What will they think of next: Honda’s U3-X unicycle

You have got to see this one to believe it.

CNet News.com [http://news.cnet.com/8301-17912_3-10360718-72.html]

The folks at Honda have created a what they call the U3-X. Essentially, this is a stool with a unique directional wheel system that allows it to travel diagonally, as well as right, left, forward, and backward. I was one of those people that got caught up in the original Segway hype. (Remember how “it” was going to change the world.)

Maybe I’m a sucker for the next cool gadget, but this looks like a fairly miraculous feat of engineering. I look forward to giving this a test drive. If anyone knows how I might arrange for such a test, please let me know.

Safari Tip of the Day: Force new pages to open into tabs

I spend the majority of my computing life in the warm embrace of Apple and their wonderful OS X operating system (Snow Leopard 10.6.1). I don’t think of myself as an Apple “fanboy,” as I did spend 12 years (from 1996 – 2008) in self-imposed exile in Windows World. However, I am very pleased that I am fast approaching my 2nd anniversary as a renewed member of the Apple Tribe.

One of the last hold-out pieces of software from my Windows-only days has been Firefox. I don’t know about you, but I absolutely LOVE the universe of Firefox extensions, which is why I have resisted making the move over to Safari. If you are a Mac user you know how much faster/efficient Safari is compared to Firefox. Even the latest Firefox 3.5 seems like it is running in molasses compared to Safari. This tip comes as I try to ween myself away from Firefox.

As great as Safari is, it does have its peculiarities and it is, sadly, still laking an extension infrastructure. (Apple… hint, hint) If Apple does not add a serious extension infrastructure to Safari I expect I will formally become a Google Chrome devotee once that browser hits an official release for OS X. I do use Chrome on a daily basis at this point, but it is clearly the poor step-child to the Windows version. It bums me out that extensions are still unavailable on Mac through Chrome (yes, I am running the dev channel).

This brings me to my “Safari Tip of the Day” — Forcing new pages to open into tabs

I am one of those people that clicks my way around the Internet. Unfortunately, by default, Safari (on Mac) opens every new page in its own window. This makes no sense to me. The whole concept of tabs, I thought, was to help avoid clutter. Safari has great support for tabs, but for some unknown reason new pages always open in a new window (unless you hold down the “command” key). I guess command-clicking links qualifies as a tip as well, but this is not the official tip. The official tip is a way to tell Safari to always open new pages into a new tab, without needing to command-click the link.

So, without further ado:

From the command line you need to execute the following…

defaults write com.apple.Safari TargetedClicksCreateTabs -bool true

This tells Safari to always open new windows into a new tab. (You need to completely restart Safari after you make this change.)

To reverse the operation, execute the following (also from the command line)…

defaults delete com.apple.Safari TargetedClicksCreateTabs

Enjoy.

P.S.

If there is anyone out there that can tell me why Safari defaults to opening new pages in new windows I’d love to know.

The U.S. government sets up online ‘app store’

Check out the latest news from Washington…

U.S. government sets up online ‘app store’
http://www.cnn.com/2009/TECH/09/16/government.app.store/index.html

I, for one, am looking forward to see how this begins to play out. Irrespective if one is a fan of “cloud computing” or not, I think we can all agree that it make sense for at least components of our governmental bureaucracies to start leveraging the economies of scale that are now available. I have invested heavily, in terms of research and actual development, in modern cloud development and believe the individual components have sufficiently matured to make this a good time for any business to seriously consider using these types of resources.

In my article “The Cloud: A Great Place for Enterprise E-mail” — published by Cloud Computing Journal in August (http://cloudcomputing.sys-con.com/node/1057635) — I contend the benefits of judicious use of cloud computing far outweigh any real, or perceived, risk.