Cure for crashing FourSquare and RunKeeper on iPhone

Process: foursquare [374] Path: /var/mobile/Applications/7F37347B-......1663AA5/foursquare.app/foursquare Identifier: foursquare Version: ??? (???) Code Type: ARM (Native) Parent Process: launchd [1] Date/Time: 2009-12-22 12:39:11.260 -0500 OS Version: iPhone OS 3.1.2 (7D11) Report Version: 104 Exception Type: EXC_BAD_ACCESS (SIGSEGV) Exception Codes: KERN_INVALID_ADDRESS at 0x20294628 Crashed Thread: 0< Thread 0 Crashed: 0 libobjc.A.dylib 0x32668ecc 0x32665000 + 16076 1 CoreFoundation 0x32d83d6a 0x32d4d000 + 224618 2 CoreFoundation 0x32d4fc28 0x32d4d000 + 11304</p>

Attention is new currency

Some companies just do not get it. It starts with an email, like this one: By coincidence, you are on project that has the CRM component so you decide to check it out and click on link. After all, it is free, right, so why wouldn't you ? The catch is that it is not free at all. Without realizing it, you have already made your first payment, by doing the sender a favor: as we know, clicking on a link in email is definitely not a good idea and recommended behaviour, unless you know the sender and trust the sender.

Here we go again

This is reloaded version of my previous blog - or continuation of the fork. First thing to start is to explain why did I do something quite contra-productive as relocate the blog and loose all the audience - however small it could have been. It would seem that I like restarts and things reloaded. I did pick a new country to become new home for me and my family (if emigration is not a restart, what else is ?

Facebook domain type-in hack

You know the drill: open browser, new tab, type 'www.facebook.com' and in moment you can see who of your online buddies is up to something interesting. This is exactly what I did. Only I did not end up in well known Facebook page, but on something really fishy: This is definitely NOT facebook. How come I ended up on 'quiz.us' site when I typed in www.facebook.com. Or did I ? Let's do it again:

Forget me not, Web2.0 edition

I stumbled upon this pretty nice little application or service - depends how you see it. It is called reQall (obviously would have been recall, but recall.com as every good domain is taken. What it does is that allows you to set a reminder in the future to do something - at given time and date: buy X, call Y, do Z. Nothing to earth-shattering about that. What is neat is the way how you do it.