I’m watching an entrepreneur interview and it cut abruptly to commercial—literally in the middle of a sentence. WTF? Hey, Business Insider and livestream: don’t do that.
Also, you can’t pause the ad.
This is a story of triumph.
I realize this is obscure, but: if you ever find yourself doing batch file renaming, A Better Finder Rename is an incredible time saver. (I wrote about it previously here.)
I’m in the middle of a comically tedious effort to change the embedded players on the RRR website from imeem to SoundCloud. As a result of a process involving iTunes, Audio Hijack, and Logic, I had the following: 153 30-second preview tracks that followed a peculiar scheme.
- First 39 tracks: original version of each song, grouped by album.
- Next 114 tracks: alternate versions of those same songs, listed in the same order but in groups of three.
For instance, if track 1 was “Characters, Setting, Plot”, tracks 40, 41, and 42 were alternate versions of “Verb Tenses”. Track 2 was “Dots and Dashes (Punctuation)”, so tracks 43-45 were alternate versions of it. The alternate versions were in the same order, thankfully (Downtempo, Recall, Instrumental).
I needed a way to rename all those files without doing it manually; I refuse to do something so ghastly. So:
- I pasted a list of the original file names into Excel and used some text functions (mostly vlookup, left, right, and concatenate) to create a pretty list.
- Then I copied/pasted that final list into a text document that simply listed all the new names, in order.
- Made a backup of my ugly-named tracks (which I later needed)
- Brought those ugly-named tracks into A Better Finder Rename, told it rename everything using my text file, and voila: new names.
Bam!
The office internet connection just started behaving erratically (not atypical), so I ran a speed test. It’s not that the connection is slow, it’s that it seems to pulse, which makes it seem like it’s constantly flipping on and off. As a result I got a report I’ve never seen: seemingly faster upload speeds than download.
Why would any human waste time sending (or writing code that sends) emails like this? How could this possibly be profitable?
SoundCloud changes the “Save” button to a countdown whenever you’re uploading tracks so you don’t click before it’s ready. Simple, intuitive, and helpful.
Having too much fun pretweeting.
I want to talk to the person at AT&T who thought “mobility bill” was a good idea.
I’m testing out our new Zendesk setup and am having a little too much fun having conversations with myself.
Oh hell yeah.
