
Just for the sake of fun, I’m trying to catalog all the apps, gadgets, and services I use on a regular basis.
Yeah, look at me up there, being all Mr. Hackerish. Not really. Think the two right monitors were hooked up to one machine running Ubuntu, the laptop had XP (still does), and I’m not sure what the remaining one had on it. Kinda dig the wallpaper on the big screen, wish I still had it somewhere.
Hardware / Gadgets
- Lexmark E 350DN printer – has done ok over the years, but haven’t used it that much.
- Linksys WRT54G router – with the Tomato firmware, it rocks.
- iPhone 16GB 3GS (and I don’t plan on upgrading anytime soon)
- Kodak Zi8 camcorder
- Western Digital TV Live Hub – probably the most used gadget because of Netflix
- Mac Mini (circa 2005) – bought off Ebay for sole purpose of streaming to the WD Live Hub.
Computer-specific
- Dell Inspiron 6000 (circa 2005) – it splits its time between the latest version of Ubuntu and XP. It has no real purpose anymore, just whatever I feel like testing on it.
- Macbook, Aluminum (circa 2008) – doesn’t get used much anymore because of…
- iPad (2010) – I do pretty much everything on this, short of anything with code. Now, it may not technically be a computer, but it serves my day to day needs well.
- Workstation (2006ish) – Don’t even know what exactly is in it besides an early quad-core processor, 512MB video card, and 8GB RAM. Its my daily work machine.
Software
- Vim – can’t count the number of times vim has saved my life.
- Tweetbot – only way to do Twitter.
- Instagram – my guilty pleasure
- Chrome – switched over to it when Firefox become a memory hog.
- Visual Studio 2010 – I’m not a big fan of Microsoft applications, but VS is nify.
- SQL Server 2008 R2 – I spend way too much time looking at stored procedures.
- Reeder – by far the best native newsreader on all iOS devices.
- Flipboard – best way to catch up memes.
- OpenSSH – quite possibly the single best tool ever.
- Tunnelier – pretty good ssh and sftp tool for Windows.
- Notepad++ – for quick editing of files on Windows.
- VLC – there might be better media players now, but its what I’ve always used. Works perfectly fine.
Services
- Basecamp – project management, but I’ve never been wild about the interface.
- Google Apps (multiple)
- Freshbooks – invoicing clients
- Rackspace Cloud – cloud servers for dev and production clients
- Amazon EC2 – fire up an instance to try something out quickly
- Amazon S3 – used in conjunction with Jungle Disk and easy to upload massive files quickly.
- Dropbox
- WP Engine – hate the constant need for WordPress to be upgraded. These guys take care of it and backups.
- Comcast home and business – can’t complain about them, rarely have any any downtime.

My other Instagram pics.
http://instagr.am/p/HQEzc6p4Fq/

My other Instagram pics.
http://instagr.am/p/HNSJydp4MK/

My other Instagram pics.
http://instagr.am/p/HLpR3Tp4Ld/

Looking for a tool that would help me test responsive web designs, I ran across Benjamin Keen’s bookmarklet. It works like a few of the other bookmarklets I’ve seen, essentially loading up a page in iframes of widths and heights matching mobile devices. The beauty of Benjamin’s bookmarklet is that it loads up a bunch of different sizes all on one screen. You can click on the links inside the iframe and everything works perfectly as expected.
Awesome.

My other Instagram pics.
http://instagr.am/p/HAYUbyJ4NV/

http://4sq.com/9KcBd3
February 12, 2012 at 02:32PM