Showing posts with label crafts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crafts. Show all posts

Sunday, October 03, 2010

Just a Note or Two and some SteamPunk

image

cc attribution: Notebooks by See-ming Lee 李思明 via flickr

Wow.  Can’t believe it has been this long since the last post!  What’s sad is that very little of it has been spent on the new laptop.

Mostly bad-crazy work stuff leading me to be exhausted by the time I get home from work. Then honoring time and family commitments on the weekends.  So much to post…so little time.

On the plus-side I’ve been able to really put some of the tools and techniques I blog about into incident response action lately.  While it is never a “fun” thing to have to do, it is pretty cool when you get to apply your knowledgebase in extreme situations.  While (unfortunately) it’s very doubtful I will share any information at all, I do expect to share some more information on tools and techniques I found valuable in the process.

I’m taking a break at the moment from technology posts to go a bit “old-school”.

While I generally use QCC’s freeware tool CaseNotes to document my incident response activities, and find it really does an excellent job fitting my needs I almost always keep a pen and micro-sized paper notebook on my person as well.  Beats writing on my hand and is great for jotting down phone numbers, bits of data, field observations, quotes, URL links, etc.

I’ve been thinking of this lately as I saw some Moleskine mini-notebooks a few weeks ago when visiting the bookstore with mom.  I didn’t pick any up but they did catch my attention.

Then The Art of Manliness blog ran a series of articles that really encouraged me to use them that much more:

The comments in the first post were a treasure-trove of links and materials for the notebook carrying fan.  I found a number of great sources for fun and functional mini-notebooks.

Field Notes - Seemed to be one of the most popular sources for no-frills “common-man” notebooks.

Rite in the Rain - Was praised by field workers, outdoorsmen, military/LE, and other extreme environment folks.

Moleskine - This brand seems to have splashed onto the market with much fan-fare.  The quality and variety seems to make them very popular with note-takers and artists alike.

Right now, I am using these Top Flight Sewn Mini-Marble Composition Books (Amazon.com) that Alvis tossed my way.  They fit unobtrusively in my front pocket and are surprisingly durable.  They are very cheap…so I tend to toss them when all the note taking is over and they are filled up.  Not really archival material.

I had been using these Mead Wirebound Memo Books (Amazon.com) but the wire ring would get crushed after a few days in my pocket and the pages tore out too easily.  So I just keep one in my car only for quick notes but that’s it.  It will likely be replaced soon.

These Writersblok Bamboo Mini Notebooks looked like a cheap and nice alternative to my current notebook fare. Made by K I K K E R L A N D, they seem high quality and fit the quirky and fun other products offered by them.

Turns out there is a whole fan-following of notebook bearers!

I’ve scored a few new RSS links for some sites that live and breath all things creative and useful with notetaking and notebooks.

The Little Black Book by Pad&Quill - This was pretty clever…and inspired me.  I’m overwhelmed at the moment with ballistic nylon carrying cases for all my portable hard drives and gizmos.  After looking at this, I was struck with how easy it would be to stop by ye-old/used-bookstore and pick up some tomes that had outward character to their binding and cover.  Then hollow them out to make carry-cases for the portable USB HDD I carry.  Some glue and some tiny metal/magnets to hold the lid shut and bam--pretty neat carry-case!

SteamPunk Resources

As a Sherlock Holmes fan, I appreciate the romantic notion of the Victorian era (but accept the Dickensian reality).  Add to that the fact that Last Exile is based heavily on a “SteamPunk” styling and my artistic eye is smitten.

Turns out there is a whole fan-base devoted to making and living SteamPunk style.

Steampunk Wallpaper is a very recent find that has provided a ton of awesome high-quality desktop wallpapers in the SteamPunk/grungish style.  Really stunning work here by the artists.  Even if you aren’t a fan, you are bound to find something appealing.

The Steampunk Workshop | Technology & Romance - Fashion, Style, & Science - Ongoing web-site filled with the very best examples and guides to SteamPunk hardware and software.

The Steampunk Home - Neat ways to add that anachronistic touch of class to your home; many with commonly available materials repurposed.

SteamPunk Magazine » Downloads - Free PDF downloads of SteamPunk Magazine.   Very interesting articles and perspecitves…to say the least!

Happy notetaking and jotting!

--Claus V.

Thursday, June 07, 2007

Linkfest: Mozilla, Paper Toys, New Sec Apps, & Vista VHD's

Last post for the night.

Clean up your Firefox Menus

I spotted these two Firefox Add-on extensions this week that might help you "declutter" your Firefox menus.

First up,

Menu Editor - Mozilla Add-on

This extension allows you to re-arrange or remove menu items from the main context menu (that's the right-click menu) as well as the main menu-bar. -via DownloadSquad.

Secondly,

A commenter named PS_4 recommends skipping that extension and just editing the userchrome.css file.

More userchome.css file hacks here: Firefox - Tips & Tricks -via supernova00.biz.

Lastly,

Personal Menu - Mozilla Add-on

This add on lets you add three new menu buttons to your toolbar; the first two "History" and "Bookmarks" provide buttons that closely mimic their counterparts on the "File, Edit, View..." bar.

The third is the cool-one.

It allows you to add whatever menu items and sub-menu items you want to it. So you can make your own personal drop-down menu! Then you can remove any other buttons and menu items from the primary bar you might want in order to save space. Quite clever!

Screenshots on the Add-on page.

-via Mozilla Links

Make your own paper toys!

Custom Paper Toys

Paper artist Matt Hawkins is offering some downloadable templates for some wacky, retro-looking paper figures.

These guys are kinda cute.

Download the PDF file, print out on heavy paper or card-stock and assemble.

Fun activity for parents and the kids. And is something you might find proud and retro-geeky enough to take to work and show off!

-via Drawn! blog

New versions of two popular Freeware Security Apps released

Some new versions of popular security apps have been released:

Ad-Aware 2007 Free - Lavasoft (freeware for personal use only)

Also in $ Pro and Plus versions with advanced features.

I have been playing with the beta version for some time and generally like it. I'm not yet ready to give it a "Valca review" but it is a nice improvement overall from the previous Ad-Aware SE version.

Not yet offered for Vista. Sorry 'bout that. Maybe Vista-ready in August?

EMSI Software has released version 3.0 of it's a-squared line.

The fuller Anti-Malware version is a 30-day trial version. While the less featured, but still handy Free version should work fine for most users.

In good news, it is compatible with Windows 98, ME, 2000, XP, 2003 Server and Vista.

--via heise Security

Miscellaneous Microsoft News and VHD Goodies

These last two links discuss the "time-limited" availability of free "virtual" Vista images

The first is a 30 day evaluation version of Windows Vista Enterprise, pre-installed with Virtual Machine Additions already loaded. You can download it from here:

Microsoft Windows Vista 30-Day Eval VHD - Microsoft Download Center

Note that while the download page says that you need Virtual Server, the virtual machine works fine with the freeware Virtual PC 2007.

As well as Microsoft Visual Studio 2005 Team Suite VHD - Microsoft Download Center

This download comes as a pre-configured VHD. This download enables you evaluate Microsoft Visual Studio 2005 Team Suite in a Windows Vista environment.

Although these are really more business and development angled products, they might be worth checking out if you are curious.

Also worth keeping an eye on for future goodies: the Microsoft Virtualization Solutions webpage.

--Claus