December 2005
Monthly Archive
Fri 30 Dec 2005
Posted by Farshid under
MixedNo Comments
For those of you who may be subscribing to the RSS feed, you may have gotten all the recent feed again simply because I upgraded to WordPress 2.0 and for some reason this was a side effect.
Other than that, I really like the new features of WP and generally speaking like the feel of it, especially the rich text editor that I have been wanting to see for a while.
Thu 29 Dec 2005
Posted by Farshid under
ReviewsNo Comments
I find myself trying out different extensions, most of which I keep. Nevertheless, the turnover of them has been high, so in order to keep a constantly up to date list of the extensions I have installed, I created a page listing all my FireFox extensions and Scripts. You will see the link to this page also on the right hand sidebar (brown) at the top under Pages heading.
While I am at it, if you are a Gmail fan like me, and have Greasemonkey installed on your FireFox, you really are going to find the scripts mentioned under this post very useful. It is written by a Google employee who works on Gmail himself.
Wed 28 Dec 2005
Posted by Farshid under
MixedNo Comments
Back in 1996, when I visited the US for the first time, I visited Vegas as well. Fast forward to now and we found a really cheap deal, too good to pass and went on to revisit the sin city.
I was curious to see how I would feel about it this time around, 9 years later, given that my perspective on many things has changed. And sure enough I did feel different. The city no longer impressed me as I remembered it back in 96. Even though the population and the hotels and attractions have exploded in size and numbers, if you take away the giant hotels and gambling, free drinks and not so cheap food buffets the city would has very little to offer.
In any case, the highlight of the trip was definitely to see two very different yet, fantastic shows and if Vegas is good its the shows. We saw KA by Cirque du Soleil and The Blue Man Show and I highly recommend both of them.
Wed 28 Dec 2005
Having used Google Analytics for a couple of months now, today I was looking around to see if I could mine any important info and found rather amusing info, that being what keywords has lead people to this blog…some make sense, others are more of a puzzle…see for yourself

Thu 22 Dec 2005
New country means learning new things. A few weeks back I heard the word filibustering on the NPR (National Public Radio, my favorite channel on the radio around here) and it didn’t make any sense whatsoever, so I looked it up and was somewhat stunned to find out what it means. For any of you that might not know what it means:
1) The use of obstructionist tactics, especially prolonged (irrelevant) speechmaking, for the purpose of delaying legislative action.
2) An instance of the use of this delaying tactic.
I did a 5 minute google search on the term to find some sort of background about this and found out that it comes from Spanish filibusterowhich originates from the Dutch word vrijbuiter (which means pirate). Anyways, long story short, early nineteenth century, John Randolph, a senator from Virginia kept giving long irrelevant talks which made the other senators ticked off, so a decision was made to stop this. 1872 though, Vice president Schuyler Colfax stopped this and once again this practice of delaying tactics started and by now as you know it’s part of everyday life of the Senate.
What is amazing to me is that when asking people about this practice of our law makers here no one even finds this particularly strange, the fact that the leaders of this country, when trying to make decisions are allowed to act as a bunch of kids and try to stall each other. Maybe I am overreacting or missing something big here, but this sounds totally out of control and childish behavior at its peak. Nevertheless it is so accepted here that when looking up the meaning in the dictionary, that is what it means.
So the question is what is the difference between filibustering in the Senate and a kid that wants ice cream in the grocery store, puts a finger in each ear and starts screaming in order not to hear his mom refuse his request.
Tue 6 Dec 2005
Posted by Farshid under
Mixed1 Comment
1) Since 1.5 was release some of my extension have stopped working and there are no upgrades for 1.5 (e.g. spellChecker extension). To adress this use the following trick (and be aware that it might make your firefox less stable, though I have no problem on this matter, yet at least)
- At the location bar, enter: about:config. This will show you a list of Firefox internal preferences.
- Right-click on the list, select New > String
- Enter “app.extensions.version” (without quotes) for the preference name.
- Then, enter “1.0″ (without quotes) as the value for app.extensions.version.
- Restart Firefox 1.5, then enable those disabled Firefox extensions.
- Restart Firefox 1.5 again to active the extensions. Done.
2) Chrome Cleaner Extension - Very Likely to help speed up your firefox (both mac and pc)
3) And here is and excellent list of extensions for your pleasure.
Sat 3 Dec 2005
Posted by Farshid under
Mixed1 Comment
A few links as I go through my blogs for the last few days
- Google Maps meets NYC Subway map
- List of all Xbox Games that you can run on Xbox 360
- Google Base - Lets you share anything with the world. Kinda hosts things for you.
- Google Analytics - Tells you everything you want to know about how your (site’s) visitors found you and how they interact with your site. I registered my site, and three days later, it says it still waiting for data even though 12 hours should have done it.
- True Local - A local search that has been under radar so far, but is out in the light now.
- Riya - Nafis told me about this one. A face recognizing software that automatically can organize your pictures. Keep an eye on this one. It will be huge.
Sat 3 Dec 2005
Well overdue, but I finally hold a working permit which means I will be looking for work as of today. Thank you uncle Sam!
Thu 1 Dec 2005
Posted by Farshid under
ReviewsNo Comments
As of today I will start sharing with my worldwide reader base (I now have one reader apparently in Santiago, Chile which means I have at least one reader in each continent) the books that I read and find useful enough to share.
Two such books are
and
. The first one at core deals with how given problem solving, a cognitively diverse group consistently will come up with better solutions (or pick the best solution alternative) in comparison to a few experts’ in that particular area or any individual expert no matter how well they know the field or smart they are. This in turn because a group’s aggregate knowledge and wisdom will always surpass an individual’s or a few individuals’ even if those individuals are experts in that field. Very interesting read and I highly recommend it if you haven’t read it yet. I find this book so useful and intersting, that I will be back to talk about this in a few months and will tell you more about it then.
The second one, Freakonomics, looks at economics from a very different perspective, one that we dont usually think about and tries to answer questions such as why legalisation of aboration really was the cause of decrease of crime rate, why drug-dealers tend to live with their mothers, simply put hidden side of things that we don’t always think about. I found it to be a fun and interesting read.