A man with a mission...

Things you do not want to say when working on an electrical box

Dammit! The power is still on!

Yet another reason why you should check that there is no power coming to the box you are working on. This time it was just across my right thumb, so nothing major and I realized it immediately. Yes, I said this time - I’ve been zapped with 110 volts six or seven times in the past.

The lesson learned today:
Make sure you update the labels in your breaker box when you move circuits around.

Ah, Facebook…How I Have Neglected thee…

So, I realized today that I’ve been neglecting my umich e-mail, and consequently any and all Facebook alerts. I haven’t been checking Facebook for a while now unless I got an e-mail. It looks like I stopped paying attention to that lovely e-mail account around 5/9. Yeah…that’s a lot of e-mails I have to process now, which I’m going to start on tonight. Sorry to all those who sent me anything in that time - I’ll get back to you real soon!

A New Download Manager in Firefox 3 Brings a New UI

[I use a Mac, so all the images in this post are of the Mac user interface. The UI for other platforms will differ slightly. Click on pictures to view other sizes.]

Firefox 3 brings a brand new download manager to the scene. There were lots of issues that existed with the old download manager both in terms of the UI and in the code that made it work. So for Firefox 3, we redid the whole thing to provide a better experience all around. It’s one of my favorite features in Firefox 3, but then I’m a bit biased. This post discusses the new features of the UI.

Old Meets New - a UI Comparison

fx2-download

The Firefox 2 download manager (above) would display the download’s icon (but not on Linux), its name, its status, and two text links to open and remove the download. In contrast, the Firefox 3 download manager (below) displays the download’s icon (even on Linux now), it’s name, the time of the download, the download size, and where it was downloaded from. For an active download, the size of the download changes to the amount downloaded so far. The main goal was to provide more useful information to the user.

fx3-download

You might notice, however, that there is now primary UI to open or remove the download. The idea here was to provide a less cluttered UI. However, just like before with Firefox 2, you can open your download by selecting it and pressing enter, double clicking it, or selecting open from the context menu. In fact, the context menu has grown a lot too!

fx2-contextfx3-context

The middle two options provide functionality that was once available from the old properties dialog. That dialog was removed because it was out of place. One of the new features of the new download manager is the ability to select more than one download (as hinted to by the “Select All” entry in the context menu). You can select multiple downloads (below) to perform an action on them such as remove, pause, or resume.

fx3-activefx3-paused

Searching

The new download manager also adds the ability to search through your download history. Let’s say that you recently downloaded a bunch of pdf documentation from threadingbuildingblocks.org and want to open it. The folder where all your downloads go is hopelessly cluttered, so you open up the download manager, and search for “pdf threading”. In a matter of moments, you are presented with the documents you wanted so you can now open them, or if they were deleted, you can re-download them.

fx3-search

Status Bar Indication

Perhaps the most useful feature that has been added in Firefox 3 is a little status indicator that can be found at the bottom right of your browser window:

fx3-statusbar

Firefox will now let you know how much time is left for your active downloads. When you click on the indicator, it will open up so you can see more detailed information about your active downloads.

That wraps up the changes to the UI. Stay tuned for a post about what new features have been added to the download manager in Firefox 3!

Rudeness

Ugh. Today was a bad day for me in the polite department. Little things that I’m generally quite good about (like listening when someone is talking to me, actually explaining things that are asked of me, etc) just got missed today. It’s very much unlike me to miss that stuff, and I feel really bad about it. I’ve reached out and apologized to the most grievous instances of my rudeness today, but I know I didn’t cover everyone. So for the rest of you, I’m sorry. I’ll do my best to not let it happen again.

(Some might argue that this blog post is even a bit rude. However, I’ve always believed that a bit of public humiliation goes a long way to correct bad behavior in normally good people, so I’m publicly shaming myself)

“That’s how I got Safari on my computer!”

Follow-up on John’s blog post:
I’m sitting here in my Capstone Design class and someone brought up how Apple is offering Safari to iTunes users. My professor didn’t believe it at first, then suddenly exclaims, “That’s how I got Safari on my computer!”

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