Open Flash Charts 2.0

Posted on March 02, 2010
Filed Under: Internet and web sites. See Also:

It's hard to say this without sounding like a commercial, but the work of the group over at Open Flash Charts is worth talking about. Good AS3 libraries are troublesome enough to find and difficult to afford. That's why Open Flash charts is so important -- it's LGPL. Source code, full charting library, and great instructions and documentation. It's almost like the open source stuff can actually be useful.

by Chris Gamble

Who's the failure now!

Posted on February 22, 2010
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iPad? It has received criticism for everything from it's name, to it's phone based OS. Sure, it has a larger screen, but you can only do one thing at a time on it. Who wants to pay premium dollars for something like that!

Then I received a call from a close friend. "I've gone back to my Black Berry. I just can't deal with another dropped call. I'll just get an iPad to replace the iPhone."

My jaw is still in the floor. Could the iPad really only solve one small glaring problem with the iPhone. Could iPad be nothing more than a little bit of freedom from AT&T. If so, I guess at least in some cases, it's already doing it's job.

by Chris Gamble

Starbucks and IT

Posted on February 18, 2010
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There is nothing more critical to stable servers and good code than caffeine. And over the years, nothing has been more "caffeine" than the venerable Starbucks. I take great interest when I hear that their brewing methods have changed again. This time, it seems, is all about instant coffee.

[Read More]

by Chris Gamble

pfSense has alternatives?!

Posted on February 07, 2010
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Sometimes I find a great idea, put it in writing, then realize that it isn't working. pfsense was one of those moments. To be fair to the project, I am still using pfsense in many places, and am perfectly pleased with it as a part of most solutions. But my corporate firewall had some issues that were causing me sleepless nights.

[Read More]

by Chris Gamble

TOC - Linux, Apple, and MS

Posted on December 08, 2009
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We all know that Apple is by far the most expensive system to buy. Going near the local Apple store turns my wallet into an instant ATM, and that's before I even consider purchasing. But, having become an recent convert, I have to ask myself, is Apple really that expensive? [Read More]

by Chris Gamble

It's official, I'm a traitor

Posted on December 06, 2009
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No stolen state secrets here, so those who found us looking for a conspiracy, this is FAR worse.

I was a Windows user for - when did Windows 3.0 come out? You know, Windows 3.0, 3.1, 3.11, bleh for Workgroups. Basically since I was a child. Not only have I used Windows since pre-puberty, but I have on a number of occasions championed it's cause. This included a rather tense corporate battle replacing dumb terminals with Windows work stations, Novel with Windows Server, and a host of Sybase running on Aix machines with MS SQL. I have in deed lived the MS life.

A few years ago (10ish to be more correct), I started experimenting with Linux. Eventually using it extensively to replace Windows servers. I found a great love for PostgreSQL, Samba, and Apache in all of it's glory. Still, my desktops have always booted up to a familiar logo, good ol' Windows.

As of Friday, this has come to a sudden halt. My thick black plastic laptop case has been replaced with a thin aluminum shell with a silly little apple carved out of the back. I spent the next few days feeling as though I had just killed my brother's dog. I am a little different.

[Read More]

by Chris Gamble

Iphones and the children who steal them

Posted on November 15, 2009
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To not be accused of misleading anyone, this blog entry features an iphone game series that my company makes and sells.

When I started working on the iPhone platform, it was to add it to our product line for our consulting business. Many may question why an internet marketing company would build iPhone apps, other than the obvious "to make money". The answer is just as simple -- because we build marketing solutions for the web. Yes I said it, iPhone apps are a part of the web. At least, the new web. The internet has left our PC's stored in our tiny little cubicles, and is now wondering the streets in the palm of our hand.

[Read More]

by Chris Gamble

How linux is no better than windows

Posted on September 17, 2009
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First off, I am of the camp that every OS sucks. Seriously, not one of them is perfect. They all have strengths (Widows strength mostly being their marketing group), and everyone has serious crippling weaknesses. And right now, it's some of the weaknesses in Linux that's irritating me.

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by Chris Gamble

A cold day in hell

Posted on September 02, 2009
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That's when I thought I would switch to Apple. Let's face it, all of the Apple hardware is way overpriced, and there just doesn't seem to be a way to be bleeding edge even if you could afford it. Sure, there are the brave souls who have managed to get OSX on "normal" hardware, but I have a family and $599 for a Mac mini was way cheaper than being one of them. So, yes, I am writing this on a mac, watching the silly little bar at the bottom for when my email comes in on a mac, all so that I could build software for the iPhone. But this article isn't about me switching to Mac, it's more a dairy entry, detailing my experiences upgrading to Snow Leopard.

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by Chris Gamble

Blue Tooth Review

Posted on June 01, 2009
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I've had the unique privilege of buying 4 blue tooth headsets in the last year. Not because I wanted to experience the gamut of what the market offers, but because my wife has lost, broken or outright mangled every headset I have given her. We started out a few years back, with a cheap 20-40 dollar Motorola that came with the purchase of every phone. The phone worked great, and the headset was worth what we paid. What it did do extremely well though, was to open my wife's imagination to the potential of hands free talking to people. After a week of not having to burn the side of her face off from exposure to an over worked cell phone battery, we were ready to push the limits of bluetooth.

[Read More]

by Chris Gamble