’s almost unheard of these days.
Blockbuster notice
For those of you unaware, Blockbuster has a variety of plans that offer x number of movies out at a time for one monthly fee. Much like Netflix, you choose movies using web app, creating a queue of movies you’d like to see. They ship you 2 or 3, you watch them and mail them back and they ship you more. About a year ago they added the ability to return the movies in one of their retail store AND take an equal number of movies home with you right then. Not only did this save time in mailing the movies back, but it also did not count against your online plan so you still got your 3 movies in the mail a couple of days later. Free movie rentals. Awesome!

A few days ago as I browsed my queue, a lightbox-style modal dialog popped up in my browser. It seems the online system was now more tightly integrated with the retail stores which noticed that I had already rented a movie that was in my queue and offered to automatically remove it. Nice touch. It’s nice to see a web app with such a helpful feature.

Feed: burned.

Monday, June 18th, 2007

Those of you who subscribe to my RSS feed (both of you) are about to notice a change. A few weeks ago I stopped splicing in my del.icio.us links and Flickr photo feeds so all you’ve been seeing is the woefully inactive blog feed. The reason? Jaiku. Jaiku is the best solution I’ve found to address my long-standing desire to offer a really comprehensive JasonFeedâ„¢.

At it’s core, Jaiku is a twitter-like app that allows for short IM-like blog posts. But the real beauty is it’s capability to read and splice most any RSS feed into your personal stream. And I might add, it does a marvelous job of auto-discovering these feeds. All you have to do is point Jaiku to a URL and it will find any associated feeds. Very slick. So the end result is a combined feed showing a large portion of my online activity. If you want to know what Jason is doing online (not sure why you would) you can see it all on Jaiku. The feed combines my Jaikus, tweets, blog posts, Last.fm tracks, mog tracks, upcoming events, Flickr photos, and my links from del.icio.us and digg. Its everything!

So tonight, I replaced my blog feed with the combined feed. This should show a lot more activity and really better represent me. If it gets to be too much, though you can still get the classic blog-only feed here.

PCCables.com – Amazing!

Saturday, May 5th, 2007

All I can say is “wow”! I placed an order with pccables.com just over 48 hours ago and it is already here.

I needed a replacement USB cable for a Nikon camera that I recently purchased. It was a store display unit sans cables, manuals, and accessories. A quick look around the net and a few local stores showed me that this was a particular cable that wasn’t a standard size. A Google search for the Nikkon part number showed that PCCables.com had the best price – and they didn’t appear to gouge for shipping. Despite the fact that their website is very unappealing visually, I figured the presence of Google’s Checkout service afforded me at least some assurance and protection. So I gave it a go, and I’m glad I did.

What impressed me immediately was the amazing response time. After placing my order, I received an order confirmation within seconds. But here’s the best part, the shipment confirmation and tracking number arrived only 35 minutes after that! I’ve never seen a company react to quickly. Not only that, but I paid for the slowest and least expensive form of shipping: USPS. But even with that method, I had the package in my hands within, literally, 48 hours. You can’t beat that.

Oh and after all that, the cable I ordered seems to be exactly what I needed and perfectly fits the camera. Thank you PCCables.com.

Noodling

Thursday, March 29th, 2007

One thing that is certain about the SXSW experience is the overwhelming presence of technology. One in five people is toting a laptop computer (90% of those using Apple portables) and nearly everyone has a mobile phone, iPod, PDA or some combination of all of the above. Seeing a person’s technology says a lot about them and I have to admit I had the occasion to peek over an occasional shoulder to spy an open window here and there.

On one hand I was very surprised at the wide range of people at the conference, as classified by what they were doing on their computer. There were plenty of the typical suspects taking notes, blogging the current session, or having IM conversations with friends. I also spotted developer types inexplicably configuring SQL servers and performing database maintenance remotely via a terminal application. There were even a few that were mired in spreadsheet applications working on a business…

…But others were doing what I could only describe as noodling. That is not really accomplishing anything but flipping between applications, swapping tabs, clicking all over the place looking for something new—ANYTHING STIMULATING—amongst the various blogs, IM clients, twitter, etc. Now I didn’t bring a computer to the panels at SXSW, instead armed with my trusty sketchbook I took notes and was generally as attentive and participatory as I could be. But I do know what these people were doing and I’ve since caught myself doing it to. It seems anytime I need an involuntary mental break I immediately begin hovering around my computer, checking email, flipping tabs on my browser, and seeing who’s on IM. It’s like a thirsty man crawling for an oasis as I try to find anything to satisfy whatever it is my mind is craving.

So it is with some understanding that I have to encourage people who attend conferences like SXSW to shut off the computer, sit back, and immerse yourself in the amazing creativity and community that is bursting around you. I think you’re missing out if you don’t.

Compact Florescent Energy Savings

Saturday, March 17th, 2007

Here’s a good resource for those of you interested in changing to CF lighting. One Billion Bulbs is a neat little community with energy savings calculators and other tools for making the switch and spreading the word. Check out the current stats:


One Billion Bulbs Statistics

How many bloggers does it take to screw in a lightbulb?

Saturday, March 17th, 2007

I am bit late to this party, but I wanted to climb on board anyway because I feel very strongly about this.

[Note: this is part of a webwide series of blog posts about compact fluorescent lightbulbs. January is the darkest month of the year in the Northern Hemisphere (December might be a bit darker, but with all the candles, trees and dropping balls, we work hard to light it up). To fight off the darkness, bloggers everywhere are invited to create a post with their own riff on why CF bulbs are cheaper, better politically, harder to market or just plain cute. Your choice. If you trackback here, I'll post your link in a future post and/or you can add your link to this lens, which donates all royalties to Ecotrust].

From Seth Godin’s Blog

This is something I’ve felt pretty strongly about for some time now. I’ve always been a turn the lights off when you leave a room kind of guy so naturally any energy savings is appealing to me. Why? Is it to save on my utility bills? Sure – who wouldn’t want that? But I really think it is more than that. Every bit of energy you conserve cascades, it adds to the big picture. Sure your bills might be a little less. But on a grander scale every little bit of energy that you save is less energy that has to be produced be it via a coal plant or oil refinery. That helps the environment. So when people are still buying large SUV’s because they can “afford” the price of gas, they’re missing the point. There is more to conservation than just your bottom line.

But the thing is, switching away from incandescent lighting may make a bigger impact than you might expect. How big? Well, according to Energystar.gov:

“If every American home replaced just one light bulb with an ENERGY STAR [compact fluorescent bulb], we would save enough energy to light more than 2.5 million homes for a year and prevent greenhouse gasses equivalent to the emissions of nearly 800,000 cars.”

Frankly, that’s a pretty modest goal. Australia has plans to completely ban incandescent bulbs altogether by 2009. How about that for government really acting on something?

So please comment here. Send your trackbacks. Sign the lens linked above. But most of all, replace those outdated bulbs with newer, more energy-efficient compact fluorescent models.