Several million colours of awesome — the Team Fortress 2 Pyro finally receives a buff and polish. And new user-created maps — cp_fastlane and ctf_turbine join the official rotation — two great maps that will really enhance team play.
More details on the Pyro changes can be found here.
Friday 13 June, 2008
Media Temple have just incremented some versions on their (dv) product line. Notably PHP5 has been upgraded to 5.2.6 (current stable release) which is a welcome improvement and Plesk has jumped a version to 8.4.0.
Both shipped during May, thus it forms a very proactive and on-the-ball choice — be sure to check out Media Temple’s release above for all the geek-worthy details, there is a lot of improvement (in Plesk particularly) overall and as such it represents a worthy return for the short upgrade period.
I also have the (slightly dubious, yet intensely pleasing) distinction of being the first cab off the rank to have an existing (dv) upgraded — oh yes, here at the The Lab we bravely risk it all1 so you don’t have to.
The process was slick and entirely painless.
As a result, it would be remiss of me not to thank the wonderful folks at (mt) — for building such great systems — and in particular Daniel Greene who drew the short straw to place their bets on the upgrade-user-plus-all-their-shit-and-pray roulette wheel. Nice work brother.
Since rolling from the grid to dedicated-virtual, I cannot stress strongly enough the level of commitment and professional support Media Temple have brought to the table. Nothing is ever too much trouble, no issue is ever left un-answered. If you are in the market, they are the go-to guys for virtual hosting. If you decide to take the plunge, help a brother out and tell them I sent you.
New orders will see the above improvements from day one, if you’re already a (dv) playa, maximum respect yo — submit a support request — profit.
1 ok, so I do have multiple-redundant stored copies of all SQL databases and full data backups. I’m crazy, not stupid.
Monday 09 June, 2008
WWDC 2008 will be remembered for the launch — albeit in one month from now — of the worst-kept secret of ’08 and very little else.
MobileMe launched — providing a web-based version of what many other mobile synch tools provide out-of-the-box — that takes over where .mac left off and finally, Snow Leopard — sounding very much like an equivalence of a Windows Service Pack at best.
That isn’t a bad thing, mind. Stability is a sore-point for many Vista users looking for something different and, perhaps, better. But the amount of coverage for things not-iPhone was appalling.
Sure, the iPhone finally makes it to a wider global market without requiring various hacks. However, we cannot buy one now. Buzz surrounding the all-new device will have well and truly peaked before this thing actually hits market.
I awoke at 5am this morning, with expectation zinging over what might await me. I needn’t have bothered. A (not so) new phone, talk of an updated OS and a mobile service all of which aren’t actually here yet.
I really think Gruber has nailed it when he talks of what Apple’s announcements at WWDC this year really mean:
“The physical phone is not the story. A year from now, the iPhone 3G will be replaced by another new model. The platform is the story.”
Yes, it’s clear they are going to sell billions of phones. At circa US $199 how can they not, surely? Although it’s not entirely clear if that is actually based on AT&T contract pricing. It’s anybodies guess what that actually translates to outside of the US and how much it will end up costing to buy outright.
Watching the keynote isn’t all that inspiring. It’s simply going through the motions of officially launching everything we already new and confirming the pre-event speculation for the most part. WWDC ’08 is basically an all-singing-all-dancing version of their future road-map.
And that’s why I feel a little, well, let down by Apple. What they seem to have forgotten in all this new “sans-one-more-thing” world, is that I, the potential user, still need to feel important, that what I’m being offered makes me feel, well, cooler.. and that it really will be worth my time. Sure, there is a strong developer angle here. I get that. But we’re not all developers and as such we still look to these events and keynotes for inspiration.
I need assurance that Jobs and Apple are on the case. That they’ve got mega-cool-shit happening right here and they want me to be a part of it. Being told to wait a month for a yet-to-be-priced phone doesn’t make me feel cooler. Not being told availability or pricing doesn’t make me feel cooler. Not having anything else up their sleeve, really isn’t at all cooler. It’s just not assurance.
So we’ll see what Apple come up with moving forward. One more thing.. just not today.
Gartenberg appears to have entirely missed that this is very much business-as-usual for Microsoft. Their bread-and-butter is entirely based on promising the future — yet continuously delivering the past — to a crowd that is, just like Gartenberg, suckered into believing the next release is “the answer”.
“All they’ve done is get the market thinking about the next version of Windows. I suspect there’s a lot of folks out there who made the decision this week to just skip Vista and wait for what’s next.”
So much comedy gold packed into such a short story — what happens to Jesus when there is too much poop? Via Kath.
In what will surely be the precursor to many fascinating discoveries — about life, the universe and everything — the The University of Arizona, JPL and Nasa co-operation has resulted in a successful landing of the “Phoenix” craft on the surface of Mars.
“May 25, 2008 NASA’s Phoenix spacecraft landed in the northern polar region of Mars today to begin three months of examining a site chosen for its likelihood of having frozen water within reach of the lander’s robotic arm.”

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