יש עברית שוב, אבל יש גם אבדות + התנצלות

טוב, אז יום אחד קמתי בבוקר וגיליתי שכל הרשומות בעברית בבלוג הפכו לג’יבריש. אין לי מושג מה קרה, אבל הצלחתי לתקן את זה. לצערי, לא היה לי גיבוי של הרשומות והתגובות בעברית. זה לא שלא ניסיתי לגבות אותם, אבל הנסיונות שלי עלו בתוהו. זאת אומרת שיש כעשר רשומות שנהרסו ולעולם לא יחזרו, אבל זה לא כל כך הרבה. נכון לעכשיו שחזרתי רק את סיפור הצבא, ובקרוב אני אשחזר עוד כמה רשומות.

בכל אופן, נאלצתי למחוק גם את כל התגובות בעברית, ועל זה אני רוצה להתנצל. למרות שעכשיו, אחרי שתקנתי את הבעיה, אני כבר יכול לגבות בעברית, לצערי אני לא יכול להבטיח שהכל ילך כמו שצריך כי כל העסק הזה חדש גם בשבילי. אני זוכר כל תגובה ותגובה, ותודה שהגבתם. אני מקווה שתמשיכו.

An observation about my cellphone

I own a Sony Ericsson T630 mobile phone. To turn it off I have to press and hold the power button for about one second. Then I hear the turn off sound and I know the phone will be shut down. To turn the phone on, I have to do the same action. However, the same sound will only be played after about two seconds of holding down the power button. The delay is different. This means that if the phone is off and I hold the power button for one second it will turn on, but will not make the sound.

The reason for this seems pretty obvious to me, although from here on I’m just guessing: the difference in the delays is not a choice the designers of the phone made. It was forced by the fact that the moment the phone is turned on, it is still not ready to produce sounds. The operating system needs to boot and sound drivers have to be loaded.

So now a design decision: let’s say the phone is off and the user holds the power button for one second only. The phone is now on. Should it make the sound to alert the user that it is working or not? I would say that it should. However, the designers of the T630 decided that it shouldn’t. You can only hear it if you hold down the power button long enough.

The last thing I think about is how much code is there in the phone’s software to make sure the sound can me made as soon as possible, to give the user the best experience. The answer to that I’ll probably never know.

All Hebrew Posts Are Offline

Unfortunately, I am unable to resolve the Hebrew font problems with this blog for now. I mean, I can post new Hebrew posts, but the ones that I had seem to have turned into gibberish. I will try to resolve this, but for now – posting will be done in English only.

Hebrew Problems

This blog is experiencing some problems with the display of Hebrew characters. Unfortunately, I can’t handle them from work, so it might take a while until Hebrew is displayed correctly.

Why I have myself as a contact on my IM lists

Many people ask me, when they see my MSN Messenger’s or Yahoo Messenger’s buddy list, why I have myself as a contact. First of all, let me say that I’m definitely not the only one that does that.

Now, why do I do that? The “official” reason is that this way I’m never alone online. When I look at my list, there’s always someone online. Me. That’s a little comforting, especially if you’re having one of those blue nights when you feel all alone in front of your computer and you log on hoping to chat with a friend and no one is online.

The real reason is that I just wanted to see what happens. It’s the hacker in me, I guess. I didn’t just want to see if I can add myself, I wanted to see if I can talk to myself. It’s funny to see how different products handle the case of self-adding.

In Microsoft’s MSN Messenger you can add yourself, but you can’t chat with yourself. You can send an email message to yourself, though. I sometimes wonder about that. I mean, why would you allow the one but not the other? About the chat, it’s probably a protocol or architecture issue. The thing is that the programmers in Microsoft handled the case of self-adding users specifically, because you cannot open a chat window with yourself, but you can still add yourself to your list. An interesting choice, if you ask me. By the way, the current version of MSN Messenger has a bug, which allows you (in a specific case) to open a chat window with yourself, but you still can’t send a message in that window. That is forbidden by the server.

In Yahoo! Messenger, on the other hand, not only you can add yourself, but you can freely chat with yourself. I think I tried voice calls with myself once, but it didn’t work since the configuration of Yahoo! Messenger would use the same sound card for the call for both parties (me and myself). My first chat with myself went something like this:
Me: Hi — This is the message I sent
Me: Hi — This is the message I got. Surprising, right? Well, it’s not like Yahoo! would do something cool like putting an AliceBot to talk back to you. That would have been funny.

And that was it. It was the shortest conversation I have ever had on IM. Yet, it was all I’ll ever need :)

השירות הצבאי שלי – אינדקס